Don Jazzy opens up on experience with failure

Nigerian music executive and CEO of Mavins Records, Don Jazzy, has opened up on his experience with failure before he founded Mavins.

While speaking with Rolling Stone, Don Jazzy revealed that he almost quit music after Mo-hits ended. He explained that he felt the need to move abroad and quit being a producer.

The music executive revealed that his friends however, kept encouraging and supporting him. He added that this support made him more motivated.

“When Mo’Hits ended, I thought that was it. I almost packed up to move abroad. But friends encouraged me to stay and start again, and Mavin Records was born. Since then, I’ve learned not to let anything break me,” he said.

#JusticeforOchanya: Nigerian Celebrities demand justice

By Abimbola Aderinola

Some notable figures in the Nigerian entertainment industry have joined the #JusticeforOchanya movement, asking that the case of 13-year-old Ochanya Ogbanje be re-opened.

Figures like Tiwa Savage, Jemima Osunde, Aproko Doctor, Saskay, Mr. Macaroni and so many others took to their X handle on Thursday to speak about the case.

Tiwa Savage expressed her thoughts on the case, urging others to speak up and rally for justice. She noted that children should be kept safe and not molested sexually.

“My heart is heavy. A young girl suffered unthinkable pain at the hands of those meant to protect her and lost her life because of it. We can’t stay silent. We can’t continue to hide behind family titles and tradition. She deserves justice. Every child deserves safety. #Justiceforochanya,’ she wrote.

Other celebrities posted the hashtag, while some also demanded that justice prevail over the case.

13-year-old Ochanya was a student of the Federal Government Girls College, Gboko, who reportedly died from Vesicovaginal Fistula (VVF). She was said to have developed this condition from allegedly being sexually assaulted by her uncle, Andrew Ogbuja and cousin, Victor Ogbuja for 5 years.

’Why i feel more free in Nigeria than America’, Burna boy

Damini Ebunoluwa Ogulu, popularly known as Burna boy, has opened up on why he prefers being in Nigeria to being in the United States of America.

The megastar, while on a livestream with PlaqueBoyMax, revealed that he feels more safe when in Nigeria than abroad. He went on to note that being in his country gives him a sense of freedom.

Burna Boy noted that despite one’s fame and fortune, one can still end up behind bars in America, but Nigeria allows him to express himself without fear.

“The definition of freedom is in my country. I can never be fully free here. Guys end up in jail here in America,” he stated.

His comment quickly sparked reactions and comments surrounding Nigerians who work very hard to leave the country.

Kolade by Kolade: A Tribute

By Kolade Mosuro

Every so often, I am mistaken for Christopher Kolade. I am Kolade Mosuro. Well, we both attended Government College, Ibadan (GCI), but then Christopher was in a bit of a hurry; he got there before I was born. He got in in 1946. I told him there was a transpositional error in the year I got in, which was 1964. The years 1964 and 1946 contain the same integers, if a boy chooses to be clever with figures. After he passed, I was accosted by a man, who, on hearing my name, wondered whether it was I who had just died! I assured him I was alive and took no offence. A friend took the matter further because he wrote to say he had just returned from paying a condolence visit to the family of Kolade Mosuro, who had just passed. I am prepared to make an appearance in the coming days to startle the world.

Christopher Kolade and I have long been entangled with our names. I told him I wished the bank had made a mistake and sent his bank statement to me, and my liabilities to him. He told me he had more liabilities than I did. I challenged him to put it to the test, which he failed to do. We lived happily with our liabilities. The only time we were at ‘war’ was when he made the obnoxious claim that his house, Swanston, in Government College, was better than mine, Carr, when in fact, he knew that mine was irrevocably better than any other.

