News
Why I Didn’t Attend The Ooni’s Funeral -Muyiwa Ige
Muyiwa Ige is the first son of slain Attorney-General, Chief James Ajibola Ige. In this interview with papermache the architect x-rayed the activities of the government of Osun State where he served as a Commissioner, his roles and the reason he was absent from the Ooni-of-Ife’s burial…
We all know that there are no Commissioners at the moment in the State of Osun, but you are still seen around with the Governor, what is your duty and what are you doing presently?
I guess your question is directly related to what is happening in the State of Osun as related to governance. Well, Exco was dissolved on the 26th of November; however, since then, there is a crop of us that are consultants to the Governor. It is obvious that constituting a cabinet now has cost implications and so by virtue of the fact that there is paucity of funds; it means that you creatively run government utilizing resources that have been available or are still available to achieve the goal.
So we are consultants to the Governor but on a pro bono basis, what that means is that we are working for free and to also establish the fact that there is no lacuna as relates to governance in the state.
You were in the last administration with Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola and of course you know criticisms have poured in left, right and centre in connection with finances of the state. Where do you think the Governor got it wrong?
We didn’t get it wrong. I know that there is an overwhelming campaign of calumny over the last couple of months, like a vendetta against the administration. I don’t want to be more specific than that. If you notice, there is a national newspaper that is hell-bent on just targeting the administration of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, even the leadership of the daily newspaper has said that it has a vendetta against us but we are not deterred, we are focused. So when you say where did we go wrong, in terms of government unusual, we’ve not done anything wrong, in terms of providing for the betterment of the common man in the State of Osun, we have not done anything wrong, in terms of providing rapid development in the state, we’ve not done anything wrong, in terms of stretching resources as far as we can probably do, so that we can get value for money, we’ve not done anything wrong. The fact that we have also encouraged the development of the civil service, civil servants, professional training, we’ve not done anything wrong. As far as the environment is concerned, making it conducive for living, we’ve not done anything wrong, re-branding the psyche of our people to let them have ownership in governance, we’ve not done anything wrong, making sure that children are fed daily in the school feeding programme, we’ve not done anything wrong.
Provision of school uniforms, provision of even employment for 20, 000 youths yearly and two batches have successfully been completed, that is 40, 000 young people have been engaged, we have not done anything wrong. So what we’ve done right is to ensure that we plug leakages and we make sure we deliver the goals for the collective good.
How is the Bola Ige family taking it that your dad’s killers have not been found since 2001?
We are in this country Nigeria and the chief law officer was cut down and a trial or a sham of a trial was conducted and nolle prosequi was entered and eventually the prime suspects were asked to walk and they are still walking around now. By the grace of God, they won’t be walking around for too long because I have always said that once there is a sensible government in place, hopefully, we will get justice. I believe that the government that we have today means well. And many people believe that they might want to revisit some of the high profile assassination cases, fortunately, capital offense is not time bound.
I know there was a pronouncement by the Inspector-General of Police sometime ago which was a bit diversionary because if you read through, even through the fine prints, he was an active participant at the time, he is trying to direct focus away from the prime suspect. But I believe everyone will get their comeuppance and the natural law which is the law of karma will always take its rightful place.
Again, as a family, we can’t prosecute because it’s the state against the suspects and all we can do is offer information that we may have and plead with the government of the day to ensure that justice is done for everybody, all the high profile cases inclusive of Dele Giwa’s.
The Ooni of Ife died recently, at the burial service, APC Governors were conspicuously absent, you were also absent. Is there any reason attached?
Well, as for the APC governors, I think you need to ask them but the State of Osun was well represented, the Vice President of the nation was there, again I can’t really speak on that because I am not party to whatever their schedules were. For me, you asked why I wasn’t there. I don’t particularly like going to funerals!
The story of the assassination of Chief Bola Ige cannot be told without the cap-removal-issue coming to mind. It happened there in the palace of the late Ooni and one would probably feel that was why you decided to shun the programme. Can you recollect what happened that day and can you recollect and paint a picture of the occurrence?
