Friday, September 12, 2025
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Gov Diri Promises Cordial Relationship With Corporate Bodies

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…..SPDC Donates Medical Equipment To Bayelsa

Bayelsa State Governor, Senator Douye Diri, has pledged his administration’s resolve to cement existing cordial relationship with well-meaning corporate organisations to foster peace, stability and sustainable development.

Senator Diri made the pledge on Monday during the courtesy visit of the Managing Director of Shell Petroleum  Development Company and Country Chair, Shell Companies in Nigeria, Osagie Okunbor represented by the External Relations Manager, Shell Nigeria, Mr. Igo Weli, to Government House,  Yenagoa.

His acting Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Daniel Alabrah, quoted the governor as having expressed gratitude to Shell for sustaining the long-standing relationship with the state that has blossomed over the years.

Senator Diri, who described SPDC and its joint venture partners as strategic partners in the development and progress of the Niger Delta states, stressed the need to continually nurture such  relationship to improve the living conditions of the people.

His words: “The essence of government is the security of lives and this includes safeguarding the health of the people to whom it is accountable. As a new government, this kind of relationship should blossom.

“The history of Bayelsa cannot be complete without mentioning Shell in and around the state. It was in Bayelsa that Shell first struck oil in commercial quantity at Oloibiri. So the history and story about Shell in Nigeria is tied to Bayelsa.

“Crude oil has been the mainstay of our economy, which has immensely profited multinational oil companies but Bayelsa has not been fairly treated.

“Our government is, however, prepared to work closely with all corporate bodies that are committed to the welfare and development of our people.”

The governor lauded the SPDC for identifying with the state government’s untiring efforts in tackling the COVID-19 pandemic.

In his remarks, Mr. Igo Weli said Governor Diri had shown leadership since he assumed office just as he commended him for the proactive steps taken in the fight against COVID-19 in the state.

“Your Excellency, thank you for being proactive in the fight against COVID-19. You are doing a lot to keep Bayelsa people safe.

“You have shown leadership and that is why we are here as partners in progress to support you with donation of the medical and other protective equipment for use in the state,” he said.

Mr. Weli highlighted a number of medical equipment targeted at enhancing the testing for COVID-19 in the state. They include a compatible PCR machine, extraction kits for 1,000 tests, intensive care unit ambulance, 16 KVA electricity generator, suction machines, infra red thermometers and other critical equipment to operationalise the state’s isolation centre.

Others are 10 critical care hospital beds and mattresses, respiratory nebulisers, hospital grade oxygen cylinders, face masks and hand sanitizers.

According to him, the Shell companies  in Nigeria comprising SPDC, Shell Nigeria Exploration and Production Company and Shell Nigeria Gas were making direct interventions to enhance medical capacities and capabilities across locations where they have operations in Nigeria as part of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation-led $30 million oil and gas industry support to the federal government to contain the spread of the scourge.

Villa Shooting: A Concealed Coup Attempt?

By Bala Ibrahim

It’s now official, that President Muhammadu Buhari has ordered investigation into the shooting spree that occurred in the State House on Thursday, and the ADC to his wife, Aisha Bunari is undergoing interrogation. In a statement yesterday, by the presidential spokesman, Malam Garba Shehu, the president acknowledged the ugly incident, with an assurance that the law would take it’s course.

Usman Shugaba, ADC to the First Lady, Mrs. Aisha Buhari, in the company of other security details attached to the First Lady, fired shots in the precincts of the State House on Thursday night, while attempting to arrest the president’s private secretary and nephew, Tunde Sabiu Yusuf, in his house.

Reports have it that, there was a disagreement between the First Lady, Aisha Buhari and Sabiu Tunde Yusuf, the President’s nephew and P.A, sequel to a journey he took to Lagos, to visit his wife, who recently delivered a baby boy. On his return to Abuja, Aisha Buhari, who had long been in discord with him, directed him to self-isolate and stay away from office for two weeks. Tunde reportedly told the President the reason for his trip and how he conducted himself while in Lagos, and the President approved that he should carry on with his duty in the office.