In 2016, Prof Oladipo Akinkugbe had a reunion of some sort for his 1946 GCI classmates and their spouses at his residence in Ibadan. There was an apology from Prof Wole Soyinka, another classmate of theirs. He was somewhere in the air but sent some bottles of wine in atonement for his absence. Akinkugbe had asked me to conduct the affairs at that reunion. For my part, I went to GCI, dug into the school records and showed up at the 1946 reunion with a cane! Questions were posed to the ‘boys’, and if they got it right, we drank to their health, and if they got it wrong, the cane was going to be applied. To play safe, I had a junior boy with me to administer the punishment!

So I asked, for example, what Christopher Kolade’s weight and height were when he got into Government College. For all their brilliance, the boys did not remember weights and heights. Kolade was the most boisterous on that day, but I spared him on account of our name. These were old men, but the everlasting child of secondary school never left them.

In GCI, Akinkugbe was tall with unequal legs, Kolade was short with short legs, and Soyinka was small with spiny legs. The class did brilliantly in academics and did not fare well in sports. But they knew themselves intimately well such that when Wole Soyinka won the Nobel Prize, they threw a party for him, but on the occasion, they delegated three of their classmates to follow him when he needed to use the bathroom, knowing he could so readily from there make for the Seme border or the airport. They ensured he used the bathroom and marched him back to the party. And so when Akinkugbe died, it was a wise choice by Chief Olu Akinkugbe that Dr. Christopher Kolade should deliver the funeral oration.

He opened the eulogy with these words: Almighty God, for His Supreme purpose and commanding pleasure, Gave the world a Light, and named him Oladipo Olujimi Akinkugbe; A veritable Star; a venerable Sage above measure, His brilliance shone ever strong on his allotted day. A Teacher of teachers; A Leader of leaders; A trusty Beacon, for all coming generations ever to treasure.

Well, Christopher Kolade may just have been talking about himself. Or, if we reversed the situation, Oladipo Akinkugbe would have said the same thing about Christopher Kolade if he had gone ahead of him. They emerged from the same mould.

nd then Christopher Kolade went further in the eulogy as follows:

Your life helps us to look afresh at some concepts and philosophies that we had taken for granted. In your years of life on this earth, you were present and prominent in so many roles and in so many places that we must now review our long-held belief that a rolling stone gathers no moss. All the evidence that is available to us tells, and confirms several times over, that your ‘rolling stone’ created lots of its own ‘moss’ and gathered a great deal more, giving us the opportunity to appreciate you, not just in terms of your years or the positions and Awards that you received, but especially, in terms of the distinguished results that you registered, and the excellent value that you created, and added to every situation that you touched.

Integrity Serenity Wisdom Purposefulness Accountability. Those are some of the attributes to which we can testify he possessed He has truly served the purpose of God in his generation and also primed upcoming generations with values and resources on which they will construct the edifice of their own leadership performance.

I have turned these words over and over in my mind and concluded that Christopher Kolade may have been talking about the ideals he subscribed to, which he found in Akinkugbe, and could as well be talking about himself.

Some twenty years or so ago, when my son was at the university in London, he told me he and his friends found comic relief in going to the Nigerian High Commission during their lull. Their university was just a stone’s throw away. They would sit in the waiting room and observe. Some Nigerian citizens came prepared for a fight; some boiled only when they got there; some were bemused by it all and hissed to forewarn that they would soon let out steam; some spoke at the top of their voices: Do you know who I am? Some were tired of it all: I beg, return my passport if you can’t do anything, nonsense; By the door somewhere, a voice rang out loud: I am old enough to be your father, imagine; A man seemingly quiet, but in a state of exasperation, suddenly bursts into a passion. Every now and then, an officer would whizz from the inner room through the waiting room, clutching some files and feeling important. All eyes in the waiting room would trail him, in the eagerness to claim him, in the hope that one of the files in his hold belonged to them. Not quite. So, they continued to wait and fume in any manner they could. In all these, the Security officer at the entrance kept a straight face, like the sentry at Buckingham Palace, pretending not to notice the drama, only to tell unbelievable tales to his brethren at home. These incredible developments brought him to work the next day, for more. There is really no dull moment at the Nigerian High Commission, London. Meanwhile, officers of the High Commission lay in siege and escaped at the end of the day through the back door.

