Tag: leader

  • Kemi Badenoch’s living hell, By Femi Fani-Kayode

    Kemi Badenoch’s living hell, By Femi Fani-Kayode

    I don’t want this country to turn into the one I ran away from.

    – Kemi Badenoch MP.

    Femi Fani-Kayode
    Femi Fani-Kayode

    The Right Honourable Kemi Badenoch (MP), former minister of Women and Equalities of the United Kingdom and the newly-elected leader of the British Conservative Party deserves to be tarred and feathered for the sort of things she says about Nigeria.

    Apart from her insulting categorisations of Northern Nigerian Muslims, which I shall come to later in this contribution, this woman had the impudence to describe Nigeria, her country of origin, as a “living hell,” a place where she had to “walk one mile to get running water” and a country where “lizards run out of the taps!”

    She constantly launches heavy salvos against the Nigerian people and our ruling elites, including politicians, legislators, members of the judiciary and those who are in the private sector, calling us thieves and labelling us as being corrupt and inept.

    She snubbed the Federal Government on two occasions by ignoring them when they attempted to reach out to her through Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa, President Bola Tinubu’s adviser on the Diaspora, which provoked the latter to say that she was yet “to find the Nigerianess in her.”

    As far as Kemi Badenoch is concerned, Nigeria is a land of demons, whilst the UK is a nation of angels.

    She forgets that the country that she lives in has a long history of corruption, looting and barbarism, and that London remains the world’s capital of money laundering.

    Again, unlike the UK, Nigeria is not supporting the holocaust in Gaza and is not complicit in the genocide that has been unleashed on the Palestinians.

    Sadly, some of our people have not only applauded her for her offensive sentiments but have also become her loudest cheerleaders.

    I suspect that those who do this may well be suffering from a disease known as “Stockholm syndrome.”

    This affliction causes its victims to fall in love with their oppressors.

    It compels them to cultivate an affection for those who seek to place them in servitude and who treat them with contempt.

    The victims of this malaise are masochists, whilst Badenoch herself is the female version of Marquis De Sade, the world’s most notorious sadist.

    Her Nigerian cheerleaders have a chip on their shoulders. They are unpatriotic and have no honour.

    No matter how much she pisses on the graves of our heroes past and defecates on our flag, they continue to worship her.

    This is pitiful.

    It is a reflection of their malevolent disposition towards their own country and their low self-esteem.

    We may have issues as a nation but we must never support those who denigrate our country for political gain.

    Kemi sold her soul to the right wing of the British Tory party and sought to put to shame the land of her forefathers, just to become their leader. Nothing can be more despicable than this.

    I have seen many attempts to rationalise her insolence and none makes any sense.

    Loving those who hate you and consider you to not only be their inferior but also sub-human, in my view, is not a virtue but a vice.

    The demonisation of our country should not be a pre-requisite for winning the leadership contest of a political party in a foreign land and if it is, one cannot expect any self-respecting Nigerian to applaud it.

    Her victory in the contest for the leadership of the UK’s Conservative Party does not in any way ameliorate my disgust of and repugnance for her or the foul stench that trails her wherever she goes.

    She reminds me of the creature that the black American leader, Malcom X, described as “a house n*gger”.

    In order to comprehend her self-loathing and reprehensible mindset, I urge those who are interested to read the black French writer, Franz Fanon’s book titled Black Skin, White Mask.

    The author had the likes of Badenoch in mind when he compiled this insightful masterpiece.

    Kemi is a willing tool of the colonialists, neo-colonialists and imperialists and she is everything that any patriotic Nigerian and every Pan Africanist should despise.

    Unless and until she purges herself of her contempt, I shall continue to regard her in the same light as William Shakespeare’s character Brutus, whose treachery and betrayal was heart wrenching and whose cut was “the deepest of all.”

    Again she reminds me of the character known as Richard Rich in William Bolt’s famous play titled A Man For All Seasons who betrayed England’s most famous martyr, Sir Thomas Moore, and sent him to the gallows with his false testimony and lies in return for a title and landed property in the province of Wales!

    To those from Yorubaland who say we must celebrate her despite her foibles because she is Yoruba, I ask the following: Must we support a Yoruba who hates her ancestry, heritage, values and culture and who sees and says nothing good about our history?… Must we endorse the acts and words of an individual who has denied us before the world, who has nothing good to say about us and who has insulted and denigrated our forefathers?

    It is in the same way that Kemi has betrayed, misrepresented and murdered Nigeria in return for her position as Leader of the Opposition in the UK.

    Anyone that calls my country “hell on earth” is fair game and this is especially if that person does so in order to curry favour with members of her political party and win their support.

    Such a person is nothing but a specious liar, an unconscionable opportunist, a bigoted racist and a cheap political hustler who will do or say anything, including selling her own people down the river, for political power.

    Institutional racism is real in the UK and the worst type of racist is a self-hating black African who feels the need to rubbish her heritage, who believes that she must disparage the land of her forefathers and who consistently reinforces the negative stereotyping of Africa and Africans in order to be accepted into the highest echelons of the British political class.

    The Bible asks, “what profiteth a man to lose his soul in order to gain the world.”

    I ask, what profiteth a woman to lose her dignity and self-respect in return for the leadership of a political party in a distant land?

    This is made worse by the fact that it is a political party whose star has dimmed, whose days of glory are over and which may not be back in power for the next ten years!

