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Again, Train Derails, Passengers Safe

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Train - NRC

By Ayodele Oni

The Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) has calmed frayed nerves over reports of a train derailment Saturday.

The NRC confirmed on Sunday that all passengers involved in a train derailment incident on the Warri-Itakpe Train Service (WITS) are safe and accounted for.

The incident occurred yesterday, Saturday, November 1, 2025, at approximately 19:30 hours, involving two of the seven coaches of the train at Kilometer 212+8m, Agbor.

According to a statement on Sunday signed by Kayode Opeifa, Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of the NRC, preliminary investigations suggest that the derailment may have been caused by suspected track vandalism.

Despite the incident, the NRC assured the public that all passengers were safely evacuated to Agbor, with no casualties or injuries recorded.

“Our recovery team, supported by security personnel, has been at the site since last night carrying out recovery operations. These efforts are progressing steadily and are expected to be completed soon,” the statement read.

As a precautionary measure, train services on the corridor have been temporarily suspended on Sunday to enable a comprehensive security and safety audit of the track and related infrastructure.

The NRC expressed sincere regret for any inconvenience caused to passengers and the general public, promising that normal operations will resume as soon as the corridor is verified safe.

This incident has reignited concerns about the safety and maintenance of Nigeria’s railway infrastructure, with track vandalism emerging as a recurring challenge.

The corporation’s swift response and ongoing recovery efforts have been praised, though the temporary suspension of services may disrupt travel plans along the Warri-Itakpe route.

Authorities are expected to provide further updates as investigations into the cause of the derailment continue, with a focus on enhancing security measures to prevent future occurrences.

FG Moves To End Doctors’ Strike, To Release N11.9 Billion Within 72 Hours

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Medical Doctors in Nigeria

By Ayodele Oni

In a swift move to end the ongoing strike by members of the Nigeria Association of Resident Doctors, (NARD), the Federal Government is set to release ₦11.995 billion within 72 hours to clear outstanding arrears, including accoutrement allowances owed to health workers.

It has also been confirmed that the full payment of ₦10.6 billion for the 2025 Medical Residency Training Fund  (MRTF) to resident doctors nationwide will commence immediately.

According to Dr. Adekunle Salako, Minister of State for Health and Social Welfare, the payments reflect President Bola Tinubu’s commitment to improving doctors’ welfare and sustaining industrial harmony across the health sector.

Salako reaffirmed this during a meeting between the Ministry’s management and the leadership of the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD), following recent agitation over welfare and professional concerns which has resulted into strike action.

Deputy Director and Head of Operations, Information and Public Relations at the Ministry, Alabama Balogun,in a statement on Saturday, stated that the Minister confirmed the commencement of the payment of seven months’ arrears of the 25 and 35 per cent upward review of the Consolidated Medical Salary Structure (CONMESS) and Consolidated Health Salary Structure (CONHESS) to all categories of health workers.

He revealed that ₦10 billion was paid in August 2025, while another ₦21.3 billion has been transferred to the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS) account for further disbursement.

According to him, the government also granted special waivers to enable massive recruitment of healthcare professionals across federal tertiary institutions to address shortages caused by brain drain.

Over 20,000 health workers, including doctors, nurses, and allied professionals, were employed in 2024, with another 15,000 already approved for recruitment in 2025, Salako affirmed.

To strengthen dialogue and resolve welfare issues, he said the Ministry has engaged Prof. Dafe Otobo, an industrial relations expert, to mediate between government and the unions.

Prof. Otobo, he said, has held meetings with the unions individually and collectively, in collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment, to fast-track consensus on allowances, salary relativity, and other contentious matters.

On the dismissal of five doctors from the Federal Teaching Hospital, Lokoja, the Minister clarified that three, who did not appear before a properly constituted disciplinary panel have been offered reabsorption into service, adding that the remaining two cases have been referred to Prof. Otobo for review.

He added that delays in promotions and payment processing are largely due to technical issues within IPPIS, but discussions are ongoing with relevant agencies to address them.

“Our health workforce is the foundation of Nigeria’s healthcare reform. Every policy and investment under the Nigeria Health Sector Renewal Initiative is anchored on their well-being and motivation.”

PDP Crisis Deepens As  Anyanwu’s Group Suspends Damagum, Appoints Acting Chairman

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PDP Anyanwu Faction

By Adesina Soyooye

The Peoples Democratic Party is on its final stretch to Golgotha.