nd then I saw Dr Christopher Kolade walk majestically, without aides, undisturbed, with comfort, in a city of noise. This was London. I was not going to disturb him, so I walked admiringly, hidden by several paces, behind him. He walked with respect and dignity while the air gracefully made way for him. One could touch the atmosphere and savour it. It was pleasing. My delight was that a good man, a very decent man, was ahead of me, possibly the best representation of Nigeria. Yes, he was our High Commissioner to the United Kingdom. I joyfully filed behind him as he strode along the west end of London. For a moment, it struck me that this is exactly what soldiers mean when they claim they can walk blindfolded behind some special Generals taking them to war. They say this when they have found absolute leadership in their General. Christopher Kolade was a generals’ general, a grand leader of men.

Consider that to a ‘big’ man who walked across the same streets of Central London on another occasion. Nigerians went after him, calling him names, for stealing our money. It does not take long for Nigerians to gather. The painful look in their eyes is a summons. The ‘big’ man quickened his steps and went hiding in a Boots Chemist shop. The stench of his crime could not be contained by any fragrant product from the shop. The crowd found him there, and they harangued him until a policeman gave him some protective reprieve, so that Boots could continue with its sales and not be detracted by Nigerian pantomime acts. London is a theatre, and it regularly features Nigeria.

few years back, some academics put together a three-volume book, a seminal exposition on Dr Christopher Kolade featuring People, Leadership and Management in one volume; Business and Economy, Nation Building and Ethics in another; and Broadcasting in the last volume. It was called Kolade’s Canons. To title a three-volume book about him as Kolade’s Canons sounds almost messianic. In truth, he led an unblemished ethical life as part of an economic life. What those three volumes said and showed concretely was that Dr Christopher Kolade was consistently exemplary and deeply knowledgeable throughout his varied career as a teacher, broadcaster, corporate executive, diplomat, university administrator and preacher. They said further that he was a shining example of public and private life. Yes, he was a remarkable man, an erudite scholar and practitioner, someone who effortlessly exerted much influence through ease, a simple and natural sense of carriage. Let us not forget to mention that in his conduct, he used words attractively and spoke distinctly. All those who encountered him felt some purity about him.

The same praises continue to resonate even in death when his alma mater, Government College, Ibadan, amongst many, put out an obituary that simply said he was an epitome of competence, integrity and selfless service. The only missing line in the obsequies is that he was an exceptionally great thinker and jolly to the core.

bout a year ago, I sat down with him in his living room to talk about company succession. The conversation expanded to life and the imminence of death. An end was bound to come for all mortals, and so it did for him on Wednesday, October 8, 2025.

Now, when I am called Dr Kolade, I nod and smile approvingly, knowing full well the old man bequeathed a name worthy of bearing, all enshrined in gold.

Dr Kolade Mosuro is a Publisher, Bookseller, and Trustee of the Government College Ibadan Old Boys Association.

Why Natasha invited Akpabio to her anniversary

By Jethro Ibileke

A national policy and advocacy group, Action Collective, has described Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan’s invitation to the Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, and other distinguished members of the National Assembly to her second anniversary and project commissioning as an act of normal legislative courtesy.

The Kogi Central Senator had invited the Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, and other members of the National Assembly to attend her second anniversary celebration, scheduled for Sunday, November 2, 2025, at her Ihima residence.

In a statement signed by its National Coordinator, Teddy Onyejuwe, the group noted that such invitations are common during similar occasions and reflect unity, respect, and camaraderie among colleagues in the National Assembly.

Reaffirming its support for leaders who, like Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, continue to demonstrate integrity, service, and accountability in governance despite daunting challenges, the group stressed that the invitation should not be politicized or misinterpreted. It further stated that the gesture aligns with long-standing parliamentary tradition, where lawmakers celebrate milestones collectively, regardless of party affiliations or political differences.

