skymediaconsults.blogspot.com

Thursday, June 30, 2022

BRIEF HISTORY OF SURULERE, LAGOS STATE. 

BRIEF HISTORY OF SURULERE, LAGOS STATE. 
Source: Gossip House

SURULERE is a Yorùbá word meaning “Patience is profitable/rewarding“ It is a Local Government Area in Lagos State located on the Mainland. According to the 2006 national population census, there were 503,975 inhabitants, with a population density of 21,864 inhabitants per square kilometer.

During the rapid urbanization of Lagos, the city expanded to the west of its lagoon, which included present-day Surulere. Families from different regions of the country have historically settled in Surulere. In addition to the local settlers of Lagos, during the nineteenth century, various emancipated African Brazilians and Cubans, who were referred to as Aguda or Saros, settled in Surulere.

Nigerians from the Northern region initially ended at Idi-Araba, while many people from the eastern part were in various quarters but predominantly at Obele, Ikate, and Aguda areas. Residents of Lagos Island who bought or leased land from the government and Aworis settled in New Lagos. In contrast, others lived in the neighborhoods of Itire, Lawanson, Ojuelegba, Animashaun, and Shitta. The New Lagos neighborhood, also known as the Surulere Re-Housing Estate, is among the first public housing projects in Nigeria. Itire, one of the quarters in Surulere has a recognized traditional authority in the Onitire of Itire.

Interesting Facts About Surulere In Lagos:
Surulere can called be called the sports city of Lagos of the presence of two international sport venues

* The National Stadium and Teslim Balogun stadia are located in Surulere.

*Surulere is also home to the popular bus station, Ojuelegba.

* Adeniran Ogunsanya, is a famous street in Surulere and with some of the most expensive shopping centers and boutiques you can find in Lagos.

* For many years, the Nigerian Football Association Headquarters was located in Ogunlana Drive Surulere.

The National Stadium with the capacity of 60,000 was built in 1972 for the All-Africa Games. The stadium has been allowed to become increasingly dilapidated since 2002 but was renovated in preparation for the 2009 Under 17 FIFA World

* Adeniran Shopping Center was hope to such famous stores as UTC, Leventis,and Kingsway Stores

* Surulere is famous for its streets: Adeniran Ogunsanya, Adelabu, Ogunlana Drive, Bode-Thomas and Eric Moore.

* The former governor of Lagos State Babatunde Fashola grew up in Sururlere and had his early childhood there where he attended Eric Moore College.

* Surulere is also popular for its many suburbs like Itire and Aguda and Ojuelegba which has inspired themes in popular culture. Fela Anikulapo Kuti used the chaotic bus station to depict the theme of poor governance in Nigeria. It also recently was the title of a recent track by the pop star Wiz Kid.
 
Brought To You By: Comr. Olamide Akinwumi James
Akinwumiolamide09@gmail.com 
09068215955

Wednesday, June 29, 2022

Just In: APC begins students’ registration, revalidation

Just In: APC begins students’ registration, revalidation.
APC National Special Task Force on Revalidation and Registration of APC Youth led and Youth focused support groups.
The initiative idea which comes directly from the office of the party (APC) National Youth Leader, Hon. Dayo Israel with the aimed of lifting the party and to takes the party gospel to youths at grassroots. 

HISTORY OF POPULATION CENSUS IN NIGERIA

HISTORY OF POPULATION CENSUS IN NIGERIA

Nigeria has a long history of census takings spanning over a century. The first census was conducted in 1866 and this was followed by Censuses of 1871, 1881, 1891 and 1901. However, all these earlier censuses were restricted to Lagos Colony and its environs. The 1871 census marked the beginning of decennial census taking in Nigeria in line with the British decennial tradition.

Following the amalgamation of the Lagos Colony and the Southern Protectorate in 1906, the 1911 census extended to some parts of the Southern Protectorate. It was marred by incomplete enumeration because some parts of the South had not recognized the legitimacy of the Colonial Government.

The amalgamation of the Southern and Northern protectorates in 1914 by Lord Lugard provided the impetus for population census that had wider coverage. Like in other censuses, the results of 1921 census were population estimates based on tax records as the aged, infants and tax evaders were excluded. Similarly, in the then Northern region, during the period mentioned above, the census result was based on population estimates from existing records or vital statistics.

The tax riots in Calabar and Owerri provinces in the then Eastern region prevented enumeration in the major towns of these areas in 1931 while the locust invasion resulted in the diversion of some census staff to anti – locust duties in some parts of the Northern provinces.

The outbreak of the Second World War disrupted the conduct of decennial censuses and as such no population census was conducted in 1941.