It was quite unfortunate that the unfortunate episode of cap removal happened at the palace of the Ooni. Chief Bola Ige was the man that gave the staff of office to Ooni Sijuade and he had gone to attend the chieftaincy investiture of the wife of the President at the time, Stella Obasanjo, of blessed memory. And from all indications, as he was walking in into the palace, the main court of the palace, there were all kinds of derogatory songs and the prime suspect was hiding with their thugs and somehow, between himself and the Chief Detail who is a state service personnel, they were able to reach over him to grab his cap and his chain and I think they removed his glasses. Thereafter they purportedly threw it up and it got hung on a tree. What my father told us was that he told the late Kabiyesi that he would not leave until they brought his cap and so he encouraged the prime suspect to go and retrieve the cap. He got the cap and as he was moving out also, he was put in the vehicle of the Director of the State Service of the state at the time, he asked them to go in one direction but they drove him towards another direction. So he told them ‘I told you there is no way out here, you need to go back.
The whole conspiracy that had started from that day ended, culminating in the attack and assassination of December 23, 2001. That’s it in a nutshell, what transpired that day. He got his cap back, even the necklace; I have it because my sister gave it to him. I have the bracelet.
But that was an abomination. You know what it portends in Yorubaland. It is almost sacrilegious to remove the cap of an elderly statesman who is not a yeye (irresponsible)person. But like I said, everyone will get their comeuppance.
On the 23rd December, 2001, you were there…
(Raises right hand, cuts in) You remember where you were too on that day, right? And you remember where you were when you heard the news of the assassination. It was a black Sunday, a black Christmas for everybody.
You were in the house with him. How exactly did it really happen?
Yes, I was with my father, we went to Lagos earlier in the day, he dropped his brother off at Oluyoro Hospital and then came back to the house. He got out of the car, asked for the Bodija police officers if they had come; that was about 8.30 and unfortunately, they had not come that evening which was quite interesting; with the benefit of hindsight… And my father left instruction that when they come, they should come and collect their Christmas present because everybody gets a present, be it Christmas, New Year or Easter or end of Islamic fasting, everybody gets a present. And so, he came in, we talked, he was supposed to be in Esa Oke that day but we changed his schedule to now travel the next morning which was Monday the 24th.
Nine minutes after was when they came in and they cordoned all of us off in one wing of the house and isolated my father. The security personnel that we had come home together were nowhere to be found only for us to discover they had gone out to eat, for which they were instructed not to go and eat but that they should wait to take my aunt back to Oluyole Estate. But again, all of us witnessed the sham of a trial and the various witnesses that testified.
When they entered the house, you saw them…
No, they were already in the house when I saw them. If you know my father’s house well, there are two wings in the house, so my mum, my aunt, my son and my wife and some other family members were on one wing. We just noticed that there was a bit of ruckus, so when I went to check because my wife went to collect food for my son and then I noticed that she did a stutter step and I was like what’s going on? So by the time I got there, I saw someone with a gun so I had my hands up and they started bringing everybody from downstairs into the room and I observed that of all the people that were in the room… the security, the Chief Detail, the orderly, the security personnel that were supposed to have been around were the only ones missing. And then my mum, God bless her soul, spoke to them that they shouldn’t harm anybody. It was just a decoy and there was a lone gunshot. We all heard that, then we heard them leaving.
Shortly thereafter, my sister came into the house. What was interesting was that when she now arrived, the security personnel that were nowhere to be found were downstairs at the time. They had locked us in, by the time they opened the door and I went out to check my dad, I found him lying on the ground. I told everybody to back off and then we carried him to the hospital. The same hospital we had been like an hour before. What’s also interesting was that we found out later that the security personnel, when they returned from where they had gone, went to check him his room and touched him and confirmed that he was cold and went back downstairs and sat and they later told my sister that she should go upstairs that he was upstairs. How callous? I gave him CPR, there was a tissue coming out from his left side, I pushed it back in, I tried mouth to mouth resuscitation. We took him to the hospital after, just like I carried my mum.
I read an interview in which you said “they may gloat that they have killed Bola Ige, but whatever they want to become, their ambition will fizzle out…
(Cuts in) they, that is collective, all of them put together. There were eleven suspects.
“If they want to be Governor, it will not be possible”…
Let’s not dwell on that, we are wasting our energy on inconsequential and irresponsible people.
As far as you are concerned, who do you think killed your dad?
Who do I think killed my dad? We’ll find out very soon.
