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Veteran Nollywood Actor, ‘Suara’ Is Dead

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Yemi Adeyemi - Suara

By Akinwale Kasali

This is not the best of times for the Nation’s Creative Industry, popularly known as Nollywood. It has, once again, lost one of its veteran and popular Actors, Yemi Adeyemi.

The Late Adeyemi was best known for his role in one of Wale Adenuga’s Production Series, Super Story, where he played the cast of Suara.

The interpretation of his role in the sitcom made him become a household name.

His demise has come as a shock to his theming fans, admirers and family.

Breaking the news of his demise was notable theatre practitioner, academic and critic, Dr. Shaibu Husseini, who announced his death on late Monday night via his social media platform.

Husseini noted that Chief Adeyemi passed away on Sunday, September 24, 2023.

“I have been reliably informed that veteran actor Chief Yemi Adeyemi aka Suara has transited.

“Popular as Suara, Chief Adeyemi rode to prominence playing Suara in the long rested ‘Oh Father, Oh Daughter’ series of the hugely popular Super Story stories by Wale Adenuga Productions.

“Baba Suara as some of us his younger colleagues simply called him, reportedly “acted out” this Sunday. Journey well Baba Suara. You will be sorely missed. Odigba Sir. Journey Well…..”

In the Production Series where he acted as Suara, he was paired with veteran sizzling actress, Sola Sobowale for her role as Toyin Tomato.

In the Sitcom, Suara was having an extra marital affair with Toyin Tomato till he left his House and family and moved in with his concubine, though he later regretted his action and retraced his steps like the prodigal Son after losing everything he worked and Laboured for.

Though, the cause of the actor’s death is yet to be announced by family member.

He will be sorely missed by colleagues, friends, families and well wishers, mostly for his distinct interpret of roles.

Ondo Assembly Gathers Fresh Allegations Against Deputy Governor

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Lucky Aiyedatiwa - Deputy Governor of Ondo State

By Ayodele Oni

Following public outcry over the allegation of a-N300 million request for an SUV vehicle, made against the Deputy Governor of Ondo state, Lucky Aiyedatiwa, the Assembly has now withdrawn the charge.

In the notice containing the allegations served on the embattled Deputy governor on Monday, the N300 million request has been removed and substituted with gross misconduct.

Aiyedatiwa, had earlier on Monday  denied receiving any notice since the announcement by the House last week. The leadership of the Assembly confirmed that the notice would get to him on Monday.

The notice, served on the Deputy Governor through one of the civil servants in his office, omitted the allegation of purchase of N300m armoured SUV for his convoy from palliatives funds.

The lawmakers had been embarrassingly criticized by members of the public on the claim.

The Spokesman of the House of Assembly, Hon. Olatunji Oshati, had appeared on Channels Television last week, where he struggled to defend the armoured SUV allegation, while a Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Special Duties, Dr. Doyin Odebowale, had gone on various radio and television stations to emphasize same baseless allegation.

According to some people, the allegation of armoured SUV purchase from palliatives funds was aimed at destroying the reputation of the Deputy Governor but after realizing it was a hard sell, they decided to abandon it and that may have accounted for why they couldn’t serve the notice since last week.

The notice, which does not mention anything about armoured SUV or palliatives funds, now contains 14 offences levelled against the Deputy Governor.

These include operation of departments under his office, alleged media attacks on the Governor, holding political meetings, dividing the cabinet, attempting to impeach the Governor and assaulting his wife on June 4, 2023 when the woman was not even in the country.

Aiyedatiwa has gone to Court to halt the impeachment move by the Assembly through his Counsel, Ebun Adegboruwa, SAN.

Impeachment: Save Ondo From Crisis, Deputy Governor’s Kinsmen Write Gov Akeredolu’s Monarch

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Lucky Aiyedatiwa and Rotimi Akeredolu

By Ayodele Oni

Ilaje, the kinsmen of the embattled Deputy Governor of Ondo State, Lucky Aiyedatiwa, has warned that a repeat of the 1983 political crisis in old Ondo state is imminent with the planned impeachment of the Deputy Governor.

