Femi Otedola, a high school dropout who became a billionaire

Otedola gives up top ownership race in Transcorp, sells stake to Elumelu

Nigerian billionaire Femi Otedola has revealed that his journey to building a multi-billion-dollar empire began without a university degree or even a completed high school education.

The 62 year-old oil mogul, in his newly released memoir titled: “Making It Big,” shares how his academic struggles led him to abandon formal education and dive into the world of business, where he ultimately found his calling.

In his 286-page book, Otedola recounts his early years at the University of Lagos Staff School, starting at the age of six in 1968, and notes that despite being classmates with notable figures like Kola Abiola, son of the late business magnate Moshood Abiola, he struggled academically.

“Academia and I were not compatible,” he writes, noting that he repeated a class and consistently ranked at the bottom of his class, sparking his pivot toward a different path.

“I finished primary school in 1974 because I repeated a class. Even when I was allowed to pass, I consistently anchored the bottom rungs of our end-of-term examination results. My interests were definitely not in academia,” he added.

He noted that after finishing primary school, he proceeded to Methodist Boys’ High School, Lagos, even as his academic struggles continued.

“The school had been founded almost a hundred years earlier, in 1878. Alumni include grand names in Nigerian history: Benjamin Nnamdi Azikiwe, Mobolaji Johnson, Ola Rotimi, Fola Adeola, Olusegun Osoba, and Hezekiah Oladipo Davies. When I joined the student body in 1974, the principal was D. A. Famoroti, who’d taken up the post in 1963 and would leave in 1980,” he recalls. “I started Form 1 at age 12 and was there for three years,” he said.

Otedola wrote that in 1977, after it became clear that his performance was not improving, his parents transferred him to Olivet Baptist High School, Oyo, a boarding school founded by Southern Baptist missionaries in 1945.

“My parents’ thinking was that all my siblings were boarders, and they seemed to be doing well,” Mr Otedola writes. “They thought this change would help turn around my attitude towards academia, but nothing changed.

“I started in Form 3 at Olivet, and as I rounded off the first year of my A Levels, my father was establishing his printing company, Impact Press, in Surulere, a residential and commercial district in Lagos State. I grew fascinated with the machines and told myself that my future would be inextricably tied to them. I managed to remain in school until the Lower Sixth examination was over. And then, I was finished; I never returned for my Upper Sixth.

“All I wanted to do was get involved in business. My father kept watch over me and drew me close. My sister taught me shorthand. I knew how to type and began typing letters for my dad. I prepared all his business correspondence. I was fascinated by the way printing machines treat paper. The white paper is placed on one end, the ink and plates are fixed, and the printed material comes out of the other end. It was captivating,” he stressed.

In spite of his mother’s protests and tears, Otedola abandoned school to work full-time in his father’s printing business. He rose quickly, becoming managing director of Impact Press in 1987 at the age of 25.

“However, I soon became restless. I had immersed myself in all aspects of the business and learned the ropes at my dad’s right hand. I certainly enjoyed the job more than grappling with the Pythagoras theorem and struggling through homework at Olivet. As time went by, though, I also thought it was time for a measure of independence from my dad.

“I still wanted to work for him — I really enjoyed hearing the rumbling of machines and savouring the smell of freshly printed material — but I also wanted to do things differently. I told him I wanted to become a sales consultant for the press, and he agreed. He said he would pay me a commission of 10–15% on any work I brought in.

“That was a significant break for me. I invested my money in buying cars for sales and marketing outreach and moved on to the next phase in my nascent professional life.”

With his new role, he began bringing in jobs from major companies and advertising agencies, particularly in calendars and diaries.

“We could hardly keep up with the demand. Our unique selling point was quality, thanks to the state-of-the-art machines we owned. We were also always on time with job delivery. We were engaged in healthy competition with Academy Press, a company located in the Ilupeju area of Lagos.

“I served as my dad’s sales exec up until 1991, when he started his Lagos State gubernatorial campaign. It was a run for office — ultimately successful — that I had initiated.”

According to him, the break in his family business gave him the confidence and foundation to strike out on his own. In 1994, he founded Centre Force Ltd. with ₦10 million in starting capital.

“From those beginnings, he built a vast business empire in oil and gas, shipping, real estate, finance, and philanthropy. He went on to chair Forte Oil, invested in power through Geregu Power Plc, and today chairs the board of FirstHoldco Plc, one of Nigeria’s largest financial groups.

Otedola’s disclosure of his educational history may come as a surprise to many who long believed he was a university graduate. At one point, his Wikipedia page even suggested he studied at the University of Lagos.

But in “Making It Big”, Mr Otedola insists his true classroom was not a lecture hall but the business floor. His lessons, he says, came from watching his father, trusting his instincts, and learning from both failures and triumphs.

“I never returned for my Upper Sixth. All I wanted was to get involved in business,” he writes. That decision, once a source of his mother’s tears, would lay the foundation for a career that has made him one of Africa’s most influential businesspersons.

Mr Otedola’s memoir, in the end, delivers a striking message: formal education may have eluded him, but discipline, persistence, and the hunger to build made him — in his own words — “make it big.”

Soludo sacks vigilantes who assaulted female NYSC member, orders their prosecution

The Agunechemba operatives

Anambra State Government has dismissed eight operatives of the Agunechemba Security outfit over the brutal assault and public stripping of a female corps member, Miss Jennifer Elobor.

Ken Emeakayi, Special Adviser to Governor Chukwuma Soludo on Community Security, disclosed this at the agency’s headquarters in Awka on Wednesday.

He said the government acted swiftly after receiving reports of the incident, adding that the operatives would be handed over to the police for prosecution.

According to him, the dismissed officers were in pursuit of suspected cultists on Tuesday, when they attacked the corps member, an action he described as “totally outside the mandate of the agency and utterly condemnable.”

Emeakayi said: “The Soludo administration will not tolerate any form of unprofessionalism, brutality or abuse of office by security operatives. Any officer found guilty of misconduct will face immediate dismissal and prosecution.”

In spite of pleas from the victim’s family and officials of the National Youth Service Corps for a quiet resolution, the state government insisted on a full investigation and accountability to serve as a deterrent.

He added that the government had already settled the victim’s medical bills, replaced her damaged valuables, including a laptop and phone, and tendered a public apology to her family, NYSC and the general public.

Emeakayi noted that the incident would serve as a turning point in reforming the outfit and restoring public confidence in community security operations.

“This government is committed to professionalism, accountability and respect for human rights in all security engagements,” he stressed.

 

Japa, Marriage, Sex and Money, By Funke Egbemode

Letty was a good girl who became a good wife but the seasons changed and this once-upon-a-time choir leader, like Lot’s wife, looked back and right before the eyes of her Pastor and in the presence of her bewildered husband, is turning into a pillar of salt. The kind of salt no one wants to touch or taste.

It was all the fault of this Japa syndrome. Letty and her husband, Brandon, had decided that Nigeria, the way it was going, was going to ruin their plans for the future. As it was, their future was becoming more and more difficult to see, like a receding apparition. Rent was tough to come up with. Their two children were not attending the kind of school they had planned for them, yet they were owing school fees, term in, term out. Brandon as a civil servant could only hope for a sprinkle of naira notes every three years because that was all his promotion fetched.

The couple added two to three and decided that ‘Japa’ was the only available option. They added their savings to loans and sold as much valuables as they could find buyers for and Brandon was off to ‘the abroad’.

But we all know how ‘Japa’ itself can be like, the difficulties Brandon faced in the United Kingdom was like riding a second-hand Raleigh bicycle uphill a dusty road in the harmattan. One year became three years and Letty found herself really alone. Note that there’s alone and there’s really alone. Really alone is when you are married and sleeping alone, picking all the bills alone and crying alone into your pillows because you don’t want the children to hear you.

It was sad and bad. Brandon didn’t find it easy. Letty soon found out that the Christian walk is difficult when you are wearing shoes designed by lack. In the process of trying to cope, Letty started leaning on another man. Yes, one man who helped pick some of the bills. The guy also made her laugh, called her regularly, picked the children from school and soon, was picking Letty from work too.

Do I need to spell the journey out? You can guess it wasn’t going to end well. It didn’t.

Letty got pregnant and is now confused. She will soon start showing and that will bring with it damning and damaging explanation. How will she explain to her in-laws or children that she got pregnant without her husband? How does a married choir leader explain her pregnancy to her pastor when everyone knows her husband is hustling in United Kingdom. Would she keep this pregnancy or terminate it? Is this the end of her marriage or what? If you were Brandon, would you accept Letty back or with a broken heart just let her and your marriage go? What will be the fate of the children who got caught up in the melee?

If you ask me, I’d say marriage is already a tasking business without you adding the Japa trouble to the mix. Couples who live together year in year out know how much work they have to put in to stay put. Japa is not for everybody and it is not all marriages that are subjected to Japa that will survive it.

For Letty and Brandon, it is not about the marriage breaking or being scarred only. It is also about a baby who didn’t ask to be born into confusion.

So, do you think it is Letty’s fault that this happened? I hear a resounding yes.

‘How could she get pregnant for another man?’

‘How could she open her legs for another man?’

‘She’s a married woman for God’s sake!’

‘What kind of Christian wife betrays her vows like that?’

‘No, she has to go.’

‘That marriage is over.’

‘Yes, the church must excommunicate her.’

‘She has brought shame on everybody, herself, her family and the church.’

Our predictable reactions. If you align with any of those reactions, you must also align with me that Japa isn’t for everybody. You must also agree with the Yoruba adage that states that it is what you leave lying around that the goat eats. Ohun t’a ba fi sile ni enu ewure n to.

In other words, Brandon and Letty should have known that their marriage would become easy prey for predators. Sometimes, a farmland left unused, unattended will soon find itself at the mercy of weeds. At other times, a daring strong man may dare the real owner and vigorously begin cultivating the land.

We must also admit that this side of the Japa syndrome will leave the marriage institution panting. It takes away intimacy and companionship which are at the core of a true union. What Japa couples are not willing to admit is they are now in open marriages. According to Wikipedia, ‘open marriage is a form of non-monogamy in which the partners of a dyadic marriage agree that each may engage in extramarital sexual or romantic relationships, without this being regarded by them as infidelity, and consider or establish an open relationship despite the implied monogamy of marriage.’

In the case of Japa husbands and wives, there’s no written or discussed agreement of sexual and romantic relationships with other people. It just happens. That evil just creeps in with time, the time created by distance. Putting money above companionship and not considering the long-term effect of japa on marriage is swelling the ranks of divorced men and women.

Look around you and sincerely appraise the lives of couples who have opted for love across the ocean.