The crisis which has left the Party ineffective since 2023, worsened on Saturday with suspension and counter-suspension.

24 hours after a Federal High Court dumped its scheduled November National  Convention into the dustbin, the Party suspended, for one month, four of its National Working Committee officers, including the National Secretary, Senator Samuel Anyanwu and the National Legal Adviser.

Those suspended are members of the faction loyal to the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, Nyesom Wike.

But in a counter move, the Wike group announced the suspension of the National Chairman, Ambassador Ilya Umar Damagum, and five other members of the National Working Committee.

At a press conference in Abuja, Saturday,  on behalf of the factional NWC, Senator Anyanwu, announced that the party’s National Vice Chairman (North Central), Mohammed Abdulrahman, has been appointed the Acting National Chairman. According to Anyanwu, he replaces Ambassador Damagum who he accused of incompetence, disobedience to Court orders and financial misconduct.

Anyanwu: “Unfortunately, some people may say that the National Secretary, National Organising Secretary who has the responsibility of monitoring everything and the National Legal Adviser, who is responsible for all legal issues, were purportedly suspended.

“On this note, we decided to suspend the National Chairman of the party, Ambassador Ilya Damagum, for incompetence, financial misconduct, and disregard for Court judgment.

“He has been suspended for one month and should face the Disciplinary Committee.

“Secondly, we also suspended the National Publicity Secretary, Debo Ologunagba, for issuing statements without the party’s approval, and the Deputy National Vice Chairman (South), Taofeek Arapaja, has also been suspended.

“The National Financial Secretary, Daniel Woyenguikoro, who has been involved in alleged financial misconduct, has also been suspended.

“The National Youth Leader, Sulaiman Kadade, and the Deputy National Secretary, Setonji Koshoedo, have also been suspended for 30 days.

“All of them will be sent to the Disciplinary Committee to show cause why they should not be expelled.

“Therefore, we are announcing the National Vice Chairman (North Central) to serve as the Acting National Chairman, Mohammed Abdulrahman.”

Insecurity In Nigeria Not Based On Religion – Shehu Sani Reacts To Trump

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Senator Shehu Sani

By Ayodele Oni

Former Kaduna Central senator, Shehu Sani, has said the United States (U.S), President Donald Trump designation of Nigeria as a “country of particular concern” due to alleged persecution of Christians, is “baseless and misleading,” and apparently emanated from misinformation.

In a statement posted on his X handle on Saturday, Sani maintained that the U.S. President’s stance was the outcome of “outright falsehoods” that were deliberately provided to him by groups he referred to as “anarchists, lackeys, and apprentices of neocolonialism” whose intent is to create “division and discord in Nigeria.”

President Trump had made the designation public on Friday via his Truth Social platform, where he alleged that Christianity in the country was facing an “existential threat.”

In his post, Trump wrote: “Thousands of Christians are being killed. Radical Islamists are responsible for this mass slaughter,” and further declared that the U.S. was prepared to “save Christians” in Nigeria and other affected nations.

In his response, Sani dismissed the claim as simple “misinformation and propaganda,” firmly arguing that the root of insecurity in Nigeria is not based on religion.

He insisted: “The designation of Nigeria is founded on outright falsehoods and wholesale misinformation. Terrorists and bandits in Nigeria kill and kidnap their victims irrespective of their religious beliefs. The records are self-evident in the last 15 years.”

The former lawmaker further argued that Nigeria’s religious demographics make systematic persecution virtually impossible.

He added, “Looking at the Muslim-Christian ratio in Nigeria, it’s technically impossible for one faith to persecute another. Nigeria is a Lion and Tiger situation, not a Lion and Zebra configuration.”

Sani accused those influencing Trump’s position of seeking personal advantage by exploiting the nation’s complex social structure.

He stressed that “Trump was misinformed by anarchists, lackeys, and apprentices of neocolonialism who aim to benefit from the seeds of division and discontent,” and issued a strong caution that “this particular weapon raised against this country shall never prosper.”

The senator concluded by urging the international community to provide genuine help to Nigeria in its struggle against terrorism instead of promoting false narratives.

He simply stated,“Nigeria, like all nations battling terrorism, needs support and assistance to tackle its security challenges.”

Ado-Odo/Ota LG Lifts Suspension On Chairman, As Ogun State Deputy Governor Intervenes

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Wasiu Adewale

By Akinwale Kasali

Days after the Legislative Council of Ado-Odo/Ota Local Government in Ogun State suspended its Chairman, Hon. Wasiu Adewale for gross misconduct, it has however lifted the Suspension.