In a letter to the Traditional Rulers of Owo, country home of Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, Olowo, Oba Ajibade Ogunoye, the Ilaje people urged the monarch to wade into the planned removal by the state assembly.

The letter reads : “Our decision to write to you, our royal Father and a revered Monarch in Yorubaland, is to the intent that appropriate reconciliatory actions might be taken before the ticking bomb is detonated with its consequent devastating destruction.

“Your Majesty may recall that when Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu was away on medical leave, the “cabal” held the Acting Governor, Lucky Ayedatiwa and the entire governance architecture of the State by the jugular and by extension, held the entire State to ransome because of their inordinate ambitions.

“In all these, the Acting Governor remained unperturbed. But in a twist of event, we are surprised that the incurably baised legislators, who could not contemplate moving motion for the impeachment of Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu on account of his angling health challenges are now engulfed in this unparliamentary travesty that will soil their existence and memories even long after their passage from the earth.

“Their ill-motivated plot to impeach the Deputy Governor, Lucky Ayedatiwa is an unpopular and unpatriotic venture which does not attract the blessing nor have the backing of the good people of Ondo State.”

The letter, signed by Prince olorungbonju Edamisan and Princess Iretiola Ademitigha adds “And it is rather unfortunate that selfish politicians are exploiting the health of Governor Akeredolu to create imaginary rift between him and his Deputy.

“We never wanted to read ethnic coloration or weave ethno-tribal sentiments around the matter until it began to crystalize to us that the impeachment is not just a war against Lucky Ayedatiwa but a pre-meditated vendetta against the entire Ilaje nation.

“It is part of a subtle ploy aimed at depriving us the opportunity of producing the next Governor of the State.

“Ilaje have served other governors from other parts of the State with utmost respect and unflinching loyalty, despite being the treasure mines that produce about 80% of the revenues from whence the state derive the economic wealth with which she cater for other sections of the Sunshine State to the exclusion of Ilaje local government where the revenues are being mainly generated.

“However, if Governor Akeredolu SAN fails to prevail on those who are exploiting the political atmosphere against the Deputy Governor, there would be no other interpretation read to the matter than to deduce that Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu’s administration has declared war against Ilaje nation.

“And in response, we shall not hesitate to prove that we are not cowards that will run into hiding, as every appropriate actions will be taken to defend ourselves.

“As law abiding citizens, we believe in peaceful co-existence but not to the extent of having our fundamental human rights being violated as in the case of witnessing this gang-up against our brother and bonafide citizen of Ondo State, Lucky Ayedatiwa, in flagrant disregard for the cooperation that hitherto exists between the peoples of Owo and Ilaje.

“Your Majesty, the age-long cordial relationship and mutual understanding that have existed between the people of Owo and the people of Ilaje are currently being tried and tested in the furnace of affliction at the instance of this political brouhaha, and the historical memories these events would create is largely dependent on how it is being managed, resolved or otherwise escalated.

“The wealth of experience and sound wisdom that the great Olowo of Owo throne is renowned for assuage our fears, knowing that your prompt intervention and royal fatherly role will quickly extinguish the flames that have been ignited by these political undercurrents.”

The ‘Curse’ On Ondo Govt House

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Rotimi Akeredolu

By Ayodele Oni

Criticisms from opposition parties and groups in Ondo State are continuing to trail the resolve of Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu to stay in his private home in Ibadan, Oyo state after his return from three months medical leave abroad.

Even before he finally resolved to seek medical attention abroad, Akeredolu had relocated to the Oyo State capital when it seemed his health was failing. His wife, Betty once cried out that a particular female aide was bringing in concortions for the Governor to treat his health challenge.

The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) and some groups which were hurriedly assembled in the wake of the Governor’s ailment have criticized the government house extension in Ibadan.

According to them, the continued stay of Akeredolu in Ibadan will increase cost of governance as some of the Governor’s aides whose services are germaine will have to relocate with him. And trust these aides and civil servants, they don’t joke with their allowances.