I’ll really like to publish personal experiences of those in the living-apart boat. I promise to keep their real names out of print.

However, this does not mean there are no couples who have stayed committed to one another in body and spirit, even with the thousands of kilometers separating them. At least, the wives remain faithful. The men? I can’t vouch for them. They can’t vouch for themselves either. How these couples do the love across the ocean deal successfully is a matter for deep study.

A wife left behind in Nigeria or posted abroad is expected to be faithful. She must be of best behaviour, work hard to send money home to the man she left behind, even. If she dares to go on a date with her colleagues and one of them posts photos or videos, her in-laws and detractors will summon coven meetings to discuss this affront as if it’s a matter of urgent national importance.

Well, as this one-sided society is prescribing closed legs for the women, it pats the man on the back for keeping his fly open.

‘He’s a man now.’

Nonsense. Do women not also have libido? Women need love too. They crave the touch of their husbands. But all I can do is protest, right? It’s their world, according to some unwritten warped law. Men can have side-chicks, even mistresses or Nigerian wife while their wives are hustling or schooling abroad. But a wife must keep her legs close and stay on ice until God knows when. It’s not fair, totally unfair but it is what it is, until God knows when. If I protest from now till I go fully gray, nothing will change.

The summary of today’s homily however is this, if you are not ready for the full consequences of your partner Japa-ing without you, do not do it. Make sure you have all your facts. Hold a honest family meeting where all cards are laid on the table. Will he have girlfriends while she’s away? Will she be able to ‘hold body’ in winter and in summer? Will he wear condom until he joins her? If she must ‘do anything’ can she be discreet? Both parties must be realistic, honest and be ready to forgive all trespasses. Yes, all trespasses because the chances that adultery will show up in marriage when husband and wife live 2,000 km apart is high. Do not just think of the money angle, the improved lifestyle, the regular supply of electricity and generally living where things work. Japa for couple goes beyond the accent and dollar and pounds. It is not a business transaction.

Marriage, its joy, future and fulfillment side should not be reduced to naira, dollars or any foreign currency. Think deep. Look far ahead. Consider all the angles and truthfully answer this question: is it a step worth the sacrifice?

Credit: Funke Egbemode

Doctors find large knife lodged in man’s chest for eight years

large knife

A man in Tanzania who came to the hospital complaining of pain and pus discharge from his right nipple was shocked to learn that he had been living with a large knife lodged in his chest for eight years, the country’s media reported.

Doctors at the Muhimbili National Hospital in Tanzania recently published a most unusual case study in the journal, National Library of Medicine.

They wrote about a 44-year-old generally healthy man who came to the hospital with a 10-day-long history of white pus discharge from his right nipple.

He denied having any chest pain, difficulty breathing, cough, or fever, but when asked if he had anything notable to tell doctors, he recalled a violent fight eight years ago, during which he sustained several cuts to his face, back, chest, and abdomen.

Doctors had managed to suture the wounds back then, and he had lived a mostly uneventful life ever since, up until his nipple started oozing pus.

Unable to determine the cause of the infection, doctors ordered an X-ray and were shocked to see a large knife lodged in the man’s chest.

“Initial imaging with a lateral chest radiograph demonstrated a retained metallic object in the mid-thorax, with surrounding opacification likely representing a resolving or chronic loculated haematoma or post-traumatic fibrosis, a sequela of the patient’s stab wound,” doctors wrote in their case study.

Somehow, the knife, which had entered through the right scapula, miraculously did not hit any major organs.

At the time of the man’s altercation eight years ago, the hospital he was treated at had no means of conducting a radiological investigation, and because he reported no pain after his wounds healed, no one bothered investigating further.

Even more bizarre is that the knife caused the 44-year-old patient no discomfort for so long. The pus was a result of the dead tissue that built up around the foreign object.

Following the shocking discovery, the knife was carefully extracted during surgery along with the dead tissue and the pus.

The patient spent 24 hours in the intensive care unit before he was transferred to the general ward for another 10 days. His recovery went well, and subsequent follow-ups were uneventful.

(NT)

Vigilantes beat, strip female NYSC member in Anambra (Video, photo 18+)

VIDEO: Vigilantes beat, strip female corps member in Anambra. Credit: Facebook | The Haven Foundation

A video going round the net has shown the moment armed men believed to be operatives of Operation Udo Ga-Achi — also known as the Agunechemba Vigilante Group — stormed a corps members’ lodge in Anambra State and assaulted a female corps member identified as Jennifer Edema Elohor and some of her colleagues.

Haven 360 Foundation shared the video on Facebook on Monday, and the video showed the female victim, Jennifer being beaten and stripped naked, by men wielding guns.

The foundation said the victims were brutalised and subjected to humiliating and sexually degrading threats.

It noted that the vigilante accused the corps members of being ‘yahoo people’ and still descended on them despite producing their NYSC identity cards.

The foundation wrote in part: “We strongly condemn the brutal assault and violation of rights of National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) members by operatives of Operation Udo Ga-Achi or ‘Agunechemba Vigilante Group’ in Anambra State.

“On July 23, 2025, these state actors stormed the corpers lodge, accusing the members of being ‘Yahoo people’, despite their prompt production of NYSC identification cards and uniforms.

“The assault was particularly egregious in the case of Jennifer Edema Elohor, who was beaten, stripped naked, and left exposed and covered in blood.

“The victims were subjected to unsavoury, horrible, sexually degrading words and actions, including threats of sexual violation.”

The video

Video and photo: The Haven Foundation, Facebook

APC and lessons from Oyo by-election, By Lasisi Olagunju

Balling with Bola Tinubu at 73, By Lasisi Olagunju

The Cambridge English dictionary defines ‘carcass’ as “the body of a dead animal, especially a large one.” The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) was recently described as “a carcass” by one of its former governors, Mr Ayodele Fayose. Yet, that carcass defeated the reigning lion, the APC, in a decisive election in Oyo State at the weekend. PDP was dead; PDP is not dead. If I were the APC presidency, I would accept this reality as a divine warning. I would go back to work; I would talk and scheme less, I would start working truly for the people’s welfare. I would know that only this will kill the ‘dead’ enemy.

An APC leader told me that the Oyo election result was “the effect of bizarre developments in the APC.” He said the APC candidate “scored 6 (six) votes in his polling unit.” Oyo State APC truly has a huge reward problem. It has the liability of a Lagos-centric Abuja, unfair in appointments in Oyo, imperial in disposition. Does this solely explain the loss? It does not. Listen. I work and live in Ibadan and I know that the state governor, Seyi Makinde, has a firm grip on the politics of the state. His stellar performance as governor and his humility before the palace and the people have made it very easy for everyone to be his friend. It will take more than ‘federal might’ to defeat such a person now and in the future. Indeed, the by-election was a referendum on his six-year tenure as governor. It was also a pointer to how well the APC and its federal government have sold themselves to the people of Oyo State.

Defence minister, Alhaji Muhammad Badaru Abubakar, is the immediate past governor of Jigawa State. His image handlers spent the night of Saturday and the whole of Sunday fighting off the news that he lost his Jigawa State polling unit to the PDP. Because bad news is good news, the story of the minister’s loss was quite popular on the internet. Then a report surfaced on Sunday that “Badaru did not vote at PU 001. His accredited polling station is PU 002. There, the APC secured 188 votes while the PDP scored 164 votes.”

The unit which the minister is disowning is Babura Kofar Arewa Primary School PU 001, very next to the one he claimed, and both situated in the same primary school compound. At that Unit 001, while APC polled 112 votes, PDP won with 308. Now, do the arithmetic. The minister did not vote in that unit, but his polling unit shares the same location with this unit where his party lost with a margin of almost 200 votes. Can we just add the two units’ votes together and ask the powerful minister to say something? Did his party win the election in that location? If I were the minister, I would keep quiet and nurse the wounds inflicted by a mere carcass.

The ruling party must be very unhappy at the pushback it got across the country on Saturday. The APC wants to go into the 2027 elections without opposition. And it is working really hard to achieve that. Poisoned carrots in the air; State of Emergency and defections down there; arrest and detentions here and there. Who will warn ‘them’ that what they desire is lethal? Where there is no opposition, there is no check upon corruption; the government itself becomes the opposition to good governance, and ultimately its own death. Find out why there are ample provisions for His Majesty’s Government and His Majesty’s Loyal Opposition in England. There was a reason why democratic Canada, in 1905, provided a good salary for the leader of the opposition. Parliament voted that year to give the incumbent an additional salary allowance, “equal to that provided to Cabinet Ministers.”

C. P. Bhambhri in 1957 wrote ‘The Role of the Opposition in the House of the People (1952-56)’. In that seminal piece, he warns that: “In a community where no opposition parties are permitted, the alternative government is one of courtiers, policemen, soldiers and gangsters and it is only by violent methods that the government may be ousted.” It is the Indian’s argument that “an effective opposition renders a government a going concern. It prevents the formation of monopolies in politics. It ensures a neutral and non-political civil service and armed forces.”

Flood should stop thinking it will sweep away the river. What we saw in Saturday’s by-elections was a reassurance that despite everything, the opposition is alive in Nigeria, and the people and their democracy are safe. But it is not enough to be alive; it will be enough only if and when the opposition is not a living dead. A vibrant opposition is needed against a creepy dictatorship slithering into the walls of our democracy. Listen again to Bhambhri: “To find out whether a people is free it is necessary only to ask if there is an opposition and if there is, to ask where it is. The existence of a strong opposition is the greatest guarantee that there shall be no tyranny of the ruling party.”

So, the dead can come back, fight and win a war? There is a story in the October 1856 edition of the Church Missionary Society (CMS)’s ‘Quarterly Token For Juvenile Subscribers’. The story has this convoluted headline: ‘The dead, alive—The lost, found: Dasalu’s Odyssey.’ It is a story of death and of not dying. It reads: “In the Yoruba country, which you know is in West Africa, there was a town called Igbore. The Apena, or judge of the town, was named Deri. One of his sons, born about 1810, was generally called Dasalu, but sometimes Ogan. By and by, Igbore was destroyed by slave wars; but Deri and his family escaped to Iro. Afterwards they went to Ijana, where Deri died. Dasalu’s mother, Lutumbi, then took him to Ilaro, and finally to Abbeokuta. Many Igbore people had settled there. That part of Abbeokuta in which they live is called Igbore. The boy grew up a bold, active young fellow, and the head of a party who used to roam about the country, seizing all the people they could, and selling them for slaves.” He later converted to Christianity and dropped his wild ways.