This did not go down well with the First Lady, as such she allegedly sent Usman Shugaba, her ADC, to ensure the compliance with her orders, not withstanding the contrary directive from the President.

To prove her point and powers, on Thursday night, the First Lady and three of her children, Zahra, Halima and Yusuf, accompanied by some of her security aides, led by the Shugaba himself, stormed House 8, the official residence of Tunde, and insisted that he must comply with her quarantine directive, or face consequences. I am not sure if they went there with PPE, but they carried guns.

This lead to an altercation between him and the First Lady, resulting in the Lady ordering his manhandling. When he became overpowered and helpless, Tunde took to logic, by opting to flee with his feet to the residence of Mallam Mamman Daura, where he spent the night. Sources said he arrived there with serious wounds on him.

On the day the incident happened, the first person I placed a call to, was Mallam Garba Shehu, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity. He refused to comment, pleading with me to keep him out of the saga. Because I am fairly familiar with the politics of the house, I chose not to press further.

However, now that the same Mallam Garba has issued a statement confirming the incident, and giving the position of the President, that arrests were made and investigations ongoing, with emphasis to the determination of the President to permit the law to take its course, the time has come for the President to be told the bitter truth, once more.

For the law to take its proper course, the President must allow all suspects in the saga to be properly interrogated, regardless of their status. This is one incident too many, and almost always, the name of the First Lady is a regular feature. If previous ugly incidences were overlooked, this one cannot be overlooked, because it involved the firing of shots in the villa, the seat of power. Those conversant with security and the statutory functions of the Guard brigade say, any single shot fired there, is presumed to be a shot fired at the Commander-in-Chief.

Gunshots in the villa? You hear of such only when there is a coup attempt, and as a one-time victim of a coup, the President must take the issue with the seriousness it deserved. What would have happened if Tunde was killed? Moreso as this particular Tunde, was so named after the late Gen.Tunde Idiagbon, the then Chief of Staff to Supreme Headquarters, and second in command to the Head of State, General Mohammadu Buhari.

Unless the President want to give the public, the impression that he is not fully in charge, as strongly speculated by the critics, the First lady, who is known to be openly disrespectful of the Covid-19 protocols, particularly with regards to the wearing of the face mask, has no business going personally with her aides, to enforce anything that has to do with the management of the disease. This is the work of the PTF, headed by the SGF.

Hardly a month pass without the First family coming in the news, for bad news. It’s either the First Lady is at war with members of the President’s family, or interfering with the running of the President’s office, or both. Always bringing the office of the President into ridicule, disrespect and undue embarrassment. Not even in the time of Patience Jonathan, was the villa subjected to such scorn.

The shooting has sent wrong signal to the world, that the President is not in control of his domestic affairs, just when his handling of the security situation in Katsina state, his home state, is being constantly condemned. These are issues that have been burning for long.

For long, the president has been advised to check the excesses of the First lady, particularly her regular rage, overbearing nature and the dishonorable display of tantrums, at the slightest provocation.

If the President decides to ignore professional advise, or choose to treat the matter with levity, what happened to him in the past, may reincarnate. This time around, using his wife as the chief coupist.

And I can bet my wallet, Nigerians would never, ever, forgive Mr. President.

Buhari’s Democracy Day Speech: Dictator’s False Dilemma

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By Bayo Oluwasanmi

President Muhammadu Buhari’s Democracy Day speech is a good example of “newspeak” in Gorge Orwell’s 1984 dystopian classic. In 1984, Orwell explains how dictators use “newspeak” language to manipulate their citizens.

“Newspeak” says Orwell, is a form of brainless speaking that enables garbage to be uttered convincingly. Going by Orwell’s theory, informed and rational Nigerians should take Democracy Day speech by Buhari as a total garbage.

Only the Akindanidanis will swallow hook, line, and sinker the garbage with blind uncritical belief in spite of the facts concerning the Nigerian state. In Buhari’s 2020 Nigeria, Orwell’s 1984 is no longer a fiction. Buhari’s use of manipulative lies, distortions, unfulfilled old promises, new empty promises, propaganda in the speech are in line with “newspeak” language. The speech is aimed at exploiting the naïveté and gullibility of Nigerians.