The Councillors stepped down their decision by lifting the Suspension placed on the Chairman following the intervention of the State Deputy Governor, Noimot Salako-Oyedele, and other leaders of the All Progressives Congress, APC, in the State.

The suspended Chairman also heeded to the request of the Councillors by presenting the Council’s income and expenditure account.

The Leader of the House, Mutairu Gbadamosi, said the suspension was lifted during plenary on Friday, saying it was taken in the interest of peace, stability, and progress of the local government.

In a statement on Saturday, Gbadamosi said the Council’s earlier suspension of Lawal was in line with its constitutional powers and oversight functions over issues bordering on transparency, accountability, and administrative conduct.

“You will recall that, in the exercise of our constitutional powers and in line with our oversight functions, this Honourable House took the decision to suspend the Executive Chairman, Alhaji Wasiu Lawal Adewale, over issues bordering on transparency, accountability, and administrative conduct,” Gbadamosi said.

He further explained that respected party leaders, including the deputy governor, Salako-Oyedele; the member representing Ado-Odo/Ota Federal Constituency, Tunji Akinosi; the Commissioner for Culture and Tourism, Sessan Fagbayi; Lai Taiwo; Kazeem Salako; and the APC LG Chairman, J.J. Akeran, intervened in the crisis and helped reconcile both sides.

“Their fatherly and motherly guidance and mediation have brought about reconciliation and mutual understanding; and in view of the executive Chairman’s  compliance with one of our key resolutions, the presentation of the Income and Expenditure Account of the Local Government, this Honourable House has resolved to lift the suspension earlier placed on him,” he stated.

Following the lifting of the suspension, the Acting Chairman, Abosede Balogun, officially handed over the affairs of the Local Government to Lawal in the presence of  Party leaders who witnessed the event.

“This symbolic moment represents a return to normalcy and a renewed commitment to collective service,” Gbadamosi added.

PDP Suspends Four NWC Members For One Month

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Debo Ologunagba

By Ayodele Oni

Barely 24 hours after a Court order put on hold the national convention of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), the National Working Committee (NWC)  has wielded the big stick against several top officials perceived to be loyal to the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike.

The NWC has suspended the National Secretary, Samuel Anyanwu, the National Legal Adviser, Kamaldeen Ajibade (SAN), the National Organizing Secretary, Umar Bature, and the Deputy National Legal Adviser.

The decision, which underscores the deepening internal division within the opposition party, was announced by the National Publicity Secretary, Debo Ologunagba, after a marathon NWC meeting held at the party’s National Secretariat in Abuja on Saturday.

“The affected officials are hereby suspended for one month and referred to the PDP Disciplinary Committee for further action,” Ologunagba said in a statement after the meeting.

Party insiders disclosed that the suspended officials had allegedly aligned with Wike’s camp and had been absent from key meetings in recent weeks — a move interpreted by the leadership as an act of insubordination.

The development comes barely 24 hours after the Federal High Court in Abuja ordered the PDP to halt preparations for its National Convention, earlier scheduled for November 15 and 16, 2025, in Ibadan, Oyo State.

Justice James Omotosho, who delivered the ruling, directed that the convention be suspended until the party complies with all constitutional and statutory requirements.

Reacting to the ruling, the PDP maintained that it would appeal the judgment, insisting that it would not derail preparations for the convention or affect the party’s internal restructuring process.

“While we respect the decision of the court, we remain focused on repositioning the PDP and will pursue all legal means to ensure our constitutional rights are protected,” Ologunagba stated.

Alleged Genocide: Bayo Onanuga Replies Rubio, Trump’s Secretary Of State, Says Nigeria Needs Support

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Donald Trump and Marco Rubio and Bayo Onanuga

By Adesina Soyooye

The Special  Adviser to President Bola Tinubu on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, has responded to a statement by Marco Rubio, United States of America’s Secretary of State, about alleged Christian genocide in Nigeria.

Onanuga’s reaction was made in a post on his official X handle on Saturday, November 1, 2025.

Rubio had shared on his official page that several Christians are being slaughtered and emphasised that the US government is ready and willing to act.

Rubio: “The ongoing slaughter of thousands of Christians in Nigeria by radical Islamists and Fulani ethnic militias is both tragic and unacceptable. As President Donald Trump said, the United State of America stands ready, willing and able to act”.