During the Dahomian invasion of Abeokuta on March 2, 1851, Dasalu was at the war front, defending his land. After the war, he was discovered to be among the missing. His elder brother, Lujobi, on the fifth day claimed that he had found a headless corpse in a bush. He then proceeded to seize “the poor fellow’s property, to the amount of fifty pounds as the headless corpse was claimed to be his.” However, it was later discovered that Dasalu had been captured, not killed, and was taken as a prisoner toward the coast. “Great was the stir the news made in Abbeokuta. Well it might! Had not his dead body been found? So, everybody thought at the time. Everybody? Did Lujobi? Or did he knowingly pass off some other dead body (it was headless, remember) for Dasalu’s? Lujobi’s cruel conduct afterwards seems to condemn him.” From his place of captivity, undead Dasalu managed to send a coded letter (àrokò) to his wife: a stone, a piece of charcoal, a pepper-pod, and a grain of parched maize, or Indian corn, all tied up in a rag.” What did this mean? “It meant that he was quite well, and as hard or strong as a stone. The prospect before him was, however, very dark, like charcoal. This has made him hot as pepper, and his body had dried like parched maize. While as for his cloth, it was a mere rag.” All attempts to ransom the man failed because he was known by his other name, Ogan. Years later, freed Yoruba returnees from Cuba brought news that Dasalu was alive there, writing as “Dasalu, the lost one.” He had been shipped as a slave but ended up in Havana after his vessel was seized. The British Consul eventually found him, and he was taken to England, where his photograph was made. So, Dasalu, once thought dead in the Dahomian war, was actually captured and enslaved, later found in Cuba, and eventually freed to return to his wife, Martha, in Abeokuta. His case is a dramatic story of loss, faith, betrayal, survival, and redemption.

The grim content of Dasalu’s aroko to his wife aptly represents the state of things with the PDP today. Like Dasalu, the carcass of the PDP rose from the cemetery to defeat the ‘Dahomians’ on Saturday in Ibadan. The Ibadan North Federal Constituency by-election saw a “dead” party blindsiding the all-powerful APC with 18,404 votes; the Abuja party struggled and netted 8,312. Now, do the maths: the difference is 10,092 votes. When a contest records such a margin of win, the English man would say it was a shellac. I would have borrowed from the Germans the word ‘blitzkrieg’ (lightning war) but that would have been grossly inappropriate to describe the Oyo State operation. It was not ‘surprise’ that overwhelmed the defeated on Saturday. No. Ogun Àwítélè means a war foretold; the defeated knew they would fall.

Check how the newspapers reported the result of Saturday’s electoral contests across the country; read the headlines: ‘PDP clears all 12 wards In Ibadan North by-election as APC candidate loses PU’;

‘Violence, vote-buying mar by-elections in Ogun, Kaduna, Kano;’ ‘Kano by-election marred by electoral malpractice, APC alleges’. Indian scholar, Railul Ramagundam, in January 2005, did a paper on the relationship between newspaper headlines and how a society is run. He entitled the piece: ‘The ‘State’ Revealed in Newspaper Headlines.’ The man says: “From a newspaper headline one can draw not just news and views about a society, but also ascertain the nature of the society and the state itself.” Those headlines are proof that Nigeria is very far from what the enemy designed for it: a one-party dictatorship.

Ramagundam wrote about India, but because scholarship is universal, we feel the validity of his thesis here, daily. Take this headline from last week: ‘After spending N21bn, FG budgets 180x more for Third Mainland Bridge repairs’. Someone in government would read this and wonder who the ‘subversive’ sub-editor was that cast that headline for Business Day newspaper. To announce the latest trillion naira contract binge of the Federal Government is to tell us that because opposition has collapsed in the parliament, money has become rain water here. Almost all federal roads in the South -West are ‘dead’, less than two trillion naira will fix all of them. But works minister, David Umahi, said recently that he was begging the president for funds to fix the collapsed South-West roads; yet our president casually and calmly approved N3.8 trillion for a bridge repair in Lagos. And he will campaign for 2027 votes outside Lagos.

Each of the parties in Saturday’s by-elections across Nigeria must have learnt some lessons in how not to take the people for granted. For parties that are rent by the dog-eat-dog posture of politics, I recommend the Bible’s Mark 3:24-25: “And if a kingdom be divided against itself, that kingdom cannot stand. And if a house be divided against itself, that house cannot stand.”

Folklorist Solomon T. Plaatje, in ‘English in Africa’ (September 1976) has this story for parties of the avaricious: Once upon a time a Bechuana village was attacked by an army, which chased the people from their homes. There remained among the ruins a cripple and a blind man. These two invalids agreed that the blind man should carry the cripple, that they should flee and follow the people. While they were passing through the country, the blind man carrying the cripple, the one who could see, saw some vultures hovering. So he told the one who had the use of his legs about it, and they went towards the place (where the vultures were hovering). There they found some vultures assembled round the carcass of a wild animal. When they had driven away the vultures, a dispute arose between them (over the meat). The cripple said: “It was my eyes that found this anima”; the blind man said: “It was my feet that found it.” When their dispute became more heated, and they would not give in to one another, the cripple crawled away from the blind man. Then the blind man, being unable to see neither his companion nor the animal, called out: “My friend, it is evident that you are our eyes. Why should you lose your temper? I know that the animal was found by you.” The cripple heard his partner and came back and led the blind man to the animal, their food.

Our politicians will never step back as the blind man did. They quarrel over spoils, over positions, and over privileges, and won’t mind losing everything to birds of carrion.

The Bechuana tale speaks to the folly of selfishness and the wisdom of cooperation. It reflects directly on the greed of the avaricious in our politics. We wait to see which politician or party learns from this as we jog towards 2027, the year of the apocalypse. The cripple and blind man story teaches all scammers in power that collective survival depends on honest partnership; that those with vision need those with mobility, and vice versa. In 2015 and 2023, the wily among politicians forged alliances to take power; they succeeded in their mission; but the king and his men scammed many allies; they rewarded a few. They consolidated and moved further, scamming the people. Today, they elevate political 419 to state policy. With exclusive claims, they own a free meal they didn’t prepare. But do they know that their conduct invites vultures to come over, inherit and eat what should have sustained everyone?

Those who lost Saturday’s by-elections will lose the 2027 general elections unless they stop taking the people to be Shakespeare’s “blocks, stones… worse than senseless things.” The people may be hungry and powerless, but they are not stupid. They are waiting and watching. It is a clitche to say they will laugh last. Niyi Osundare says it better in ‘The Eye of the Earth’: the people always outlast the palace.

Credit: Lasisi Olagunju

APC, opposition in each other’s throat over by-election results in 12 states

APC

Three political parties – the All Progressives Congress (APC), the African Democratic Congress (ADC), and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on Sunday differed over the outcome of the by-elections held on Saturday across 16 constituencies in 12 states.

While the APC captured 12 constituencies, the PDP recorded wins in Ibadan, Oyo State, and Adamawa State; the NNPP emerged victorious in Kano; and the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) secured 2 in Anambra State. The ADC, however, did not win in any constituency.

The ADC faulted the by-election, alleging it was marred by intimidation and corruption.

In a statement issued on Sunday, the ADC National Publicity Secretary, Bolaji Abdullahi, stressed that the outcome of the bye-elections does not reflect the true strength of the party as the coalition platform for opposition leaders.

ADC stated: “The ADC noted that the party did not field candidates for most of the positions contested in the by-election. Therefore, with all its flaws and irregularities, this election should not be seen as a measure of the strength or capacity of the Opposition Coalition, but rather as a sad reflection of how far the system has been corrupted against the will of the people.

“What Nigerians witnessed in yesterday’s (Saturday) by-elections is yet another reminder that under the current administration, democracy itself, just like the economy and our national security, continues to decline under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and the APC.

“When elections are marred by widespread violence, when ballots are openly and brazenly exchanged for money, when opposition candidates are excluded without explanation, and when the very institutions entrusted to safeguard democracy become complicit, then the vote of the ordinary Nigerian ceases to have meaning. In some states, nearly 300 thugs armed with rifles, knives, and cutlasses were arrested on election day. Is this democracy—or banditry disguised as voting?

“In one state, a vote-buyer was caught with N25.9 million intended to procure and corrupt the will of the people. In another, election officials were themselves implicated in similar inducements. This is no longer isolated malpractice; it is fast becoming the political culture of our electoral process under the APC.

“After so many years, the failure of the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System in some states has once again raised questions about the Commission’s competence, sincerity, and perhaps, complicity. Nigerians deserve elections that command the implicit confidence of every citizen and the respect of the rest of the world. INEC must not be allowed to turn excuses into a code of conduct.

“The bigger picture that we must all remember is that for better or worse, these by-elections represent the clearest indication of a dress rehearsal for 2027. If violence, vote buying, candidate intimidation and exclusion, and collusion between security forces and compromised election officials become the new normal, then Nigerians and the international community must brace themselves.

“The ADC therefore calls on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to rise above his partisan interest and, for once, demonstrate genuine leadership by ensuring that Nigerians can cast their votes freely and safely. The President must recognise that no government can claim legitimacy if it consistently presides over elections that citizens and the international community perceive as fraudulent.”

Lessons from the KWAM 1 Fiasco, By Simon Kolawole

My friend and I were passing by a car parked next to my street. We usually discuss Nigeria during our daily exercise and it is our wont to analyse trending events and developments, trying to highlight the problems and propose possible solutions. I always tell David: “It is very easy to point out Nigeria’s problems. Every Tom, Dick and Harry can do that. The hard part is proffering workable solutions from the position of knowledge, not emotions.” On Friday, the topic of our discussion was the recent aviation dramas: the one between Prince Wasiu Anifowose, the fuji maestro also known as K1 De Ultimate or KWAM 1, and Valuejet; and the other between Ms Comfort Emmanson and Ibom Air.

What have we really learnt from these episodes? “You see that car and all the gadgets?” I asked David, rhetorically. “When cars were first made, I can assure you there were no side mirrors, wipers or sound systems. With driving experience, motoring evolved. Manufacturers began to see the need for these additions to improve user experience.” Today, cars have dashboards to help with camera-guided reversing and parking, for performance management, navigation, etc. There are now airbags to protect passengers in the event of an accident — and many lives are being saved by this. Serious societies learn from every experience and take measures to address identified shortcomings.

In the Valuejet incident, we saw video clips of K1 trying to stop a flight from taking off at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja. When the pilot eventually decided to call his bluff and take off, K1 had to skilfully duck under the right wing which would have knocked him down and probably ended his life. I had never seen anything like that in my life, not even on Netflix. He had tried to board the flight with a flask — whether or not it contained water or alcohol was another matter. By aviation rules, there is a limit to the volume of liquid allowed beyond security gates. Denied boarding, K1 made a scene and allegedly poured some liquid on the captain who had intervened.