    The truth is even if the Englanders proclaimed Kemi Badenoch as their Queen, I will continue to loathe her because she has contempt for my country.

    250 million people live in Nigeria and it is not the dark, evil, beast-infested forest and wild jungle that Badenoch portrays it to be.

    It is not filled with ignorant, grass skirt-wearing, ape-looking, monkey-sounding, primitive barbarians and heinous cannibals that she would have others believe.

    We are not a land of sub-human creatures who have no decency, no decorum, no knowledge, no heritage and no history.

    We are not uncivilised, we do not live in trees, we do not behave like animals and neither are we godless, unruly, ignorant or incompetent.

    Just like any other country, including the UK itself, we are not infallible and we have our own fair share of flaws and challenges.

    Yet, that does not diminish us and I am not constrained to feel any sense of elation when a person that has displayed such disdain for our people achieves anything simply because that person has her roots in my country or in my ethnic nationality.

    The fact that Kemi is of Yoruba descent does not absolve her of her rancid bigotry and does not constrain me to give her a free pass.

    To those from Yorubaland who say we must celebrate her despite her foibles because she is Yoruba, I ask the following: Must we support a Yoruba who hates her ancestry, heritage, values and culture and who sees and says nothing good about our history?

    Must we endorse the acts and words of an individual who has denied us before the world, who has nothing good to say about us and who has insulted and denigrated our forefathers?

    Surely doing so would be the height of clannish and cultic behaviour and an inglorious display of a crude and primitive disposition.

    We are far bigger and better than that.

    Even if she was a mass murderer, those that think like that would still hail her because she is Yoruba.

    This surely is not our way and neither does it bring honour to our name.

    We must judge her on what she says and does and not on the basis of her tribe, gender, nationality, religious faith or the colour of her skin.

    Outside of that, it says a lot about the values of the British Conservative Party, when a vainglorious, dangerously ambitious, self-deprecating, Uncle Tom and Aunty Jemima-like figure could be elected as its leader.

    This is a far cry from the Conservative Party of Winston Churchill and Margaret Thatcher.

    I have little doubt that they both turned in their graves upon hearing about Badenoch’s ascension in the firm knowledge that their party had been handed a poisoned chalice.

    Those misguided Nigerians who celebrate her simply because she is from our shores are hugging a snake that hates them with passion.

    If Kemi’s views about the quest for reparations do not open the eyes of Badenoch’s Nigerian cheerleaders, nothing will… She also stands against multiculturalism, even though she is the Leader of the Opposition in a multi-cultural, multi-racial and multi-religious nation, and she is married to a white English man… What a contradiction!.. She says she believes that “not all cultures are equally valid” and from her divisive rhetoric, it is clear that she also believes that not all races are equally valid either.

    Eventually, she will turn around and bite them and they will curse the day that she was born.

    The truth is that I fear for the plight of the Nigerian community in the UK in the unlikely event of her ever being elected Prime Minister.

    Permit me to end this contribution with the following.

    In Kemi’s most graphic display of ignorance, mendacity, religious bigotry, tribalism and racism, she said that she does not believe that Northern Nigerian Muslims should be allowed into the UK because they are, in her view, “Islamists.”

    She went on to say that Northern Muslims support terror and that an example of this are the ugly events in Chibok, Northern Nigeria ten years ago, when over two hundred schoolgirls were kidnapped!

    She also said that Muslims who do not support Israel in its relentless ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians and its genocidal acts in Gaza are “not welcome in the UK.”

    The fact that she had to single out Nigeria and cast aspersions on the character of no less than 50 per cent of our population, describing them as “Islamists” and alluding to the malicious falsehood that they are terrorists, speaks volumes.

    One is constrained to ask whether the sheer mendacity of this woman has any limits.

    On the quest for reparations for the slave trade, Badenoch had the following to say:

    “This is the past. We need to talk about the future. There are many countries now that want to use guilt to try and exploit the UK. They ask for reparations. I saw it as a Trade Minister. It’s not culture wars. I was at the WTO, I won’t name the Minister from another country and he was telling me that we needed to give up some of the things we were doing because of colonialism and because they needed time to develop. These arguments are a scam. Don’t fall for it. We need to make sure that we put this country first. We work well with our neighbours, we work with other countries but we have to look after ourselves too.”

    Imagine this coming from a black African woman, millions of who’s ancestors were enslaved and shipped off to the West!

    She is dumb, deaf and blind to the fact that those advocating for reparations rightly believe that the UK and the rest of the West should make up for the damage that they did through slavery.

    @Africa. Echo put it well when they posted the following on X:

    “Germany and the rest of the West continue to provide financial recompense to Israel but Kemi Badenoch believes Africans do not deserve reparations for decades of colonialism and centuries of enslavement”.

    If Kemi’s views about the quest for reparations do not open the eyes of Badenoch’s Nigerian cheerleaders, nothing will.

    She also stands against multiculturalism, even though she is the Leader of the Opposition in a multi-cultural, multi-racial and multi-religious nation, and she is married to a white English man.

    What a contradiction!

    She says she believes that “not all cultures are equally valid” and from her divisive rhetoric, it is clear that she also believes that not all races are equally valid either.

    An even greater contradiction is the fact that she is staunchly anti-immigration.