But Onanuga in a  post on Saturday said Rubio’s statement is far from the truth, that Christians are not being slaughtered in Nigeria.

According to Onanuga,  both Christians and Muslims are attacked in Nigeria. What Nigeria needs from America, he said, is military support to fight the violent extremists in the country.

Onanuga, in part: “Dear Secretary Rubio, there is no ongoing slaughter of thousands of Christians in Nigeria. This is a gross exaggeration of the Nigerian situation. What we do have are sporadic attacks on some villages by bandits and terrorists and the attacks are religiously insensitive. Christians, Muslims, churches and mosques are attacked randomly”.

Police Confirms Abduction Of  Medical Doctor  In Anambra

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CP Ikioye Orutugu

By Adesina Soyooye

A Consultant Neurosurgeon, identified as Dr Mbanugo T., has been abducted in Uruagu Nnewi in Nnewi North Local Government, Anambra State.

The Medical Doctor was abducted on 30th October along the New Nnewi-Oba road.

The news of his abduction was first broken by an official of the Nigeria Medical Association in Anambra State.

He told  journalists that his colleague-doctor was abducted Thursday evening and that relevant government agencies had been told of the sad incident.

“He was kidnapped by armed assailants along the New Nnewi-Oba Road in the evening of Thursday.

“We have been assured that the kidnappers are being tracked. Please let us remember Dr Mbanugo in our prayers and remain security conscious. The evil days are not yet over.”

On Friday, SP Ikenga Okoye, spokesman for the Anambra State Police  confirmed the incident.

He said that the Command received the report of the abduction, and added that the Commissioner of Police, Ikioye Orutugu, has already ordered a full-scale investigation on receiving the report.

“The Anambra State Police Command has received a report of the abduction of a medical doctor at Uruagu, Nnewi, in Nnewi North Local Government Area of the State.

“According to preliminary information, the incident occurred on Thursday, October 30, 2025, when the unidentified assailants reportedly abducted the victim under yet-to-be-ascertained circumstances.

“Upon receiving the report, the Commissioner of Police, Anambra State Command, CP Ikioye Orutugu, immediately ordered the launch of an intensive investigation and directed the tactical teams of the Command to ensure the safe rescue of the victim and apprehension of the perpetrators.

“The Command assures members of the public that every effort is being made to ensure the swift resolution of the case.”

At the time of filing this story, there has been no breakthrough.

Ondo Police Command Parades 10 Suspects Linked With OBT, Kidnapping, Burglary

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Police Officer

By Ayodele Oni

Operatives of the Ondo State Police Command have arrested a suspect who fraudulently obtained the sum of ₦10 million  under the pretext of supplying a set of laboratory equipment.

The suspect, one Adekugbe Moses, male, aged 29 years, is among the ten suspects paraded by the command for committing various offences.

Moses was alleged for offences bordering on Obtaining Money by False Pretence and Stealing by Conversion.

The State Commissioner of Police, Adebowale Laws, who briefed Journalists in Akure, at the weekend, stated that “The case was reported on the 10th of January, 2025, by one Engineer Adekunle Adesina, male, who alleged that the suspect fraudulently obtained the sum of Ten Million Naira from him under the pretext of supplying a set of laboratory equipment.

“However, upon receiving the said amount, the suspect absconded to Lagos State and converted the money to his personal use without delivering any of the promised items.

“Acting swiftly on the report, detectives from the Command commenced a detailed investigation which led to the arrest of the suspect.

“During interrogation, Adekugbe Moses confessed to the crime, admitting that he had no intention of procuring the said equipment. Upon the conclusion of the investigation, the suspect would have his days in court to face the full weight of the law.”

Laws revealed that two suspects were equally arrested for cultistism and illegal possession of firearm.

“On the 26th of October, 2025, at about 0530 hours, operatives of the Command arrested two suspected cultists and armed robbery suspects at Ipele, Owo Local Government Area.

“The suspects are Lawason Munini (male) and one other, both of whom were apprehended following credible intelligence.

“A pump action gun was recovered from the suspects. During interrogation, they confessed to being members of a notorious cult group known as the Malians Club, comprising about ten members.

“One of the suspects revealed that he was initiated into the group after paying an initiation fee. The group is said to operate from a structure along Ipele Road, which serves as their meeting point.