“The Action Collective joins the good people of Kogi Central and well-wishers across the country to celebrate Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan for her courage, resilience, and unwavering focus on people-centered representation. Her story is an inspiration to all Nigerians who believe in democracy and justice,” the statement said.

The group congratulated Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan on the successful completion of her second year in the National Assembly, noting that her tenure has been marked by visible impact through constituency project commissioning and empowerment initiatives that have directly benefited the people of Kogi Central.

It also commended her for the quality of her representation, resilience, courage, and unwavering commitment to public service despite political intimidation, institutional harassment, and her illegal suspension.

“Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan’s steadfastness in fulfilling her mandate stands as a beacon of hope for Nigerian democracy, especially given the numerous challenges she has faced since assuming office.

“Despite her illegal suspension, harassment through the judiciary, and pressure from political actors, Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan remained resolute in her mission to represent and empower her people,” the statement added.

“Her courage to continue working for her constituents under such adversity reflects true leadership and dedication to the ideals of justice, equity, and democratic service,” the group concluded.

President Tinubu advised to ignore ‘mischievous attacks’ on Ribadu

A civil society organisation, Inclusive Citizens’ Advancement Network (Inc-CAN), has criticised a seven-day ultimatum issued by a North-East youth group to President Bola Tinubu to probe the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA).

The organisation described the ultimatum as an “empty outburst” and a distraction coming at a time when the National Security Adviser (NSA), Malam Nuhu Ribadu, successfully led Nigeria out of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) grey list.

Inc-CAN stated this in a communique issued in Abuja by its Executive Director, Mrs Esther Nwankpa, and Interim General Secretary, Mr Olufemi Adeniyi, on Friday.

The group said the demand by the youth coalition was misplaced and contrary to the popular view among Nigerians that Ribadu had worked tirelessly as a key figure in President Tinubu’s counter-terrorism and governance reform agenda.

Nwankpa described Ribadu as a public officer of “absolute integrity, patriotism and commitment to the greater good”.

She added that the attacks on him were being sponsored by “envious and mischievous interests” bent on derailing ongoing security reforms.

She said the ONSA, under Ribadu’s leadership, provided critical strategic oversight and coordination among the nation’s security and intelligence agencies, which contributed to the country’s removal from the FATF’s list of jurisdictions under increased monitoring.

“The historic delisting of Nigeria from the FATF grey list is a major milestone in our national journey towards financial transparency and integrity.

“The development has reinforced global confidence in Nigeria’s anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing architecture and improved the nation’s capacity to attract foreign investment,” she said.

Nwankpa also commended the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU), the National Counter-Terrorism Centre (NCTC), and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) for their collaborative roles in achieving the delisting.

She praised the Director-General of the NFIU, Hajiya Hafsat Bakari, for her pivotal role in coordinating reforms, saying Inc-CAN would nominate her for a national honour in recognition of her exceptional service.

Nwankpa urged Nigerians to disregard the “misguided outbursts” of the youth group and support the Tinubu administration’s efforts to consolidate national security and institutional integrity.

“The NFIU under Hajiya Bakari’s leadership displayed uncommon commitment and professionalism in addressing FATF’s concerns and strengthening the country’s compliance framework.

“Ribadu has served Nigeria with utmost distinction, both as a former anti-corruption czar and now as National Security Adviser. His integrity and commitment to national stability remain unquestionable and unequalled,” she added.

Councillors suspend Ogun LG chair over alleged gross misconduct

By Adejoke Adeleye

The Ado-Odo/Ota Legislative Council in Ogun State has passed a motion seeking the immediate suspension of the Chairman of the Local Government, Alhaji Lawal Adewale Wasiu over alleged acts of gross misconduct, financial impropriety, insubordination and abuse of office.