    She asserts that, “Britain must not be a sponge for migrants,” forgetting that she is a first generation migrant and a beneficiary of the British immigration system that she now seeks to discredit.

    These contradictions and asinine assertions betray a level of perfidy, deceit, intellectual barrenes and scholarly ineptitude that beggars belief.

    Another display of her crass ignorance is her assertion that Nigeria, a country that she was raised in, has been run by “socialist Governments.”

    This is arrant nonsense.

    I guess her definition of “socialism” is anything that does not share her ultra-conservative, neo-colonialist and neo-imperialist views.

    The irony of it all is that despite her pretence at being more English than the English and more conservative than Enoch Powell, by the time the British right-wing finish using her, they will flush her down the toilet like turd.

    She deserves no better.

    • Femi Fani-Kayode is the Sadaukin Shinkafi, a former minister of Aviation and a former minister of Culture and Tourism of Nigeria.
  • Opeyemi Bamidele Emerges Leader of 10th Senate

    Opeyemi Bamidele Emerges Leader of 10th Senate

    The Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, has announced Senator Opeyemi Bamidele (APC-Ekiti) as majority leader of the 10th Senate.

    Akpabio made the announcement on Tuesday at plenary at 11. 29 a.m. after commencement of proceedings from the Eid-El Kabir break.

    Akpabio also announced Sen. Mohammed Ndume (APC-Borno) as the Chief Whip; Sen. David Umahi (APC-Ebonyi), as the Deputy Leader and Sen. Lola Ashiru (APC-Kwara) as Deputy Chief Whip.

    The Senate had adjourned sitting on June 14 for Eid-El Kabir.

    Akpabio said, “The All Progressives Congress (APC) caucus of the Senate after consultations has emerged with their leadership which will be the fulcrum of commencing other businesses of the chamber.

    “I’m happy to announce that by consensus the Senate Leader is Senator Opeyemi Bamidele; he will be the Majority Leader.

    “Sen. Mohammed Ndume (APC-Borno) will be the Chief Whip of the 10th Senate; Sen. David Umahi (APC-Ebonyi), by your consent will act as the Deputy Leader and Sen. Lola Ashiru (APC-Kwara) will be the Deputy Chief Whip.”

    A copy of Bamidele’s citation indicates that he is currently  a ranking  senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria representing Ekiti Central Senatorial District and Chairman, Senate Committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters in the 9th National Assembly; Michael Opeyemi Bamidele is the Founder, Principal Attorney & Head of Chambers at the Law Office of Opeyemi Bamidele & Associates (with offices in Asokoro District, Abuja and Lekki Phase 1, Lagos) from where he is at the moment on leave of absence.

    Bamidele is a New York Attorney, Member of the 7th House of Representatives and three-term Member of the prestigious Lagos State Cabinet between 2000 and 2011 when he served as Hon. Commissioner in different ministries and under two governors.

    He had served as the Senior Legislative Aide, SLA, to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in 1992 when Tinubu was a Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and Chairman of the Senate Committee on Banking, Finance, Appropriation and Currency.

    He is a lawyer without border, licensed to practise in the Federal Republic of Nigeria as a Barrister and Solicitor of the Supreme Court; an Attorney and Counselor-at-Law of the State of New York, USA; and a Notary Public of Nigeria.

    Bamidele graduated with honours in 1986, from the University of Ife (Obafemi Awolowo University), Ile-Ife with a Bachelor of Arts degree and, subsequently, from the University of Benin, Edo State, Nigeria, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Laws (LL.B) Degree with honours, in 1990.

    After his call to the Nigerian Bar, Bamidele launched into a full-time legal career in 1992. He obtained a Master of Laws (LL.M) degree from the World-renowned Franklin Pierce Law Centre in the University of New Hampshire Law School, Concord, New Hampshire, USA.

    He specialized in Intellectual Property Law, with bias in International Patent, Trademark and Copyright Law, including the Licensing of International Transfer of Technology.

    A learned counsel of no mean stature, Bamidele is an active member of the New York and Nigerian Bar, a Member of the American Bar Association and a Member of the International Bar Association.

    He is also a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators (Nigeria), the Chartered Institute of Management Consultants as well as the Chartered Institute of Local Government and Public Administration, Nigeria, among others.

    In October, 2019, Sen.  Opeyemi Bamidele was appointed a member of the prestigious Body of Benchers, Nigeria.

    He is a seasoned and multilateral legal practitioner, Civil Rights activist, a former Honourable Commissioner for Youth, Sports and Social Development as well as Honourable Commissioner for Information and Strategy consecutively in Lagos State.

    He was a former Chairman, House of Representatives Committee on Legislative Budget and Research in the 7th National Assembly.

    He also served as the Chairman of the National Assembly Budget and Research Office, NABRO, between July 2011 and June 2015.

    In recognition of his significant contribution to the restoration, growth and development of democracy and good governance in Nigeria as well as his heroic exploits as a foremost political activist, seasoned legal practitioner, accomplished public administrator, quintessential lawmaker and consummate politician, the prestigious National Honour of the Commander of the Order of the Niger (CON) was conferred on Sen. Opeyemi Bamidele by the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, Muhammadu Buhari, in October, 2022.