The 1952/1953 Population Census was regarded as the first modern, national and carefully planned census in Nigeria. The principle of simultaneity was not complied with as the census enumeration was staggered. The census of Northern Nigeria was conducted between May and July, 1952 while that of West and Mid-West were conducted in December 1952 and January 1953 respectively. Census in the East was conducted from May to August, 1953. This enumeration strategy made the comparability of data between one region and another difficult. Furthermore, the disruption of the Second World War made people suspicious of the intention of the exercise and therefore many people did not submit themselves for enumeration. This meant that the exercise was characterized by gross under enumeration.

The 1962 population census covered the whole country and was undertaken simultaneously during the month of May. Although the census was given adequate publicity, the results were not acceptable to the regions on grounds of high politicization.

The refusal of the government to accept population census of 1962 prompted the 1963 population census which critics claimed were arrived at by negotiation rather than enumeration. The result was contested at the Supreme Court which ruled that it lacked jurisdiction over the administrative functions of the Federal Government.

The 1973 Census conducted between November 25 and December 2 was not published on the ground of deliberate falsification of the census figures for political and /or ethnic advantages.

The 1991 Census was conducted under Decree 23 of 1989 which set up the National Population Commission. It was conducted all over the country from November 27 to December 2, 1991.This was the most scientific and most acceptable until the 2006 Population and Housing Census. In March 2006, Nigeria, for the first time, conducted a Population and Housing Census. Several stages were involved in the project. For the first time, the use of GPS and Satellite Imagery to carve out Geo-referenced EAs was adopted. Also Machine readable forms (OMR/OCR/ICR) were used to record information from respondents.

However, the worst of it is that Nigeria has not conducted National Population Census since the last one 2006 making it 16years ago.  

Brought To You By: Comr. Olamide Akinwumi James
09068215955

Tuesday, June 28, 2022

HISTORY OF EGBADO PEOPLE OF OGUN STATE

HISTORY OF EGBADO PEOPLE OF OGUN STATE

The Egbado appear to have migrated - possibly from the Ketu, Ile-Ife, or Oyo - to their current area early in the 18th century.

Egbado towns, most importantly Ilaro, Ayetoro, Afon, Imeko, Ipokia and Igbogila, were established in the 18th century to take advantage of the slave trade routes from the inland Oyo empire to the coast at Porto-Novo.

Other towns were Ilobi and Ijanna, which were strategic in protecting the flanks of the slaving routes. The Egbados' were subject to the rule of the Oyo kingdom, which managed them via governor Onisare of Ijanna.

The Oyo were unable to deploy their cavalry force to protect the routes, due to tsetse fly and lack of horse-fodder and thus had to rely on the Egbado people to manage the routes.

The historians Akinjogbin, Morton-Williams and Smith all agree that by the early 18th century this route to the coast was heavily engaged in slave trading, and that slaves were the mainstay of the Oyo economy.

The Egbado later achieved a fragile independence after the fall of the Oyo kingdom, but were subject to frequent attacks from other groups such as the slave-raiding Dahomey (who seized, among others, Princess Sara Forbes Bonetta), and various tribes who wished to force open their own slave-trading routes to the sea.

Ilaro and Ijanna towns had been destroyed by the 1830s. By the 1840s the Egbado had come under the control of the adjacent Egba group, who used the Egbado territory to forge routes to Badagry and the port of Lagos.

By the 1860s the Egba abandoned the route because the British were actively using their formidable navy to try to abolish the slave trade. Consequently, the Egba expelled British missionaries and traders from the area in 1867.

After 1890 the Egbado asked for a British protectorate and got a small armed garrison, thus becoming independent of the Egba. The area became part of the British Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria in 1914, as Egbado Division in Abeokuta Province.

The administrative headquarters were later transferred away, after the creation of the new Ogun State subsumed the old Abeokuta Province.

The modern Egbado/Yewa:
In 1995 the Egbado chose to rename themselves the "Yewa", after the name of the Yewa River that passes through the area they inhabit. They are primarily agriculturalists, but there is some artisan and textile processings.

They are located mainly in the areas of: Ado-Odo/Ota, Ipokia, Yewa South, Yewa North, Imeko Afon, and part of Abeokuta North.

There were complaints that the system of patronage and nepotism in Nigerian politics has caused the area to be neglected in terms of investment[citation needed].

The area developed a popular style of music, called Bolojo, in the 1970s. The population level is uncertain, but may be around 400,000.

Source: Gossip House
Brought To You By: Comr. Olamide Akinwumi James
09068215955

NIGERIAN DRAMATIST: CHIEF (DR.) OSETURA HUBERT ADEDEJI OGUNDE, “A TRUE LEGEND ”.