The second incident involved Emmanson a week later. We first saw a video of her hitting a member of Ibom Air crew who was obviously blocking her from disembarking. The hostess, also named Comfort (and my mum is also Comfort, so I am a bit uncomfortable here), did not retaliate. I suspect she knew the drama was being video-recorded. Emmanson was eventually physically pulled out of the aircraft because she was apparently under arrest. According to Ibom Air, Emmanson had refused to comply with safety instructions on mobile phone use, assaulted crew members, and tried to use a fire extinguisher as a weapon — but Emmanson is yet to tell us her own recollections of the events.

Back to K1, the civil aviation authorities first placed him on a six-month no-fly list — which means no airline operating in Nigeria can fly him, else its licence will be suspended — and sent a criminal complaint to the attorney-general of the federation and the inspector-general of the police. Because of his social status (for those who don’t know, K1 is the pre-eminent Fuji artiste and one of the biggest stars in the world of Yoruba music), it would appear nobody was willing to arrest him. Blocking the path of an aircraft is unheard of and would qualify as an act of terrorism in many countries. Referring his matter to the AGF and IGP, I think, was a coded move to kill the matter.

Emmanson, an “unknown” Nigerian, was not that lucky — as is usually the case with “unknown” Nigerians. I mean, the prisons are full of people who stole a piece of meat, whereas those who pilfered billions get a slap on the wrist, after which they may be rewarded with national honours. Not only was she bundled out of the aircraft, she was also promptly charged to court, and the judge wasted no time in sending her to detention at the Kirikiri prisons (with the fancy name “correctional centre”) until October 6, 2025. After protests and criticisms — especially the comparison with the more serious offence allegedly committed by K1 — Emmanson was freed from prison detention.

I now return to the question: what did we learn? By the way, I am not interested in the 2027 politics that coloured some reactions. I want to stick to the facts in the public domain in making my comments. K1 said he passed security with an empty flask and it was only at the lounge that he filled it with water to take it on board. He said he suffers severe dehydration, which means he needs to constantly take water. If it is true that the flask was empty when he passed airport security screening, no offence had been committed at this stage. Aviation rules do not allow you to take a certain volume of liquid beyond security point. However, there is no limit if you get it after screening point.

When K1 was challenged at the boarding gate, Valuejet’s suspicion was that the flask contained alcohol. I do not think the officials did enough diligence to keep evidence that it was alcohol. And if it was indeed alcohol, is it permitted on board? To the best of my knowledge, alcohol can be carried into an aircraft. In fact, airlines serve alcohol on certain flights. Also, alcohol is sold after security screening and people buy and take it aboard. So, even if K1 was carrying a flask filled with alcohol, he had not committed any offence. In other words, merely carrying a flask of liquid to the boarding gate doesn’t mean you have broken the law as long as the content was obtained after security screening.

The question that will need to be answered here is: was the flask really empty when he passed security? How are we going to find out? The way our airport “security” officials behave, security is the last thing on their minds. For one, they can be star-truck. Once they see a public figure or celebrity, they lower their guard. Those ones can get away with anything. I would, therefore, suggest that fixing this part of the leak should be of utmost concern to the aviation authorities. Airport officials are less than professional in the way they do their job and it is something I have witnessed many times. Regrettably, we may never know if K1’s flask was empty or not at the screening point.

When K1 was told by the Valuejet officials that he could not board with the flask, he pushed back, allegedly pouring the liquid on the captain. This, if true, was the beginning of the misdemeanour. He should have been restrained by airport security. When he further went to stand in front of the aircraft, the flight should have been grounded for security reasons until the human obstruction had been cleared. Instead, ground officials were pleading with him. By the time K1 was doing “James Bond” as the pilot recklessly decided to take off, he should have been in handcuffs. Our airport security can be very weak. K1 can’t try that in Togo. The US is too far to be used as an example.

What are the lessons? One, security screening at the airport must become stricter. Any VIP who refuses to submit to scrutiny should be cautioned. If it is the “big” people with their own security that are causing the disruption, this should be properly documented and reported to the appropriate agencies, including the DSS. Let it be on record. Two, if passengers have to take certain things on board for medical reasons, there must be a doctor’s report. This is also necessary for documentation. We need to set these ground rules so that there is no room for guesswork or doubts. Three, if any passenger should behave the way K1 did, they should be arrested and charged to court immediately.

As for Emmanson, we still do not know the entire facts. But under no circumstance should a passenger hit or intimidate a cabin or crew official. This is frowned upon in advanced societies. In the UK, for instance, you could be prosecuted for assaulting an airline or trainline official. A bus driver can decide to suspend a journey if under assault or intimidation from a passenger. My younger sister always says we have no respect for one another in this country and I agree with her. We treat people with disdain. We find it hard to say “thank you” when we are served; we think that because someone is a security guard, receptionist, dispatch rider, driver or plumber, they are less than human beings.

But respect cuts both ways. Did the Ibom Air official treat Emmanson with some respect? What was their manner of approach in asking her to switch off her phone? Respect begets respect. That does not and can never justify her alleged violent conduct, but it would be good to know exactly the sequence of events so that we can learn some customer care lessons therefrom. Perhaps, the airline personnel need to learn how to pass their message to passengers in a polite manner. Moreso, the way Emmanson was arrested looked very crude and embarrassing. Is there no decent or more civilised way of arresting an alleged offender? Must the officials behave like the thugs of Oshodi Oke?

I would expect the airline operators, aviation authorities and security agencies to do a post-mortem on these incidents and examine them sincerely to know what went wrong and what could have been done better. Like I said, the rules must be clear and may have to be read out at the point of conflict to help passenger education. Also, pilots need to be reminded of their professional responsibilities. Similarly, airport security must become more professional. I would also say cabin crew must undergo constant training on customer management. Above all, we need a class-blind consequence management process. There are enough lessons to go round from these two appalling incidents.

Sadly, we hardly learn any lessons. Otherwise, Nigeria would not be like this. The next incident is just around the corner. Senator Adams Oshiomhole did his own drama at the Lagos airport some months ago. Nothing happened. A whole former governor? Who can touch him? That is the way we roll in Nigeria — a country where “big” people can do and undo. They are above the law. That is why when Nigerians started kicking that Emmanson could not be in Kirikiri while K1 walked free, we decided to forgive both. Faced with the choice of bringing a big man to book, we would rather free a small fish. We missed a trick there — a golden opportunity to show that nobody is above the law. Farcical. 

AND FOUR OTHER THINGS…

POLICY WATCH

After we had gone on a binge of creating tertiary institutions in virtually every local government (OK, I know I’m exaggerating) without the slightest idea of how to fund them and where the teachers will come from, the Federal Executive Council (FEC) has now placed a seven-year ban on establishing new ones. Dr Tunji Alausa, minister of education, said: “In our country, access to quality education is no longer an issue. What we are witnessing today is duplication of new federal tertiary institutions, a significant reduction in the current capacity of each institution, and degradation of both physical infrastructure and manpower.” Typical policymaking in Nigeria: shoot first, think later. Amazing.

EVIL SERVANTS

Mr Ola Olukoyede, chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), recently revealed that there are many abandoned housing estates in the federal capital territory (FCT) and across Nigeria, which he suspects were being developed by civil servants with stolen money. “The moment they leave public service and the money is no longer coming, they abandon the estate. Then, the developer will start looking for investors to support them to complete the project,” he said. The focus of money laundering via property development is often on politicians, but those ones are still learning the craft compared to a class of civil servants. Can EFCC crack the hard nut? Watching.

THE CATALYST

I was at the Tayo Aderinokun Hall of the University of Lagos last week as my mentor and renowned sports journalist, Dr Mumini Alao, presented his autobiography, with a guest lecture by Mr Babatunde Fashola, former governor of Lagos state, titled ‘Rethinking the Current Football Business Model in Nigeria as a Catalyst for Sports Development’. Alao, who discovered my sports writing talent in 1991, inspired and mentored a whole generation of sports journalists. As editor of Complete Football, he played a key role in Nigeria’s football development (not just journalism) in the 1990s with his exposés and insightful journalism. I intend to devour every word in the book. Legend.

NO COMMENT

Mrs Kemi Badenoch, the erratic leader of the UK Conservative Party and world-famous Nigeria-basher, says she no longer identifies as a Nigerian. “I am definitely an Essex girl,” she later said in her makeshift British accent. So sad. Since her earth-shaking proclamation, the sun has stopped shining in Nigeria. We are completely finished! I know it is none of my business, but the real British people know themselves. When Mr Nigel Farage, the British version of Donald Trump and leader of the anti-immigration UK Reform party, asks Badenoch to “go back to your country”, what would she say? “Please, I’m a white woman trapped in a black skin. My name is Chemical, not Kemi.” Hahahaha.

Credit: Simon Kolawole

Media girl, Toke Makinwa unveils gender of her unborn baby (Photos)

Toke Makinwa expecting her first child

Nigerian media personality, actress, author, reality TV show host, and entrepreneur, Toke Makinwa has revealed she’s having a baby girl through a creative video on her Instagram page.

In the video, Toke used the color of a designer bag to announce the baby’s gender, unboxing it to reveal a pink-themed gift, signifying she’s expecting a girl.

She shared the intimate moment with her followers, excitedly sharing the news with her online fans.

Toke wrote: “I couldn’t wait to find out the gender of my baby, I wanted a very intimate gender reveal and that’s what I did.

“Went to my top 3 stores and bought presents that represented the color of the gender. I decided to put together this precious moment to share with you online Uncle and Aunties… 💃💃💃”

More photos:

Toke Makinwa reveals gender of her unborn baby

Toke Makinwa reveals gender of her unborn baby

Wasiu Ayinde: Shame of a nation (1), By Tunde Odesola

Image result for tunde odesola

Unenviable bee life. Despite buzzing from pillar to post in the field, transporting tonnes of nectar sugar to its hive for honey, the bee, like the Value Jet aircraft passenger, is ultimately deboarded from its hive in an extractive process to yield nature’s sweetest and goldiest liquid, honey; a perfect example of the product outvaluing the producer.

As a youth looking forward to sitting the secondary school-leaving certificate examination, the release of the album, Talazo ’84, by the new kid on the Fuji music bloc, Wasiu Ayinde Barrister, presented to me an opportunity for defiance, self-belief, and entertainment.