  • Lagos Guber: Afenifere Leader, Pa Fasorati Endorses Sanwo-Olu

    Lagos Guber: Afenifere Leader, Pa Fasorati Endorses Sanwo-Olu

    National leader of the Yoruba socio-cultural group, Afenifere, Chief Reuben Fasoranti, has endorsed the re-election bid of Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, urging the electorate in the state to queue behind the All Progressives Congress, APC, candidate on Saturday.

    Sanwo-Olu’s re-election, he says, would help consolidate the achievements recorded in Lagos.

    Pa Fasoranti, in a press statement said that Lagos  was an important nation’s commercial city and the pride of the Yoruba race, saying the evolving physical and socio-economic developments of the city should not be thwarted.

    He said the state would gain more under the incoming Tinubu administration than when it was in the hands of the opposition.

    The elder statesman urged Lagosians not to make the mistake of buying into the gimmick of those bent on reversing the achievement Lagos had recorded.

    Pa Fasoranti also described the emergence of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu as winner of the 2023 presidential election as “a reflection of the electoral will of the majority of Nigerians”, congratulating the former Lagos governor for his victory.

    The Yoruba leader said he aligned with impartial electoral observers to give the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, a pass mark for the conduct of the presidential election, which he described as “free, fair and credible”, despite the challenges that threatened to derail the process.

    The elder statesman urged the electoral umpire to build on the gains of the presidential elections and improve on the feat recorded in the conduct of gubernatorial elections coming up next Saturday across the federation.

    He said: “I want to use this opportunity to recognise and appreciate the achievements of the Governor of Lagos State, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, who is seeking re-election for a second term on the platform of APC. Lagos as the economic nerve centre of Nigeria and by extension of Yorubaland deserves the very best. Governor Sanwo-Olu has been through the mill and crucible of politics, business, and public administration, occupying various positions in government since 1999 and garnering requisite experience which he has displayed in the last four years to the admiration of all and sundry.

    “I am convinced that these giant strides should be sustained in the city with the third largest economy in Africa. I therefore wish to join my voice to those of other patriotic Lagosians that there is need for continuity in the state by lending my support to the second term bid of Mr. Babajide Sanwo-Olu as governor of Lagos State. In addition, I believe that Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu as APC president will benefit Lagos State more if the state has an APC governor to complement whatever the president has for Lagos State.”

    Pa Fasoranto acknowledged Sanwo-Olu’s achievement in provision of physical infrastructure in various sectors of the Lagos economy, including transportation, education, housing, security, health and agriculture.

    He added that the response of Lagos State Government to stop the spread of Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic was worthy and commendable.

    He said: “Sanwo-Olu’s achievements include but are not limited to the Blue Line rail, Imota Rice Mill, Red Line rail, the Proposed Fourth Mainland Bridge, numerous housing projects in different parts of Lagos, and road projects across the state. These projects, when fully operational, will employ over a million Nigerians, mostly youths, thereby substantially reducing unemployment in the country.

    “I am convinced that these giant strides should be sustained in the city with the third largest economy in Africa. I, therefore, call on the good people of Lagos State to come out en-masse on Saturday to cast their votes for the governorship candidate of the APC, Mr. Babajide Sanwo-Olu.”

  • Osinbajo: A Leader for All Seasons, By Azu Ishiekwene

    Osinbajo: A Leader for All Seasons, By Azu Ishiekwene

    Azu Ishiekwene
    Azu Ishiekwene

    Trying to fit him into a mold can be sometimes problematic. I have always thought of him as a teacher and mentor. And later, only much later, as a friend. For over three decades he has been more than enough in each of these roles.

    My path with Dr. Yemi Osinbajo, as he then was, first crossed at the University of Lagos when he was a lecturer at the Faculty of Law and I was a student at the Department of Mass Communication at the same university. Just a busybody trying to indulge my fantasy of becoming a pocket lawyer, I met him out of curiosity.

    One of his students and good friend of mine who passed on many years ago, Sunday Okoli, fondly called Harry, gave the impression that the Law Faculty had four of the university’s biggest talisman – Jelili Omotola, Oyelowo Oyewo, Amos Utuama and Osinbajo.

    One day, I strayed into one of Osinbajo’s classes in what can only be described as ambulatory trespass. I was struck by his charm, ease of delivery and how his students connected with him. I thought to myself as I snuck out, with a lecturer like this, perhaps I should have studied law? I never returned to his class but that encounter stayed with me.

    I followed him through the many pleasant stories Harry told of him but our paths never crossed again until many years later when he was appointed Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice in Lagos by Governor Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    In 1999, Lagos was a mess. A big mess.

    Although the city still retained its vibrancy and boisterousness as the country’s commercial capital, years of neglect and centralised government had robbed it of vital energy, threatening to bury it in crime and filth.

    To make matters worse for a new government at the time, a nasty turf war between the PDP-controlled central government and the six AD states in the South-West (including Lagos), meant that any serious attempt at clean-up which obviously required significant resources from the centre, would be a tug of war.

    President Olusegun Obasanjo, smarting from the humiliation of the 1999 election in which he was roundly rejected by his home base, the South-West, was not in any mood to do Lagos or any other states in the region any favours.

    The mission to clean up, rebuild and renew the city (among several other election promises made by Tinubu) would require tough, even brutal, political engagement; no less than it would also involve soft skills, especially prudent and robust use of the law, to clear landmines and claw back vast subnational territory long appropriated by the unitarist state, rendering the federating units mere appendages of the centre.