During your dad’s funeral programme, Professor Wole Soyinka made a statement; he said “Bola Ige’s killers are here with us”. How did you feel hearing that statement?
Keep in mind that Professor Wole Soyinka is my godfather and he was very close to my father so he wouldn’t just make a statement without understanding and appreciating the level of what he is speaking about. So the statement was poignant, right on point. I am sure it went to the marrows of those that were present because it sent jitters down their spines.
Well, the killers are still walking now, they were there, whether by proxy or by extension or connection. It was also found out that the party was a nest of killers. But we thank God we are in the era of change and definitely Nigeria will not be the same again. There is a sensible government in the country. Let’s just watch.
You come from an influential background where it was rumoured that the names of Senior Advocates were normally written from your dining table. What does it feel like coming from such background?
Names of Senior Advocates? No o, but even if you heard it, you should know that it is very unlike Ige for something to be written behind closed doors. My father was very liberal. He allowed democracy to thrive. If you had a superior argument, your argument would carry the day. It is only unfortunate that we’ve gotten ourselves caught up in the morass where some people would sit behind closed doors and be writing such. It is very unlike Ige. Even if you heard it, you should be the one championing the cause that it is not possible, never.
What are the responsibilities the name ‘Ige’ downloaded on your shoulder?
If you recall I said the excess baggage is heavy. It is only after my parents transited to the great beyond that I had an idea of the sacrifice that they have made, how they were always willing to help others, be it education, health, anything, looking after people, cousins, relatives, the ones you don’t know, and it was not as if my father was wealthy but he solved people’s problems. That was most invaluable.
Fortunately and unfortunately one cannot run away from that level of responsibility and in as much as one can do, you do, the one you cannot do, you are open and honest that it’s not that the will is not there, but somehow, you can’t all get sorted. Again, one should be thankful that one comes from good stock and one has a goodly heritage.
After your dad’s passage, some people came out to say they are his children, I know one that is a journalist and he is doing well, he is carrying the family’s name excellently well. What is your relationship with them?
Are you one of them? You can also come and say you are his son (general laughter). I don’t know him, you know him so go look after him. K’olomu da omu iya e gbe (let everyone be on his own).
Are you saying Bola Ige does not have a love child?
It is idiotic.
If you were not an architect, what would you have been?
Interesting question. I have no idea (laughs). What is interesting is that my father asked me what I wanted to be and I told him I wanted to be an Architect so it was my decision to be an architect. I picked my school, I picked to go to America on my own, the only thing my father did was that he called Dr Alex Ekwueme to confirm if I was on the right track, if the school I wanted to attend was a good school and Alex Ekwueme who is an architect did confirm that I was on the right track. Maybe I would have been a lawyer but there are too many lawyers in the family. Fortunately my wife is a lawyer, so I don’t need to go that route again. However, everybody needs law, so maybe in some years, I’ll go and take a crash course in Law, I’ll do a two-year programme in Buckingham or something. So when they start speaking legalese, nobody will be cheating me.
Are you a politician?
I am an architect (general laughter). We are all political animals. I know you are trying to stoke the fire so you can go on a negative level but being a politician doesn’t mean you have to engage in all the atrocities and bad press that our politicians have been getting. It is an opportunity to serve and again, you are only a politician if you are going into it for the betterment of the lot of the common man which means you give up yourself and you are also a servant of the people. Any politician that goes into politics just out of greed will not last.
On the social ladder, there are some people they refer to as “ajebutter”, you fall within that class, what was your first day as a commissioner like? How did you relate with the people?
It is quite obvious that you are the “ajebo”, I am the “ajepaki”Which people? My people? What do you mean the people? It is quite obvious that you are the “ajebor” because when you are asking me how do I relate with these people, it shows you are disconnected from the people, I am in tune with the people. I have never been disconnected if you know who I am. I am a grassroots person. If you go to the NURTW people or the market seller whether in Osogbo, Ilesa, Esa Oke, Iwo, anywhere, or both of us stand or try to buy boolior something, I will connect with them better than you (general laughter).