But my admiration for Wasiu had to be in secret because my no-nonsense parents preferred the rich and instructive music of Tunde Nightingale, Adeolu Akinsanya, Haruna Ishola, Jim Reeves, Jim Rex Lawson, I.K. Dairo, Victor Olaiya, Osita Osadebe, Chief Commander Ebenezer Obey, King Sunny Ade, Victor Uwaifo, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, Orlando Owoh, Ofege, etc, to the originality-lacking music of Wasiu of those days.

In my father’s home, there was an unwritten, but effective law. If you’re watching a programme on TV or listening to the radio, and a Fuji song wafts in, you must change the channel or frown, stand up and walk away. That was the disdain my family had for Fuji, a music genre considered vulgar and lowlife.

And, if you pretend as if you didn’t notice the Fuji song on the radio or TV, my father, Pa Adebisi Odesola, of blessed memory, in the most sarcastic of voices, would twist a sentence in the music, like, “Wese Boy ko, Wese girl ni; o ti gbe rubbish yen kuro ki n to wa gba eti e! Will you turn off the rubbish music before I slap you!?”

But in the eyes of a teenager born on Lagos Island and bred in Mushin, Wasiu was a symbol of possibility. He felt like a big brother and folk hero, whose musical breakthrough whispered to me, “This is Wasiu, young and successful; if Wasiu can achieve musically, you too can, academically.”

Well, 41 years after the release of Talazo’84, I remain a fan of Wese Boy, but now with a better understanding of what enduring music is, an example of which is the music of Fuji Oracle, the late Chief Sikiru Ayinde Barrister, whose songs are truly timeless.

Although I still love Wasiu Ayinde, I hate his lifestyle. The ambivalence between his life and music takes me back to the bee and the honey metaphor – the creation and the creator. This ambivalence prompts the questions: Can the artist be separated from his art, and should fans appreciate and enjoy the music of a morally deficient artist?

While he lived, King of Pop, Michael Jackson, was a matchless talent in voice and dance. Though not convicted, Jackson faced longstanding allegations of child sexual abuse, making many feel uncomfortable supporting his work, and raising the question: Can the powerful messages in his songs like “Man in the Mirror” or “Heal the World” be separated from the allegations against him?

“Mute R. Kelly” became a widespread movement after American R&B god, Robert Sylvester Kelly, was convicted of multiple sex crimes, including against minors. His conviction caused a sharp drop in public support, with many refusing to stream his music. Unlike the music of Jackson, however, R Kelly’s music brims with autobiographical themes, making the separation of the artist from his art more difficult.

Back home in Nigeria, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti needs no introduction. Though celebrated for his fight against corruption and government highhandedness, Fela was criticised for ruling his Kalakuta Republic with the same highhandedness he criticised public officials for. While some believe his personal flaws shouldn’t be magnified to overshadow his socio-political relevance, others say his activism was no excuse for extremism.

After 41 years in Fuji limelight, controversy is no stranger to the son of Anifowose, who has made a fortune by ingratiating himself with high-end politicians such as ministers, senators, governors and incumbent President Bola Tinubu, singing their praises for a fee.

However, his lack of discretion and unbecoming arrogance, two flaws many blame on the absence of adequate formal education, saw him record a personal phone call with President Tinubu and put the audio call online, breaching the protocol of the Office of the Nigerian President. Sadly and quite worrisomely, the Office of the President did not sanction Wasiu’s recklessness on that particular occasion.

A few days after thoughtlessly exposing President Tinubu’s phone conversation with him, Wasiu grew wings and perched on the roof of his Ijebu-Ode home, looking down on Islamic alfas, who graced his mother’s burial, describing them as interlopers who opened their mouths like an umbrella when there was no rain or sunshine. “Ile baba mi ni Fidipote, awon alfa, won lo be. Ibi ni gbogbo won wa se kinni, ni won wa ganu si,” Wasiu said.

In an attempt to douse the heat generated by his numerous controversies, including the allegations of maltreatment levelled by his former drummer, Kunle Ayanlowo, and the President’s phone call leak, KWAM 1 granted an interview to online TV, Agbaletu, owned by multitalented journalist and music aficionado, Dele Adeyanju, in April 2025.

In the interview, Igi Jegede, clad in a Yoruba attire, with a purple and beige colour thinking cap to match, gave a good account of himself as he denied the allegations of maltreatment, arrogance, highhandedness, vindictiveness and ruthlessness levelled against him. Interspersing the Yoruba interview with some unilluminating English grammatical expressions, Omogbolahan cut the picture of a man sinned against, rather than he sinned.

However, he shot himself in the foot when he highlighted to Agbaletu TV the virtues someone of his social status is expected to possess. His words, “At this juncture in my life, the responsibilities I carry are so many. Wasiu Ayinde is the one you know (but) Wasiu Ayinde has different meanings in various communities, especially in Yorubaland and Nigeria as a whole. Wasiu Ayinde is the Oluomo of Lagos – a very prestigious title and responsibility. This will constrain me from saying some things the way I should, but I won’t be able to say them the way I should. So, also, Wasiu Ayinde is the Mayegun of Yorubaland. Someone who is Mayegun is a peacemaker; no one hears foul words from the mouth of Mayegun.”

With the thinking cap still firmly on his head, the Oluaye Fuji continued, “Mayegun should not talk, and people go asking, ‘Was it the Mayegun that said such?’ The greatest of the greatest honour (is my title) as Olori Omoba of Ijebuland; that’s also so big, the society must not hear bad things from my mouth. There are many things I will overlook or choose not to hear or respond to. It’s not that I overlook or wave such things off, but because no one hears foul words from the mouth of Abore (the chief priest). I have two more years to turn 70. Imagine someone who has all these titles, and the things you hear from him are still controversial.”

I wonder where K1 De Ultimate put the thinking cap he wore while granting the Agbaletu interview when, on Tuesday, August 5, 2025, he exhibited a behaviour unbefitting of an Omoluabi, a Mayegun and an Olori Omoba, at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, where he stood in the path of an aeroplane – boasting and threatening – trying to prevent it from taking off, like NURTW members would threaten yellow buses in Lagos. Arabambi became grumpy and baptised the members of Value Jet airline’s cabin crew with w(h)ate(ve)r was the content of his flask, prompting the airline to bar him from travelling, even as he moved the battle to the front tyre of the plane, blocking it from moving.

Until the clips of his shameful airport saga went viral, Wasiu, shortly after dodging the wing of the fast-moving plane in an ‘ariku yeri’ fashion, played the victim, claiming he was in the right, and threatening the owner of Value Jet airline, Kunle Soname, his fellow Ijebu tribesman, saying, “Soname will feel me.” Oniyeye. Ironically, the Wasiu, who, in a song, warns a mother about her child climbing the branchless pawpaw tree, is the one engaging in eregele in front of a plane.

Ayinde’s mentee, Kunle Alabi Pasuma, aka Lagata, likens ere ’gele to the dangerous play by a young boy, Ade, who recklessly rides his bicycle along the road where an egg seller displays her wares, upturning crates of eggs and incurring a huge debt. Pasuma, also known as Iba Wasi, stretches the recklessness metaphor a bit further by likening Ade’s tale to a drunk, who also convulses, saying it is a double whammy for a drunk to convulse, “Ade ma n sere ’gele, Ade n gun keke, nibiti iya eleyin joko…”

According to a leaked audio, Arabambi said he needed water ‘every second’, yes, ‘every second’, and I quote, “I need water. I am dehydrated, I constantly take water…I am a patient. I needed this water, every second, I needed it. You don’t want to see me shut down.”

To ensure fairness and clarity, I placed Wasiu’s claim of needing water ‘every second’ on the table of medical doctors. A medical doctor and associate professor in the Department of Psychiatry, Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Adeoye Oyewole, said, “It is a lie. No dehydration would be on that level. If dehydration gets to that level, the patient would be placed on IV fluid to prevent renal failure. It is a lie.”

Speaking on anonymous condition, another medical doctor, who owns a hospital in Lagos State, said, “If Wasiu claims to need water constantly, the question to ask is, ‘Does he not sleep at night?’ Does he not play for hours without drinking? If he needs water constantly, as he claims, such water must be ORS containing sugar and salt; it can’t be ordinary water. He’s lying.”

Yet another medical doctor in the service of Osun State dismissed Wasiu’s claim. The doctor, nicknamed BJ, said, “Wasiu was just looking for an excuse. His claim lacks medical backing if subjected to medical analysis. He’s a joker.”

Hours after Wasiu’s blowup, Nigeria’s Minister of Aviation, Festus Keyamo (SAN), acting like he was in a just and serious country, swiftly condemned the bad action of the bard as ‘totally unacceptable’, and placed him on a no-fly list, an action that drew a resounding applause from Nigerians. Following Keyamo’s action, a jittery Wasiu quickly clambered down his high horse and ate the humble pie, making a public apology in which he begged Tinubu, Keyamo, NCAA, and FAAN for forgiveness. But, in what he called an apology, the haughty way Olasunkanmi Ayinde described himself as an ambassador of the country in the past 50 years, highlights a refrain in his Talazo’84 album, ‘ko seni to le na mi lore, loju tani, Asiwaju Ahmeda o….’ Wasiu’s limited knowledge precluded him from knowing that nobody appoints themselves an ambassador – an authority needs to appoint someone an ambassador.

It appears the scales of utopia were to later fall off Keyamo’s eyes as he soon realised the minstrel in the eye of the storm was the canary ‘son’ of Tinubu, whose privileged position defies justice and defiles integrity. As an intelligent politician, Keyamo probably took a cue from the fate that befell some Lagos elders, who gathered under the aegis of the Governor’s Advisory Council, and advised Tinubu on the need not to meddle in the removal of Lagos State Speaker, Mudashiru Obasa, by Lagos State House of Assembly members. Bourdillon refused the counsel of the elders and facilitated the reinstatement of Mudashiru in a brazen manner, which echoes a line from Wasiu’s song, “E mo egbé e yín ke jòkó jé…”

To underscore Ayinde’s arrogance, I reproduce basically the viral phone conversation he had with Tinubu when he lost his mother early this year: How can you (Tinubu) be in power and I (Wasiu) will suffer tribulation. You (Tinubu) can’t be in power, and I (Wasiu) will suffer. That is impossible in the Nigeria that you (Tinubu) are president, the Nigeria that you (Tinubu) have in your hands.”

At this point, it is pertinent to peep into the mind of Wasiu and psychoanalyse what constitutes the keys to success for him. This exercise will give an idea of why he behaves the way he does.