    It was in the pursuit of this latter part that Osinbajo, a member of Tinubu’s outstanding cabinet at the time, had to deploy his legal genius in public service for the first time outside the classroom.

    Leading human rights activist and senior advocate of Nigeria, Femi Falana, once told me that even though political activism will continue to be a major tool to restructure Nigeria, the progress made through legal activism has been largely understated.

    Before Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike made VAT a court issue, challenging the right of the federal government to collect the taxes from the state, Lagos had been there in its quest to expand its income and the relative autonomy of the constituent states by testing the law.

    Osinbajo led Lagos in a series of litigations to claw back swathes lost to federal meddling in areas such as creation of local governments, physical planning, title registration, registration and production of vehicle number plates and casino licensing. In the area of physical planning and title registration specifically, the court ruled that the federal government has no land. The Land Use Act vests ownership and control of land in state governments.

    In a ruling in 2019 in a case earlier originated by Lagos State when Osinbajo was AG, the state also secured a judgement that upheld its right to charge and collect consumption tax from hotels, restaurants and event centres within the state.

    The judgement is based on the principle that the power to impose consumption tax is on the Residual List. This judgement was also given against the FIRS that deemed that it had the right to collect those taxes.

    These battles on legal interpretations of the Constitution are not cut and dried. The dispute that arose over the right of control of inland waterways between the federal and state governments, for example, was fought in court for over 10 years, before a ceasefire was brokered between the National Inland Waterways Authority and Lagos State.

    Perhaps one of the most remarkable legal battles of all in Osinbajo’s time in Lagos was in the case of Attorney General of Lagos State v. Attorney General of the Federation 2004, a feisty and protracted legal tango in which Lagos sought to recover local government funds seized by Obasanjo after his futile attempt to crush and capture Tinubu’s government in an electoral heist which claimed five of the six states in the South-West region for the PDP.

    That recovery effort, in the words of Osinbajo, “made Lagos to start thinking like a sovereign.” It set the tone for raising the state’s Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) from around N600 million monthly in 1999 to N45 billion as of 2021.

    It also set the tone for Osinbajo’s performance on the bigger stage.

    Have you seen him lately? His hair has greyed not a little since he became Vice President eight years ago. Which is a little surprising considering that former President Goodluck Jonathan, himself a former Vice President, once said a Vee Pee’s job is essentially to read newspapers.

    Or to quote first US Vice President, John Adams, who described his office in a letter to his wife as, “the most insignificant contrivance” ever contrived by man.

    But that’s precisely the source of Osinbajo’s festering grey hair. In the last eight years, the job of Nigeria’s vice president has been anything but a spare. He has been acting President during which time he took a few of the most consequential decisions.

    His office has been at the heart of Nigeria’s first attempt to develop a social safety net programme. When COVID-19 hit with its depredations, the database from the safety net programme came in handy.

    Osinbajo has been the Buhari government’s face-of-the-youth, rallying them, speaking to and for them on all things – from crypto to ICT and innovations. Surely, in a country where people under 40 form about 65 percent of the population, these exertions are more than “insignificant contrivance.”

    I’m not so sure how meaningful his knowledge of the law and expertise in jurisprudence has been to this government. One thing he has been passionate about which the government has flaunted, however, is the Ease of Doing Business. It’s largely to his credit that Nigeria has improved from a ranking of 169 (out of 190 countries) in 2016 to 131 two years ago.

    I have sometimes wondered what is next for him, after he leaves office. Of course, he has a thriving law practice from which he was extricated to serve as Buhari’s running-mate one fateful morning in December 2014 after an appearance in a case at the Supreme Court, Abuja. If he returns to his Chambers in Lagos, it may well be a holding place.

    At 66, he remains a calm, thoughtful debater and fun to be around. He has inspired and challenged millions of people, especially the young and the young at heart across ethnic and party-lines, to believe. With an extraordinary sense of humour, a rock-solid wife and a heart of faith, his best years of service to God and country still lie ahead.

    He is not only a teacher, mentor and friend. He is, above all, a leader for all times.

    • Ishiekwene is Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP

     

     

     

     

  • IPOB Terrorist Leader, Simon Ekpa, Arrested in Finland By Police

    IPOB Terrorist Leader, Simon Ekpa, Arrested in Finland By Police

    Popular Nigerian separatist agitator Simon Ekpa has been arrested by Finnish authorities.

    According to news from Finland,  the police escorted the separatist out of his apartment in Lahti on Thursday.

    Criminal Investigator, Tommi Reen from the Central Criminal Police told the HS news outlet that the Keskusrikospoliisi (KRP), the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) in Finland had a police operation in a private apartment in the centre of Lahti.

    The platform claimed that they had gone to Ekpa’s residence for an interview but the Finland police, KRP, surprisingly answered when the HS team rang the separatist bell.

    The Nigerian government had asked Finland to intervene in the operation of a separatist in Lahti. On Thursday morning, KRP prevented HS from entering Ekpa’s apartment and said the interview would move to “the future”.

    We had agreed on an interview at Ekpa’s apartment near the Lahti market. Still at 10.06, Ekpa had released a tweet for nearly 70,000 followers.

    “We Biafra’s people are fighting until the end this time,” the last post read.

    Ekpa drives Biafra’s independence in Southeastern Nigeria without losing. He encourages people in social media to boycott the Saturday presidential election.

