www.newstower.ng

COURT SLAMS INJUNCTION ON DEFENDANTS FOR ALLEGED DEFAMATION OF UBANI

The High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, has issued an ex parte interim injunction restraining the Editor-in-Chief of Law and Society Magazine as well as Dr. Tonye Clinton Jaja from making further alleged derogatory publications against prominent Nigerian lawyer, Dr. Monday Onyekachi Ubani, SAN.

 

The order, granted on Tuesday, December 9, 2025, by Hon. Justice S. U. Bature of the Maitama Division, follows a defamation suit filed by Ubani, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria and former Vice President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA). The suit, marked FCT/HC/CV/4411/2025, alleges that the defendants circulated materials that injured Ubani’s professional reputation.

 

Justice Bature, after reviewing Ubani’s ex parte application (No. FCT/HC/M/16245/2025) filed on December 4, 2025, and supported by an affidavit sworn to by Susan Nwenna Nwaze, granted the following interim orders: That

 

The defendants, their agents, and privies are barred from issuing or disseminating any further publications considered derogatory of Ubani pending the hearing and determination of the substantive motion on notice.

 

 

All parties are directed to maintain the status quo ante bellum until the court hears the motion on notice.

 

The court granted permission for substituted service of all processes on the defendants.

 

The matter has been adjourned to December 16, 2025, for the hearing of the Motion on Notice. Dr. Ubani was represented by Sir N. S. C. Okoro.

 

While the specific contents of the alleged defamatory publications remain sealed pending further proceedings, the lawsuit is reportedly linked to recent articles published in Law and Society Magazine and public statements by the defendants which Ubani says have gravely harmed his reputation as a respected human rights advocate and Senior Advocate of Nigeria.

 

Fleeing bandits’ drug supplier ‘Gamboli’ arrested in Niger

By Ebinum Samuel

 

 

As NDLEA intercepts US, Canada, Sweden-bound opioids in black soup containers, designer wears; uncovers clandestine codeine syrup factory in Abia; arrests woman, son over 1,187kg skunk seizure in Ondo

 

Three weeks after escaping arrest at his home in Anguwan Makera, Kuta, Shiroro local government area of Niger state, a notorious supplier of illicit drugs to bandits operating in the area, 33-year-old Mohammed Sani (alias Gamboli) has been arrested by operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) at his hideout.

Following credible intelligence about the illicit drug activities of Gamboli, NDLEA operatives had on 20th November 2025 raided his house at Anguwan Makera, Kuta, where they recovered 471.8 kilograms of skunk, a strain of cannabis. Though he escaped arrest during the raid and has since been in hiding, the manhunt for him eventually paid off on Thursday 11th December when NDLEA officers acting on processed intelligence traced and arrested him at one of his drug joints in Anguwan Fadama, Kuta. Intelligence reports had indicated that Gamboli is a major supplier of illicit drugs to bandits operating in Shiroro local government area.

Meanwhile, NDLEA officers in Abia on Thursday 11th December raided a clandestine codeine syrup-manufacturing factory at Amapu Igbengwo village, Umuakpara, in Osisioma local government area of the state. During the operation, operatives recovered a total of 9,015 bottles of codeine syrup weighing 1,152.2kg.

In Enugu state, operatives on Thursday 11th December arrested Ossai Emeka, 45, along Onitsha – Enugu Ezike road with 7.2kg skunk, while Enoje Agada, 40, was nabbed along Enugu-Ezike -Ette road with 94.6kg of same psychoactive substance.

 

 

A raid carried out by NDLEA operatives at a notorious drug joint known as “Beere the California” at Ido in Oyo state on Thursday 11th December led to the seizure of 3.4kg skunk, 1.6kg Colorado, a synthetic cannabis and 400grams of methamphetamine. The owner of the drug joint identified as “Idowu the killer” is currently at large while a suspect Ajibade Faruk was nabbed at the joint. Another operation at Idi Oro, Elekuro, Ibadan on Friday 12th December led to the arrest of Olusanya Abosede, 35, and the seizure of 238.4kg skunk.

While the duo of Bashiru Babalola, 43, and Ugunwale Ranti, 50, were arrested on Wednesday 10th December at Gbaji checkpoint, Seme road Badagry, Lagos with 50,000 pills of tramadol 250mg, NDLEA operatives in Ogun state arrested two suspects: Akinwale Makanjuola and Joseph Owolabi with 73kg skunk at Iperu just as another suspect Wasiu Lateef was nabbed with 25kg of same substance at Oke Agbede, Imeko area of the state on Tuesday 9th December.

In Ondo state, NDLEA officers acting on credible intelligence on Monday 10th December raided a compound in Ogbese, Akure North local government area, where they arrested a 55-year-old woman Veronica Obi and her 29-year-old son Bright Obi, and recovered 1,187 kilograms of skunk and its seeds from them.

A suspect Ohiomah Igbafe, 44, was arrested during a raid operation at Uroe community, Owan East local government area of Edo state, where 461kg skunk and its seeds were recovered on Tuesday 9th December.

In Gombe state, a suspect Muhammed Sani (alias Sha-Mu-Sha), 50, was arrested with 40,000 capsules of tramadol at Tunfure area, Gombe, while two other suspects: Muhammad Abdullahi (a.k.a Sakalala), 52, and Muhammed Hamza (a.k.a Mamman), 32, were nabbed at Ashaka Jalingo, with 56kg skunk on Monday 8th December.