“Acting on intelligence, operatives raided the identified hideouts in Ipele and Melege, though some members escaped. The Command is intensifying efforts to apprehend the fleeing suspects and recover more arms.”

Another feat by the command was recovery of firearms and rescue of kidnap victims in Akoko area of the state.

“In another major success, the Anti-Kidnapping Unit of the Command recorded a commendable breakthrough along the Oka–Akungba axis, where three kidnapped victims were rescued after a fierce exchange of gunfire with their abductors.

“One of the kidnappers was neutralized in the process, while others fled with gunshot injuries. Recovered from the scene were two locally-made pistols, expended cartridges, mobile phones, and other personal effects belonging to the victims. All rescued victims have since been safely reunited with their families.

The commissioner announced the case of one suspect that allegedly hacked into the WhatsApp page of a retired senior police officer.

“In continuation of the Command’s sustained efforts to track down cybercriminals and fraudsters who exploit technology to defraud unsuspecting members of the public, operatives of the Ondo State Police Command have arrested one Ayodeji Oluwapelumi Samuel, male, for offences bordering on Fraud, Obtaining Money by False Pretence, and Stealing by Conversion.

“The arrest followed a petition received from a very senior retired police officer, who reported that on the 4th of October, 2025, she discovered that her WhatsApp account had been hacked by the suspect and his accomplices.

“Using the compromised account, the culprits deceitfully contacted several of her associates, fraudulently obtaining various sums of money amounting to over One Million Naira.

“Upon receipt of the report, detectives from the Command’s Criminal Investigation Department immediately swung into action.

“The team sought and obtained a Bankers’ Order from the court on the PalmPay account used by the suspect to receive funds from the unsuspecting victims.

“The response from PalmPay’s compliance unit furnished the Command with the full profile details of Ayodeji Oluwapelumi Samuel, which enabled operatives to track his digital trail and telephone number.

“A coordinated intelligence-led operation thereafter led to his arrest in Ibillo/Ososo, Akoko-Edo Local Government Area of Edo State, where he was found in possession of incriminating evidence linking him directly to the crime.”

“Daddy, Can You Believe It? They Are Saying Mummy Is Dead!” – Yusuph Olaniyonu Mourns Wife”

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Yusuph Olaniyonu and Wife

I do not know why she fondly referred to the Almighty Allah as the ‘Owner of Life’. I know it is the equivalent of one of Allah’s names, Al-Mumeet (the One who gives life and the One who takes it away. He ordains who becomes lifeless). On several casions when we discussed a plan or talked about a politician planning for the 2027 or 2031 elections, her retort was usually that “why do people plan as if they own their lives? Do they consider what the Owner of Life has in stock for them?” On such occasions, I usually wonder why she enjoyed referring to God with that deserved, fitting, and apt appellation.

Then, on October 14, 2025, the Owner of Life actually manifested Himself to her, her family, friends, well-wishers, colleagues, and associates, revealing why He truly deserves that appellation.

The previous day, I had driven in the same car with my second son, Oladipo, from our Abuja home to drop Aishat Odunayo Olaniyonu, my wife of 28 years at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Airport, Abuja, for her journey to Lagos. She was accompanied by our youngest son, Oladepo.

They were to be an advance party for a wedding ceremony that the entire family was to attend on October 18 in Lagos.

Then, this fateful Tuesday morning, I spoke to her on the phone about 10 am as I worked out.

She was perfectly okay. She had no complaint.

I returned home and was preparing to go out when the phone call came from Oladepo. He had left his mum about 50 minutes earlier, hale and hearty, in the Ojodu area where they stayed with a family friend. He was already somewhere in the Alimosho area to deliver a gift he had brought from the UK for his late friend’s mother.

He just got to his destination and had not disembarked from the vehicle when he was informed that his mother had slumped where he had left her in Ojodu. He immediately put a phone call through to me.

“Daddy, call Aunty Ronke. They said mummy slumped”, he said in a very hasty and frightened voice. I did as he said and simply asked Ronke if my wife had been taken to the hospital.

The person I called was in an extreme state of chaos. I directed that there should be no waste of time. She must be rushed to the hospital. Our first son, Oladapo, who called me on the phone advised that while they were taking her for medical attention, we should quickly observe two rakat prayers for her recovery. I complied. I knew we needed divine intervention when a woman who was hale and hearty less than two hours before then was reported to have slumped.

After the prayer, I picked up my already packed bag and headed for th Abuja airport.