The motion, sponsored by Hon. Asalu Aina Musediq, representing Ota Ward 2, was moved during the council’s plenary session held on Thursday, October 30, 2025, at the Ado-Odo/Ota Legislative Chamber.

In the motion, the Legislative Council accused the Chairman of persistently refusing to present the statutory Income and Expenditure Account of the Local Government to them despite several official requests in line with the provisions of Section 52, Part V of the Ogun State Local Government Law 2000 (as amended).

Hon. Musediq stated that the council had, on no fewer than four occasions, written to the Chairman demanding the financial records for legislative scrutiny, but he allegedly failed to comply, offering either excuses or no response.

“This deliberate refusal to render an account of the Local Government’s financial operations is not only a breach of the law, but raises serious suspicion of financial impropriety, administrative impunity and abuse of office,” he declared.

The motion also accused the Chairman of consistently disregarding legislative resolutions, invitations and correspondences from the Council, an act the lawmakers described as a “gross display of disrespect for the legislative arm” and a violation of the doctrine of separation of powers.

Hon. Musediq cited relevant sections of the Ogun State Local Government Law, noting that the Chairman’s conduct contravened Sections 37(11), 52(f), and 52(i) of the law, all of which outline the duties and accountability requirements of a local government chairman.

He emphasized that such behaviour undermines the principles of good governance, accountability and transparency, the very foundation upon which the third tier of government is built.

Following deliberations on the motion, the Council resolved that the Chairman should be suspended from office with immediate effect for a period of three months, pending the outcome of a thorough investigation into the financial and administrative management of the council.

During the suspension period, the motion stipulates that the Chairman “shall not have access to any Local Government accounts, documents, or financial instruments”.

“He cannot issue instructions, sign letters, or represent the Local Government in any official capacity, retain any government property, including vehicles, documents and communication devices, which must be returned to the Head of Local Government Administration (HOLGA).”

The Council also directed that the Vice Chairman, Hon. Abosede Balogun, should immediately assume office as the Acting Chairman and perform all statutory functions in accordance with the law.

Furthermore, the Clerk of the Legislative Council was instructed to communicate the resolution to all relevant authorities, including the Head of Local Government Administration, the Ogun State Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, the Ogun State House of Assembly and security agencies, as well as the Association of Local Governments of Nigeria (ALGON), for further necessary action.

Ogun: Abiodun’s Built-for-the-Cameras Roads

By Jelili Ariyibi

Senator Olamilekan Adeola, Ladi Adebutu, Gboyega Nasir Isiaka, Segun Sowunmi, Noimot Salako-Oyedele and others circling the Ogun State governorship in 2027, consider this your warning label: the state you seek to govern has, for decades, produced some of Nigeria’s most grotesque roads. These are road projects announced with fanfare, which are then washed away within months in a long-running system showing that the state has long mistaken visibility for vision.

Three governors-Gbenga Daniel, Ibikunle Amosun and now Dapo Abiodun, have all come as saviours, promising redemption by asphalt. Each left potholes, craters and billboards boasting of “transformative infrastructure.” Each wore the hard hat of reform and departed as a foreman of failure. Daniel came with his cosmetic Ogun State Road Maintenance Agency (OGROMA) but left broken roads. Amosun built six-lane highways of dubious quality and flyovers where they were not needed, some still abandoned. Abiodun has followed in similarly dire footsteps, commissioning roads that crumble faster than the banners used to advertise them. Ogun’s asphalt obsession has produced more spectacle than substance.

Since taking office, Abiodun has turned roads into his signature pursuit. The photo opportunities, press releases and television clips have been endless. Yet for many residents, the experience has been the opposite of durable infrastructure. Roads disintegrate within months, bridges collapse after a few rains, and stretches of asphalt turn into credible imitations of a river, not even a fish streams. Every newly tarred surface now carries a silent question: are these roads built for cameras or for endurance?