No fewer than 907 pills of tramadol, tapentadol, cocodamol, amitriptyline and bromazepam concealed in containers of local black soap, and designer wears, in six different consignments going to the US, Canada and Sweden were intercepted and seized by NDLEA operatives at two major courier companies in Lagos between Tuesday 9th and Wednesday 10th December 2025.

At the Apapa seaport in Lagos, NDLEA officers on Saturday 13th December intercepted a consignment of 170,000 bottles of codeine syrup weighing 23,579kg during a joint examination of a container with men of Customs Service and other security agencies.

In like manner, Commands and formations of the Agency across the country continued their War Against Drug Abuse, WADA, sensitization activities to schools, worship centres, work places and communities among others in the past week. These include: WADA enlightenment lecture to students and staff of Community Senior Secondary School, Sheme, Katsina; Government College, Tudun Wada Dankade, Kano; and Methodist High School, Makurdi, Benue, while the Enugu state command of the Agency paid a WADA advocacy visit to HRM Igwe Ikechukwu Samuel Asadu, Chairman, Enugu State Council of Traditional Rulers.

While commending the officers and men of DOGI, Niger, Abia, Oyo, Enugu, Seme, Ogun, Ondo, Gombe, Apapa and Edo Commands for the arrests, seizures and their dexterity, Chairman/Chief Executive Officer of NDLEA, Brig. Gen. Mohamed Buba Marwa (rtd) enjoined them and their colleagues across the country to continue with the ongoing balanced approach to the drug control efforts of the Agency.

 

 

 

Dr (Chief) Oluwayomi David Atte

 

Tribute

 

Prof. Albert Anjorin: “BODA ALBERT”

 

There I was. A green behind the ears strapping youth, completely lost in the environment of a University. I had registered as a fresh undergraduate of the University of Ibadan in September 1971. There was a gathering in Trenchard Hall – it was the welcome ceremony for new students. It was , I think 2nd October 1971. The big wigs were there and many others. I stood with another fresh student from Iya Gbeddeand we were chatting in our dialect. Suddenly, I heard this boom of a baritone voice, with a forefinger pointing directly at me, “You. Come here”. I trembled like a leaf in the wind as I approached this huge and imposing man. “Where do you come from?”, he asked next. “Good afternoon Sir. I come from Takete IDE in Kabba Division” I mumbled in response. “What is your name and who are your parents?” he asked. I wondered why this huge man before me was interested in finding out who was but I had no choice in the matter. His tone seemed like a command I had to obey. So I told him. Suddenly, completely unprepared for what came next, I found myself off the ground, held in a vice grip by arms that seemed as long and as strong as those of a gorilla. He was huge and I was small. It was not a difficult thing for him to lift me up in a passionate embrace. Swirling around my head was the big question, “who is this man and what is happening?”. He put me down gently but held on to my hand in his big ‘paw’. Still a baritone boom, his voice softened as he said, “I am Albert Anjorin from Ayede Amuro. Welcome to UI” and immediately changed to our very unique ‘specie’ of Yagba.

I was in what was like a dream. This is the great Dr Anjorin whose name and fame, “our first doctor” I had heard in whispers, standing right there, holding my hand and chatting happily with me!. I had known his father and family in Ayede before they moved to Orokere. Who didn’t know the father of the famous doctor? I had, and still have to pass through Ayede to and fro to connect the rest of the world. I passed through Ayede and Orokere on the very day Boda Albert’ left to be with the Lord and did so again as recent as last Sunday (07 December). Back to starters.

After the ceremony in Trenchard Hall, he asked for, and actually followed me to my room in Mellanby Hall nearby. From there he took me to his apartment in UCH, cooked me a meal and returned me to my hostel in the evening. It is a long story because it was ONE DAY that defined the life long relationship we had.

His apartment in UCH became my second home for three years as I spent almost every Sunday after church there. At times he would come to take me out. He became Boda Albert and I became Wora David. That’s how he greeted me from 1971 to the last time we spoke two months to his departure from Mother Earth. Boda Albert lived large and lived life to the full. He chose his path and there was no persuading him otherwise. He let me be with what he called my “fanatic religion” and never disparaged my faith. But he asked me to let him be in his chosen path. He had a wonderful and long courtship. It was romance made in heaven. I saw their radiance faces at the wedding and the fairy tale first months of marriage in their UCH apartment. I joined them in the joy of welcoming Olumide into this world. I also shared in the sorrow and strain of a young marriage in crisis. For once he allowed my faith in God to intrude into his life. But Boda Albert chose his path. However, crises didn’t change him. He remained a man of indomitable character, always carefully choosing what he wanted and sticking to it whatever the “world” said.

I left him in Ibadan after graduation and our paths didn’t

cross again until 17 September 1977. I had arrived in London on 01 September to begin my PhD program at the University of London. I had no idea Boda Albert was in London but somehow someone told him I was in London too and incredibly, he showed up at the front desk of my International Hall residence that day, 17th. The unmistakable Wora David reached me before I reached him. I felt the same bear hug as I felt on 02 October 1971. It was so good to see him. Of course it was not long before we headed for his apartment in his car. There, for the first time in my life, I saw colour TV – 17/09/77!

Unfortunately it was the tail end of his stay in London and three months later he returned home. We relived the three months like the Ibadan days afresh. His open, loud and bombastic laughter and friendliness “without guile”, the hallmark of his entire life, still played out.