The speech exposes Buhari as suffering from dictator’s false dilemma. For example, let’s examine what he says about democracy, rule of law, the constitution, corruption, the economy, and press freedom.

He says he’ll ensure democracy and the rule of law, but his disdain for flouting court orders and illegal detention of activists and critics is legendary. He tells Nigerians that his regime supports freedom of speech. In reality, Nigerians were beaten, arrested, detained, and dispersed from protesting peacefully. Protesters were hounded like criminals by the police and security forces. Omoyele Sowore, leader of #RevolutionNow was abducted and detained for organizing peaceful demonstration for good governance.

According to Buhari, “We have witnessed eleven quarters of consecutive GDP growth since exiting recession.” Under his watch, Nigeria became poverty capital of the world.

He preaches one Nigeria, but he’s the greatest nepotist divisive president that employs division and diversion to further polarize the already fractured and divided nation. He says he’s fighting corruption but looks the other way when his close aides and associates are involved in corruption. Indeed, Nigeria is the most corrupt country in the world. He assures the nation that Nigeria will always be governed by rule of law and uphold the constitution. Buhari is notorious for breaking the law and violating the constitution.

He promises that he’ll guarantee freedom of press. The fact is, The World Press Freedom Index describes Nigeria as one of the most dangerous and difficult countries to practice journalism in the world as journalists are often spied on, attacked, arbitrarily arrested, or even killed.

Buhari’s past is a prologue. His long record of abuse and brutal tactics of repression have not disappeared. Do not be fooled by the propaganda and false promises promoted in his Democracy Day speech. Buhari is who he always has been – a brutal, senseless, and sadistic dictator.

Buhari has returned Nigeria to Abacha’s dark days. Activists, journalists, critics, have been routinely targeted for state-sponsored intimidation, detention, and torture. His regime is an extension of his military junta.

Don’t blame dictator Buhari alone. We the people – Nigerians – are the ones enabling the dictator. After all, the dictator cannot function without followers. Nigerians have abdicated their personal responsibilities which directly cripple freedom of expression and derail democratic process. Though we enable dictator Buhari, we can also disable him. This is how we can give meaningful interpretation to Democracy Day!

Swift Reporters Management Condoles Amaechi Over Elder Brother’s Death

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Condolences have continued to pour in on former Rivers Governor and Nigeria’s Transportation Minister, Rt. Hon. Chibuike Amaechi over the demise of his elder brother, Dede Amaechi.

In their message of condolence,Swift Reporters Editorial Board led by Bar Dotun Sowemimo and Adewole Kehinde said the news of the death of Dede Amaechi, came to them as a rude shock.

Late Dede Amaechi

They described him as a gentleman, unassuming, caring and a wonderful personality. They further said his death has dealt a big blow not only to the family of Rt. Hon Rotimi Amaechi but to every member of the media family of Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi.

While asking God to grant Amaechi, his immediate family and the rest of his political family and associates the fortitude to bear the big loss, Swift Reporters Management prayed God to grant eternal rest to the deceased.

Rivers APC Crisis: Your Accusations Are Baseless, Dakuku Isn’t The Cause Of Party’s Division, Eze Replies Aguma

….Says Abe, Aguma, other dissenters responsible for party’s loss in 2015
….Gives reasons why Dakuku was a better candidate than Abe
…..Commends APC Statutory Members for Shunning Aguma’s inaugural Exco Zoom meeting.

The unfortunate imposition of Hon. Igo Aguma as Sole Administrator of the Rivers APC by a Port Harcourt High Court was greeted with widespread condemnation and perceived by a sizable population of party faithful, lovers of democracy and people of goodwill as a gimmick to deepen internal wrangling and further throw the party into perpetual hostility in a bid to achieving some outlandish ends, alien to the values of society and ethos of unity and good brotherliness.

Chieftain of the All Progressives Congress and former National Publicity Secretary of the defunct New People’s Democratic Party (nPDP), Chief Eze Chukwuemeka Eze, said barely a week into his forceful affixation on the party, Aguma has swiftly swung into action, playing the spoilers script for which he was hired and aggravating the agonies of party members whose fortunes have been stocked in limbo.