NIGERIAN DRAMATIST: CHIEF (DR.) OSETURA HUBERT ADEDEJI OGUNDE, “A TRUE LEGEND ”.
....the father of Nigerian theatre.
Chief (Dr.) Osetura  Hubert Adedeji Ogunde

Hubert Ogunde changed the name to Ogunde Theater Party in 1947 and Ogunde Concert Party in 1950. Finally, in 1960, he changed it to Ogunde Theater, a name that remained until his death in 1990. He has been described as "the father of Nigerian theatre, or the father of contemporary Yoruba theatre".

In his career on stage, he wrote more than 50 plays most of which incorporate dramatic action, dance, and music, with a story reflecting the political and social realities of the period. His first production was a church-financed play called The Garden of Eden. It premiered at Glover Memorial Hall, Lagos, in 1944. Its success encouraged Ogunde to produce more plays, and he soon left his job with the police force for a career in the theatre.
Chief Ogunde seen in action 🎬 during one of his film production.

In the 1940s, he released some plays with political commentaries: The Tiger's Empire, Strike and Hunger and Bread and Bullet. During the 1950s, he toured various Nigerian cities with his travelling troupe. In 1964, he released Yoruba Ronu, a play that generated controversy and earned him the wrath of Chief Akintola, premier of the Western Region.

The Ogunde Theater was banned in the Western Region of Nigeria for two years as a result. This ban was only revoked by the new military government of Lt. Col. F. A. Fajuyi on the 4th of February, 1966. In the late 1970s, Ogunde was spurred by the success of Ija Ominira and Ajani Ogun, two pioneering Yoruba feature-length films, to co-produce his first celluloid film, Aiye, in 1979. He released Jaiyesimi, Aropin N'tenia, and Ayanmo, feature-length films influenced by Yoruba mysticism, thereafter.

Ogunde starred in Mister Johnson, the 1990 motion picture that also featured Pierce Brosnan. The movie was shot on location in Toro, near Bauchi, Nigeria.
Ogunde was born in Ososa, near Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State, Nigeria, to the family of Jeremiah Deinbo and Eunice Owotusan Ogunde. His father was a Baptist pastor and his maternal grandfather was a priest of Ifa, an African traditional religion. Ogunde briefly lived within the precincts of his grandfather's compound and was exposed to Ifá, Ogun and many other traditional religious celebrations. Both the Christian and traditional religion of the Yoruba influenced his upbringing. He had his education between 1925 and 1932, attending St John School, Ososa, (1925–28), St Peter's School, Faaji, Lagos, (1928–30) and Wasimi African School, (1931–32).

His first contact with performance art was as a member of Egun Alarinjo during his elementary school days. After completing his education, he worked as a pupil-teacher at St. John's School, and was also church choirmaster and organist.
He later joined the Nigerian police force in March 1941 in Ibadan. In 1943, the police force posted him to the Denton Police Station, Ebute Metta, where he joined an African initiated church, the Church of the Lord (Aladura). In Lagos, he created an amateur drama group, the African Music Research Party, in 1945.
Like many of his theatre contemporaries, such as A. B. David, P. A. Dawodu, Layeni and G. T. Onimole, his theatre career began under the patronage of the Church. In 1944, he co-produced his first folk opera with G. B. Kuyinu, The Garden of Eden and The Throne of God, commissioned by the Lagos-based Church of the Lord (Aladura) founded by Josiah Ositelu. The performance was sanctioned to aid contributions to a Church building fund.The folk opera premiered at Glover Memorial Hall with the chairman of the ceremony, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, in attendance. The play incorporated realism and dramatic action in the acting, dancing and singing of the performers, separating it from the common Native Air Operas predominant in Yorubaland at the time.

This was an innovation that contributed to making it a success. At the request of the Alake of Abeokuta, Ogunde performed "The Garden of Eden" at the Ake Centenary Hall. Encouraged by the success of the play, he went on to write more operas. He wrote and co-directed three religious-themed plays: Africa and God (1944), a folk opera infused with Yoruba cultural themes than were non-existent in The Garden of Eden, Israel in Egypt (1945) and Nebuchadnezzar's Reign and Belshazzar's Feast (1945). In 1946, he resigned his post with the police to become a professional dramatist.
As has already been stated, Ogunde's African Music Research Party, founded in 1945, was the first contemporary professional theatre company in Yorubaland. Previous performance groups were masked theatre troupes called Alarinjo who were dependent on the court or church for support, and who grew in popularity as a result of word of mouth. Ogunde distinguished his group by using promotion methods such as advertisements and posters, and by changing the round stage used by alarinjo performers to one with a proscenium. In addition, he introduced dramatic action and realism in his plays, depending on the audience for commercial support. By these acts Ogunde began the rise of modern professional theatre in Nigeria, a movement in which he remains the most influential practitioner.
After leaving his job as a police constable, Ogunde moved away from his earlier focus on religious themes and started writing plays that were nationalistic and anti-colonial in outlook, a trend in Lagos during the furious forties. During this period, many of his early operas were co-directed by G. B. Kuyinu.

