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Obaseki Inaugurates Solar Power Project At Benin Military Hospital, To Extend Facility To 18 LGAs

Governor Godwin Obaseki of Edo State on Monday, performed the groundbreaking ceremony of a solar power project to supply 24 hours of electricity at the Nigerian Army Military Hospital in Benin City.
Obaseki, who spoke to journalists after the official inauguration of the project, said the facility will be delivered and commissioned within the next 60 days.
The governor who was represented by his deputy, Omobayo Marvellous Godwins said the government remains committed to proffering a lasting solution to the power problem in the State.
He said, “I had cause to felicitate with my people in Edo North for the Sallah celebration as this is my first official assignment as Deputy Governor of the State. I am grateful to God Almighty for this. This is historic as God has perfected the plan that it will be in a healthcare facility and it means so much to me.
“The Commander while speaking was looking at the running cost of the project. The cost of energy, when reduced, will go a long way to help reduce the running cost in the facility. It will save the cost of diesel and will reduce the burden.
“We have a mortuary, equipment and human resources here at the Military Hospital Benin, and energy (electricity) is required to run 24/7 services. There should not be downtime at all. This project here in this hospital is timely and needs to be approached with all sense of seriousness. I have no doubt at all in my mind that in the next 60 days, we should be close to commissioning this project.”
On extending the project across all councils in the State, the governor noted: “It’s a laudable project and as an administration, we need to sit down with the 18 local government chairmen across the State to see how to positively design such projects so it can be extended across the State.”
He added, “We have a very good plan for the State and have gone more than 70 percent in its execution. I am sure we will finish well as a government.”
On his part, Commissioner for Mining and Energy, Engr. Enaholo Ojiefo noted that the project is a collaborative effort between the Edo State Government and the Military, adding, “The Commander approached us to appeal to the State Government to work and collaborate with them. We see our people coming here, especially the pregnant women, who come for healthcare services. The governor instructed us to ensure we support them with constant electricity.”
The Commissioner continued: “By tomorrow, the team will be here, followed by the panel installation. We are looking at a month plus for the project to be completed and ready. We have one of such project working in Eyaen already. There is a 1MW facility at Aduwawa and this will be another 1MW.”
Earlier, the Director of Military Hospital Benin, Brig. Gen. Pauline Olubunmi Aburime, who identified poor power supply as one of the greatest challenges facing the hospital, said: “We explored all forms to ensure we have constant power supply. We wrote to the Military authority, met with Discos, and interacted with the Edo State Government to see how to prioritize power.
“The state government agreed to kick start a solar project to support us and improve our electricity supply to the hospital which will surely improve our services. I thank the Edo State Government for their proactive response.”
News
Adeleke: Crime Cannot Dethrone Apetu And Enthrone Oluwo

Tunde Odesola
In April 2025, woe wore a wear of shame on the Apetu of Ipetumodu, Oba Joseph Olugbenga Oloyede, in faraway United States, when he was indicted in a multimillion-dollar fraud case. Before his arrest and indictment, Oloyede, like the tail of the squirrel, swished his royal horsetail as he ate some American banana. Enveloped in the sweetness of the ripe banana, Oloyede unknowingly stepped on the tail of a coiled cobra by the banana tree, tragically setting off the trigger.
Blind to crown, deaf to creed, dumb to pedigree – the American legal system – silent but watchful, snapped p-a-a-h, its jaws slamming shut on Oloyede’s neck in a brutal metallic bite. “Ikún n j’ọ̀gẹ̀dẹ̀, ikún rèdí, ikún o mọ̀ wípé ohun tó dùn ma ń pani”.
Fast-forward to August 26, 2025. Nigerian cyberspace convulsed with a screaming headline, “Osun monarch jailed four years in US for $4.2m COVID-19 fraud.” The report, published in The PUNCH, was shocking. It was shocking to those who mistake the inevitable for surprise, like the case of a foolish husband running helter-skelter for financial help to buy baby care products when his wife gave birth after a nine-month pregnancy. Anyone who had followed the story since April knew that the August sentencing was a punitive arrow hitting the bull’s eye. By then, the concrete mix of justice poured in April had simply solidified by August.
You need no ‘kalokalo’ prophets or roadside imams or ‘sakamanje’ babalawos to foresee the gathering storm about to sweep off the Apetu throne. In America, justice is cheetah-fast. In Nigeria, justice is snail-slow. Oloyede mistook America for Nigeria and ended up in the belly of justice.