In a statement circulated to media houses, the party chief expressed displeasure over the first public speech of Igo Aguma after his horrendous Court ordination, where he alleged that the emergence of Dr. Dakuku Peterside as the governorship canditae of the All Progressives Congress in the 2015 general elections is one fundamental divisive factor in the party.

Describing Aguma’s comment as laughable, Eze said the former Reps member is merely playing a script penned and handed him by satanic collaborators and conflict entrepreneurs who are hell-bent on wrecking the party and dimming the light of a rising national figure and former Rivers Governor, Rt. Hon. Rotimi Amaechi and other emerging personalities within the State.

Dismissing Aguma’s claim, the party stalwart maintained that Dr. Dakuku’s candidature was totally in order and his election as the party’s flagbearer was unanimous and welcomed by members, delegates and stakeholders and therefore cannot be considered a basis for the the party’s problems.

He however accused Senator Abe of instigating the unending rivalry owing to his tumultuous and inordinate ambition which did not enjoy popular consent.

Throwing light on how Peterside emerged as Consensus Candidate to fly the flag of APC during the 2015 general elections, Eze said: “Rivers State APC by 2015 was divinely set up to address three principal injustices visited on some sections of the state. One of them was addressing the unjust situation of the Riverine areas of the state not occupying the seat of power since 1999, after the eight years of Dr. Peter Odili and the eight years of the then Governor, Rt. Hon. Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi – all from the upland section of the state”.

“The second injustice is that meted on the Ogonis: having not produced a Governor, Deputy Governor or Speaker of the State House of Assembly since the creation of the State as far back as 1970”.

“The last injustice is that sighted in the South-East Senatorial Zone. The zone has not produced the Governor since the creation of the state; Rivers East having produced Dr. Odili while Rivers West produced Rt. Hon. Dr. Amaechi, leaving the South-East in the cooler all these years”.

Eze stated that addressing the three major issues at the same time is impossible for the leadership of Rivers State APC and any human organisation because there can only be one governor who must come from a particular section of the state.

However the party leadership in its wisdom, achieved two of the three goals by conceding power to the South-East Senatorial Zone and also resolved to shift power from the upland to the riverine area of the state. This zone presented four great leaders in the persons of Most Distinguished Senator Magnus Abe, who was representing the zone in the upper chambers of the National Assembly, Engr Tele Ikuru, the then Deputy Governor of Rivers State, Hon. Dr. Dakuku Peterside and Barr. George Feyi, the then Secretary to the Rivers State Government, among others.

Any of them so chosen will defeat whoever any other party may present in the 2015 elections. The party decided to address the riverine issue: Hon. Dr. Chief Dakuku Adol Peterside from the Riverine area of Opobo/Nkoro LGA and a member of the Federal House of Representatives and Chairman of the Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream) then who is a symbol of unity among the Ogoni, riverine and upland sections of the state, became generally accepted to fly the flag of the APC in the 2015 gubernatorial election in Rivers State.

From the standpoint of truth, this did not go down well with Abe and his cohorts who vowed to scuttle the chances of victory at the polls, and surely they did. Everyone who followed through events within the APC during the 2015 elections can attest to this.

In an attempt to appease Abe, he was encouraged to go back to the Senate and the party did all within her powers to ensure that he gets victory, but unknown to the party, Abe still harboured evil agenda which was displayed to the climax during the build up to the 2019 general elections and consequently, Rivers APC could not boost of any elective position at the national or state level.

In furtherance to addressing the Ogoni issue, Dakuku Peterside, in his acceptance speech said, “I heard that some 150 young men and women were at the Government House, Port Harcourt, three days ago, Ogoni people love me and are very hospitable. I grew up in Ogoni, where I spent over ten years. I still have many childhood friends from Ogoni. The protesters are not Ogoni, but people from other political parties, who want to cause confusion. The opposition parties sponsored the 150 youths to protest. It is nothing to worry about. I was at the forefront of Ogoni struggle in 1990, when the Ogoni Bill of Rights (OBR) was put in place”.