I moved to live in the University Quarters, Fate, Ilorin, early 1986. Boda Albert was living almost directly opposite me. He wasn’t far from Prof Fawole while my dear Oga and Mentor, now His Majesty, the Elegbe of Egbe, Uncle Ayo Irekera, lived further down the road (that was when we knew that Tunde, though still young, would go places). Boda Albert’s home became my second home once again until the saga of the “University and 44 Lecturers” erupted and he had to leave. He remained himself, lived large, spoke his mind with uncharacteristic candor and dared the world to oppose him. Boda Albert was my mentor. Even though he was himself unbendable in his principles, he and Uncle Moses Ayinmodu, also my relation from Amuro, did more to tame my temperament than anyone else. I was a rash, bold and undiplomatic young man. Like Boda Albert, I feared no man, spoke my mind frankly and damning the consequences. Our Father, Late Chief Sunday Awoniyi, once called me “an unguided middle” when others quaked in his presence but I would have none of what he was trying to make us do. Boda Albert and Chief Moses Ayinmodu took it upon themselves to tame my rascality. “You say the truth and you stand on good arguments BUT it is important to apply wisdom and respect for people, if not your good qualities will be wasted” they kept admonishing me. They succeeded, more than anyone else could do in remolding me into what I am today. I am most indebted to them. They are the foremost heroes of my life

I cannot close this tribute without saying this. In 2010, the Council of Okun Traditional Rulers under the wise Chairmanship of His Majesty, Obaro OLOBAYO- a veritable and incredible Obaro, and other Okun Elders set up a Committee of Distinguished Okun People to liaise with the leaders of Kogi Central, led by the Ohinoyi of Ebiraland and the Leaders of Oworo and Lokoja to seek their cooperation and alliance in the quest for the creation of Kabba State. The Committee had important meetings all round and was very successful. The point I want to make is that Boda Albert was a member of that Committee and I was the Chairman of that Committee. How can I be Chairman when Prof Anjorin and other notable Okun Sons are there? I wanted to reject that position. It was Boda Albert who said “David, God chose you not man. Where assignments are political like this, you are my Leader and I promise to serve with you” . He was the behind the scene hand that guided me through that assignment. He developed the schedule and strategy with me and came to my rescue when my youthful experience could not carry me through. I will never forget that sssignment and the role Boda Albert played in it. I was no equal to him in any way but he humbled himself to let me be his boss. What a man! What a heart! What a hero! Boda Albert is one of the finest that Okunland and Nigeria have ever produced. I, especially, will miss him. Adieu, Boda Albert

Unfortunately Boda, I will not be able to be at your graveside to bid you farewell in Amuro or pay my personal respects in the ceremony at Ilorin. One my was from Takete IDE on 07 December 2025, I slipped a disc on the rough patch between Koto nKarfi and Gegu. I am unable to undertake any trip now because of my back. Know this, however Boda Albert, I am deeply grateful for all you have done to make my life better. I will remember them and you all the days of my life. I will pass on the story of your life to the coming genenations. Farewell Boda Albert. Rest until we meet again

Yuletide: Anambra CP Urges Strategic Officers To Intensify Proactive Policing

By Ebinum Samuel

 

 

The Commissioner of Police, CP Ikioye Orutugu, fwc mnips PhD, today 12th December 2025, held Command’s Strategic Officers’ Lecture at the Police Command Headquarters, Awka. The CP, according to the Command spokesman, SP Tochukwu Ikenga, opened the session by conveying the Inspector-General of Police’s commendation to officers and men of the Command for their professionalism and exemplary conduct during the recently concluded Governorship Election.

 

Orutugu further charged all strategic officers to intensify proactive policing measures as the Yuletide season approaches. This follows operational briefings received from Area Commanders, Divisional Police Officers, and heads of tactical units.

 

 

CP Orutugu emphasized the need for Strengthened Intelligence-driven Operations, Increased Visibility Policing, More Robust Patrol Systems, and Strict adherence to the Command’s Anti-Crime Operational Plan, all designed to ensure a peaceful and secure festive season across Anambra State.

 

He urged Commanders to remain vigilant, professional, and Community-oriented, and to respond swiftly and decisively to any emerging security concerns.

 

In a related development, the Commissioner of Police presented cheques amounting to ₦33,158,545.65 to fifty-four (54) beneficiaries under the Group Life Assurance Scheme and the IGP Family Welfare Scheme. The gesture demonstrates the unwavering commitment of the Police High Command to the welfare of officers and the families of those who paid the supreme price in the line of duty.

 

 

The CP reassured residents of the Command’s readiness to provide effective security throughout the Yuletide period and called on the public to remain law-abiding and report suspicious activities promptly.

Anambra Police Debunks Report of Journalist’s Detention, Clarifies Security Protocol

 

The Anambra State Police Command has dismissed claims that a journalist was detained within the premises of the Anambra State House of Assembly, describing the report as misleading and inconsistent with the events that occurred.
In a statement issued on Thursday, the Police Public Relations Officer, SP Ikenga Tochukwu, said no journalist was held in custody at any point. He explained that officers on duty merely carried out standard security procedures required to verify the identity of the visitor and confirm the legitimacy of his invitation.
According to Tochukwu, the routine check was non-confrontational and designed strictly to safeguard the Assembly complex, staff, and other dignitaries present. He added that such verification is a normal procedure applied to all guests, irrespective of profession or status.