I believed I had to get to Lagos as fast as possible to take charge of the situation. A protocol officer at the airport was already helping to arrange an airline ticket for my journey to Lagos.

On my way, I put a call to Oladepo to be sure he had gotten back to where his mum was and could give me a first-hand report of the situation. By this time, the picture I had in my head and mind was that Odunayo only fainted and would be revived in a hospital after which I had to be on the ground in Lagos to monitor the situation and care for her until she was fit to return to Abuja.

However, I got a shocker when I called Oladepo on my way to the Airport. As soon as he picked up my phone call, I heard the young man shouting at the top of his voice: “Let me see my mummy, let me see my mummy”. When I told him to calm down and tell me what was happening, he shouted: “Daddy, can you believe it? They are saying mummy is dead”. Inalilahi wa ina Ilaehi rajiun.

From the benefit of hindsight, the Al-Mumeet whom Odunayo liked to call ‘the Owner of Life’ had demanded her life about 90 minutes after our conversation. She was not sick. She was her usual boisterous self when we had that phone conversation. A hair stylist was in the house to dress her hair and she was to wash her hair with a shampoo in the bathroom.

She left the living room and as soon as she got into the bathroom, the Owner of Life took her life. She had not uncorked the shampoo container, but the tap was running. The people in the living room did not know anything had happened to her until the hairstylist was making a fuss about being unduly delayed and was threatening to go back to her shop to attend to other customers.

Her host went inside the room to relay the message of the hairstylist when she found her on the floor of the bathroom. The bedlam that followed is better imagined. One could guess that between when she slumped and when her host saw her on the ground, there could have been about 30-minute intervals. That must be the reason the hairstylist was complaining bitterly about being unduly delayed. When my sons and I went to see her body in the private morgue on Wednesday morning, she was looking so peaceful as if she was asleep. No stress on her face. No wound on her. I guess the Owner of Life was kind to His wonderful servant while taking her life.

As it seems, the two most important women in my life had died similarly. 14 years ago, some hours after my mum spoke to me on the phone and prayed for so long for me, I got a call that she was suddenly unable to speak or move her body while on the sofa in her living room in Lagos. I was in Abeokuta and within one hour of that first call, the hospital she was rushed to certified her as ‘brought in dead’. She was not sick. You could imagine the feeling of deja vu that came over me that Tuesday.

In my 28 years of marriage to Oduanyo, she has been a major force propelling my life. She was my solid pillar of support. She was a strong woman. She was my rock of Gibraltar. A very good companion. A reliable and faithful partner. A loyal and devoted wife. She was a woman of huge capacity and multiple competencies. And she deployed all these in serving her family and humanity. While members of the family, including our children, friends, and associates called her Mamamia, a nickname I gave her over 20 years ago, sometimes the children also hailed her as ‘Mama in Charge or ‘In Charge Mama’.

She took charge of my life and that of the children such that she provided for a lot of our needs. I only needed to fund her and provide the endorsement. She made me dependent on her for so many things and on several fronts. Now, she has left me in limbo at a time when I was already used to the pampering. To show how dependent I was on Odunayo, immediately after her burial, we got to our Abeokuta home and I could not locate the key to our room. She was the only one who knew where she kept it when we left the place last June after the Eid-el-Kabir festival. I did not care to know where she kept it because I had always assumed we would return to the house together anytime or at least she was a phone call away from me if I needed to ask where the key was. After a fruitless search, we had to replace the lock.

She was my storm breaker when the tide threatened to sweep me away last year. She stood firm for me. Last year, when I wrote about my travails during a five-month illness, I only made a little mention of her roles in the way God intervened to save me. She did a lot more than an article could cover. If I were writing a book about that period, there would be a need to devote several chapters to Odunayo. She was the stormtrooper. I could recollect many occasions where only her interventions saved me from becoming a victim of wrong diagnosis or wrong application of a correct diagnosis.

She was proved so right by her several interventions that a colleague of mine who visited us in the hospital several times once asked me if she was a medical school dropout or a one-time nurse. She perfectly played the roles of nurse, minder, and caregiver. For my children and me, for her mum and her siblings, there was no length Odunayo could not go to sacrifice for our happiness.

Many of her friends and members of the extended families also benefited from her generosity and support. She was a courageous, hardworking, determined, and focused woman. Her labour of love was incredible and ceaseless.