The government insists it is working. Officials brandish lists of completed and ongoing projects from Sagamu Interchange to IlaroOwodeImeko as proof of progress. No one doubts the ambition. The problem is the pattern. Roads that should last for years begin to fail in months. The AdigbeOpako Bridge in Abeokuta collapsed less than a year after reconstruction. It was opened with ceremony; then nature returned to finish what engineers should have done properly. That collapse was not just an engineering failure — it was a metaphor for a government that mistakes motion for progress.

cross the AyetoroItele and LafenwaItele corridors and around Ota Junction, the same tragedy plays out. Rains turn new asphalt into mud. Buses grind through trenches. Traders wade through floodwater to save their wares. Children splash through brown pools on their way to school. Each viral video of these scenes becomes an unpaid audit of governance, exposing shallow work, poor subgrades, inadequate drainage and hurried construction meant to satisfy political calendars.

For residents, this is not an academic debate. Every pothole is a tax on survival: broken shock absorbers, higher transport fares, spoiled goods and a huge toll on physical as well as mental health. For farmers, bad roads mean harvests that rot before reaching the market. For traders, it means shrinking profits. For those trying to run businesses where roads are ruins, there is nothing like ease of doing business.

Independent assessments have only confirmed public frustration. Ogun was recently ranked among the worst-performing states for road quality. When rankings, citizen complaints and visible failures align, the conclusion is clear: something is deeply wrong with how Ogun builds and maintains its roads.

The rot begins before the asphalt. Contracts go to firms without capacity. Drainage and soil conditions are ignored. Supervision is weak. Political deadlines override engineering logic. Maintenance, when attempted, is reactive. These are not secrets — they are habits that guarantee the next collapse.

The AdigbeOpako Bridge is the most infamous example but not the only one. The IteleLafenwaAyetoro corridor has become a seasonal swamp. The Olusegun Osoba Road that leads to the new Agbado Train Station, commissioned in 2022, has failed in over 40 places. The Buba Marwa Road, commissioned last year, is going the same way. The Ishashi Road linking Ojodu Abiodun to Akute, completed in 2023, lasted barely longer than lettuce. The same road failed within six months under Daniel, and within a year its bridge was washed away, cutting off the area from Lagos. Each road is a scar — a reminder that Ogun builds in haste and repairs in despair.

When questioned, the government reels out new lists of “completed” projects, blames predecessors and accuses critics of politics. But all the press statements in the world cannot explain why the roads do not last. Accountability begins with independent audits and the courage to name contractors who take public funds and deliver private disasters.

Durability must replace drama. Ogun does not need more ceremonies — it needs roads that outlive campaign posters. Citizens who drive, walk and trade on these roads are unmoved by slogans. Their verdict comes every rainy season when the asphalt either holds or disappears.

biodun’s ambition has been visible, but ambition without endurance is theatre. The applause should not come from ribbon-cuttings or purchased awards but from commuters who arrive home safely, traders whose goods reach the market intact, farmers whose produce survives the journey and businesses that can function without navigating craters.

So, to whoever becomes the next governor: learn from the ruins. Ogun is tired of being a rehearsal ground for infrastructural incompetence. Do not repeat Daniel’s blueprint of grand talk and little delivery. Do not follow Amosun’s pattern of vanity projects without drainage. Do not imitate Abiodun’s PR-driven construction that melts before the next rainy season.

If you build for show, your roads will not outlive your term. If you build for posterity, the state may finally escape this asphalt cycle of shame. Ogun’s soil has swallowed enough promises. The next governor must decide whether to keep feeding it more.

-Ariyibi writes from Matogbun.

Rep Amos dumps PDP for APC, citing Tinubu’s ‘recognition’ of Southern Kaduna people

By Amen Gajira

House of Representatives member, Daniel Amos on Friday announced his defection from the Peoples Democratic Party to the All Progressives Congress (APC) over expectations that his people in Southern Kaduna will benefit more if they support the reelection of President Bola Tinubu in 2027.

He said the President has already demonstrated love for the Southern Kaduna people with the citing of a federal university and medical centre in the area.