He noted that reference to an “enemy” made during the encounter was a situational comment arising from what officers perceived as inadequate explanation from the visitor. The brief misunderstanding, he said, was immediately resolved without escalation.
Further checks by the police revealed that the person who invited the journalist was neither a lawmaker nor an employee of the Anambra State House of Assembly. He was also at the facility based on a separate invitation extended by the institution.
The Command emphasized that this clarification was necessary to counter narratives suggesting harassment of media personnel, insisting that the police did not obstruct the journalist’s work or freedom of movement.

Tochukwu reiterated the Command’s respect for journalists, noting that members of the press remain strategic partners in shaping public consciousness and promoting accountability in governance and security operations.
He assured that officers in Anambra State would continue to engage with media professionals with civility, respect, and cooperation, in line with global policing standards.
The Police Command also appealed to the public to seek verification before circulating reports capable of undermining mutual trust between the police and journalists.
SP Ikenga Tochukwu reaffirmed the Command’s commitment to professionalism and transparency in handling security matters across the state.

ALBERT SUNDAY ANJORIN: APRIL 4, 1943 – DECEMBER 2, 2025: BEYOND MERE MORTAL

 

By Tunde Olusunle

 

Ade Emmanuel Abanida, a very senior medic and longstanding brother and I had been in regular talks in the last two years about our mutual mentor and confidant, the most charismatic Albert Sunday Anjorin. Abanida and I encountered the octogenarian Emeritus pathologist, seasoned teacher, affable humanist and free-spirited scholar, charismatic colossus at various intersections in our lives. Whereas Abanida was Anjorin’s postgraduate student in pathology at the University of Ilorin during the 1986/87 academic session, I had met the old man years earlier and been wholly adopted by him as a beloved kid brother, ardent mentee and loyal ally. Professor Anjorin was very ill, Dr Abanida had informed me, and his former students were polling support for him.

I immediately put a call through to Prof Anjorin to hear his trademark voice. A critical part of me remains in Ilorin till date. Long before our roads fell into gross dilapidation and became fertile hunting ground for freelance criminals and ransom takers, it was most convenient for me to be chauffeured from Abuja to the erstwhile address of the legendary warrior, Afonja. Nothing would equate sitting down with Prof and engaging with him, and enjoy our father-son conversations, which would typically switch from English, which he spoke with the fervour of William Shakespeare, to our home-tongue in the Okun country, Yagba, and thenceforth to Yoruba. This will be interspersed by wise cracks of the very humorous old man and his patent royal laughter. My heart was eternally with him.

Last October, I braved it to Ilorin and headed straight for his home in GRA, in the Kwara State capital. His choice of a location for his very spacious retirement home, in the “Government Reserved Area,” tells you something about a man of taste and distinction. My good friend, Segun Sobogun who picked me up from the airport and I were received by Prof Anjorin’s long-serving driver, Moses Ayoade and settled in the living room. Prof Anjorin knew my whole family and my closest of friends. He adopted everyone as family and was selfless in pouring his being assisting in times of need, in whatever way he could. Sobogun, Toyin Olaoye, Martins Oni and John Audu are some of my Ilorin-based friends he knew so well. Ayoade left us for a moment ostensibly to inform Prof that I was visiting. He returned in a jiffy to inform us to proceed to his bedroom on the first floor of the edifice. Prof Anjorin sprang up from the bed once we walked in and greeted him. “Olusunle,” the way he typically called me, oju re, (is this you), he asked in Yagba. “So good to see you,” he continued as he struggled to get on his feet to acknowledge my friend and I.

O ri ighin mo ku wa, (can you see how emaciated I’ve become), he continued as I embraced him. Stretching out his hand to greet Sobogun, he asked me: “Where did you find this man,” in obvious reference to the fact that he hadn’t seen him in a long time. “Sobogun, where is Olaoye?” I waved him to his bed, pulled a chair and asked for details of his situation. He narrated same very enthusiastically, graphically. He spoke about how his former students, many of whom he couldn’t remember, and friends, had been magnanimous in ensuring steady supply of his medications, some of which were either unavailable locally or priced beyond the reach of a retiree like him. I got him to speak on phone with my wife Funmi, whose wedding to me he co-chaired over three decades ago; my cousins, Pastor Kayode Elebiyo and Dr Toba Olusunle who he co-mentored, and Dr Ade Abanida, among others. You could see his excitement, the sheer joy of being able to engage with many people he hadn’t seen in years but who loved and respected him still.

He looked around the room as if searching for something. Ki ma’n se o olojo lo, Olusunle (what do I offer you on this your august visit, Olusunle)? “When you’re stronger, Prof, it will be my utmost delight to fete you to your favourite catfish peppersoup,” I joked with him and we both had a good laugh. After being with him for over two hours, I told him I would love to take a photograph with him as keepsake until our next meeting. He got up and wore a neatly-tailored top with exquisite pens peeping from the breast pocket. Me ma’n wo sokoto, (I won’t wear my trousers), he warned. Hinmi re, Prof, (never mind Prof), I reassured him as I requested Segun Sobogun to kindly take us a few photographs with my phone. “Tell Sobogun,” Prof Anjorin warned as Segun adjusted my phone to get a good angle, ewo’m e gbedo yo ninu foto ma fa, (my scrotum must not appear in this photograph) and we all had a good laugh.

We exchanged farewells and I assured Prof I’d see him on my next visit to Ilorin. He walked us to the tip of the stairs and pleaded not to have to go with us downstairs. We thanked him for receiving us so very warmly and reliving the memorable times we shared with him. Weeks later on December 2, 2025, Abanida sent me a post from the Nigerian Medical Association, (NMA), Kwara State branch, announcing the transition of Prof Anjorin. Just in case I hadn’t seen the post, Dr Abanida followed up with a call, both to notify me of the sad development and to commiserate with me knowing my very special relationship with Prof. Looking back now, I’m glad I saw him that Thursday October 16, 2025, in the course of my trip to Ilorin.