    On Thursday, ECPA does not say that he would not participate in the elimination of government people. He even leads and acquires weapons. ”

    ECPA claims that he has become a substitute for the Director of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) separatist movement, Nnamdi Kanu, after he was arrested. He also claims to determine the IPOB armed wing Eastern Security Network (ESN).

    But the skein is complicated. Part of those who claim to be IPOB or ESN members are blaming the first lying and abuse of the name of the cane.

    The intention is to demand the forefront to explain what his separatism and the opposition to the election are all about.

    We are late. Ekpa’s neighbor will soon open the door to the stairwell. The journey breaks down.

    The police are waiting for the police from the Central Criminal Police.

    “The interview goes to the future,” he says.

    When asked if the interrogation is long or the fact that the person we are looking for after them is not possible to meet, the police respond that “both and”.

    “Krp is doing his job here,” he says.

    The photographer who was on the site of HS later testified when civilian cops led Simon Ekpa out of the apartment.

    Criminal Inspector Tommi Ree of the Central Criminal Police confirms to HS on the phone that KRP had a police operation in a private residence in the center of Lahti on Thursday during the ongoing pre -trial investigation. Police caught one man from the apartment. KRP suspects the man arrested for the crime, but does not comment at this stage of the crime title.

    Reen did not confirm the man’s identity, but only talked about the operation in the apartment in the center of Lahti at a general level. He did not comment any further.

    Nigeria has asked Finland to intervene in Ekpa’s activities. Last week, the Nigerian Foreign Minister invited the Finnish Ambassador to Leena Pylvinäinen’s meeting due to the subject.

    Jussi Nummelin, Western and Central African team leader of the Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs, told HS a week ago that Finland is concerned about the safety of Finland, and condemns violence and incitement, and “actions aimed at preventing people from exercising their democratic rights.

  • Why Gov Sanwo-Olu Deserves Second Term in Lagos State –Socio-cultural Group Leader, Olatunji

    Why Gov Sanwo-Olu Deserves Second Term in Lagos State –Socio-cultural Group Leader, Olatunji

    By KELVIN OLAMIDE

    History was made in Lagos by Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu on Monday and Tuesday as President Muhammadu Buhari officially inaugurated the Lekki Deep Sea Port located in Itoke village, Ibeju-Lekki, Lagos, observing the offloading from CMA CGM Mozart at the Quay.

    This project with an investment in excess of $1.5 billion is a Joint Venture between the Federal Government of Nigeria through the Nigerian Ports Authority, Lagos State Government, the Tolarams Group (the owner of the Lagos Free Zone), and China Harbour Engineering Company.

    In Lagos, the President also inaugurated the Imota Rice Mill, conceptualized and completed by Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State as well as the Bestaf Lubricant at MRS Holdings Company Limited.

    The 200m litre lubricant plant, which covers the whole value chain of lubricants, is the first of its kind in West Africa.

    On Tuesday, the President also inaugurated the historic first Phase of the Blue Line of the Lagos Rail Mass Transit in Marina and the John Randle Centre for Yoruba Culture and History at Onikan roundabout.

    Commending the Lagos State governor for his foresight, a socio-cultural leader, Otunba Sola Olatunji says Lagos will become one of the top 10 economy in the world in the next four years stressing that Lagosians do not need to change a winning team as they have to vote en masse to return Sanwo-Olu and his team for a second term in office.

    “These projects will engage thousands of Lagosians in employment and very soon the state will be number one economy in Africa,” Olatunji said.

    Olatunji also said that the governor deserves a garland for all these historic projects as he praised the him for his yeoman effort in saving lives during the Corona virus pandemic .

    According to the All Progressive Congress stalwart, at a time when the western world was mocking Africa that the streets, especially in Lagos, Cairo and other major cities in Africa, would be filled with heaps of human carcasses and flood of tears from wailing bereaved persons, Governor Sanwo-Olu took the bull by the horns as the incident commander and fought corona virus like a World War Trojan. When cities like New York, Milan in Italy and the whole of Spain were recording deaths in hundreds of thousands, Lagos had lower than 50 casualties. Thanks to Sanwo-Olu’s proactive strategy.

    During the eight months lockdown, there was the strong belief that hunger might killed more people than COVID-19. But Sanwo-Olu flooded Lagos with palliatives on a regular basis until the hydra-headed monster was largely defeated.

    This is the mark of a leader who encapsulates the yearning and aspirations of his people; a leader who has touched the lives of over 20-something million residents of the state.

    “Sanwo-Olu’s handling of COVID-19 pandemic is enough for voters in Lagos to give him the ticket for a second term in the March 9, gubernatorial election,” th Chairman of Ikale Heritage Development Association,  said. “The governor is a born leader and he is on his way to achieving greatness in the South-west and even Nigeria.

    “Till date, the English people still regard Sir Winston Churchill as the greatest British leader just for leading them to victory in World War II. But here is a governor who saved millions of lives during COVID-19 and even exposed his own life to danger on several occasions since Lagos was the epicentre of the epidemic in Nigeria. How else can we say thank you to such a gallant warrior than to vote for him overwhelmingly during the election for him to continue the total transformation of Lagos to a mmega city of our dream.”

    According to Olatunji, Sanwo-Olu has added other achievements to COVID-19 bringing critical development to the state by harnessed human and capital resources to serve the people.