What did Alayeluwa Oba Oloyede steal? Kinni kabiyesi gbe gaan? Oloyede looted COVID-19 emergency funds created for struggling businesses, conspiring with one other criminal, Edward Oluwasanmi, to submit fraudulent applications for loans which were made available through the US Small Business Association (SBA), under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act. In April, the Igbakeji Orisa pleaded guilty to wire fraud and tax fraud charges linked to a pandemic relief scam, which siphoned over $4.2m stimulus funds. Colleagues and townspeople thought that the àkàrà the Ori Ade was eating his pap with was tucked under the leaves enwrapping the àkàrà. No one suspected that the king was using a sickle to reach high tree branches outside his arm’s length. Ohun ọwọ́ mí ò tó, mà á fi gọ̀ngọ̀n fà á.
Before his enthronement as the Apetumodu of Ipetumodu in 2019, Oloyede, a chartered accountant and tax consultant, had worked with First Bank and Lead Merchant Bank in Nigeria, and relocated to the US in the late 1990s. In the US, he served as an adjunct professor at Indiana Wesleyan University and the University of Phoenix. Then, one night, greed knocked on the door of his heart, entered and showed him COVID-19 emergency funds. As Joseph the Dreamer resisted Potiphar’s wife, Joseph Oloyede could not resist the pounded yam and egusi served by greed.
Subsequently, Judge Christopher Boyko of the US District Court for the Northern District of Ohio sentenced him to four years and eight months in prison, ordering him to pay $4.4m as restitution and forfeit his Medina mansion on Foote Road, Ohio. After imprisonment, the 63-year-old Oloyede will serve three years of supervised release, which means he will not be able to travel outside the US while on supervised release. And, going by the tone of the current US immigration policy, Oloyede, a naturalised US citizen, is most likely to lose his American passport after serving his term.
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On August 26, 2025, the day Oloyede received four sets of orange-coloured prison uniforms at the Federal Correctional Institution, Elkton in Lisbon, Ohio, alongside basic undergarments, footwear and bedding, I took to my Facebook account @Tunde Odesola, and predicted, “Expectedly, the Apetu of Ipetumodu, Oba Joseph Oloyede, would be dethroned. The Oluwo of Iwo, Oba Abdulrashidi Adewale Akanbi, should also be dethroned because what is sauce for the goose should be sauce for the gander. Oluwo is an ex-convict in the US. He was slammed with two lifetime bans – to never enter the US. Osun State Governor, Asiwaju Ademola Adeleke, over to you.”
On Monday, May 11, 2026, worried by what was suspected to be a tactical delay by the Osun State Government to keep the throne vacant till the return of Oloyede from prison, I called on two persons in Osun to put the issue in perspective. The first person I called was a respected friend and honourable son of Ipetumodu. The second person I called, a top government official, was also an esteemed friend, renowned for a large dose of wit and wisdom.
At the end of our separate discussions, I told both of my friends that I was going to take the Adeleke government to the cleaners in my column on Friday, May 15, 2026. The government official friend gave me reasons for the delay in announcing the dethronement of the Apetu, citing legal and communal bottlenecks, adding that efforts were afoot to declare the throne vacant. My son-of-the-soil friend thanked me for sounding him out on the issue and wished me well in my writing endeavours. I also called a colleague who is close to both the Apetu and the community. So, the die was cast! I started to map out a mental graph of the article.
Alas, a few hours after I discussed with the three personalities, the Osun State Government announced the dethronement of Oloyede! My colleague sent the ‘breaking story’ to me. Ha! Is this a joke? I ran a quick check, and it was true. The dethronement is true. Was it painful that a game was snatched from my jaws? No. Was I happy? Yes. I was happy that the Adeleke government did the right thing, though late. Going by the threats by many indigenes of Ipetumodu, who have vowed not to vote for Adeleke in the governorship election coming up in three months, one is tempted to believe that the belated dethronement was a political stroke to gain the votes of Ipetumodu people. On the other hand, however, it took courage on the part of Adeleke to smash the calabash of a friend’s royal house, risking political antagonism three months before a historic election.