I first met Prof Albert Sunday Anjorin 45 years ago. My cousins, Kayode Elebiyo, Toba Olusunle and I, all wrote and passed our West African School Certificate Examination, (WASCE), in Division One, that same 1980, in our various schools in the old Kwara, Kaduna and Bendel states. My father, Pastor Jacob Adeniyi Olusunle, had relocated from Benin City to set up his own enterprise the year before and our new home in Ilorin was going to be the new hub for as many members of the family, immediate and extended, who desired a convenient environment for instruction, spiritual growth and educational advancement. Elebiyo was Head Boy of his alma mater, St Kizito’s College, Isanlu, in contemporary Kogi State, when 37-year old Anjorin was Guest Speaker at the prize giving day and graduation ceremony of his class in June 1980. The strikingly grey-haired, younger, dashing Dr Albert Anjorin who travelled from his desk at the fledgling University of Ilorin to speak to the youngsters, dazzled Elebiyo and his classmates with Oxford-style brilliance and erudition at the event.

As the “Olusunle trio” of Elebiyo, Toba and I sought to proceed with our education, we needed guidance, we needed mentoring. Elebiyo quickly remembered Anjorin and we went in search of him at the mini campus of the University of Ilorin one harmattan morning in 1980. He received us very warmly but advised us to visit him in his official quarters in GRA, Ilorin so we could have ample time to discuss. Since the three of us didn’t make the cut for the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Examination that year, he advised us to hasten to obtain application forms to enable us get places in the School of Basic Studies, (SBS), Kwara State College of Technology, Ilorin, where we would write the very highly regarded Cambridge University-moderated Higher School Certificate Examination, (HSC). We all got placements, even as we clutched to him as our pathfinder.

He wholly and totally adopted and indulged us. His doors were open, his car keys typically on a table in his living room. He shared beers very freely with us and regularly pampered us with sizzling peppersoup. One of those days we got to his house before him, we began depleting his stock of lager even before his arrival from work. Since there were 12 bottles in the fridge and there were four prospective consumers, the “Olusunle trio” and Anjorin, simple mathematics meant, were each entitled to three bottles. Since Anjorin didn’t return early and we needed to wait to see him, we cleared the stock. It was a thirsty Anjorin, confident he could refresh with a very cold drink on his return to his home, who came in shortly after.

He opened the fridge only to discover it had been emptied. He looked at all three of us, thoroughly exasperated and said in Yagba: “Ha, you these boys, you drank up a whole carton of beer including the few bottles which should be mine. Beer that I bought myself and kept to chill. I bet you, on this one, God will ask you questions!” We froze in our seats knowing the gravity of our offence. He walked to the kitchen, got himself a glass, inspected the bottles of beer we were just settling to consume and seized them. He poured himself a drink and told us we would be forgiven if we promptly replaced what we took “illegally.” We winked to ourselves as Toba dashed off to restock! Prof Anjorin had no space for bile and malice. He forgave whatever was thrown at him and just moved on.

Toba left for the primeval University of Ife, (now Obafemi Awolowo University), one year into our programme in SBS, Ilorin. Elebiyo and I visited him often and fell in love with the ambience and aesthetics of the campus. For the 1982 university entrance examination, we chose Ife so we could rejoin Toba. Once we didn’t make the first list, we both panicked. We went straight to Prof Anjorin. He acquitted himself on that occasion as the quintessential marketer for the burgeoning University of Ilorin. “Young men,” he addressed us. “But for your teenage fantasies about Ife, the new big thing in the Nigerian university system is Ilorin, okay. Some of the best academics from across the world, from across Nigeria, are congregating in Ilorin. We are maintaining very high standards comparable to, if not higher than Ife and UI, okay.”

Prof Anjorin continued. “I’m glad you both made your Cambridge HSC papers. Rather than wait endlessly to be admitted into 100 Level law in Ife, both of you should write to JAMB for change of university, change of course and admission into the direct entry class. Go and meet my friend, Tayo Adido, Admissions Officer in the Faculty of Arts and tell him you’re from Albert Anjorin. You resume in 200 Level. You can always go back to law if you want after your bachelors, okay. Elebiyo, once you get your admission letter from JAMB, walk to Hakeem Danmole in History and tell him you’re from me. Olusunle, report to Olu Obafemi once you resume in English. They are your lecturers, not your college fathers. They are tough scholars and they’ll keep an eye on you. Congratulations! All the best.” And that was it.

Anjorin was right. In Unilorin, I met some of the finest, most rigorous scholars who put me through the grindstone of thorough scholarship. Profs David Cook, (who mentored Ngugi wa Thiong’o); multiple award-winning Nigerian-American Tayo Olafioye; Prayag Tripathi, (who co-supervised my masters thesis); Stephen Lubega, and Russell Chambers, all of blessed memory, left lasting imprints on me. Emeritus Professor Olu Obafemi who has received almost every topmost honour for scholarship from institutions, academies and country, is thankfully very much around and well. I didn’t need to rethink the imperative to return to Unilorin shortly after completing the mandatory National Youth Service Corps, (NYSC), during which I continued to benefit from the goodwill and guidance of Prof Anjorin. By this time, I had developed a very keen interest in pursuing a career in journalism. I contributed regularly to The Guardian, Daily Times, The Herald and Nigerian Tribune, while working as a schoolteacher.