In early 1945, he produced Worse than Crime, a political play infused with Yoruba dance and ancient folk songs. Like most of his early plays, it premiered at Glover Memorial Hall, Lagos. Later in that year, he wrote The Black Forest and Journey to Heaven, two Yoruba operas that also improved on his use of traditional Yoruba folklore. The latter also had a strong Christian influence. In November 1945, he wrote a pro-labour play, Strike and Hunger, motivated by the events of a general strike by labour unions led by Michael Imoudu. In 1946 he wrote and produced Tiger's Empire. Premiering on the 4th of March, 1946, Tiger's Empire was produced by The African Music Research Party and featured Ogunde, Beatrice Oyede and Abike Taiwo. The advertisement for the play was the result of Ogunde's call for "paid actresses". It marked the first time in Yoruba theatre that women were billed to appear in a play as professional artists in their own right. Tiger's Empire was an attack on colonial rule. He followed Tiger's Empire with Darkness and Light.

Later, in 1946, he produced Devil's Money, an African story about a man who entered into a contract with an evil spirit so in an effort to get rich. The folk opera was successful and had a set of twenty-four actors donning costumes. After the death of Herbert Macaulay, he wrote the opera Herbert Macaulay to commemorate the life of the nationalist, who died in 1946. He then released another politically-themed play, Towards Liberty, in 1947. Before 1948, Ogunde plays were staged in Lagos and occasionally in Abeokuta, but his growing popularity in other Western Nigeria provinces made him think about traveling to other cities with his theatre troupe.

In 1948, he went on a tour of major Western Nigerian cities with his group, including stops at Abeokuta, Ibadan, Oyo, Ede and Ogbomosho. When he took his tour to the north, he had two major encounters with the police there due to the political content of Worse than Crime and Tiger's Empire. His first tour outside Nigeria was not well received by the Ghanaian audience, largely because they did not understand the Yoruba language and Ogunde was ignorant about the tastes of the people.
Ogunde then wrote his first satire, Human Parasites, about the craze for Aso ebi (a social culture which encourages both men and women to buy the most expensive materials for social gatherings). “The custom has lent itself to much abuse in that the occasions for celebrating marriages and funerals occur so often that one may be asked by friends to buy ‘Aso Ebi’ more than ten times a year”. "Human Parasites" lampooned the fashionable socialites of Lagos, but many of them were Ogunde's patrons. Around the time that he wrote Human Parasites, he first changed the name of his troupe to Ogunde Theatre Party. Ogunde's plays from this period were folk operas in which the actors on stage sang their lines with limited dialogue.

In 1947, Ogunde and Adesuwa, his wife and frequent co-star, traveled to London to make contacts with theatre agents for the promotion of his shows in England. The talks were not fruitful but while in London, they had the opportunity to take waltz and tap dance classes. In his later operas, he syncretized the waltz with the traditional Batakoto dance and tap dance with the traditional Epa dance.
In 1950, Ogunde continued writing plays with political undertones. Bread and Bullet, first performed in 1950, is a play about the coal miners strike in Enugu that resulted in the shooting of twenty-two people in that year. In Northern Nigeria, the performance of the play was limited to certain areas due to allegations of seditious dialogue. It was during this time that Ogunde introduced the English language to the dialogue of his plays. In January 1950, he staged a reproduction of his 1945 play Black Forest, re-arranging the play to introduce English and Yoruba dialogue. The African music featured was created by both Western and African instruments. The re-produced Black Forest and Bread and Bullet changed his style of drama from Yoruba folk opera to an improvisational theatre where dialogue is spoken. Ogunde then released a string of plays with dialogue either spoken or sung. He released an Islamic morality tale, My Darling Fatima, in 1951. He followed this with three situational comedies: Portmanteau Woman (1952), 'Beggar's Love (1952) and Princess Jaja (1953).

In 1955, his theatre went on a tour of Northern Nigeria that included performances at the Colonial Hotel, Kano. During this time, Ogunde ceased to write as often as he did in order for him to be able to go on grueling road tours to different parts of the country. The Ogunde Theatre Party became a traveling theatre group thereafter. He also changed the name of the group, from Ogunde Theatre Party to Ogunde Concert Party, in 1950.
In 1964, he produced two important plays: Yoruba Ronu and Otitokoro. They both spoke of the political events in Western Nigeria, events which led to the declaration of the state of emergency in 1963. He was the most prominent of the dramatists of the folk opera.