Only this week, a group, Ondo Redemption Front claimed that

“While Mr. Akeredolu returned to the country, for over two weeks that he returned to Nigeria in controversial manner, he has not been sighted in the State rather, he has been hidden somewhere in Ibadan by his cronies where he has been operating through proxies and thereby made governance in the State to be carried out in secrecy.

“Also, worthy of mention is the fact that since the return of Mr. Akeredolu and his refusal to resume at his official duty -post for the governance of the state, a situation that is causing serious apprehension in the state.”

The governor’s aide, Richard Olatunde, has however urged the people to disregard this as nothing has affected governance in the state with the Governor’s resolve to remain in Ibadan.

PDP, said “Akeredolu is beginning to fuel media speculations that, against the advice of his doctors he was hurriedly brought into Nigeria to foil an impeachment process.

“He also ordered an upgrade of his Ibadan residence to include a replica of Executive Council Chambers, from where he intends to hold Exco meetings.

“Does Akeredolu want to make Ibadan the capital of Ondo State? What is the hurry to resume all about, if he cannot come to Ondo State?

“Would it not have made more sense if he was still attending to his health abroad? Why did he say he has resumed when indeed he has not?

“Our party wishes to advise Akeredolu to come to Ondo State to complete his tenure. But if he does not feel fit enough to resume, he can proceed on another medical leave instead of trying to pull wool over our eyes in Ondo State.”

Going down memory lane, especially since 1999 when the present Democratic Rule kicked off, no governor that won second term ticket in the state completed the tenure while living in the Alagbaka Government House. Only former Governor Olusegun Mimiko had served the state for two terms and the incumbent governor. From the record, at the second year of Mimiko’s second term, he hurriedly packed out of the governor’s lodge due to what was described as some diabolical attacks.

He had moved from the old government house which was being used since the creation of the state in 1976 to a new one constructed by his administration to accommodate the governor’s office and lodge. After his few days stay at the new complex, Mimiko was lucky to have survived two attacks by thunder, which completely destroyed a section of the new building.

Government officials then blamed the destruction on shoddy job by contractors. Mimiko did not waste time or tried to toy with his life. He packed his belongings and family members and left for his personal resident at Ondo town where he was coming to the office when he wished and his aides were joining him even some state guests were received at the country home. There was no much noise then because the ex governor’s private residence was within the state.

Now Akeredolu has resolved to remain in Ibadan where he had been practicing law before he became Governor to attend to his health needs. It was even gathered that even while in Akure Akeredolu never stayed at any of the Government houses either old or new one. He was said to be using the Presidential suite within the government house as his residence.

The question now : Is the Alagbaka Government House cursed. What has been preventing second term governors from completing their term inside the well fortified edifice? It is still not known whether Akeredolu will return to Alagbaka before completion of his term but from all indications, he will remain in Ibadan for now to continue to attend to his health .

Access Corp: Wigwe Says Growth Plans Remains Firm; Grosses N940bn H1’23

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Herbert Wigwe - Access Bank MD arrested by EFCC

The Group Managing Director, GMD, Access Holdings PLC, Herbert Wigwe says the plan to transform Access Holdings Plc into a leading financial and ecosystem player in Africa remains firm.

The group’s chief executive stated this on the back of the company release of its Audited Consolidated and Separate Financial Statements for the period ended June 30, 2023, to the Nigerian Exchange Group, NGX.

Access Holdings Plc, the parent company of Access Bank recorded a 58.9 percent increase in gross revenue to over N940 billion for the half year ended June 30, 2023, H1’23, according to the statement to NGX.

Speaking Wigwe said the financial provider is resolute in its objective to foster opportunities for shared prosperity with customers and other stakeholders.

According to him, “Our growth plans for the African continent remains firm and clear, driven by the strong long term growth prospects and trade opportunities seen across many of the countries.

“Continuing with our 5-year cyclical strategy, our primary objective remains to transform Access Holdings Plc into a leading financial and ecosystem player, fostering opportunities for shared prosperity` among all stakeholders.”

The financial service providers also stated in the statement to NGX that it recorded 71.4 percent and 52.6 percent increase in Profit Before Tax, PBT, and Profit After Tax, PAT, at N167.6 billion and N135.4 billion respectively for H1’23.