Giving what looks like a pep talk in a viral video, Wasiu enumerates three fundamental keys to success in life. According to him, these keys are ‘money, boldness and connection’. Simple! In the short video clip, Baba Sultan was actually referring to Baddo, Nigeria’s hip-hop sensation. For a man close to 70 to assert that ‘money, boldness and connection’ are his three key recipes for success, it goes to say that the power show at the Abuja airport reveals a man whose id dominates his ego and superego. If a man dominated by moral conscience were to give such a pep talk, he would list integrity, hard work, kindness, morality, patience, fairness, commitment and justice as keys to success.

When people describe Nigeria as a puppet on a string controlled by the powerful, the administrations of Muhammadu Buhari and Bola Tinubu readily come to mind, not forgetting those of Olusegun Obasanjo, Musa Ya’Adua and Goodluck Jonathan. Do you still remember the indicted cop, DCP Abba Kyari, who was heard on a recorded phone conversation negotiating access to the cocaine seized from two criminal suspects? Hahaha, that’s Naija for you.

A sane mind would think Kyari would have been brought to justice. But is Nigeria a sane country? Kyari’s indictment for drug crime came on the heels of his indictment by the US in the multinational fraud involving Ramon Abbas, aka Hushpuppi, currently serving an 11-year jail term for international wire fraud after he was arrested in Dubai by the FBI in 2020 and consequently sentenced.

The Buhari administration turned down the request by US authorities for the extradition of Kyari to face criminal charges, maintaining the disgraced cop was on trial in Nigeria, already. Subsequently, the court barred journalists from covering Kyari’s trial, which began in March 2022, saying the identities of witnesses needed to be protected. However, journalists have yet to resume covering the case even as Kyari has been released on bail for not escaping when the gates of the Kuje prison were flung open during an attack on July 5, 2022. Chibunna Patrick Omebi and Emeka Ezenwa, the suspects in possession of 21.25kg of cocaine, have since been released after serving their time in prison, but Kyari is still on trial in Naija. Hahahaha!

Kyari is a northerner like Buhari. Wasiu is a south-westerner like Tinubu. Ushie Rita Uguamaye, aka Raye, is from the south-south creek of Cross River State. She is the National Youth Service Corps member, whose certificate of national service is being withheld by the NYSC in controversial circumstances – after she described President Tinubu as a ‘terrible leader’ overseeing a worsening national economy.

For Raye to receive a pardon like Wasiu, she might need to wait till 2060 when her kinsman might emerge Nigerian president. By then, the foundation of the ethnic bias laid by Jonathan, built by Buhari and cemented by Tinubu would have long become an enduring law in the Nigerian Constitution.

But Raye is not as lucky as Comfort Emmanson, the Air Ibom female passenger, who let all hell loose in a fit of rage that saw her wig, bag, shoes, and all flying in different directions during a free-for-all with cabin crew members inside a plane that arrived in Lagos from Uyo. Unlike Raya, Wasiu and Emmanson have reportedly been appointed as ambassadors by various organisations, but a mass protest led by human rights activist, Omoyele Sowore, to enforce Raya’s rights, was overlooked by Tinubu while Wasiu, his ‘son’, got his hand raised in triumph as if he just won a Grammy.

She should thank her stars the timing of her fight coincided with when the overpampered ‘son’ of Tinubu was showing the world this is the best time to be a Yoruba …. To be continued

Credit: Tunde Odesola

Veteran Nigerian actor, Chief Kanran, dies

Olusegun Akinremi, popularly known as Chief Kanran

Veteran Nigerian actor, Olusegun Akinremi or Segun Remi, popularly known as Chief Kanran, has passed away. He died at the age of 70.

Movie executive and producer Seun Oloketuyi confirmed the news in an Instagram post on Friday, stating that the actor passed away earlier in the day.

He wrote: “Popular actor Segun Remi popularly known as Chief Kanran died Friday morning. Details soon.”

Chief Kanran, who began his professional acting career in 1975, was a household name in the Yoruba film industry, renowned for his distinctive style, refined elegance, love for luxury, sharp humour, and commanding performances that lit up stage plays and movies for decades.

His acting career began on stage before moving into television and film, appearing in numerous Yoruba stage productions and gaining prominence as part of a popular NTA drama series.

Over the years, he featured in many notable films, including Ewe Orun, Aiye, Efunsetan Aniwura, Agbarin, and Bata Wahala. He was widely recognised for portraying authoritative characters, often as a king, chief, or village elder.

He took on the title role in Kurunmi, a play by Prof. Ola Rotimi, and featured in several episodes of Mirror in the Sun, marking his shift from stage to television. He also played a businessman in the soap opera Images.

His major breakthrough came on stage with Langbodo, Nigeria’s drama entry for Festac ’77, performed at the National Arts Theatre, Iganmu, Lagos.

On television, he memorably portrayed Alaafin Kanran in a drama aired on Lagos Television on October 1, 1988.

As of the time of filing this report, details about the cause of his death has yet to be disclosed.

 

APC Rep claims lawmakers pay up to ₦3m to present bills, petitions on the floor of the House

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A member of the House of Representatives, Ibrahim Auyo, has claimed that lawmakers pay between N1 million and N3 million to present bills, motions, and petitions on the floor of the Green Chamber.

Auyo, who represents Hadejia/Auyo/Kafin Hausa Federal Constituency of Jigawa State and a member of the All Progressives Congress, made the claim during a meeting with his constituents.

In a video of the meeting, which has since gone viral, the lawmaker spoke in Hausa while responding to criticism over his record of bill sponsorship.

He said, “Since I was elected as a member in 2015, no individual has given me a bill to pass, either from Auyo, Hadejia, or Kafin Hausa. They are just pretending.

“And also, even the bills and petitions are paid for. You have to pay from N3 million, N2 million, or N1 million to present it.

“And after you present the bill, you must follow up by lobbying the whole 360 members of the House to accept the bill.”

The lawmaker said he was open to receiving proposals from the constituency, provided they were properly channeled.

“For the bills, I give each community the chance to present theirs. They should sit with their community leaders, write down their needs, and bring them to me in Auyo.

“Even if I am not in Auyo and I am in Abuja, they should delegate two or three people from the LGA to meet my team so we can confirm it is from the constituency and see if I can address it or not.

“We have done this before they started giving us such requests, so why can’t we do it now when they actually give them to us?

“I have my representatives—they should go through them. If they do so, I can first review it; if I can do it myself, I will. If it is a bill, I can also present it,” he explained.

Auyo also dismissed accusations that he had failed to help constituents secure jobs.

He said, “That is not true. Whoever says I didn’t help our youths is lying. Those I helped know themselves, and I can’t satisfy all.

“Even God that creates us [did not make us equal]. Look at your five fingers; they are not the same, so you can’t satisfy all.

“I do distribute my things [empowerment] myself, and 80 percent out of 100 percent is for youths, I swear to almighty Allah.

“My first motorcycle and car distribution was distributed to the youths. No single elderly person benefited. Just recently, during the governor’s empowerment in Auyo LGA, all the beneficiaries were youths.”

The lawmaker claimed that some young beneficiaries sold the items given to them.

“You bought [an empowerment item] at N300,000; they sell it for N150,000 immediately after collecting it,” he said.

Auyo urged constituents to work with him until the end of his current tenure in 2027 and warned against making personal attacks on leaders.

“I urge people to work collectively as a team, to submit their requests to me or even through others. In fact, it is me now, and by God’s grace, until 2027, it will still be me.

“Insulting leaders for personal reasons is wrong. Some people, if not for politics, are too small to insult you.

“My advice to the youth is this: when you insult someone’s father today, tomorrow someone will insult your own father. When you insult someone, you are insulting your own father—even if he is in his grave,” he concluded.

(Punch)

Lawyer drags Nigerian president, NCAA, FAAN, AGF, others to court for giving KWAM 1 ‘special treatment’

Comfort Emmanson & Kwam 1

Lawyer and public interest advocate, Ayodele Ademiluyi, has instituted a N500 billion suit against the Federal Government, the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, and several other parties at the Federal High Court in Lagos, accusing them of grossly violating the rule of law in the handling of two separate aviation incidents involving music icon, King Wasiu Ayinde Marshal, and another passenger, Comfort Emmanson.

Respondents in the suit marked FHC/L/CS/1632/25, are: the President of Nigeria, the Attorney-General of the Federation, Minister of Aviation, Festus Keyamo (SAN), NCAA, the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria, Ibom Air, ValueJet, the Nigerian Correctional Service, King Wasiu Ayinde, the Nigerian Police Force, the Governor of Akwa Ibom State, the state’s Attorney-General, and the Airline Operators of Nigeria.

Addressing the press on Friday, Ademiluyi, who also serves as convener of the Movement for Justice and Secretary of the Radical Gender Movement, said the legal action was aimed at defending public interest and holding aviation stakeholders accountable.

According to him, the dispute goes beyond the individuals involved, exposing deeper institutional weaknesses.

The lawyer faulted the disparate treatment given to both cases, alleging that King Wasiu faced no legal repercussions, while Emmanson was subjected to swift punitive action.

“Our aviation system needs a complete overhaul. We cannot allow impunity to reign or degenerate into a banana republic where someone can stop a plane with their bare hands and walk away without consequence.

“It’s a gross imbalance. There was no arrest, no arraignment, no prosecution of Mr. KWAM 1.

“In fact, he was rewarded with a brand ambassadorship for the aviation sector. What message does that send to the public?” he stated.

Ademiluyi insisted that rewarding the musician with an ambassadorial role was inappropriate.

“If someone can stop a plane with their bare hands and be appointed a brand ambassador, it sends the wrong signal,” he said.

He also accused the Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, of taking sides, stating, “We are asking for an order of mandamus to compel relevant authorities to take proper action against those involved, particularly Mr. KWAM 1.

“This is not about celebrity status or political connections — it’s about the sanctity of the rule of law,” he said.

The lawyer criticised the Airline Operators of Nigeria’s handling of the Emmanson matter, describing their role as overreaching, saying, “The central issue remains: Mr. Kwam 1 is walking the streets free. That is a big slap on the rule of law. The suit we have filed is a public interest action. The collective interest of the polity is at stake,” he said.

Ademiluyi urged the court to use the matter as a landmark opportunity to affirm that no individual, regardless of prominence, is beyond legal accountability.

APC and PDP political parties are terrorist groups ―Canadian Court declares

Image result for pdp and apc logo

Federal Court of Canada has upheld a decision labeling Nigeria’s two dominant political parties — the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) as organizations linked to terrorism, while denying asylum to former member Douglas Egharevba over his decade-long affiliation with both parties.

Justice Phuong Ngo, in a ruling delivered on June 17, 2025, dismissed Egharevba’s appeal after Canada’s Immigration Appeal Division (IAD) found him inadmissible under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA).