Political office is service. 12 commissioners in a state of 4 million people, the ratio is one in 342,000. It doesn’t always come but when you have the opportunity, make good use of it, serve diligently with all your heart and fortunately also, the administration of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola is focused, runs government unusual, we worked 24 hours a day, seven days a week trying to make Osun better and Osun is the better for it because Osun can never be the same again with the introduction of this administration and the amount of work we have done is unprecedented. I take it in stride, knowing that it is about service and that you are there to serve the people, they are not there to serve you. At every stop on the way you must make sure that you solve their problems.
When I was in the Ministry of Lands, even when we were going to separate structures, those that did theirs illegally, we educated them that what you have done is illegal and they said okay. So you educate them that it’s not proper and so our people know right from wrong and our people also appreciate good things. You can see some of the urban renewal initiatives going on in the state capital, the Nelson Mandela Freedom Park, I’m not sure if you knew the train station, the way it was then. What we have now is special and by the time it is commissioned, ah! People are taking walks now in the evenings, even at the train station, there are sidewalks provided so you don’t have to walk in the streets where koropes would hit your elbows or run over you. So we encourage quality living, we have restored healthy living and I’ll say it is most invaluable, the opportunity, it is special.
You play polo. What else do you do to relax when you have the time?
I play soccer, I play table tennis, you can’t play me in table tennis. I play scrabble, I do every sporting activity except swim. Unfortunately I am like a rock in water (laughs) but my wife has given me a challenge now because she couldn’t swim before but now she can swim. And my kids were ordinarily fearful of the water but they are like fishes now. Now I am the only one left but I will challenge them too or rather, I will take up the challenge. I also play squash, in squash, you can’t beat me. It is good to be fit and to engage in sporting activities because exercise is a mindset also and it helps you to relax.
lifestyle
Meet The New 47-year-old Alaafin Of Oyo, Prince Akeem Owoade
Prince Akeem Owoade is a Nigerian and Canadian entrepreneur, philanthropist, and president of 100279 Manitoba Limited, a real estate investment and financial services business in Manitoba, Canada.
Born 47 years ago to a prominent and royal family of Owoade-Agunloye in Oyo town, Prince Akeem Owoade is one of the surviving children of Pa Rasaki Ibiyosi Owoade, the descendant of Aremo Aderounmu Iyanda Owoade, Agure Compound, Oyo town in Oyo State, Nigeria.
aking an early interest in engineering, Prince AkeemOwoade began his engineering studies by completing his National Diploma and Higher National Diploma in Mechanical Engineering from ‘The Federal Polytechnic, Ilaro, Ogun State (1994 to 1997) and The Polytechnic, Ibadan (1999 to 2001), Oyo State. Nigeria respectively. He did his NYSC with Nigeria Gas Company as Mechanical Intern/Planner in 2002.After the completion of his NYSC, he worked with Oceanic Bank International Plc. in Warri as a teller. (2003 to 2004).
Prince Akeem Owoade decided to further his education in the United Kingdom where he attended University of Sunderland (2008) and Northumbria University (2012)
News
Panic As Governor’s Official Car Got Stolen
Confusion and fear was the order of the day at one of the Government houses in the Southwest some days ago when one of the official vehicles of the Governor, a bullet-proof jeep allegedly disappeared from the garage.
The SUV which is said to be one of the three bullet-proof vehicles being used for the Governor’s official assignment was discovered missing.
The Governor who was out of the country on a short, rest leave was claimed to have been disturbed when he was alerted.
Sources claimed it wasn’t the first time things would get missing at the Governor’s private residence.
‘There had been series of thefts, ranging from missing cash, phones and other expensive items, it’s usually swept under the carpet. Indiscipline is the order of the day here’, a source confirmed this to papermacheonline.
The State Governor, a quiet individual who is spending his second time in office was said to have been disturbed by the occurrence that he had to cut short his leave and return home. One of his closest aides was also kidnapped recently.
Business
Former First Bank Employee Accuses Oba Otudeko, Bisi Onasanya Of Massive Fraud
A former First Bank of Nigeria Limited employee, Adesuwa Ezenwa, has accused billionaire industrialist Oba Otudeko and former Managing Director Bisi Onasanya of massive fraud during Otudeko’s tenure as chairman of FBN Holdings Plc.
In court documents filed at the National Industrial Court of Nigeria, Ezenwa alleges that unsecured loans of approximately N12 billion were granted to a company in which Otudeko has significant investments, disguised as loans to Stallion Group of Companies.