The growth in gross revenue was driven by a combination of 63 percent growth in interest income and 51.9 percent increase in non-interest income.

The Holder said: “In a demonstration of the trust and confidence reposed in the institution by its customers, Access Holdings also witnessed a significant 35% year-to-date growth in customer deposits, concluding the half-year at a commendable N12.5 trillion. This growth was inclusive of all business segments, firmly solidifying the Group’s stature as the largest financial institution in Nigeria by total assets.

“Access Holdings’ synergies across its business verticals yielded remarkable results, as the company experienced a 39.0% y/y increase in total assets and a 40.6% year-on-year rise in shareholders’ funds. As of the mid-year point in 2023, total assets and shareholders’ funds stood at N20.9 trillion and N1.7 trillion respectively.

“These striking figures underscore the efficacy of the Group’s strategic approach and its ability to generate value from a diversified business portfolio, spanning banking, asset management, and payment services, operational in twenty countries across four continents.”

Meanwhile, the Group’s Pensions business has surpassed the N1trillion in Assets Under Management, AUM, milestone, thereby ranking as the 4th largest PFA by AUM and the 2nd largest by the number of registered retirement savings accounts, RSAs.

Furthermore, its payments vertical, Hydrogen, processed over N3.0 trillion in transactions, achieving a 407 percent month-on-month growth in point of sale, POS, transactions, and 99 percent system uptime on account switching within the period.

CBN Reneges On Payment Of $10bn Forex Backlog To Money Banks

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Three weeks after the CBN promised to clear the $10 billion forex backlog due to commercial banks, the apex bank has yet to do so, according to a report by The Punch.

On September 6, the immediate past acting CBN Governor, Folashodun Shonubi, said the apex bank had concluded negotiation on dollar debts with commercial banks, disclosing that all forex exchange backlogs would be cleared within one to two weeks.

According to him, deposit money banks have assisted the apex bank to clear the majority of its overdue FX forward contracts at maturity

As such, he said the CBN had reached an agreement to reimburse the lenders within one or two weeks following extensive debt restructuring talks that lasted over a long period of time.

“In response to questions about the backlogs, the banks have been working with the CBN on various structures to clear them. So, what happens is that at maturity, they make the foreign exchange available to those that need it.

“We are discussing with them so we can structure their own. So, we are working towards clearing them in the next one or two weeks. It is something we have been discussing for a while,” Shonubi had told audience at a forum in Lagos

However, multiple top bank executives told The PUNCH on Sunday that almost three weeks after the promise, the apex bank had yet to make good its promise.

They said the development had put banks in a very tight FX liquidity position, a situation that has made many lenders to temporarily suspend several FX transactions including school fees and Personal Travel Allowance applications.

Findings show the situation has also worsened dollar liquidity at the parallel market as bank customers shift to the black market to meet their forex needs.

“The FX backlogs have not cleared. The promise has not been made good. We are hoping that the new CBN governor will begin a discussion with banks on it or clear them immediately,” the executive director of a commercial bank told one of correspondents on condition of anonymity.

Also, a top official of Tier-2 bank privy to the development, said, “We have yet to see the FX backlogs cleared including the overdue forward contract obligations. We don’t know when this will be cleared. Unfortunately, the situation has worsened our FX position, making many banks to put some FX demands of their customers on hold.”

A report by JPMorgan, a United States-based lender put the total amount of forward contract debt owed by the CBN at $6.84bn. The CBN has however dismissed the report.

CBN: Cardoso, 4 Deputies To Be Grilled By Senate Today

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The Senate is set to screen the new CBN Governor, Olayemi Cardoso, alongside four Deputy Governors today.

Cardoso was appointed on September 15 by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu following the voluntary resignation of Godwin Emefiele who was suspended from the position by the president in June this year.

Ajuri Ngelale, Special Adviser to the president on Media and Publicity had in a statement confirming the appointees said their appointment was subject to the confirmation of the Senate.

According to a statement signed by the Senate Leader, Michael Opeyemi Bamidele, on Monday, the senate will on Tuesday screen all the nominees on resumption from its annual recess.