“President Bola Tinubu has shown from day one that he is a true leader who recognises us as a people.

“He has given us the Federal University of Applied Sciences in Kachia, the Federal Medical Centre in Kafanchan, which made our decision an easy one.

“These are clear signs that if Southern Kaduna supports Tinubu in 2027, the region will benefit even more,” Amos who represents Jema’a/Sanga Federal Constituency said.

Rep Daniel Amos spoke to journalists in Kafanchan, shortly after tendering his resignation letter to the PDP.

The lawmaker, who chairs the Committee on House Services, explained that his decision to join the APC was informed by the need to align with the centre to attract more developments to his constituency.

He cited the internal party conflict within the PDP as another reason for his defection, adding that his decision followed wide consultation with his constituents.

“We looked at the crisis in the PDP and decided to look for an alternative platform in the interest of our people.

“I can confirm that we have gotten that the agreement of our people to move to the APC so we can better their lives.

“I believe that what we are doing is not only divine but something that all of us as a people will gather some day and thank God for the wisdom to take this decision at this time,” he added.

On whether he received assurances before joining his new party, the lawmaker answered in the affirmative.

“It is true that we were promised that when we join the government at the centre, both at the state and federal level, our zone will get it’s fair share of resources,” he stated

Danie Amos reiterated his commitment to prioritising the welfare and interests of his constituents over and above all political considerations.

mos, along with other high profile PDP defectors from Southern Kaduna, would be formally received into the APC by Vice-President Kashim

Shettima, Gov. Uba Sani, and Speaker of the House of Representatives, Tajjudeen Abbas, at a grand ceremony in Kafanchan on Saturday.

(NAN)

Aiyedatiwa splashes SUV gifts on traditional rulers

By Alaba Olusola Oke

Gov. Lucky Aiyedatiwa of Ondo State, on Thursday in Akure presented brand new Toyota SUVs to traditional rulers across the state, describing it as an effort to protect and advance welfare of traditional institution.

iyedatiwa stated that the gesture was to make a historic milestone in collective journey towards the progress and elevation of every traditional kinship stool to an enviable height.

He appreciated the traditional rulers in the state for the tremendous support accorded his administration in maintaining peace and security in their various domains.

“As the custodians of our rich cultural heritage, the preservers of our values and the closest link between government and the grassroots, our administration recognises your importance and cannot afford to neglect your welfare.

“Within the first year of our tenure, our government completed the long-abandoned project for the construction of a befitting secretariat for the meetings and other activities of our royal fathers.

“This achievement, coupled with the prompt payment of the statutory five per cent of total fund allocation to the 18 local government areas of the state from the federation accounts to our traditional institutions underscores our firm dedication to your course.

Today, all grade ‘A’ Obas will go home with a Toyota Fortuner Jeep, 2025 Model while all Grade “B and C” Obas will later receive a Toyota Cross Jeep 2025 Model: both are among the latest-model of the globally respected Toyota brand, ” he said.

ccording to him, the vehicles are symbols of dignity, honour and respect to traditional rulers.

He, therefore, solicited for the continued support of the traditional leaders, assuring them of government’s commitment to continue prioritise their welfare.

lso speaking, the state Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, Alhaji Amidu Takuro, said that the gesture was to appreciate and recognise the invaluable roles of the traditional institution to the government.

Takuro noted that the traditional rulers had continued to ensure promotion of peace, unity and community development across the state.

He thanked the governor for fulfilling his promise of better welfare to the traditional rulers.

The commissioner urged the traditional rulers to make good use of the vehicles.

In his appreciation, Olowo of Owo, Oba Ajibade Ogunoye, said that the gesture was quite befitting.

Oba Ogunoye, who is the state Chairman Council of Obas, stated that the governor had always been a surprise to the traditional rulers in good deeds.

He promised that the traditional rulers would continue to be partners in progress with the government.

(NAN)