Ezenwa, who was summarily dismissed in October 2016, is seeking redress for her termination and demanding N500 million in damages and N25 million in legal costs. She claims that she was made to bear the consequences of granting unsecured loan facilities worth billions of naira to companies linked to Otudeko and Onasanya, while her superiors who approved the credit were not penalized.
Ezenwa joined First Bank in 2002 and became a relationship manager in the corporate banking division in February 2016. She alleges that her superiors, including Abiodun Olatunji and Cecilia Majekodunmi, who worked closely with Onasanya, were involved in the fraudulent activities.
“As a relationship manager, I worked under the supervision and direction of my branch manager and group head and signed official correspondence only after they had approved and/or signed same. I had no independent authority in relation to the grant or disbursement of loans or other banking facilities,” Mrs Ezenwa said.
According to the claimant, she executed a large number of documents while she was still employed by First Bank, but only after approval by her bosses and on their direction.
She said she was summoned on 25 August 2015 to appear before a credit disciplinary committee reviewing facilities availed to a company known as Supply and Services Limited, a subsidiary of Royal Ceramics Group, one of the major customers of the bank.
The plaintiff said the committee could not determine whether she had a personal interest in any of the loans granted or whether she made any gain related to her duties. She said she was, however, blamed during proceedings for not whistleblowing on some of the deals endorsed by Mr Olatunji and Mrs Majekodunmi.
“The admonition was most unfair and unwarranted as I was in no position to whistleblow on my superiors … The persons to whom these reports would have been made were the very persons who were the perpetrators of the misdeeds,” she said.
A litany of allegations against Mr Otudeko
Mrs Ezenwa disclosed that unsecured loans of roughly N12 billion were availed, on one occasion, to a company in which Mr Otudeko has significant investment even though the facility was masked as loans granted to Stallion Group of Companies, which later spotted the false entry in its statement of account and complained.
In one case in 2012, she further alleged, an unsecured credit estimated at N2 billion was granted to Broadwaters Resources Company Nigeria Limited, which ended up being a conduit pipe used by Mrs Majekodunmi and Mr Onasanya to siphon monies from the bank. The claimant said the loan was never repaid.
“Out of the N12 billion camouflaged as lending to the Stallion Group, N8.21 billion was transferred through various accounts to a final destination account belonging to a company known as V-TECH LTD, which belongs to the chairman of FBN Holdings, Oba Otudeko, while the sum of N4.45 billion out of the same fictitious facility was transferred to Ontario Oil and Gas. The facility remains unpaid to date,” Mrs Ezenwa said in court fillings.
According to her, several similar loans were granted by Mr Olatunji and Mrs Majekodunmi, including to Supplies and Services Limited, which were “subsequently sublet and disbursed in smaller bits to several customers on more profitable terms to both officers.”
Swap Technologies and Telecomms Plc, Orbit Cargo, Netconstruct Nigeria Limited, and High-Performance Distributions Limited were among the companies named as beneficiaries of the loan disbursement.
Mrs Ezenwa disclosed that such loans could not have been granted without the involvement of the board of First Bank, considering that the amounts involved were huge and above the approval limits of the executive directors, the vice president and the managing director of the bank.
According to the complainant, her dismissal by the bank brought her into disrepute, threatening her chances of securing employment in reputable companies in future.
“The action of the defendant (First Bank) has consequently caused the claimant untold mental distress and is all the more damaging as the claimant is in her thirties and has simply been made a scapegoat for the malfeasance of some of the lapses of the management of the bank,” she said.
Among other demands, Mrs Ezenwa is urging the court to declare that there was no basis for the bank to dismiss her.
“She is being made a scapegoat for a lot of questionable transactions within the bank, which she is claiming innocent of,” Seyi Sowemimo, the claimant’s lawyer, told PREMIUM TIMES on Saturday. “So far, the trial has started. We have subpoenaed the EFCC, and we have subpoenaed the central bank to bring the audit reports of the bank,” Seyi Sowemimo, the claimant’s lawyer, told PREMIUM TIMES.
The allegations have sparked a legal battle, with Ezenwa seeking justice for her dismissal and damages for the fraudulent activities she claims to have uncovered.
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