The statement said: “The Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria will resume plenary on Tuesday, September 26. We will consider the screening of Dr. Cardoso at the Committee of the whole.

“Dr. Cardoso will be screened alongside four deputy governors namely Mrs. Emem Nnana Usoro, Mr. Muhammad Sani Abdullahi Dattijo, Mr. Philip Ikeazor, and Dr. Bala M. Bello.

“Besides, the Senate has scheduled to screen the ministerial nominees – Dr. Jamila Bio Ibrahim and Mr. Ayodele Olawande, respectively designated as Minister of Youth and Minister of State for Youth on October 3.”

Cardoso is coming to the office amidst serious problems affecting the country’s monetary system.

Top on the list for the new CBN governor to tackle is the falling value of the naira, as well, as the instability in the country’s foreign reserves.

APC/PDP Bicker Over Alleged Removal of Petrol Subsidy

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Phrank Shaibu and Bola Tinubu

The ruling All Progressives Congress, APC, has urged Nigerians to discard claim that fuel subsidy has been reintroduced.

Phrank Shaibu, a spokesman to the PDP presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar, last week, claimed that the President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration has started paying subsidy to marketers on the petrol consumption in the country.

The president had during his inauguration on May 29, 2023, said fuel ‘subsidy is gone’, thus putting an end to the humungous amount paid as subsidy on petrol to marketers.

Reacting, Felix Morka, APC spokesman said in a statement on Monday that the claim is fake news peddled by the opposition party, saying there is no evidence to show that the federal government has reintroduce the regime of fuel subsidy.

The APC spokesman said the PDP is yet to recover from losing the presidential election and has resolved to mislead Nigerians on the subsidy matter.

Part of the statement reads: “Shaibu’s only ‘evidence’ for such an arrant conclusion is that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has appointed more media aides than economic and security advisers, conveniently glossing over the fact that Mr. President was swift in rejigging the security architecture and repositioning the Armed Forces for optimal performance in defence of lives and property.

“Certainly, he does not understand the issues and the interplay of statecraft and economic management initiatives by President Tinubu to remove age-old distortions and contradictions, accelerate and solidify all round recovery and prosperity for our country.

“That Shaibu described as ‘lies’, the administration’s courageous decisions to remove fuel subsidy, harmonize the foreign exchange regimes and sign into law the Students’ Loan Act, only buttresses his poor understanding of economic development and governance. That the fine details of these visionary and people-centred policies are still being worked out and have yet to run their due course cannot and do not negate their valid objectives and potential transformative impact. The President has dutifully appointed experienced and highly skilled professionals to key institutions of the economy, including the Ministry of Finance, Central Bank of Nigeria CBN, and Federal Inland Revenue Service FIRS and created the Ministry of Marine and Blue Economy in a patriotic zeal to reposition and grow the economy.

“Lifting the Visa ban on Nigerians by the United Arab Emirates UAE authorities should ordinarily make any well-meaning Nigerian happy. Diplomatic rapprochement between Nigeria and UAE authorities is ongoing and details of outcomes will soon be made public.

“The matter of the proposed meeting with United States of America President Joe Biden does not even require elaboration. Having met with President Tinubu on the sidelines of the G-20 Nations summit in India, another meeting with President Biden during the United Nation’s General Assembly UNGA had become unnecessary and was not even on President Tinubu’s schedule, contrary to preliminary indications on the matter.

Due to the falling value of the naira and the rise in the price of crude oil in the international market, petrol dealers had last week said the federal government may spend about N1.68tn as subsidy on Premium Motor Spirit, popularly called petrol, from September to December this year.

Uzodimma: I’m The Best Candidate To Lead Imo Now

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Hope Uzodimma

Governor Hope Uzodinma of Imo State has emphasised his readiness to contest in the forth coming governorship election scheduled for November 11, 2023, saying that he is best qualified to lead the State now amid the others.

The Governor cited his notable achievements in his ongoing first tenure and expressed confidence that he is the best candidate to lead Imo State to even greater heights.