According to Peoples Gazette, Canada’s Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness argued that both parties were implicated in electoral violence, democratic subversion, and politically motivated killings in Nigeria.

Court documents revealed that Egharevba was a PDP member from 1999 to 2007 before joining the APC, where he remained until 2017. Upon relocating to Canada in September 2017, he disclosed his political background, which drew scrutiny from immigration authorities citing intelligence reports linking the parties to widespread violence.

The IAD cited the PDP’s conduct during the 2003 state elections and 2004 local government polls, where party operatives allegedly engaged in ballot stuffing, voter intimidation, and attacks on opposition supporters. The tribunal concluded that PDP leaders knowingly benefited from this violence and failed to curb it, satisfying Canada’s legal definition of democratic subversion under paragraph 34(1)(b.1) of the IRPA.

Justice Ngo further ruled that mere membership in an organization associated with terrorism or subversion is sufficient grounds for inadmissibility under paragraph 34(1)(f), regardless of direct involvement in violent acts.

Egharevba’s argument that electoral violence was common across all Nigerian political parties was rejected. The court held that even flawed Nigerian elections still constitute a democratic process under Canadian law and that undermining them qualifies as subversion.

With this ruling, Egharevba’s asylum bid has been effectively terminated, and deportation proceedings are expected to begin.

BBNaija’s Imisi names 4 male housemates she’s in love with

BBNaija S10: Imisi names 4 housemates she's in love with

Big Brother Naija (BBNaija) housemate Imisi has confessed that she’s attracted to four male contestants: Kaybobo, Rooboy, Jason Jae, and Victory.

Such revelation surprised many, especially given her previous infatuation with fellow housemate Faith, who had consistently rejected her advances.

Imisi’s candid admission has stirred up emotions in the house, leaving others stunned by her sudden shift in relationship focus.

She said: “I am in love with four people – Kaybobo, Rooboy, Jason Jae, and Victory,”

The end of Nigerian political parties, By Dele Sobowale

Wind of change blowing in Kano and Zamfara, By Dele Sobowale - Vanguard News

“A political party deserves the approbation of the American people only as it represents the ideals, the aspirations and hopes of Americans. If it is anything else, it is merely a conspiracy to seize power” – US President Dwight Eisenhower, 1890-1969.

I strongly believe that a Nigerian political party deserves to be called one only if it serves the needs of Nigerians for food, security, housing, health services, infrastructure, employment, and, above all, hope for the future.

Right now, none of the contraptions – ADC, APC, APGA, SDP, PDP etc – meets that basic requirement.

In fact, nothing reveals how totally self-centred the nation’s political class has become than the ease with which people move from one “conspiracy to seize power” to another.

In no other country worldwide pretending to be a democracy based on multi-party system can one observe this demonstrable lack of principle or integrity as in Nigeria.

If asked to point to the thing which renders hope elusive, my first answer will be lack of truly honest and patriotic leadership.

Everybody comes into office with their own cabals – which is another definition for an extortion ring masquerading as office holders.

WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THEM

“What’s in a name?” – William Shakespeare, 1564-1616.

A few weeks ago, I got published an article on this page titled, PRESIDENCY 2027: IF NOT TINUBU, WHO ELSE?

Among the points not raised in that article, but very pertinent now, is the fact that all the leading aspirants for the 2027 presidential election, Tinubu included, have one thing in common. They have all been members of several political parties; which they discarded when expediency and self-interest dictated.

Tinubu started with AD; moved to AC, ACN and finally landed in APC. Atiku started as one of the Founding Fathers of the PDP; he moved to ACN, returned to PDP; went to APC; returned to PDP and is now in ADC. Obi started in APGA; went to PDP; left for LP and is now straddling PDP and ADC.

The first and most obvious question to all of them is: Which of the parties with which they were previously affiliated represented the ideals, aspirations and hopes of the Nigerian people?

The second question is: Why did you defect from that party?

Given the fact that in most multi-party democracies, different political parties present different approaches to governance, providing voters with clear choices, it is difficult to imagine how any principled politician could be comfortable in three parties in less than a generation and still expect to be believed by the people.

America provides us with examples of what should happen in a democratic society in which politicians are not just hustling to seize power and the national wealth. Donald Trump was US President at the same time Buhari was Nigerian President.

No single Democratic Party member defected.

Buhari was still President when Biden was elected. Again, no single member of the Republican Party crossed carpeted.

By contrast, each presidential election, since 1979 till today, has resulted in mass defection to the president’s party by people elected on the platform of other political parties.

Nigerian politicians, almost all shameless and lacking in integrity, have made mandate robbery a recurring crime.

Certainly, the same thing would have happened if either Atiku or Obi had been declared the winner.

Very few would have remained in APC.

CONSEQUENCES OF POLITICAL CORRUPTION

“Every country has the government it deserves” – Joseph De Maistre, 1753-1821.

Nigeria cannot develop because we generally tolerate dishonesty – as long as it is perpetrated by those we like and whose lack of integrity favours us.

An elected official who secured the job by presenting a forged certificate is either a heinous criminal or being hounded by critics or opponents; depending on whether we are indirect beneficiaries of the scam.

The National Assembly, NASS, parades several members with cases which have been bottled up by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, and a generally complaisant judiciary which would employ any technicality available to subvert substantive justice.

Their prime accomplices are leading legal luminaries, the Senior Advocates of Nigeria, SANs, who would deploy all the tactics, fair and foul, to ensure that justice is never done – if the price is right.

President Buhari raided the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, to the tune of N30 trillion without approval from the NASS and, till today, neither the Senate President nor the Speaker, or for that matter any NASS member, at the time has ever condemned that gross violation of the Constitution they swore to uphold.

Rampart subversion of the Nigerian Constitution at all levels of government, by elected officials, that lawmakers in general can justifiably be regarded as outlaws – irrespective of political affiliation.

Since lawlessness has become the norm, one must wonder which political party they claim at any point in time.

The atrocities committed under one party would naturally be carried to the new party.

Because APC is the new magnet drawing all sorts of dubious characters, one might as well ask: In what manner has any of the governors who decamped from PDP altered their approach to governance?

Unless I am mistaken, there has been no discernible difference in their leadership style.

That is understandable; because the defection was not based on anything other than expediency and fear. Unfortunately Nigerians have a bleak future in front of us.

NO GREAT NATION IS LED BY POLITICAL COWARDS

“A nation of sheep will soon have a government of wolves.”

That wise observation describes the Nigerian situation today. Governments and law enforcers (Police, DSS, EFCC, LASTMA, FRSC, etc) at every level behave as if the Constitution does not exist.

The federal and state legislatures no longer pretend to be independent arms of government.

Instead everybody has become part of the conspiracy to seize power and to share wealth without work. Irrespective of the political party, Ministers and Commissioners are seldom appointed based on competence and character, but, to serve the financial and political interests of their principals.

Poor performance is not sanctioned by the Chief Executive, president or governor, because the appointees merely fill a slot in a political game.

Recent merger of political parties started, as all terrible things, with the Obasanjo-led Peoples Democratic Party which went about swelling its ranks by poaching willing elected members of the opposition.

The short-sighted leaders of the PDP were not wise enough to understand that no aspect of life moves in a straight line.

More often than not, life is a boomerang.

The weapon they unleashed for sixteen years is now being used to destroy their party.

People like my childhood friend, Bode George, who held up the hands of defectors in those days, now cast a pathetic figure as they recede into political irrelevance.

If there any evidence needed that the black man is a slow learner, the eagerness with which the APC had embraced the failed PDP strategy for expansion is it.

Today, there is no single member of APC who is not a former member of another party – mostly the PDP.

Yet, this nation of sheep, which had grown steadily poorer, since 1999, is still being led by the people who ruined the country while they became richer.

Even with 2027 so far away, the sheep are already being herded to the slaughter house by the wolves – who certainly don’t care about their welfare.

So what is the use of having political parties; when the choice is between oblivion and ruin for the masses?

GUARD DOGS, MAD DOGS AND SECURITY OFFICERS

“Brute force without wisdom falls by its own weight” – Horace, 65-8 BC, VANGUARD BOOK OF QUOTATIONS, VBQ, p 63

Governors of states in a democracy are supposed to behave like guard dogs – those well-trained beasts which can discern real from imagined threats.

Those highly intelligent animals don’t attack people passing by simply because they don’t like their looks.

Mad dogs, on the other, hand will savage anybody within biting distance – including the owners of the property.

We have read stories of dogs mauling toddlers of their owners.

Many Nigerian governors, transient occupiers of the seat of government, apparently lack the insight and wisdom to determine when their actions imperil the security of life and freedoms constitutionally guaranteed to the people who permanently own Government House.

On Sunday, August 3, 2025, every newspaper in Nigeria carried the story of Niger State Governor Bago’s assault on the Nigerian Constitution by ordering the closure of Radio Badeggi and ordering demolition of the building.

All the papers not only condemned the order, but, each of them added other instances where the same governor had once again reminded us that: “Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely” (Lord Acton, 1834-1902).

On display here was delirium of absolute power in the hands of someone obviously erratic and bereft of the wisdom to use the power for the good of society.

The good people of Niger State have my sympathies.

It is not easy for people to have hope for the future when their lives are yoked to such leaders; who, after failing badly to provide food, security, education and health services, resort to naked use of power.

Credit: Dele Sobowale

Tinubu going on another trip as Nigeria bleeds ―Peter Obi

I'm being threatened for rejecting mind-blowing offers - Peter Obi - Daily Post Nigeria

Mr. Peter Obi, the 2023 Presidential Candidate of the Labour Party (LP), has accused President Bola Tinubu of insensitivity to the plight of Nigerians with his constant of foreign travel amidst Nigeria’s myriad of economic and security challenges.

President Tinubu, according to a statement issued by the Presidency, is travelling out of Nigeria on a two-nation of Japan and Brazil tour with a stopover in another city.

Analysts posit that with this trip beginning on Thursday, the President would have travelled for over 200 out of the 806 days he has so far spent in office.

Obi, in a post titled: “Again our President moves as the Nation bleeds” on his verified X handle, said,

“Amid the deplorable state of our nation in all ramifications, we have a virtually indifferent President who has continued to display insensitivity to our situation.

“How can anyone explain that a President who came from Brazil recently and met with the President is returning to the same country, leaving the various degrees of challenges at home unresolved?

“The latest itinerary of the President shows he will depart Abuja on Thursday, August 14, for a two-nation trip to Japan and Brazil.