    He said: “In spite of the COVID-19 setback, the governor is outstanding among his peers in terms of infrastructure. It is a known fact that he has constructed over 308 roads so far. He has also repositioned the health sectors through the building of more health centres at the grassroots, and a free health policy for children below 18 years and adults above 65 years of age.

    “The historic red line rail project can only be completed by a genus after the conception by the late Alhaji Lateef Jakande several years ago. The trains have been delivered from Milwaukee, United States, and soon Lagosian will not have to pack themselves inside omnibus, popularly called molue, like sardine.

    “In the area of infrastructure, Some of the projects Governor Sanwo-Olu carried out are; the Lagos-Ogun boundary roads, Lekki-Oniru Traffic circulation projects, Pen Cinema Flyover and road networks in Somolu, Ikoyi, Victoria Island and many other places.”

    While the state is known by its slogan as the center of excellence, it has also in deed shown itself as a state worthy to be emulated as it has established itself as a leading state in terms of its growth and development.

    Olatunji added: “In the Agricultural sector, through the Agricultural Value Chains Enterprise Activation Programme, Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu has trained many  youths in various agricultural practices which has gone a long way to giving them a means of livelihood and sustenance.

    “He has seen to the training of over 12,000 women, thousands of youths in the State have been empowered across the several value chains.

    “Then the Imota rice mill that occupies 8.5 hectares. It will be the largest mill in Africa and the third largest mill in the world. The rice mill has a capacity to produce 2.8 million bags of 50kg bags of rice yearly, while generating 1,500 direct jobs and 254,000 indirect jobs. It is an integrated mill with two warehouses and 16 silos (each with a capacity of 2,500 tonnes, 25 metres high, 40-year life).

    “Environment? Sanwo-Olu is a master strategist.  He has also made positive activities in the Environmental sector. In order to secure a clean Lagos, Governor Sanwo-Olu donated 30 units of 12-cubic meter trucks, 60 units of 24-cubic meter trucks and 12 hook loaders which is expected to compliment over 850 PSP compactor trucks to enhance service delivery in under-served communities across the State.

    “What else can we say than to urge Lagosians to use their PVC wisely and vote Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu for a second term.”

  • 2023: Afenifere National Leader, Pa  Fasoranti Blesses Tinubu in Akure

    2023: Afenifere National Leader, Pa Fasoranti Blesses Tinubu in Akure

    Ahead of the 2023 general elections, the presidential candidate of the ruling All Progressive Congress , APC,  Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, on Sunday received the blessings of Pa Reuben Fasoranti, National Leader of  the Pan Yoruba group, Afenifere,.

    Tinubu paid a courtesy visit to Pa Fasoranti, the leader of the pan-Yoruba organization, in his country home in Akure on Sunday morning to pay homage to the elder Statesman.

    Asiwaju is seen prostrated before the respected Afenifere leader while the latter showered torrent of blessings on him proclaiming divine assurance and  a convincing victory at the February 25 presidential election for the APC.

    The Fasoranti endorsement in Akure must have laid to rest the direction the Pan Yoruba group is going after a factional leader, Pa Ayo Adebanjo declared support for the Labour Party standard bearer, Peter Obi insisting that it is the turn of the South East to produce the next president after Muhammadu Buhari..

    Security was beefed up around the Akure residence of Pa Fasoranti as members of the APC trooped to the area to welcome Tinubu.

    A huge crowd escorted Tinubu from the Akure cargo Airport to the residence of Fasoranti, venue of the meeting with the Afenifere leaders.

  • Mimiko Rejects Atiku’s Presidential Campaign Council Ondo Leader

    Mimiko Rejects Atiku’s Presidential Campaign Council Ondo Leader

    Former governor of Ondo State, Olusegun Mimiko, has rejected inclusion in the Presidential Campaign Council of the People’s Democratic Party, (PDP) in Ondo State.

    Mimiko’s media aide, John Akinduro, described as fake news the claims that he had ditched governors Nyesom Wike and Seyi Makinde and abandoned the agitation for regional equity within the PDP.

    “The report and the list that triggered it, are fake and a deliberate attempt to muddle things up and smear Dr Olusegun Mimiko.

    “It must be stated with emphasis that Dr Mimiko was neither consulted by anyone nor consented to his inclusion in any Ondo state PDP Presidential Campaign Council list.

    “For the avoidance of doubt and to set the record straight, Dr Mimiko is unwavering in his commitment to the principle of equity, fairness and justice through which he believes a credible push for a PDP victory is possible

    “He fully subscribes to the agitation by his colleagues and other stakeholders in PDP and the generality of Nigerians that the PDP structure must reflect Nigeria’s diversity if it genuinely wants to unify a visibly divided country.”

    Mr Wike is spearheading a movement for the resignation of the PDP National Chairman, Iyorchia Ayu, as a condition for his support for the presidential bid of the candidate, Atiku Abubakar.

    Mr Wike is also not a part of the Atiku Campaign Council and had been rumoured to be supporting the APC candidate, Bola Tinubu.

    But the naming of the list for Ondo State came unexpected with the name of Mr Mimiko appearing conspicuously at the top.

    Reports went around that he had possibly abandoned Mr Wike with whom they had mounted pressure on the party for a rejig of the party structure.

    Other leaders of the 441-member campaign council in Ondo State are, Roland Omowa as Chairman of the 441-member and former PDP governorship candidate in the state, Eyitayo Jegede as the Vice Chairman.

