Flashback Friday: Chief Obafemi Awolowo with his Kids
An old 1960s photo of Chief Obafemi Awolowo in London with his kids, Olusegun, Omotola, and Oluwole Awolowo.
An old 1960s photo of Chief Obafemi Awolowo in London with his kids, Olusegun, Omotola, and Oluwole Awolowo.
Chief Marshal Harry was slain at his Abuja residence on March 5, 2003, one month before the presidential elections scheduled for April 19, 2003. Prominent politicians and civil rights organizations denounced the savage killing of Chief Marshall Harry. Prior to his murder, Rivers state native Chief Marshall Harry served as national head of the now-defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP). Intimidating the region with his vast political following in the South-South, he organized it to support Olusegun Obasanjo for President on February 27, 1999. The political arithmetic of Dr. Chuba Okadigbo and his attempt to actualize President Buhari’s ambition before his death. However, in an effort to save Nigeria from what he perceived as Chief General Olusegun Obasanjo’s appalling performance, Chief Marshall Harry left the PDP for the ANPP and joined General Muhammadu Buhari’s campaign path. South Africans would vote for General Muhammad Buhari of the ANPP, not President Olusegun Obasanjo, Chief Marshal Harry said in a public statement. Chief Marshall Harry’s proclamation alarmed the president and other political rivals. Following the ANPP convention, everything was prepared for the upcoming ANPP campaign trail. However, on the evening of March 5, 2003, a group of gunmen broke into Chief Marshall Sokari Harry’s home in Abuja and killed him in front of his family after they were unable to enter the building. At the Force Headquarters in Abuja, armed robbers were displayed as Chief Marshall Harry’s killers by the Nigerian police force, which was then led by Mr. Tafa Balogun. However, his daughter rejected the actions of the police and acknowledged that, prior to the assassination of her father on March 5, 2003, the gunmen had made a comment in which they said, “You said Buhari for President a Joke.” As fate would have it, Chief Marshall Harry was not there for the general elections held on April 19, 2003, which President Olusegun Obasanjo defeated President General Muhammadu Buhari. The late Marshal Harry was the national vice-chairman of the ANPP South-South and a supporter of Nigerian unification. His son Inye Marshal Harry and Mujahid Dokubo-Asari of the Mujahid Dokubo-Asari both accused a number of high-ranking government officials of plotting to kill both Harry and former PDP chieftain Aminosoari Dikibo during the 2003 election. Olusegun Obasanjo, for example, filed a N1 billion defamation suit against journalist Akanda Oro, also known as Awikonko, in 2018. The identity of the assassin who killed Marshal Sokari Harry in his Abuja home is still a mystery, and no one has ever been prosecuted.
In order to defend the rights and right to self-determination of the Niger Delta people, Boro founded the Niger Delta Volunteer Force (NDVF) in 1966. This was a reaction to the Nigerian government’s alleged abuse and neglect of the area’s resources. In February 1966, Boro organized an armed uprising that became known as the “Twelve-Day Revolution.” The NDVF proclaimed the Niger Delta Republic and attempted to seize control of the area’s oil reserves. But the Nigerian military put an end to the uprising quickly, and Boro was taken prisoner. Following the revolt’s collapse, Boro and his supporters were taken into custody, put on trial for treason, and given the death penalty. But following a coup, General Yakubu Gowon—who had assumed the presidency of Nigeria—gave them amnesty. Boro joined the Nigerian army in 1967 to fight against the breakaway state of Biafra during the Nigerian Civil War (1967–1970). In the federal military operations in the Niger Delta, he was a key player. In the midst of the Nigerian Civil War, on May 16, 1968, Isaac Adaka Boro passed away under strange circumstances. There is conjecture and disagreement on the precise circumstances of his passing.
The military government led by General Muhammadu Buhari condemned Governor Ambrose Folorunsho Alli to 100 years in jail in 1984 for allegedly stealing N983,000 meant for a road project. Alli passed away five years later, on September 22, 1989, his 60th birthday. He was the driving force behind the founding of Bendel State University, which is now known as Ambrose Alli University in Ekpoma, Edo State. Professor Alli outperformed Brig. Gen. Samuel Ogbe in terms of leadership when serving as the governor of the erstwhile Bendel State during General Buhari’s military rule. Among his achievements are: Establishing more than 600 secondary schools and doing away with tuition fees; Establishing free education for all elementary and secondary schools, including books, stationery, and uniforms; Founding Bendel State University (now Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma), which has many campuses; Establishing polytechnics, colleges of education, and colleges of agriculture; Offering free medical treatment and prescription medications at state-owned hospitals. His extraordinary accomplishments brought him fame, but they also made adversaries, which is how the Buhari government unfairly detained him. Eventually, the fabricated accusations of embezzlement were removed from his record, and the university he created was named in his honor.