I shared with Prof Anjorin my career intention and asked if he knew Dr Yemi Ogunbiyi, who by then was Managing Director of the Daily Times of Nigeria Plc. Happily, Anjorin and Ogunbiyi were friends as students in the University of Ibadan in the 1960s. They also belonged to Sigma Club, a classy collective of like minds in their time. One of those evenings as I shared fellowship with Anjorin in his favourite watering hole, the “fish pond” in Adewole Estate, Ilorin, he put me on notice that he would be travelling to Lagos in a few days and I could come with him. I put my credentials together and created a file of the various articles which had been published in newspapers. That April morning in 1990, Prof Anjorin and I drove in his famous Peugeot 505 saloon car to Agidingbi, Ikeja, Lagos, the operational base of the organisation.

We met Dr Yemi Ogunbiyi and Anjorin introduced me to him in very flowery terms. Once Anjorin left us for his other pursuits in Lagos, Ogunbiyi put me through the briefest job interview I ever attended. “Yeah, Tunde, your uncle has just spoken very glowingly about you. How can you make Daily Times better?” I pulled out the file of some work I had done for The Guardian where Ogunbiyi had pioneered the very authoritative and robust literary section. My file included full-page interviews with David Cook; Zulu Sofola, Africa’s first female playwright; Oludare Olajubu, pioneer exponent of ewi egungun, and theatre reviews. In Daily Times, I had written about Emeritus Professors Niyi Osundare, Obafemi and so on. Ogunbiyi looked up from the file: “Are you the same Tunde Olusunle who has been writing these?” I answered in the affirmative. I was immediately hired!

In the course of my postgraduate work in Unilorin, I met my wife, Funmi. As our courtship blossomed, I introduced her to Prof Anjorin who had effectively become family. He kept close watch and once he discovered we were serious, he sent for me one of those evenings and asked that I come alone. As we sat to interrogate the victuals of aquatic delicacies, he spoke to me: “Olusunle, I may not be the best person to offer advice about marriage because my own marriage failed quite early. I can see that you’re serious about Funmi and I’m happy about that. But please note that very substantially, the responsibility for the success of a marriage, resides with the man. Keep that in an important place in your heart. And please invite me to your wedding when you eventually pick a date. Wora.” With the late Prof Tunde Ipaye, Nigeria’s first Professor of Guidance and Counselling, Prof Anjorin was co-chair of my wedding in Ibadan, in the early 1990s. He was such a rare breed.

Early 1997, I travelled to Ilorin to have a surgical procedure at the University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital, (UITH). I was Chief Press Secretary to the Military Administrator of Kogi State and was granted just enough time for the surgery, brief recuperation and resumption at work. After all pre-operation tests had been concluded, I was given a deferred date for the procedure. The official explanation was that medical students of the University of Ilorin were to write their examinations. Professors and consultants would all be involved and so my procedure could not proceed. Anjorin stepped forward. He met the Chief Medical Director, (CMD), and explained that the permit I was given by my boss in Kogi State was like a military pass. I was expected to be back on my desk on a particular date and he desired the hospital worked towards helping me achieve that. He requested that the surgery be conducted before the commencement of the examinations for the medical college. He promised to oversee my convalescence by co-opting consultants who were not necessarily engaged, during that examination window. Prof Anjorin’s intervention worked! He was that compassionate, that concerned about everyone.

Back in 2004, Chief Onyema Ugochukwu who was General Manager when I was employed during the tenure of Dr Yemi Ogunbiyi as Managing Director of Daily Times, proposed me for investiture with a revered traditional title in Abia State. My parents, Pastor and Deaconess Jacob Adeniyi Olusunle led the delegation. My father personally called and co-opted Prof Anjorin and designated him my “uncle,” apart from being special guest at the event. He travelled with my family all the way from Ilorin to Ekenobizi, Umuahia South in Abia State, to grace the occasion. He set aside his research, teaching and supervision of students within the period, just to honour me on that occasion. Prof Anjorin was so unusually selfless. For a man who did so much for others without scruples or strings attached, all he needed do was snap his fingers when his son, Olumide, was wedding in Kaduna, about a decade ago. Olaoye and Sobogun joined me in the old administrative headquarters of Northern Nigeria to support a man for whom doing good was second nature.

Whenever I sneaked into Ilorin and didn’t make it to his place to pay homage, I had to watch my back to avoid being “caught” by Prof Anjorin. After putting your “crime” to you, to use a legal term, he fined you on the spot. “Olusunle, you will be responsible for the next two bottles of Star I will be taking. And this comes with a well-appointed plate of peppersoup as you very well know.” He was that down-to-earth. Prof Anjorin was urbane, cultivated, genial and ebullient. He was compassionate, bohemian, extroverted and large-hearted. He was extremely witty, his laughter, infectious. His worldview was so broad, he had a perspective to virtually every subject on the floor, whether it was local or global. Simply put, Prof Anjorin was beyond mere mortal. He was indeed an icon. To say he will be missed is an understatement.

Rest well, Prof.