    However, a statement by the spokesperson of the Ondo PDP, Kenney Peretei, said the state campaign council was constituted by the State Working Committee in conjunction with leaders and key members of the party in the state.

     

  • Troops Bomb ISWAP Leader Fiya Ba Yuram’s Camp in Sambisa, Kill Terrorists

    Troops Bomb ISWAP Leader Fiya Ba Yuram’s Camp in Sambisa, Kill Terrorists

    Scores of high-profile Islamic State in West Africa Province (ISWAP) terrorists were killed by Nigerian Air Force, NAF, military jets at the enclave of Fiya Ba Yuram, in Sambisa Forest, over the weekend.

    Fiya Ba Yuram, a notorious terrorist, is the current leader of ISWAP in Sambisa Forest in Borno, Northeastern Nigeria is rumoured to have been killed in the omslaught but not comfirmation from the Nigerian troops yet..

    Yuram took over the leadership of the ISWAP insurgent group, following the killing of Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau, last year.

    The raid at Fiya Ba Yuram’s enclave followed a credible and actionable intelligence by the Air Component of Operation of Hadin Kai, which revealed that terrorists were gathering for an undisclosed mission.

    An intelligence military source said air strikes were then authorised and launched on the location, following the intelligence.

    He said, “An assessment of the location after the strikes revealed it to be successful, though it remained unconfirmed if Fiya Ba Yuram was among the terrorists neutralised in the strikes.”

    Meanwhile, similar air strikes were also launched on Tunbuns near Lake Chad after suspected terrorists’ activities were observed in the area believed to be a training camp for ISWAP fighters, PRNigeria also gathered from another military intelligence officer.

    “The targets were subsequently acquired and engulfed in flames all after. The aftermath of the airstrike revealed that pandemonium broke out as the remnant of surviving terrorists took cover under nearby trees which were later struck by the aircraft,” the officer disclosed.

    The NAF Director of Public Relations and Information, Air Commodore Edward Gabkwet confirmed the strikes to PRNigeria, saying, “Yes, strikes were carried out on some specific targets in the Tunbuns and Sambisa with varying degrees of successes recorded. The NAF won’t however be drawn into the details of those neutralised.”

  • NAF Eliminates Terrorists Leader, Shanono, in Kaduna

    NAF Eliminates Terrorists Leader, Shanono, in Kaduna

    The Nigeria Air Force, NAF, has eliminated a terrorists leader, Alhaji Shanono, and 18 of his foot soldiers in Kaduna State.

    The Director, Public Relations and Information, NAF Headquarters, Air Commodore Edward Gabkwet, made this known in a statement on Wednesday in Abuja.

    He said that the terrorists were eliminated following sustained air operations in the North West.

    According to him, no less than 26 kidnapped victims earlier held by the insurgents were released as a result of the air strikes.

    He added that the Chief of Air Staff (CAS), Air Marshal Oladayo Amao, had commended troops for the sustained air strike against terrorists operating in the zone.

    “One of such strikes which occurred on August 9, resulted in the elimination of a well known terrorist leader operating in Kaduna State.

    “Indeed, following receipt of intelligence on same day, that a well-known  insurgents kingpin, Alhaji Shanono, had scheduled a meeting with his foot soldiers at Ukambo, a village about 131 km from Kaduna.

    “The Air Component of operation `Whirl Punch` dispatched aircraft for interdiction mission at the location.

    “Overhead the location, insurgents were sighted under clusters of trees at the foot of Ukambo high ground and after ensuring the absence of civilian settlements within the location, the crew received the authorisation to strike.

    “Feedback from local sources disclosed that over 30 rifles and 20 motorbikes were destroyed while about 18  insurgents, including Alhaji Shanono, were  neutralised while others sustained various degree of injuries.

    “However, sources also revealed that not less than 26 kidnapped victims earlier held by the insurgents were released as a result of the airstrike,” he added.

    Gabkwet said that the CAS had reviewed the ongoing air operations against the insurgents and other criminal elements in the country.

    “From the briefings received by the CAS, it is evident that so far, the directive given to the operational commanders is yielding the requisite outcome,” he said.

    The director said Amao had addressed the commanders and reminded them of the need to remain steadfast and focused on the task ahead.

    “We can’t afford to let down our guards,” the CAS told the commanders.

    Meanwhile, the Air Component of Operation Hadin Kai in the North-East had conducted successful air interdiction missions on insurgents’ targets in Borno.

    “One of such operations was conducted on August 6 at Gazuwa, about 1.2 kilometers to Gargash, after intelligences revealed that infighting for supremacy was underway between Shekau`s faction and Islamic State of West Africa (ISWAP) faction.

    “The state of confusion and disorder between the two factions presented an opportunity for a surprise strike by NAF pilots which was carried out using two aircraft types.

    “It should be noted that though the map coordinates led the pilots to the exact site of the infighting, the location also had an ISWAP flag hoisted on the structure and three solar panels on the rooftop.

    “Intelligence received and corroborated by local sources revealed the strike was a success as the insurgents did not anticipate it with several eliminated and others injured.“

    According to the director, the sustained air strikes had disorganised the insurgents who had begun to realise that they were fighting a lost cause that would lead to their death.

    “Most are said to be contemplating surrendering just like others before them,” he said.

    Source: NAN

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