“Ogoni people are peace-loving and not violent. It was when I was Rivers Commissioner for Works that most of the roads in Bori (traditional headquarters of Ogoniland) were tarred. I will continue to protect Ogoni interests. APC in Rivers State cannot be in reverse gear. We will place emphasis on equity, justice and fairness. We will ensure inclusive government. Everybody will be carried along. I am an Ijaw, but I will be the governor of Rivers State. We can together build a greater Rivers State.”

The impressive and hearth-warming speech of Dakuku Peterside made no sense and impact to Abe and his team as they were already determined to ensure that the Dakuku and the APC never merit the Brick House.

We entered the battle field to wrestle power with a seasoned political War Lord like Wike with a divided house but PRETENDING to be working together. The consequences of the internal division is what most of us are still suffering today.

Eze maintained that Dakuku is one of the most detribalized Rivers man around, the most effective and organized public official and with what he demonstrated as the DG of NIMASA even the blind can attest that this man would have turned Rivers State into the best State in Africa if not for the devious plot of Abe’s group that have kept Rivers State in its present sorry state.

It is still on record that this young man ran the best and most inclusive governorship campaign ever in the country which is being talked about to date.

Eze is saddened that Aguma having benefitted so much from Dakuku could have the gut to utter such a trash knowing that after the 2015 elections , Dakuku kept the home front intact; holding all inclusive Leadership meeting every forth night and inclusive General stakeholders meeting every Month .

Eze recalled that even after the Supreme Court concluded the Governorship case, Dakuku went from LGA to LGA campaigning for party candidates who were on the ballot for repeat election of March 2016 including that of Senator Abe so what exactly do Aguma and his misguided group want from Amaechi and Dakuku to continue to sustain division in the party.

Eze reiterated that it is very sad and unfortunate for anybody who knew the history of APC in Rivers State to describe Dakuku as the brain behind the division currently facing the party which time ks is murdering the truth and I wish to urge Aguma to apologise to Dakuku and withdraw and desist from petty and unfounded allegations if truly he is in for peace, unless he is resolved to implementing the satanic agenda of keeping the party in perpetual turmoil and frustrating the fortunes of young people.

In summary, Dakuku’s candidature represented the yearning of Rivers people, they wanted a bright, humble, God fearing, energetic, focused leader who will unite every Rivers man as Governor. His candidature was also to solve the agitation of the people of Rivers South East Senatorial district and Riverine Ijaws rolled into one.

Eze Commended the party’s Statutory Members for shunning Aguma’s makeshift State Executive Council during its alleged meeting of 13th June, 2020 thereby leaving him alone with Elder Chidi Wihioka with few of Aguma’s Hotel staff to hold their meeting in an unknown destination.

This simply proves that both the Statutory members and stakeholders of the party are fully aware of the sinister agenda of Aguma and those sponsoring him and decided to maintain a reasonable distance.

The party chief further averred that in as much as the party yearns for peace, a graveyard peace stewed in falsehood and hidden agenda and championed by a cosmetic party member and proponent of internal hostility cannot proffer a workable template that can usher in the needed peace but can only serve to achieve its clandestine ends.

NNPC Makes Audited Accounts Public

By Anthony Osae-Brown and Tope Alake

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation has published audited financial statements online in a bid to improve transparency around its operations.

The state-owned oil company, known as NNPC, has been criticized for years of conducting the nation’s oil business in secret by publishing only unaudited financial reports. The statements published on the company’s website yesterday were for 2018 and were signed by Chief Executive Officer Mele Kyari.

NNPC also published audited accounts online of its 20 subsidiaries and business divisions for first time.

Disclosure “is good for transparency and accountability,” Waziri Adio, executive secretary of Nigeria Extractive Industry Transparency Initiative, said in a response to a private message on Twitter. “I urge them to make this a regular practice and in open data format.”

National Petroleum Investment Management Services is the group’s most profitable division, according to the statements. It reported revenue of 5.04 trillion naira ($13 billion) in 2018 and profit of 1.01 trillion naira. That compares with a loss of 1.65 trillion naira in 2017.

The report shows total assets managed by NAPIMS at 18.6 trillion naira, with the oil and gas components valued at 14.2 trillion naira.