Tunde Olusunle, PhD, Fellow of the Association of Nigerian Authors, (FANA), is an Adjunct Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Abuja

Alaafin meets Marwa, assures NDLEA of support, collaboration in fight against illicit drugs

By Ebinum Samuel

 

Why we need traditional rulers to join the crusade against substance abuse -Marwa

The Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Abimbola Owoade has assured the Chairman/Chief Executive Officer of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) Brig Gen Mohamed Buba Marwa (rtd) of support and collaboration in his renewed mandate to curb the scourge of substance abuse and illicit drug trafficking in the country.
The revered traditional ruler gave the assurance when he led two other royal fathers: Oloro of Oro, Oba Joel Olaniyan Olatoye and Olusin of Ijara Isin, Oba Ademola Julius Ajibola, on a courtesy visit to Marwa at the Agency’s national headquarters in Abuja on Friday 12th December 2025. He said he is proud of Marwa’s trajectory as Atunluse of Yoruba land.
According to him, “to be kind with you, we are proud of you. Your being in this position at the moment is not just by chance, it’s because of your devotion, your commitment. You have this amiable character. That’s why you are able to govern Borno and Lagos State, and you have always been a performer. Another thing which I can’t forget about you is the legacy of Keke Marwa that you brought to Nigeria.”

 

Responding directly to the charge by the NDLEA boss for traditional rulers to support ongoing efforts against drug abuse in the country, the Alaafin assured of his readiness to mobilise his colleagues to work with the Agency.
“I’ve heard your message and the same thing with some of my colleagues here and some of my other traditional rulers, we are ready to collaborate with you. I have to tell you, we are at the grassroots, we are close to the community people. We know a lot about what’s going on. So, I’m using this opportunity to tell you that we are ready. We are more than ready to work with you and to give you all the necessary support to make sure that you are successful in this job. We can tell you that anytime you are in need of us, we will always be there for you”, Oba Owoade stated.
In his welcome remark, Marwa congratulated the Alaafin for ascending the throne of his forefathers. He charged him and other traditional rulers across the country to leverage on their influence at the local level to work with NDLEA to stamp out substance abuse in communities.

 

In his words, “The drug scourge in Nigeria is at an unacceptable limit and from the drug use survey report of 2018, we find that close to 15 million Nigerians aged 15 to 64 use drugs. It’s a big problem and we have been mandated by President Tinubu, to stand up, fight the drug scourge, arrest those responsible, prosecute them and seize their assets, the traffickers. And on this assignment, we would like to call on the traditional institutions because it’s a very, very important institution.

 

 

“Nigerians respect the traditional institutions. Whoever you are in Nigeria, you still come from somewhere. And when you go back to that place, you pay homage to whoever is the leader of the community. And so when the traditional leader speaks, it carries weight. And equally we plead for traditional leaders to also engage the religious leaders in charge of churches and mosques in their domains, they should do serious advocacy against the use of drugs. The NDLEA is always prepared to work with the traditional institution.”
He said the Agency will also appreciate getting information about drug dealers in local communities from traditional rulers because of the risk they pose to many youths and their families. “We really appreciate this collaboration and I know for a fact that if we are able to control drug use, even the criminalities will come down because all the people that are kidnappers and the insurgents, terrorists, bandits everywhere, they use drugs first to charge themselves up, to make them high.”
He expressed appreciation to Alaafin for the visit and wished him long successful reign in
good health, peace, development and prosperity in the entire Oyo Kingdom.

Dangote unveils N1t Education Fund to support 1.3m students

 

 

Nigeria industrialist, Aliko Dangote, has announced a N100 billion yearly education support initiative, describing it as a long-term investment aimed at reducing financial barriers that drive millions of young Nigerians out of school.

The programme is expected to cost more than N1 trillion over the next decade. Dangote, while speaking at the launch in Lagos, yesterday, said that the plan would support 45,000 new students every year from 2026, rising to 155,000 beneficiaries by the fourth year and remaining at that level for 10 years. In total, the scheme is projected to reach 1.3 million students across all 774 local councils.

According to him, the initiative comprises four programmes targeted at sectors where educational exclusion is most acute. Through the Aliko Dangote STEM scholars, the programme will fund 30,000 undergraduate students yearly in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) across Nigeria’s public universities and polytechnics. Beneficiaries will have their tuition aligned to actual institutional fees.

A total of 5,000 students in public technical and vocational institutions will receive support each year for tools, materials and essential training requirements through the Aliko Dangote Technical Scholars. This complements the Federal Government’s recent policy providing free tuition for TVET students.

The Presidency has praised Dangote for unveiling what is now the largest private education support programme in Nigeria, describing the initiative as a major boost to the Federal Government’s human capital development agenda.

Vice President Kashim Shettima, while speaking at the event, said the intervention demonstrates the critical role of private-sector actors in national development.

He noted that Nigeria’s demographic growth makes urgent investment in education indispensable, warning that ‘a population becomes a liability only when it is uneducated’.

Shettima added that the Aliko Dangote Foundation programme would widen opportunities for thousands of learners and bolster the Federal Government’s efforts to build a competitive workforce. He called for stronger collaboration between the government, the private sector and development partners to address persistent gaps in the education system.

Dangote said the intervention aimed at Nigeria’s most vulnerable learners, noting that financial hardship, rather than a lack of talent, is the primary reason many drop out of school. He noted that for more than three decades, the Aliko Dangote Foundation had invested heavily in health, nutrition, economic empowerment and humanitarian support across Nigeria.

He, however, said that one guiding principle has remained unchanged: ‘no nation can rise above the quality of education it offers its young people’.

Dangote said the focus would be on measurable outcomes, including retention, completion rates and post-school impact, noting that the vision behind the initiative is to give every deserving child the chance to learn — unfettered by cost, free to dream, and equipped to achieve.