He composed over 40 operas in Yoruba. His play Yoruba Ronu (or "Yoruba Think") was a satirical account of the strife that plagued Yorubaland in the 1960s. The protagonist of the play, Oba Fiwajoye, is betrayed by the actions of his deputy. He is given over into the hands of his enemy, Yeye-Iloba, leading to the imprisonment him and two of his political allies. The deputy then ascends the throne and rules as a tyrant before he is eventually killed by the people. The play was staged at an Egbe Omo Olofin meeting in the presence of NNDP leaders such as Akintola. During the performance, Akintola and a few others walked out, feeling it was a subtle attack on their role in the Western region crisis. It was banned in western Nigeria for two years (1964 to 1966) as a result, but was produced with great success in other parts of the country.

In the 1960s, The advent of Western Nigeria Television (WNTV) gave Ogunde an avenue to reach his audience without traveling. He produced his plays Ayanmo and Mama Eko for the television audience. Ogunde was a representative of Nigeria to Expo 67 in Montreal. On his way back to Nigeria, he stopped at New York and performed at the Apollo Theater in Harlem.

In the late 1970s, film director Ola Balogun directed two successful Yoruba films. The first, "Ajani Ogun", was co-produced with the actor Ade Love. The second, "Ija Ominira", starred Ade Love. Ogunde decided to join the trend. He invited Ola Balogun to direct Aiye, an adaptation of one of his stage plays. Ogunde chose the play partly because it attracted crowds during its run of performances. Unlike the stage act, the film was shot in such a way as to allow for a sequel. The film premiered in 1979, and within a year it had made its money back. Aiye explored Yoruba mysticism, the issue of witchcraft and traditional notions of light and darkness.

Ogunde sold some of his properties to finance the movie. The next Ogunde film was Jaiyesinmi, a sequel to Aiye co-directed by Ogunde and Freddie Goode. His third film was Aropin N'Tenia, another adaptation of a stage play which had premiered in 1964. The film had fewer mystical symbols than those that preceded it. Ogunde provided the funds for the production of all of his movies without exception. His fourth film was Ayanmo, originally adapted from a play that had been dedicated to his wife, Adeshewa, who had died previously. Ogunde established a film village at Ososa, his hometown, to serve as a film shooting studio for his films in 1982. His last two films, Aropin N'tenia and Ayanmo were shot at the Ogunde film village.

Ogunde released many music albums during his career. His distinctive voice marked the songs in these albums which, like his plays and films, demonstrated knowledge of the Yoruba ethos. The albums included Ekun Oniwogbe (about the human conscience), Onimoto (about motor drivers) and Adeshewa (about the loss of his wife and co-star, who died in a tragic accident). The most popular of his albums is Yoruba Ronu, a soundtrack to the play of the same name. He produced over 90 songs in a creative life that stretched from the late 1950s to 1988. From the 1960s onwards, he produced a soundtrack album for each play.

In 1986, he was invited by the Nigerian government to form a national drama troupe. During this time, he represented Nigeria in the Commonwealth Festival of Arts, performing a play called Destiny (which was a re-arranged Ayanmo that he had released earlier in 1970. Destiny was a production with thirty dancers. In the play, Ogunde incorporated some of his favorite dance steps, Ijo-Eleja (or the dance of the fishermen), Asan Ubo-Ikpa from the Ibibio culture, and the kwag-hir from Tivland.
Ogunde established an estate at Ososa. The venue served as the rehearsal center for the national troupe before his passing in 1990. Ogunde married more than ten wives and had many children. The Ogunde Theater was largely a family-run business, and all the wives and children took part in the productions at one time or the other. Some of the children were actors and actresses, while others were drummers, singers and ticket sellers. All of the wives shared the stage with their husband at various points in the history of the theatre.

The manager of the Ogunde Theater, who also happened to be one of the wives, was the former Miss Clementina Oguntimirin. She later became known as Adeshewa Clementina Ogunde or Mama Eko, taking the latter moniker from the popular 1960s play of the same name that she starred in. His other wives included Ibisomi Ogunde, Risikat Ogunde and Emily Kehinde Olukoga-Ogunde.

Ogunde became the leading producer of Yoruba celluloid movies, with J'ayesinmi (Let the world rest) and Aiye (Life!), blazing the trail.
He was ill during the shooting of the film "Mr. Johnson". Chief Ogunde died on the 4th of April, 1990, at London's Cromwell Hospital following a brief illness. A portrait of Ogunde hangs in the National Gallery of Modern Art, Lagos. During his life he had been honoured with a chieftaincy title, thus making him an Oloye of the Yoruba people.