Speaking on a live Igbo programme at the Hot 99.5 FM Owerri, weekend, where he inspected various facilities of the broadcast house, Governor Uzodimma highlighted his commitment to repositioning Imo State and building upon the progress achieved thus far.

He noted that the significant strides his administration has made and the transformative initiatives undertaken to improve the lives of the citizens are the records his opponents do not have because they lack the capacity for such.

His words: “I am fully prepared to contest in the upcoming off-cycle gubernatorial election. I firmly believe that I am the best candidate to continue leading Imo State towards a brighter future.

“Through the implementation of impactful policies and programmes, I am confident in our ability to propel Imo State to even greater heights.”

The Governor highlighted some of his accomplishments to include infrastructural development, educational reforms, healthcare advancements, youth empowerment and development among other efforts to attract investments and foster economic growth within the State.

“I firmly believe that we have laid a strong foundation for the transformation of Imo State. However, there is still much work to be done. I am committed to continuing our efforts to improve governance, foster socio-economic development, and uplift the lives of the people,” Governor Uzodimma stated.

The Governor had further used the occasion  to communicate his vision for Imo State, present his case for re-election, all of which underscored his track record and dedication to the State’s  progress.

OPINION: The North And Tinubu’s Appointments

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Lasisi Olagunju

By Lasisi Olagunju

President Bola Tinubu gave our country’s Minister of Defence and Minister of State, Defence to the North; he gave the North Minister of Police Affairs and Minister of State, Police Affairs; he gave the North Minister of Education and Minister of State, Education; he gave the North Minister of Agriculture and Food Security and Minister of State, Agriculture and Food Security. Again; he gave the North the Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare plus Minister of Steel Development and Minister of State, Steel Development. To the North, again, Tinubu gave Minister of Water Resources and Minister of State, Water Resources. I can go on and on and add the Minister of Housing and Urban Development and Minister of State, Housing and Urban Development. No part of the South has that privilege of having ‘couplet’ ministers managing key sectors. It is double, double blessing for the North. I don’t think any president has ever done that – not even the insular nepotist, Muhammadu Buhari, did. But why did Tinubu do that? Sacrifice, obedience and gratitude for favours. Sacrifice (libation) to power timekeepers, obedience to janitors of politics, and gratitude to regime makers. “O Lord that lends me life, lend me a heart replete with thankfulness!” (William Shakespeare in Henry VI).

But my people say it is impossible to get it right if you are asked to sweep the compound of the witch. If you do it well, she will accuse you of overdoing it; if you do not do it well enough, she will accuse you of not doing it at all. The North is like Hades. In the pantheon of the Greek, Hades is that greedy god who wants more of everything and who shares what he has with none. The Yoruba have Esu which takes everything wholly and completely. Those who know who Esu is know how fatally wrong it could be to appease him with one hand; he demands your two hands and ten fingers (owo meweewa) to deliver his offerings. Yet, whether at home or at the crossroads or even in palaces, Esu takes; he does not give; and when he takes, he offers neither thanks nor thankfulness. Those who know his oríkì say he is the master of the marketplace who buys without paying; the one who ensures that nothing is bought and nothing is sold unless it is nightfall – and on his own terms. For their way to be free of trouble, all other deities worship and propitiate him. That is northern Nigeria; it is not enough that it has all the above. It wants more, and maybe all.

The North is complaining. Its elites say they made this president, now the supposed side chick is ‘forming’ independence; he is neither singing their song nor dancing to their beats – the right way. I have a sultry parallel to draw here: The bed is made, the room is scented with the fragrance of desire, the groom is unknotting his boxers, yet the bride is complaining that her husband is not paying enough attention to her needs. What does the hot bride want to eat that is not yet on fire?