Dangote also disclosed that the programme’s long-term sustainability is tied to his formal commitment to allocate 25 per cent of his wealth to the Aliko Dangote Foundation, adding that the progress on the initiative will be reviewed in 2030 as part of Dangote Group’s Vision 2030 strategy.

He commended President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope agenda in the education sector, alongside the Federal Ministry of Education, SUBEBs and state governments for ‘deliberate and steady efforts’ to support learners amid economic pressures.

Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, speaking on behalf of the 36 state governors, also commended the initiative and pledged the governors’ full support.

Also, Education Minister, Tunji Alausa, described the initiative as ‘pure human capital development’, saying it aligns with the Tinubu administration’s education sector renewal plan of transforming Nigeria from a resource-based economy to a knowledge-based economy and is significant because every local council will benefit.

Shakara Trybe Founder to unveil Nigeria’s first 30-foot Christmas tree made entirely from Nigerian fabrics this Detty December

By Ebinum Samuel

 

This Detty December, Lagos will witness a cultural milestone, the unveiling of the first-ever 30-foot Christmas tree made entirely from Nigerian fabrics, a groundbreaking installation designed to celebrate sustainability, unity, fashion, and community spirit happening on Christmas Eve, the 24th December at the J. Randle Centre for Yoruba Culture and History, Onikan Lagos Island.

Spearheaded by Culture Influencer, Media Personality and Fashion Entrepreneur, Ebunoluwa “ebbiekikz” Dosumu, the founder of Trybe, the tree is made from hundreds of donated fabrics Aso-oke, Ankara, Adire, George, lace and more crowd sourced from families across the country each piece carrying its own memory, its own tribe, and making it a community project at its core.

Together, they form a towering masterpiece that reinforce a simple truth: fashion is one of the strongest threads that bind Nigerians together.

Attendees of A Shakara Christmas will be immersed in a day designed to spotlight the richness, beauty, and diversity of Nigerian culture. Highlights include an Interactive Stage Play, described as the first of its kind in Lagos, and a Cultural Fashion Runway by Shakara Trybe, a runway showcase featuring original Nigerian cultural pieces.

There will also be nostalgic experiences and festive characters, including throwbacks to the joys of growing up in Nigeria, traditional games, festive icons, and elements that evoke deep cultural nostalgia.

 

The event will further offer an Indigenous Food Tasting Experience, a curated tasting session of Nigerian dishes across tribes celebrating the nation’s culinary diversity and the flavours that connect communities.

Cultural spotlights and immersive installations will also be featured, with creative displays capturing the stories, traditions, and artistry that define Nigeria’s cultural landscape.

The night will close with a heartwarming moment led by Loud Urban choir in a communal carol session beneath the illuminated 30-foot fabric tree symbolizing togetherness, hope, and the spirit of a united Nigeria.

A Shakara Christmas marks the beginning of Ariya Village, a vibrant 13-day cultural festival dedicated to showcasing tradition, fashion, food, storytelling, community living, indigenous craftsmanship, and Nigerian creativity.

A Shakara Christmas is designed for Nigerians at home and abroad seeking meaningful, family-friendly, culturally rooted Detty December experiences.

For Nigerians and the diaspora searching for Detty December events in Lagos, family-friendly Christmas activities, cultural festivals in Nigeria, Nigerian Christmas experiences, sustainable fashion installations, heritage-driven creative events, end-of-year Lagos celebrations, and diaspora-friendly Nigerian cultural events.

Retired NDLEA directors visit Marwa, pledge continued support for drug war

By Ebinum Samuel

 

 

Retired Deputy Commanders General of Narcotics (DCGN) who served as directors in the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) have paid a visit to the Chairman/Chief Executive Officer Brig Gen Mohamed Buba Marwa (rtd) to congratulate him on the recent renewal of his tenure by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu while they pledged their continued support for the ongoing effort against substance abuse and illicit drug trafficking in the country.

Leading the team of nine retired directors on the congratulatory visit on Thursday 11th December 2025, the Agency’s former Director of Prosecution and Legal Services, DCGN Sunday Nbona Joseph (rtd) commended Marwa for his relentless efforts to transform NDLEA into a frontline drug law enforcement body now globally recognized and respected.

He said the Agency, its workforce and Nigeria have a lot to gain from Marwa’s reappointment because of his commitment, hard work and leadership qualities. While expressing appreciation to President Tinubu for reappointing him for another tenure of five years, they assured of their preparedness to continue to offer advice, suggestions and support for continuous operational successes of the Agency.

“With your reappointment, we ask God to give you longevity and more ability and capacity to record many more achievements. Thank you very much for the opportunity that you have given to us at such short notice”, DCGN Sunday stated, after which they presented a giant congratulatory card to the NDLEA boss.

 

 

In his response, Marwa thanked them for the kind gesture and best wishes he had received from all of them including those who could not be physically present. According to him, “We are grateful to the president who deemed it fit to renew our tenure. I’m grateful to you all for being part of the reason for the renewal. Obviously, a CEO cannot on his own make those seizures, those arrests, those sensitizations and all the rehabilitation going on. No CEO will do that alone. It’s all under commands which fall under your various directorates.

“I’m not saying anything that is not factual. I rely on the management team, which you have been, from the day I joined until when you left. So, I appreciate you also for all that you have contributed and continue to contribute. Now, I’m not under any delusion that everyone is happy that I came back for a second time, not least the criminal elements.”

He told them that a lot of successes had been recorded since they retired from the Agency and assured them that more will be attained in the coming days “because President Tinubu is giving NDLEA the full backing we need to achieve more.”