Ogunde Plays are:
• Garden of Eden and the Throne of God (1944)
• Africa and God (1944)
• Israel in Egypt (1945)
• Nebuchadnezzar's Reign and Belshazzar's Feast(1945)
• King Solomon (1945)
• Worse than Crime (1945)
• Journey to Heaven (1945)
• The Black Forest (Igbo Irunmale) (1945)
• Strike and Hunger (1945)
• Tiger's Empire (1946)
• Darkness and Light (1946)
• Mr. Devil's Money (Ayinde) (1946)
• Herbert Macaulay (1946)
• Human Parasites (1946)
• Towards Liberty (1947)
• Swing the Jazz (1947)
• Yours Forever (Morenike) (1948)
• Half and Half (1949)
• Gold Coast Melodies (1949)
• Bread and Bullet (1950)
• My Darling Fatima (1951)
• Portmanteau Woman (1952)
• Beggar's Love (1952)
• Highway Eagle (1953)
• Princess Jaja (1953)
• Village Hospital (Ile Iwosan) (1957)
• Delicate Millionaire (Olowo Ojiji) (1958)
• Songs of Unity (1960)
• Yoruba Ronu (1964)
• Aropin N'tenia (1964)
• Otito Koro (1964)
• Awo Mimo (1965)
• Ire Olokun (1968)
• Keep Nigeria One (1968)
• Mama Eko (1968)
• Oba nta (1969)
• Ogun Pari (1969)
• Oh, Ogunde (1969)
• Ewe Nla (1970)
• Iwa gbemi (1970)
• Ayanmo (1970)
• Onimoto (1971)
• K'ehin Sokun (1971)
• Aiye (1972)
• Ekun Oniwogbe (1974)
• Ewo Gbeja (1975)
• Muritala Mohamed (1976)
• Oree Niwon (1976)
• Nigeria (1977)
• Igba t' ode (1977)
• Orisa N'la (1977)

Films:
• Aiye (1980)
• Jaiyesimi (1981)
• Aropin (1982)
• Ayanmo (1988)
• Mister Johnson

Television:
• Ogunde: Man of the Theatre - BBC (1983)

References:
• Clark, Ebun (1979). Hubert Ogunde: the making of Nigerian theatre. Oxford UNiversity Press.
• Asobele, Timothy (2003). Yoruba cinema of Nigeria. Lagos: Upper Standard Publications.

Brought To You By: Comr Olamide Akinwumi James
Akinwumiolamide09@gmail.com
09068215955


Monday, June 27, 2022

INAUGURATION OF THE JKF-BAO TRANSITION COMMITTEE

INAUGURATION OF THE JKF-BAO TRANSITION COMMITTEE
In action, Governor Kayode Fayemi with the Governor-elect Governor Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji and his Deputy Governor-elect, Mrs Monisade Afuye during the transition committee inauguration.

Ekiti State Governor, Dr.Kayode Fayemi inaugurates Transition and Advisory Council Members at the Conference Hall of Governor's Office, Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State, SouthWest Nigeria.

The Press Release by the Governor as below:
Monday, June 27, 2022 | Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State, Nigeria
2. An Important Time in Our History
 
● Your Excellencies, Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen, it is my pleasure to welcome you to this historic event, and to start by congratulating us all on the successful conclusion of the June 18, 2022 gubernatorial election.
 
● I am delighted that the electorate overwhelmingly voted for our great party the APC and our candidates, Mr. Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji and Chief Mrs. Monisade Afuye – now Governor-Elect and Deputy Governor-Elect respectively, to consolidate on the work we have done so far.
 
● Today, Ekiti kete is witnessing the commencement of proceedings towards the historic transition of power from the Kayode Fayemi administration to the Biodun Oyebanji administration – the first of its kind since the enactment of the Ekiti State (Transition) Law 2019.
 
Group Photograph, The Transition Committee with Gov. Kayode Fayemi 

● I would therefore not want the import of this event to be lost on us, as it is a very crucial step in the consolidation of our democracy, especially for us in Ekiti State.
 
3. Consolidation of Our Democracy
 
● Today, Ekiti State is leading the way again as a model sub-national government with the implementation of a carefully crafted law with robust provisions to ensure smooth transition of power from successive administrations of the Government of Ekiti State.
 
● With the Ekiti State (Transition) Law 2019, we have made sure that even in cases where there is an alternation of power between different political parties, those coming after us would be guided to ensure seamless continuity of the vision, the completion of projects, and the upholding of commitments validly entered into.
 
● We are pleased that our efforts would ensure that regardless of electoral outcomes, Ekiti would always win. This is also why one of the enduring legacies to be handed over to the incoming administration is the recently crafted 30-year State Development Plan - 2021 - 2050 which should serve as a critical road map to the new administration and even successive ones.
 
● I would therefore like to make this appeal to Ekiti Kete, that in the coming years, we all remain vigilant and cooperative to uphold this non-partisan new and better way of doing things, and the sacred tradition we are establishing today.
 