I married her in the church as she was born a Christian. Her baptismal name was Happiness because she was born on New Year’s Day. When we were courting I assured her she would be free to practice her religion while I would also remain a Muslim forever. I was surprised during the christening ceremony for our first son, she informed the Muslim clerics that she had decided to embrace Islam and had chosen the name Aishat as her Muslim name. My parents and I were very happy.

Since then, Odunayo improved by the day in her iman (faith). She prayed five times, fasted, had embarked on the holy pilgrimage in 2010 and her capacity for giving sadakat was incredible. If Odunayo was consistently buying roasted corn from a woman by the roadside, she would secretly empower the woman with N50,000 or N100,000. She was always concerned that while such money meant nothing to some close relations that we often give to, they meant a lot to all these petty traders. It would help them take care of other family issues without any effect on their business or if they invest it in their business, it would make great changes.

Last Ramadan, as a mark of thanking Allah (SWT) for restoring her husband to good health, Odunayo began feeding 50 people twice a week during the iftar session. For all the security men, about five of them in our estate, the iftar feeding was a daily affair during the Ramadan session. It is as if she knew the last Ramadan was her last.

Last Saturday, our former co-tenant came on a condolence visit. She said she was told by our former landlady that Mamamia’s last words were ‘Inalilahi wa ina Ilaehi rajiun (from Allah we have come and to Him we shall return). Oladapo and I corrected her that that was an exaggeration.

MNobody saw Mamamia when she slumped and at the time her host saw her on the floor, she was no longer talking. However, we all know that the phrase ‘Inalilahi wa ina Ilaehi rajiun’ was a regular retort to her. She uttered it anytime and anywhere she saw anything that surprised her or appeared unexpected to her. In fact, if she suddenly found out on her way out of the house that her purse was not in her handbag, her first expression of surprise will be ‘Inalilahi’.

Mamamia was many things to many people. To her aged mother, she filled the void of her late husband who died 36 years ago. To her children, she was a guardian angel. There was nothing she could not give to ensure their well-being. To me, she was a dependable ally, a fortress in whom I felt protected. To her friends, when she is on your side, you can go to bed and have no worries again. For many of her son’s friends, she was a pan-Nigerian mother who never discriminated against anybody but related to them like her own children. To her folks back home in Sabomi and Kiribo in Ondo State, she was their golden ambassador. To the less privileged people in all the places we have lived from Lagos, Abeokuta, and Abuja, she was always seeking to serve Almighty Allah through them. To many ordinary people whom she met in the market or saw on the street, she was caring and always seeking to spread joy.

Odunayo liked children. We both stopped having biological children 23 years ago after three beautiful and well-groomed boys. However, she continued to have many children who saw her as their ‘mother’. Her latest are Hafsat, Imam, Adnan, and Amani whom she met alongside their parents while we lived in the Mabushi area of Abuja. She loved them so much and they loved her too. Amani whose real name is Fatimah Aminu Jefiya, is her favourite and youngest. She is just four but very precocious. Mamamia called her ‘My Margi Princess’ and she could never do anything wrong in Mamamia’s estimation. In fact, Mamamia’s day was not complete without forcing me to listen to what I now called Amani News for the day. When I returned home from work, she would tell me what she discussed with Amani or what Amani’s mum told her about the young girl, earlier.

The kids also loved Mamamia. During my illness, Amani’s eldest brother, Imam, told the mother who was going on a holy pilgrimage that the only request he was making was for her to always pray for Papamia (as they also referred to me) in Masjid Haram, the holy mosque in Mecca. He said the mother should not bother to buy him anything. It was the young boy’s way of repaying Mamamia’s loyalty.

Imam’s only sister, Amani, and her mum loved Odunayo to bits. Amani would pack her bag and insist she was relocating from her mother’s Gwarinpa residence to Gidan Mamamia. When the mother told Amani that Mamamia is dead, she rejected the story. ‘Mamamia tajay London’, she replied, meaning Mamamia has only gone on a visit to London the way she sometimes did. Any visit Mamamia paid to the United Kingdom translated to a new jaka (bag) and takalumi (pair of shoes) for Amani. The young girl loves fashionable things, a trait Mamamia believed she shared with her. Except that this visit by Mamamia is not to London. Mamamia ta rasu. The Owner of Life has recalled Mamamia. We will never see my Abeke again. So, so sad.


Olaniyonu, Journalist, Lawyer,  Strategic Communicator Writes from Abuja.