Its oil production subsidiary, the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company, reported a post-tax profit of 179 billion naira in 2018. The corporation’s three refineries reported a combined loss of 154 billion naira with the Kaduna refinery recording zero revenue for that year. NNPC didn’t publish consolidated audited accounts for the group.

Culled from Bloomberg

Oil Drops As New Coronavirus Outbreaks Raise Fuel Demand Concerns

Aaron Sheldrick

Oil fell more than 2% on Monday, extending losses from last week, as new coronavirus infections hit China and the United States, raising the prospect that renewed outbreaks of the virus could weigh on the recovery of fuel demand.

Brent crude futures fell 89 cents, or 2.3%, to $37.84 a barrel by 0302 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures were down $1.18, or 3.3%, to $35.08 a barrel.

A cluster of infections in Beijing has increased concern of a resurgence of the disease. The coronavirus pandemic started at the end of last year in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

The oil benchmarks fell about 8% last week, their first weekly declines since April, as U.S. coronavirus cases started increasing. Over the weekend, more than 25,000 new U.S. cases were reported on Saturday alone as more states reported record new infections and hospitalizations.

“The recovery in oil demand is already set to be a lengthy process, and a fresh wave of cases will certainly raise worries that a recovery in demand may take even longer than initially thought,” ING Economics said in a note.

Industrial output in China, the world’s biggest crude oil importer, rose for a second consecutive month in May but the rise was smaller than expected, suggesting the world’s second-biggest economy is struggling to get back on track after containing the coronavirus.

The country’s refineries increased their throughput in May by 8.2% more than the same period a year ago to about 13.6 million barrels per day (bpd), government data showed.

An OPEC-led monitoring panel will meet on Thursday to discuss ongoing record production cuts and see whether countries have delivered their share of the reductions, but will not make any decision, according to five OPEC+ sources.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and its allies, collectively known as OPEC+, have been reducing supplies by 9.7 million bpd, about 10% of pre-pandemic demand, and agreed in early June to extend the cuts for a month until end-July.

Iraq, one of the laggards in complying with the curbs, agreed with its major oil companies to cut crude production further in June, Iraqi officials working at the fields told Reuters on Sunday.

The country’s oil minister later said it would export an average of 2.8 million bpd in June.

Culled from Reuters

Juju, June 12 And Malami’s Killer-Soldiers

By Tunde Odesola

Like a skeleton, another June 12 creeps up on us. This year’s anniversary is at the King’s Court located on A-Sore-Rock. Twenty-seven-year memories of missed opportunities and unlearnt lessons flood back: Torn drums. Cracked voices. Stopped music. Yet, today’s anniversary dancers wriggle on in wild gyration. The drummers, with bulging biceps and sweaty bodies, bang crazily on the drumless drums. The same leaders of yore chant a broken melody akin to the sound of a plodding elephant farting through a wetland. Shocked, the audience can’t believe their ears nor trust their sight. Something is recklessly amiss. This scenario isn’t what they bargained for.

This isn’t the picture of Nigeria that was promised and shown to them five years ago. The drums are torn. The voices are cracked. The music has stopped. Yet, the King and his court of jesters dance on, unmindful of the ‘ah!’ that flung open the jaws of the audience. Yet, the King and his court happily chant a dirge to a perplexed audience on June 12.

Again, it’s June 12, a once-in-a-year period when Nigeria remembers the symbol of her modern democracy, Chief MKO Abiola, whose presidential victory was annulled by his true friend, General Ibrahim Babangida, in 1993.

June 12 has become an annual ritual to luxuriate in bombast and utter hot air. On this June 12, the Katsinner King beats his chest, listing his achievements and claiming responsibility for the taste of water, the color of air, the roar of the ocean, the teeth of the fowl, the eyelids of the snake and the fecal matter that squeezes through the anus!

Wailers should shut up! Nothing can be done to stop the killings and kidnappings in Borno, Katsina, Benue, Yobe, Adamawa, Gombe, Kano, Kaduna and all across the land. The Nigerian military is ever efficient; it murders!