Iyamode is seated on the left, and Iya Naso is seated on the right. While there are eight strong women in the Alaafin’s palace, Iyamode, Iya Kere, and Iya Naso are the most formidable. The circumstances surrounding his death’s aftermath. The Death and King’s Horseman When the 1946 ceremony commemorating the Alaâfins’ death was set to take place, a British officer went out and arrested Eleshin Oba, throwing him into jail because, as per British law, attempting suicide is a crime. In order to bury his father, the son of Eleshin Oba, who was a trader in Ghana’s Gold Coast at the time, hurried back home. Upon witnessing him in life, he was so appalled by the depravity that he instantly took his own life. Pierre Verger first studied and recounted the historical incident in the 1960s. Prof. Wole Soyinka’s play was first released in 1975.
The chieftaincy titles of the Woje Ileri of Ile-Ife and the Lisa of Egbaland belonged to Oloye Sir Adeyemo Alakija. In addition, he was among the most prosperous merchants and attorneys in Nigeria in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Nigerian lawyer, politician, and businessman Alakija was born on May 25, 1884, and died on May 10, 1952. Beginning in 1933, he was a member of the Nigerian Legislative Council for nine years. He became a member of the Governor’s Executive Council in 1942. In 1948, Alakija served as the president of Egbe Omo Oduduwa till his passing in 1952. The early 20th century cultural nationalism that swept over Nigeria had a profound effect on him. His family changed their assimilated Portuguese name to Alakija, a native name, in 1913 as a result of his boldness. As his life came to a close, he was made the Bariyun of the Ake Lineage of Egbaland and the Woje Ileri of Ile-Ife, elevating him to the aristocracy of his tribe. Like many emancipated slaves living in Lagos, the Oloye Alakija, whose first name was Placido, was of Afro-Brazilian lineage. The Amaros was another name for the groups. For a while, the Alakija family was the most well-known Amaros in Nigeria. He introduced the usage of masonic symbols, such as the unblinking eye on an inverted V and three vertical forms, within the organization as a member of the fraternity. He was a high-ranking Freemason as well. Alakija was a donor to both Egbe Omo Oduduwa and the Action Group, and he had a significant impact on their growth. Early in his political career, Alakija gained notoriety through his partnership with Herbert Macaulay and Egerton Shyngle. However, after a falling out with Macaulay and due to his moderate political beliefs, his popularity started to decline until the early 1950s, when he started to gain favor with the public.Alakija became close friends with a number of groups and communities, including the Syrian and Lebanese populations in Nigeria. Following his 1949 visit to Lebanon, he was given a medal of the cedars. Alakija, the youngest of the seven children in the family, was born into the family of Marculino (also known as Elemeji) and Maxmilliana Assumpcao. His mother was the daughter of Alfa Cyprian Akinosho Tairu of Oyo, while his father was of Egba descent. Maxwell Porphyrio Assumpcao-Alakija, his eldest brother, was a barrister in Bahia, Brazil, and the father-in-law of Sir Olumuyiwa Jibowu. Olayimika Alakija, a former member of the Nigerian Legislative Council, was another brother of his who later became his legal partner. Tejumade Assumpcao, an older sister, married Sir Ladapo Ademola, the Alake of Egbaland, her family’s traditional country, and became Olori Tejumade Alakija Ademola, Lady Ademola. Prior to transferring to CMS Grammar School in Lagos, Alakija attended St. Gregory’s Catholic School.Later, in the early 1930s, he attended Oxford University and developed into a fervent supporter of giving Nigerians access to higher education while they were still under colonial rule. Alakija began working in the post office in 1900 after completing his secondary schooling, and he spent ten years in the civil service.After completing his legal studies in London and receiving his degree in 1913, he began a legal business in Lagos. His legal practice prospered, but Herbert Macaulay, a previous friend whose political views changed as a result of the Lagos Eleko issue, opposed him when he entered the electoral fray.(We’ll tell the Eleko Crisis narrative at a later date.) Alakija was against Eshugbayi Eleko, the Oba of Lagos, and others who supported the Oba, such as Macaulay and the Jamat Muslims. He ran for the legislature in 1923 but was unsuccessful. But he was a nominated member of the Legislative Council from 1933 to 1941, serving as the division’s representative for Egba. In addition, he served as the Island Club’s inaugural president. Along with Ernest Ikoli and Richard Barrow, the president of the …