I do not belong to the Tinubu orchestra; what I sing here is my own chord. We may complain about the quality of some of the Tinubu appointees but the justice of the spread between the north and the south no one should. The cluster structure of the appointments would be seen by critics as the president zoning and centralizing prebendal privileges in the hands of regional power lords. His friends and fans would argue that the cluster pattern is the president’s way of ticking problems and attaching them to localised solutions. If the North has Defence Minister and the defence ministry’s Minister of State; if it has Police Affairs Minister and the ministry’s minister of state in addition to the National Security Adviser and the Chief of Defence Staff, should it still have the mouth to complain of lack of official attention to its endemic insecurity? If the North has the Minister of Education and the ministry’s Minister of State, should it still rummage for policies that will wean it of the blight of mass illiteracy and of having uncountable millions of out-of-school-children? If the North has the Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, should we ever hear it lament high incidences of child and maternal mortality and epidemics of preventable diseases? The whole of the agriculture ministry is ceded to the North; the entire Water Resources ministry belongs to the North. We wait to see how it will use these to feed its dying, hungry poor – more than eighty percent of its population. It is like now that the South-East has the Minister of Works, we wait to see who that zone will blame if the East-West Road remains unbuilt at the end of Tinubu’s reign. And, if the management of the economy is in the hands of the Lagos-Yoruba, the country knows who to attack now that a dollar is selling for a thousand naira.

Samuel Butler, author of ‘The Way of All Flesh’, warns that what is golden is tact, not silence. Although my fish does not swim in Tinubu’s river, I join this ‘noise’ because of the hypocrisy of those involved. New groups are being formed and old hacks are being activated to compose complaints. One of them is the Arewa Economic Forum (AEF) which recently accused Tinubu of what it termed ‘Yorubanisation’ and ‘Lagoslisation’ of his appointments in the economic and finance sectors. Chairman of the Forum, Alhaji Ibrahim Shehu Dandakata, at a press conference in Abuja said the North was not happy that it was being left out “in the Finance and ICT sectors.” Voices from outside the North are also being borrowed the perfect way slave owners deploy their bondmen to battle. There is an Ile Ife man whose business name is MURIC; he joined the orchestra from his Lagos base and wrapped the nepotism charge with boubou of religion: “All five key appointments made by President Tinubu to revive the economy were given to Christians and Yorubas mainly. These new appointees include the Minister of Finance, Wale Edun; the newly nominated CBN Governor, Dr. Michael Cardoso; Hon. Zacch Adedeji, acting chairman, FIRS; the chairman, Tax Reforms Committee, Mr. Taiwo Oyedele, and Mr. Tope Fasua, Special Adviser on Economic Affairs,” MURIC’s promoter, Ishaq Akintola, said in a statement. The MURIC man’s puppeteers did not tell him or he forgot to remind them that an Atiku Bagudu from Kebbi State is the Minister of Budget and Economic Planning. Ishaq Akintola is Yoruba, he is attacking the Yoruba; he is Muslim; he accused his Muslim-Muslim presidency of marginalization of Muslims. Perfect isé erú (slave job) delivered the erú way. In folklore, we tell the hunter to use the sword of Tortoise to kill Tortoise (idà ahun la fií pa ahun). One of the best newspaper articles I read on Nigeria’s north-south relations was written in the early 1980s by Banji Kuroloja, editor of the Nigerian Tribune from 1984 to 1988. Because the title of the piece came very simple and catchy, I will remember it forever: “Singing Their Songs.” I can’t forget. I also can’t forget the takeaway from it: “The ubiquitous North has a way of making others sing their songs.” Forty years plus after that article was published, nothing has changed; the falconer still holds the falcon by the throat, making it say what it is told to say. We’ve seen how abjectly the MURIC man recited his verse, shedding blood when the owner of the problem was shedding tears.

Even the National Publicity Secretary of the North’s apex organization, the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), Professor Tukur Muhammad-Baba, joined the discourse. In a newspaper interview, he accused Tinubu of giving sensitive and lucrative appointments to persons from his ethnic Yoruba stock. He said Tinubu should not be doing what he is doing “in a deeply fractious federation like ours.” He remembered that “a part of the constitution directs that… appointments must reflect the social diversity of the country in terms of balancing, of place of origin, indigeneship, ethnicity, religion, etc.” Muhammad-Baba and his ACF did not remember the existence of this constitutional provision throughout the eight years of imperial Buhari, Bayajjida II of the kingdom of Northern Nigeria. “Few love to hear the sins they love to act.” That is how William Shakespeare, in his ‘Pericles, Prince of Tyre’, elegantly explains what hypocrisy does to people’s sense of shame.