An ex-Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Abubakar Tsav, died last week. Before he died, Tsav, who investigated the gruesome murder of Dele Giwa, was convinced that the Nigerian military killed the fearsome journalist and protected his killers from prosecution. Some of those fingered by Tsav in parceling Giwa to the great beyond via a letter bomb in 1986 are still alive. But some are vegetating on the top of a hill.

The Nigerian military fiercely protects murderers. Like in the case of Giwa, the Nigerian military also effectively protected the Taraba kidnap kingpin, Bala Hamisu aka Wadume, from being taken to justice by some dedicated policemen. Three of the policemen who were transporting Wadume to justice and two civilians were murdered in cold blood by Nigerian soldiers on Tuesday, August 6, 2019. Five other policemen sustained life-threatening injuries in the soldiers’ attack. And the killing wasn’t wrong in the eyes of the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), whose Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Abubukar Malami, has removed the names of the killer-soldiers from the prosecution list. When soldiers kill patriotic policemen and innocent civilians with bullets brought by taxpayers’ money, the killer-soldiers only need to chant ‘esprit de corps’ to the retired General and the prison gates will be flung open for the killer-soldiers to march to freedom in starched khaki.

Disgusting events occur in Nigeria as naturally as leaves come to trees and fish come to water. I salute my fatherland, Nigeria, the wanton field where the President and his wife, Aisha, seldom wake up from different sides of the bed to wash their domestic linens in public. I remember the many domestic battles of Aisha but I won’t dwell on them. I remember that on a state visit to Germany in 2016, Buhari, who was in the presence of German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, publicly consigned Aisha to the kitchen, the living room and the ‘Other Room.’ I also remember Aisha’s battle to reclaim her domestic space from stifling and overpowering relatives.

On this year’s June 12 anniversary, I won’t criticise the President for three reasons. One, nothing has really changed for the better in Nigeria in the last five years despite critical appraisals of his administration by the media. Two, the President appears unperturbed with the deaths and agony wasting the land. Three, I’ll overlook Buhari’s perennial incompetence on this historic occasion because the event should be a celebration of Abiola’s courage, passion and vision.

So, in honour of the late Aare Ona Kakanfo, I’ll comment on one of his pastimes. Music.

It’s an open secret that the young MKO earned a living as the lead singer of his musical band which played at private and public functions. He later won a scholarship and went to the University of Glasgow, Scotland, to study. He got his breakthrough when he joined the International Telephones and Telecommunications (ITT Nigeria) in 1968, rising to the post of Chairman/Chief Executive by 1971. Abiola’s philanthropy was matchless so were his tastes for arts, sartorial elegance and the good life. At a period, MKO was the most sung about Nigerian. And he was a patron of the two foremost Juju music icons, Chief Commander Ebenezer Obey and King Sunny Ade, who both waxed many songs in his praise.

As I write this article, I’ve listened to King Sunny Ade’s, “E su biri biri ke bomi,” and Obey’s, “The man, the son and the donkey,” a couple of times. In “E su biri biri,” Sunny examines the abiding complexities of life while Obey, in ‘Ketekete’, bemoans Man’s insatiability. Both Obey and Sunny engaged in the longest music rivalry in Nigeria’s history, spanning over 40 years without engaging in nasty name-calling as obtained between the late Fuji moderniser, Chief Sikiru Ayinde Barrister and General Kollington Ayinla, the inimitable Bata Fuji creator.

Obey, the grandmaster of Juju Miliki has left his art to become a fisher of men for Jesus Christ. Sunny, the extraordinary King of African Beats, and a two-time Grammy Award nominee, is getting old. Sadly, both Juju godfathers have no godsons to step into their shoes and carry on the torch. Between 1989 and the early 90s, multi-instrumentalist Sir Sina Peters had the Juju throne in sight when he released four successive monster hits, Afro Juju, Shinamania, Dancing Time and Experience, but his genius wasn’t enough to earn him the crown.