The horrifying tale of Nigerian assassinations in the 20th century may not entirely register with today’s youth, who may not fully appreciate the terrifying nature of Nigeria under military control and interventions. Throughout the 20th century, Nigeria had the greatest rate of high-profile assassinations in West African history. Numerous individuals were assassinated, including Dele Giwa, Alfred Rewane, Kudirat Abiola, Babatunde Ashafa, Admiral Olu Omotoyinwa, Dipo Dina, Irene Obodo, Sunday Ugwu, and many more. Muftau Adegoke Babatunde Elegbede (13 August 1939 –19 June 1994) served as the Military Governor of Cross River State from July 1975 to October 1978 as well as the Chief of Nigeria’s Defense Intelligence Agency from July 1986 to January 1990. Elegbede, a Navy Captain, served as the Military Governor of Cross River State from July 28, 1978, until September 30, 1979, when he deferred to Clement Isong, the elected civilian governor, in the early days of the Nigerian Second Republic. The Maritime Academy of Nigeria was founded at Oron (now in Akwa Ibom State) during his administration. Elegbede served as Chairman of the Kaduna Zone military tribunal during the military regime of General Muhammadu Buhari, which replaced the Second Republic following a coup on December 31, 1983. The tribunal’s purpose was to try public officers from the previous civilian regime who had been accused of embezzling public funds. Following his appointment as director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, he served as General Ibrahim Babangida’s chief of administration at Defense Headquarters. Commodore Elegbede served as the Flag Officer Commanding of the Sea Training Command in September of 1985. From 1983 till 1993, he was a part of Babangida’s Armed Forces Ruling Council. Elegbede was shot about 70 times by automatic rifle rounds when he was killed by unidentified assailants on June 19, 1994, along the Gbagada/Owonshoki expressway in Lagos. Three of the seven alleged thieves were formally charged in July 2001. Nevertheless, no one had been found guilty of the crime as of September 2009. Was it possible that he was assassinated because he was in possession of sensitive information regarding some high-ranking military officers?
Beautiful actress Dakore Egbuson-Akande, born Dakore Omobola Egbuson on October 14, 1978 in Bayelsa state, is shown in this 1981 childhood portrait.
Ten years before to his passing, in an interview, he stated: The Black Scorpion has stopped biting, thus my days of killing are done. When I was retired from the Army by the Gowon dictatorship a few years ago, his venom was neutralized. 2014 saw Brigadier Adekunle declare at his Surulere home, “My killing days are over.” ‘’Until now, the Nigerian society had labeled me as a legalized murderer. I will work on any project right now that helps save my fellow Nigerians’ souls. Not that I regret my time spent in the military, or what some like to call my “killing days.” However, there are instances in which you must reevaluate. Being a soldier comes with a stigma since you are forever marked. People perceive you as a bloodthirsty cannibal with nothing redeeming about you. When asked how he came up with the moniker “Black Scorpion”? “I think the identification of an octopus as a scorpion was incorrectly made by the Western press, and it has stuck ever since.” You see, my battalion’s symbol was and remains an octopus. It doesn’t bother me. I find it to be incredibly meaningless. I have a brand now. Human assessment procedures can be risky. As a father, I don’t believe I pose a threat even if you claim that I am hazardous when carrying out my duties. Yes, if you claim that I am a radical. I’ll trust you if you tell me I’m a strict disciplinarian. However, I would like evidence if you claim that I am hazardous. For my ideals, I was deemed a radical in the Army. Simply glance around to see whether or not the folks require drastic modifications. See if they can comprehend their allies and adversaries. The people are being given new life by radicalism to the extent that they feel proud of and a part of the country.
Millicent Dolly May Small, a Jamaican singer and songwriter best remembered for her 1964 hit song “My Boy Lollipop,” was the star of this incredible advertising campaign. At that time, Millie was 19 years old; manufacturing at the Agindigbi plant had just begun in 1965. This campaign was for Cardbury West Africa. In the 1960s, the marketing contributed to the “Bournvita’s” rise to fame. In the 1960s, Millie was invited to Nigeria by the late Eddie Ugbomah, a legendary filmmaker and showbiz icon. She performed at prestigious nightclubs and locations throughout Lagos. Millie was adored by the late Oba Adeyinka Oyekan II, the Oba of Lagos. Later on, he would give her the title of chieftaincy. Additionally, the late leader MKO ABIOLA was a huge Bournvita enthusiast. On Wednesday, May 6, 2020, Millie passed away due to a stroke. Her age was seventy-two. Gen Z can’t relate to this.