“The President will stop over in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, before proceeding to Japan.
In Japan, President Tinubu will attend the Ninth Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD9) in the City of Yokohama from August 20 to 22. The itinerary is silent on the President’s return date to his visibly troubled nation.

“The situation we find ourselves in is deeply worrisome. Our President, who has not found it worthy to visit any of our troubled states, takes joy in travelling to foreign countries at the slightest invitation or excuse. Often departing several days even before the events he’s invited to.

“In his last trip, for instance, he had a one-week State visit to St Lucia before attending the BRICS Summit, where Nigeria was merely invited as an observer, though the role was dressed up as “partner” to the invitation, which was more significant. The leaders of actual member countries who attended only arrived a day or two at most for the event.

“Nigeria’s insecurity situation, economic hardship, and human suffering have reached their peak. We are now counted among the most insecure nations, the most fragile economies, and the hungriest countries in the world. This dire reality demands the full attention of Mr. President, and his travels should be more within our troubled states and communities, spending time on the ground, and taking decisive action to alleviate the people’s suffering rather than these overseas conferences that contribute little or no tangible value to our nation’s woes. And where the trip is necessary at all, it could be attended in just a few days rather than indulging in prolonged, unnecessary absences from a country that requires 24/7 attention.

“What our nation needs now is security of lives and properties, economic stability and ensuring that our people have food on their table.

“Our President’s planned trip of 12 days departing today, if necessary, should have been at most a 5-day trip as the event he was invited to in Japan commences on the 20th.

“Nigeria today demands competent leadership with capacity and compassion to start dealing with the problems besetting it with the presence and sacrifice required.

“Mr. President must, as a matter of urgency, commence tours of our states with the same enthusiasm he shows for jetting out of the country every month. These visits will enable him to see, listen and learn more about what Nigerians are going through.

“Though Nigerians know that our huge problems cannot be solved overnight, they want to see 100% effort and tireless commitment to solving them.

“Most importantly, our President must know that he’s not a tourist, but the Chief Executive of a troubled nation, so he must have consciousness, no strict work schedules and a strict travelling schedule to show that he has a troubled country to quickly return to.”

70-year-old Principal Secretary to Nigerian Governor weds very young lover, a lawyer (Photos)

70 year-old Principal Secretary to Ebonyi Governor weds younger lover

The Principal Secretary to the Governor of Ebonyi State, Nigeria, Chief Mathias Adum, has on Thursday tied the knot with his very young lover, Miss (Barrister) Oluchi Ekuma.

Adum, who is said to be in his 70s, was a former Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Matters in the state and an ex- Member of the House of Representatives.

The bride shared their pre-wedding photos in a Facebook post where she wrote: “Indeed this day has come and we give God all the glory. It’s our honor to specially invite you to our traditional wedding ceremony.”

Her post:

70 year-old Principal Secretary to Ebonyi Governor weds younger lover

Also sharing the photos, one Solomon Okwu Nwojiji wrote: “LOVE  IS A VERY BEAUTIFUL THING AND KNOWS NO AGE OR BARRIER. IF YOU LIKE BE POOR OR ALLOW THEM KPAI YOU YOUNG WITH PRESSURE. BIG CONGRATULATIONS CHIEF. MATHIAS ADUM. PRINCIPAL SECRETARY TO EBONYI STATE GOVERNOR. FMR, MEMBER, FEDERAL HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. AND YOUR BEAUTIFUL WIFE, BARR. OLUCHI. I LOVE THE QUALITY COMBINATION OF THIS UNION. YOUR UNION IS BLESSED FOREVER, CHIEF.”
His post:

Love knows no age - Reactions as Principal Secretary to Ebonyi Governor weds younger lover

Photos:

70 year-old Principal Secretary to Ebonyi Governor weds younger lover

70 year-old Principal Secretary to Ebonyi Governor weds younger lover

Love knows no age - Reactions as Principal Secretary to Ebonyi Governor weds younger lover

70 year-old Principal Secretary to Ebonyi Governor weds younger lover

I’m looking for a young private-jet-owner rich man as husband ―Music diva, Tiwa Savage says

I'm looking for a young man with a private jet - Tiwa Savage

Nigerian star and award-winning singer, songwriter and actress, Tiwatope Omolara Savage, known professionally as Tiwa Savage, has said she now wants a young private-jet-owner rich man as husband.

The famous 45-year-old singer, in a recent podcast shared how she is still single and looking for a man!

Also in another recent interview, Tiwa admitted she has always dated low, going below her standard, and that hasn’t paid off, so she thinks it’s time to date a man of her status — a very rich man.

Tiwa says she cares less of what anyone will say, saying it’s time for a change, a change of actually living her dream life.

Fast forward to this interview, she says the man must be young with a private plane. The mom of one, who was once married to her manager, also said she detests babymama dramas, and her supposed man must be free of it.

She said: “I’m still looking for someone’s son. I don’t have any [partner]. And I think it is because I’m asking for specific things. Maybe I need to narrow my spec down.

“I’m actually looking for someone who has a private plane, young, someone who doesn’t have baby mama drama because I can’t deal with that.”

Tiwa’s son, Jamil, from music executive Tunji Balogun, a.k.a TeeBillz, recently turned 10.

The curious rehabilitation of K1, By Abimbola Adelakun

Of all the possible resolutions to the drama involving Wasiu Ayinde Anifowoshe (the artiste popularly known as K1), and which has been the subject of frenzied discussion for the past week, what I bet no one saw coming was that he would emerge as an NCAA ambassador. If this were to be a work of fiction, such a turn of events would be taken as a lazy resolution by an unimaginative scribbler, except, of course, the story is about Nigeria, in which case the plot twist would be quite consistent with the absurd character of the country.

Even though the Nigerian in me was cynical all along that the state would fully enforce even the initial six-month ban they handed him, I admit that I applauded when Minister of Aviation Festus Keyamo announced the punitive move. I thought even if the punishment fell short of what the law dictated as consequences for his actions, it was still a good start that a country that routinely abrogates its own standards for those who have a measure of power, influence, and social connection could take such a decision. As it turns out, I was the one who was overshooting the runway. At this point, I will not even be surprised if the traditional ruler who begged on K1’s behalf slams him with a chieftaincy title before the weekend runs out, and he, too, throws a party well-attended by the social elites of the country.

Since the news reported that FAAN planned to engage the musician as an ambassador for airport security protocols, I have been genuinely amused and gravely disappointed at the cowardice of the aviation officials who think they can rehabilitate K1 through such shoddy means. What exactly makes him credible to undertake the task? And why so soon, too? The development is more amusing considering a similar infraction by Ms Comfort Emmanson, another unruly flight passenger, whose actions are not as qualitatively egregious as those of K1. The popular musician had held up an aircraft because they would not let him carry a flask of water on board. This was an issue that could perhaps have been quietly resolved by pouring out the contents of the flask and requesting water on board, since he needed to remain hydrated, but no. He is a Nigerian big man, and the rules cannot possibly apply to him like some lesser mortal. He tried to prove that much by standing in front of a plane readying to taxi, thereby constituting a danger to the crew and passengers.

Following the outrage, they imposed a six-month flying ban on him, only to later announce it would be indefinite until investigations were concluded. We would have been trusting enough to believe that the offence was truly being investigated if the Emmanson case had not happened, for us to compare the differential treatment each party received. That was when we also got to know that the procedure for punishing a self-entitled old man who stood in the path of a plane had been paralysed somewhere along the convoluted chain of administrative command. The NCAA says it is out of its power to act because the airline ValueJet did not petition. The airline, of course, remained mute because the issue was wrapped up in several social and tribal considerations; going against someone like KWAM-1 would trigger all sorts of parapọ̀ sentiments. We were told the matter had been referred to the police, the IG and the attorney general for investigation. Less than 24 hours after the IG Kayode Egbetokun ordered a “full investigation” into the incident, NCAA reverted with the news that the offender had now become its ambassador! Ironically, the same people claiming they could not punish K1 because they had reached the limit of their judicial capabilities were curiously powerful enough to reduce his ban to just one month.

For all the issues I have with Emmanson’s manic display, I remain grateful to her for the timing of her madness. If it had come a year ago or even one year from now, it would have been too distant a reference to poignantly confirm the inherent injustice built into the Nigerian so-called justice system. It was her craziness and the undue harassment she subsequently suffered that forced aviation officers to a measure of accountability on the differences in their responses to a similar offense by a popular artiste (who also happens to be a self-identified President’s boy and the official bard of the ruling APC), and a woman whose name and face you hardly knew before her video went viral.

For Emmanson, there was no endless investigation process activated, nor was she given a chance to make an apology video. She was not afforded a soft landing of “to err is human”. When justice came for her, it was swift and efficient. She was taken to court and charged with assault. She was also handed a harsh pronouncement of a lifetime ban from flying (locally and internationally) by the Association of Airline Operators of Nigeria. Reading the press statement, you get the impression that, left to AON’s spokesperson, Obiora Okonkwo, he would bring back the infamous Bar Beach show just to make a visible example of this woman. Whereas for K1, the official response was more of a deferral to a vague and complicated system, with handwringing by public officials waiting for directives from the top to make decisions. The law that was too impotent to stand up to K1 suddenly had its blood pumping at the sight of the young woman. It was nauseating to watch.

For some curious reason, the aviation authorities thought they could reconcile all the conflicting ends of the K1 and Emmanson saga by making the former their ambassador and letting off the latter with a slap on the wrist. Maybe they should have left it at that, but no, the Nigerian in them must exhibit itself. They went ahead to announce he would become their ambassador for airport security protocols. Again, why? Whatever lesson a man who blatantly violated airport security protocols might have to teach the rest of us about obeying them would have been better served if he had been jailed as the law prescribed. I understand that asking him to play an ambassadorial role in lieu of a punishment is supposed to represent some “community service” project, but it seems like too much of a compromise. To save K1’s face after the humiliation he suffered after the video of his misadventure went viral, they want to spin a narrative of redemption and rehabilitation for him by making him an ambassador. It is a poor move, similar to one undertaken by the NDLEA years ago when they announced (and later retracted) Naira Marley as the agency’s ambassador. When you make the person who has come to represent the blatant violation of the standards your agency wants to enforce the very face of the campaign for the enforcement of such standards, you do not end up telling a warm and positive story of moral redemption. Neither does it exemplify the traditional wisdom of using the goat to guard the yam barn. Instead, it only illustrates the extent to which your so-called standards are loose, negotiable, and self-undermining. What you are telling the world is that you are so poor at standing up for your own rules to be enforced that you would, in fact, reward the person who openly flaunts them.

Credit: Abimbola Adelakun