It isn’t uncommon for a music genre to die off. Apala, a genre of Yoruba music, was once more popular than Fuji. Today, Apala is in the Intensive Care Unit. Awurebe, another form of music popularised by the late Epo Akara, is dead. Waka music, made popular by Batili Alake and Salawa Abeni, is on life support. In an interview by Oyinmomo TV, Shina Peters confirmed that Fuji music was a major threat to Juju music. He said the monumental success of Fuji Garbage by Barrister inspired Afro Juju. He also recalled an episode during a show at the Tafawa Balewa Square in Lagos, where fans migrated from the stage of KSA to Barrister’s, saying this forced him to understudy Barrister and discover the secret of ‘omele’ drum as a crowd puller. Much later, Barrister’s acceptability also dwindled among music fans, who preferred noise, nonsense and percussion to philosophical lyrics, hence Barusati expressed his readiness to sing ‘saje’.

Ironically, Barrister’s successor, King Wasiu Ayinde, in an interview with Teju Baby Face, described KSA as his role model, saying as a lover of good music, he was wowed by KSA’s music and swagger. In their peaks, Wasiu was the crown prince to Barrister and Kollington. Wasiu is the linchpin that Juju doesn’t have. Luckily for Fuji, Wasiu has likely successors in Wasiu Alabi Pasuma, Osupa Saheed and Abass Obesere.

Why is there no successor in sight for Juju music? Is it because it’s a much more difficult genre than Fuji, which doesn’t adhere strictly to musical notes? June 12 and Abiola were killed. Will Juju outlive Sunny and Obey or not?

Written by Tunde Odesola and first published in The PUNCH on Monday, June 15, 2020.
Email: tundeodes2003@yahoo.com

Chief Edwin Kiagbodo Clark: Accolades & Odes To A Colossus

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By Amb. Godknows Boladei Igali

From North to South, East to West, the bells of celebration are tolling to honour one of Nigeria’s most outstanding and venerated statesmen, Chief Edwin Kiagbodo Clark. Variously known as a teacher, a lawyer, a senator, a cabinet minister, and most significantly as the country’s oldest activist and one that it can still boast of, Chief Clark remains a voice for the voiceless, a defender of the  weak and a protagonist of the entrenchment of the values of human dignity and democracy. He is, by all means, a great, good, old man!

For his great national service, he has been saluted by President Muhammadu Buhari as well as former Head of State Yakubu Gowan, Ibrahim Babaginda, Abudusalem Abubakar and President Goodluck Jonathan.

Click the link for the full details of “Accolades & Odes To A Colossus” Chief Edwin 93.

 

Blame Aisha Not

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The media was agog with the news “how the power tussle in the Presidential Villa between First Lady Aisha Buhari and Sabiu ‘Tunde’ Yusuf, the President’s influential Personal Assistant and favourite nephew,” had taken a dangerous turn when the First Lady accompanied by her children – Zahra, Halima and Yusuf, – took a team of policemen led by her Aide-De-Camp to forcefully confront Tunde following an earlier heated disagreement over his refusal to self-isolate after his trip to Lagos to see his wife, who had just given birth to a boy.

With what is happening in Burundi, we shouldn’t expect the first lady, Aisha Buhari to jeopardize the health of her husband. If truly Sabiu traveled to Lagos and refused to quarantine himself for 14 days after return, the First Lady was right to deny him entry into the villa, despite his being the domestic Aide to the President.

We all know that President Buhari doesn’t use Face Mask, and Tunde Sabiu being his Domestic Assistant will definitely transmit the virus easily if he happened to be a carrier.

Now, the allegation that Aisha ordered her ADC to throw Tunde Sabiu out for refusing to Quarantine himself is more than justified, no woman will want to be widowed, especially inside the Villa and we all know that, God forbid; COVID-19 infecting President Buhari might be a death sentence.

Tunde Sabiu has ordered the arrest of Aisha’s ADC, accusing him of shooting gun inside the Villa, the irony of it all is that, Tunde Sabiu was a threat to the life of the President at that moment, he violated the law mandating all Villa staff to Self-Quarantine if they had access to location with COVID-19 and Lagos is one of such location. He should apologise to Aisha Buhari and the President for the embarrassment he caused the First family.

A case of Burundi is still very fresh; the President is dead, his mother dead, wife and sister in ICU, President- elect infected, all of COVID-19.