 
4. Confidence in the Incoming Administration
 
● Your Excellencies, distinguished ladies and gentlemen, I am delighted to commence this process of transition, knowing that our beloved homeland would be in safe hands. The Governor-elect, Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji would be coming to office on the back of his record as an experienced public administrator who is well-educated and well-travelled – a true homegrown son of the soil who has his fingers on the pulse of the yearnings of the people.
 
● He has been a central figure in my administration from 2010 – 2014, and 2018 – 2022, who deservedly shares in the credit for all we have been able to do for the good people of Ekiti state. As the former Secretary to the State Government, he shares in our records of achievement in Good Governance that has seen considerable improvements in the ease-of-doing-business, and earned us the second position in the Disbursement Linked Indicators mileage of the World Bank/FGN backed State Fiscal Transparency Accountability Sustainability (SFTAS), amongst other accolades.
 
● He shares in our achievements in education and the restoration of our pride of place as the intellectual hub in the country, with our free and compulsory education, building of new model colleges, improved teacher quality, regular grants-in-aid, massive investments in infrastructure and equipment, as well as the improvements in the learning environment in our schools. All these have resulted in Ekiti having the lowest rates of out-of-school children in the country, and significant improvements in percentage pass rates in common examinations.
 
● He has been a part of the thinking behind the long term vision to build a workforce of the future in tune with global trends and our comparative advantages in agriculture as well as science and technology which is centred around the Ekiti Knowledge Zone for which we recently received final confirmation of the AfDB Board approval. The vision has also resulted in the establishment of the Ekiti State Polytechnic, Isan-Ekiti, and the Bamidele Olumilua University of Education, Science and Technology, Ikere-Ekiti as well as the growth and development of our premier university – EKSU.
 
● He has been a part of the infrastructural revolution in the state which has seen the completion of a number of critical roads such as Ijero - Ipoti - Iloro-Ayetoro, Igede-Awo-Osi-Ido, Otun - Osun-Iloro, Odo Owa - Oke-Ila-Osun State Boundary, Ikogosi - Ipole Iloro-Efon Alaaye, Ilawe - Erijinyan, Oye-Iye-Otun road, Ikere - Ise-Emure, Isan - Ilemeso, Iludun - Obo-Ayegunle, Aramoko-Erinjiyan-Ikogosi, Agbado-Ode-Isinbode-Omuo, New Ado-Iyin, Ilawe-Igbaraoke, Irele - Ipao - Arinkin Bridge - Kogi State Boundary, Ajolagun Bridge linking Ikere to Ijare Road - Ondo State Boundary and Ilupeju-Ire-Igbemo-Ijan, as well as the commencement of work on Ifaki - Esure - Eyio - Awo road, Itapa - Ijelu - Omu road, the Ado-Ifaki dual carraige way, Ilawe - Ikere road, Ijero - Ara - Awo road, Ikole township roads, and rehabilitation of Ado-Ekiti metropolitan roads. Equally, he has been part of the Rural Access and Agricultural Markets Projects – RAAMP.
 
● He has been part of the team that delivered the Oja Oba Market at Erekesan, the magnificent Obafemi Awolowo Civic and Convention Center, and arguably the largest water corporation headquarters in Nigeria, as well as a total overhaul of three major water dams in Ero, Egbe, and Ureje with the installation of power sources, main pipes, and reticulation of hundreds of kilometers of pipes to towns and villages in about ten local government of the state.
 
● He has also been a part of the various efforts to upgrade broadband access through the comprehensive deployment of fibre optic infrastructure both within our education quadrangle and also state wide. He has equally been a part of the team that has bern responsible for the 5 megawatt Independent Power Project currently due for completion in August 2022.
 
● In the health sector, he has been part of the team that facilitated our free health care programme, the rehabilitation of all the primary health facilities across the state, and the rehabilitation and equipping of our specialist and general hospitals. The Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital has witnessed phenomenal growth and more importantly earned full accreditation by the relevant authorities and he has contributed to one of the most successful stare health insurance schemes in the country with 100,000 enrolees.
 
● In terms of the comprehensive vision to position Ekiti as an economically viable state, he was part of the implementation of a number of successful public-private partnerships such as the Ikun Dairy Farm now being run by Promasidor Limited, and the Ire Burnt Brick which has been revamped now and being run by a competent core investor operator.
 
● He has been a part of the vision for the agriculture sector, which has birthed the Cargo Airport project billed to become operational by September 2022. The cargo airport is designed to plug Ekiti strategically into the global value chain and expose our farmers and processors to a global market, and create vast opportunities for our young people.
 
● He has been part of the team that envisioned and designed the Ekiti Knowledge Zone (EKZ) project that would make Ekiti the hub for a knowledge economy, wealth creation and application to national and global challenges.
 
● He was at the centre of our pioneering effort to re-engineer regional integration in Western Nigeria with the establishment of the Development Agenda for Western Nigeria Commission when he served as Commissioner for Integration and Inter-Governmental Affairs which was to later birth Amotekun - the Western Nigeria Security Network.
 