Not knowing when to complain is a problem. That the North believes it has the moral right to talk at all is because it thinks itself senior in the Nigerian arrangement. But I know that the greedy is red-eyed twice: when he eats his yam alone and when his neighbours converge to eat their pounded yam. For eight years, Muhammadu Buhari dared the other parts of Nigeria outside his north and fed àdí (palm kernel oil) to Èsù with his provocative nepotism. He did it without personal consequences because he stood on very firm grounds of regional supremacy. While he wantonly shredded Nigeria’s garment of diversity, today’s noisemakers (and their slaves) egged him on with claps of endorsement. They okayed Buhari’s cronyism and hollered that the spread of the appointments was not necessary but that what mattered were competence and performance. They felt (and feel) no shame that at the end of their Buhari’s eight years, what was harvested from their farm of ‘competence’ and ‘performance’ was mass hunger and mass misery.

I know that there are certain All Progressives Congress (APC) masquerades who wear costumes of region and religion to complain about their not having posts (yet). If they are in the cold, whose fault should that be? Tinubu’s is a government of libation, everyone who has sense knows. But when you refuse to offer prayers in the right temple and drop sacrifices in the proper shrines, expect disappointments. There is a Festus Keyamo whose ministerial dream suffered reluctance of nomination and controversy of clearance. But, apparently because he knew in what river to wash his hands, his troubles eased off with apologies in sherds of remorse. There is, on the other hand, the petite Nasir El Rufai who went through the examination process supervised by prayerful Godwin Akpabio but had his result withheld by those who held the yam and the knife. What else is there to say when a pupil finds their report card in the mouth of the headmaster’s goat? Yet, there are some who got what they wanted because of the good boy and good girl they had been to the new powers in town. If you keep your palms clean, it is not every time you pour libation to dispensers of favours. And, I have here Ezeulu in Chinua Achebe’s ‘Arrow of God’. The old priest is full of apologies for not setting before his guests “even a pot of palm wine.” The response he gets is to the effect that “when a father calls his children together, he should not worry about placing palm wine before them” (page 143). But that is a father that has paid his dues and has not taken more than he has put down.

Now, is it not a shame that the complaints we hear from the North are about elite privileges and not about the hardship in town? Think about the existential struggles of an average Nigerian and what interests the political class. Like an exasperated friend said on Friday, inflation is hitting the roof, the naira is sinking, market capitalisation at the Nigerian stock market is tumbling, people are dying, yet what interests the elite is what appointees come from their bedrooms. Instead of the northern elites complaining about the ethnic origin of those managing the economy, they should be worried about the calamity of their own failure as leaders and the collapse of all humanity in their region. On the streets of Ibadan, we encounter, daily, beggars from the North with heart-rending stories. This last Saturday, one of them, Harira Muhammadu, told the Saturday Tribune that she left her husband, aged father and children behind in Kano to face a “life of uncertainty” begging on the streets of Ibadan. She said she had no other choice than to beg because the North had collapsed and she could not afford to watch her children starve. “If things were easy and sweet for us back home, we would not come here to live this life of uncertainty. I have some children with me and I do not have anything to feed them with and it is a lot of work…I remember when I first came here many years ago, I did not know where to go or what to do and I was afraid and all. I would cry and wipe my tears. Sometimes, the children would cry with me but I endured because I knew that if I returned home (to the North) the suffering would be more severe,” she said.

There is no southern town or city without sad stories such as that of the beggar above. Yet, check all conferences, read books, monographs and pamphlets from the North, the poor perennially have no space there. There is never a conversation there on the imperative of finding a cure for the pandemic of poverty in that region. The North’s eunuch stands erect (or has an erection) only when there is a South to intimidate. Everything is about power and elite comfort carefully packaged as regional nationalism and/or duty imposed by religion. The elites of the North won’t keep quiet until they are back in power to ride roughshod on the other parts of Nigeria. Check how to deal with bullies. Stand up to them.


Dr Olagunju, a Columnist for Nigeria Tribune wrote this on 25th September, 2023