● He has been a part of the team that has prioritized workers’ welfare and ensured the prompt payment of salaries and pensions.
 
● He has been a part of the Ekiti State Security Council that understands the issues and our approach to security sector governance in the state.
 
● He has been as much a part of our history as a state, as he is a symbol of our hope for the future. He has an enviable pedigree as one of the members of the Committee for the Creation of Ekiti State, in which he served as the secretary at the young age of 26. He was one of those who prepared the blueprint for the takeoff of the state, and has cumulatively contributed close to 12 years in the service of the state as a Special Assistant, Chief of Staff, Commissioner, and Secretary to the State Government.
 
● I have found in him a conscientious public servant who is trustworthy in all his dealings, and very dependable. I owe a debt of gratitude to him for being the engine room behind all our efforts, and for his faithfulness with all that has been committed to him through the years. At this time by the grace of God, BAO / Afuye lokan, to take Ekiti to the next level.
 
● I am most gratified that I have found in Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji a worthy successor because there is no true success and legacy without a successor that can continue with the vision. I have known him and enjoyed a personal relationship with him as a friend, brother, colleague, and one of my most trusted allies for close to two decades.
 
● As my administration transitions out, I am confident that with Mr. Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji and Chief Mrs. Monisade Afuye, Ekiti is in safe hands. I have no reservations in commending him to the good people of Ekiti as a worthy successor for the Office of Governor, who would carry on with our vision, and usher Ekiti into a new season of sustainable development, peace, and prosperity.
 
● I ask that Ekiti Kete gives the incoming administration the same degree of support and goodwill I have enjoyed.
 
5. Terms of Reference are:
a. to make comprehensive arrangement to manage, the transfer of political power seamlessly;
b. to ensure the provision of State of the State briefings for the Governor- Elect during the period before his assumption of office;
c. to undertake any other function as enshrined in the Transition Law to achieve the object of this Law.
6. Thank You Ekiti
 
● As I conclude, I would like to thank Ekiti Kete for the support you have granted my administration over the course of my tenure and the assurance of your continued support for us to finish well and strong.
 
● I am confident that with the 30-year Ekiti Development plan that has been put in place, and patriotic people at the helms of our affairs, Ekiti would take her rightful place where we achieve sustainable development, peace and progress in our homeland.
 
● It is my pleasure to formally inaugurate the transition committee comprising very accomplished Ekiti sons and daughters in keeping with the provisions of the law, and I am confident they would justify the confidence reposed in them.
 
● Your Excellencies, Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen, once again I thank you all for coming to this historic event, and wish you a safe and pleasant journey back to your respective destinations.
 
Dr. Kayode Fayemi, CON
Governor

Friday, June 24, 2022

Ekiti Government Constitutes Transition Committee, Advisory Council.

Ekiti Government Constitutes Transition Committee, Advisory Council.
Ekiti State logo

In line with the Ekiti State Transition Law, 2019, the State Governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi, has approved the composition of a Transition Committee and an Advisory Council, following the election of Mr Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji as Governor-elect.

The Transition Committee. would among other tasks, study the state of affairs of the present administration, review the programmes and projects of MDAs and map out strategies for a smooth transition from the incumbent to the incoming government. The Advisory Council would address unresolved issues.

The Transition Committee and Advisory Council comprise members nominated by the state government and the Governor-elect.
Members of the Transition Committee are:
• Mr Foluso Daramola (SSG/ Chairperson)
• Mr Tolu Ibitola (Chief of Staff)
• Mr Wale Fapohunda, SAN. (AG/ Comm for Justice)
• Mr Akin Oyebode (Comm for Finance)
• Mrs Peju Babafemi (Head of Service)
• Dr (Mrs) Olabimpe Aderiye, mni
• Dr Oyebanji Filani
• Mr O’seun Odewale
• Mrs Margaret Fagboyo
• Prof Bolaji Aluko
• Senator Olubunmi Adetunmbi (Co-Chairperson)
• Mr Oluwole Ariyo
• Mr Deji Ajayi
• Senator Tony Adeniyi
• Mr Niyi Adebayo
• Engr Dipo Bamisaye
• Dr Habibat Adubiaro
• Mr Sunday Fatoba
• Prof Bisi Aina
• Mr Adejumo Feyisope

The Advisory Council members are:
• Otunba Bisi Egbeyemi (Chairperson)
• Prof Modupe Adelabu (Co-Chairperson)
• Surv. Abiodun Aluko
• Chief Jide Awe

The Committees are to turn in their reports within six weeks from the date of their inauguration.

Yinka Oyebode
Chief Press Secretary to the Governor
24-06-2022