In the spirit of equity and fairness, a Yoruba translated proverb says, “The chieftaincy title that is due to the Iwo community will also be due to Ede.” On this note, I humbly call on Governor Adeleke to revisit the criminal cases of the Oluwo of Iwo, Oba Abdulrosheed Adewale Akanbi, in the same United States of America, where he was jailed and deported. When the Englishman, in his intelligence, looked at the cases of Apetu and Oluwo and said, “What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander,” the Yoruba man, in his wisdom, responded, “Kò sí bí ọ̀bọ ṣe ṣe orí, tí ìnàkí ò ṣe.”
Running a banner headline, “Royal Exclusive: Harry and conman Nigerian king (Oluwo) twice deported from US,” British tabloid, The Mail on Sunday, in its May 19, 2024 edition, splashed the picture of the Oluwo of Iwo and Prince Harry on its cover, calling Akanbi a criminal, who wangled his way from being a fraudster to the royal stool of Iwo.
The headline and story of The Mail on Sunday were less acidic than that of The SUN, another British tabloid, which screamed, “Dodgy Royal: Nigerian king (Oluwo) who Harry called his ‘in-law’ is CONMAN jailed and deported after trying to cash stolen £247k cheque,” with the rider, “The Funky King was jailed 15 months in 1998.”
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Reporting a three-day visit of the 39-year-old Harry and his 42-year-old wife, Meghan, to Nigeria, THE SUN reveals Akanbi had been deported twice from the US and banned twice for life from entering the US.
THE SUN story reads, “But the Nigerian royal (Oluwo) is a convicted fraudster who was twice kicked out of America. He was allegedly first arrested in Boston in 1998 after he tried to cash a stolen cheque for £247,000 from the aviation company Boeing.
“Akanbi posed as a successful businessman called Joseph Pigott but cops were alerted by a suspicious bank teller at BankBoston. The conman (Oluwo) was also charged with forging a cheque for £59,000 using the name Thomas Eyring. He was also reportedly jailed for 15 months and deported to Nigeria in April 1999.
“His £1,500 fine was waived ‘because of an inability to pay’. Despite being banned from re-entering the US, he was then said to have been caught attempting to cross the border in March 2011. Akanbi was with his then-wife Rakiya Saidu, and young son and claimed they were going to New York to shop. Facing the prospect of a maximum prison sentence of 20 years and a £197,000 fine, Akanbi pleaded guilty. He was sentenced to time served, deported and banned from the US for life a second time.”
Anyone who believes Oluwo has a grain of integrity can get these stories by simply googling the headlines. Akanbi had kept mute despite my challenging him repeatedly to go to court to prove his integrity. I am not alone in calling the criminal Oluwo out; some of his royal colleagues had dragged him before courts on account of his fraudulent activities. In December 2016, the Oluwo of Iwo Oke, Oba Kadiri Adeoye, had dragged him before an Osogbo magistrate’s court, accusing him of forgery. In a 33-paragraph affidavit, Oba Adeoye deposed that Akanbi was unfit for the esteemed position of king.
Akanbi’s refusal to show up in court infuriated Magistrate Olusola Aluko, who issued a bench warrant and said, “I am baffled that the Commissioner of Police has not done his duty. I am also surprised by his claim that he was unaware of the bench warrant. This must be the joke of the century. I, therefore, order him (commissioner of police) to immediately arrest the respondent (Oluwo),” and bring him to court on January 6, 2017.
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Aluko’s order was sequel to another bench warrant made by an Iwo magistrate’s court headed by Mr I. Omisade, against Oba Akanbi, who sent one of his chiefs and a letter of apology to Aluko’s court on the following date of hearing, claiming he was indisposed.
Also, the Agbowu of Ogbaagba, Oba Dhikrullah Akinropo, had dragged Akanbi before another Osogbo magistrate’s court headed by Mr Olusegun Ayilara, alleging that the Oluwo was unfit for the position of king. This followed an alleged physical assault on the Agbowu by the Oluwo in 2020, but the Oluwo denied assaulting his colleague.
In June 2024, a leading anti-corruption and human rights group, Human and Environmental Development Agenda, called on Governor Adeleke to investigate Oluwo’s alleged criminal records, with a view to protecting the sanctity of the Iwo royal stool and the integrity of the Iwo community. A letter signed by HEDA’s chairman, Olanrewaju Suraj, said it behoved the state government to raise a special panel to investigate the criminal allegations against Akanbi.
In clear terms, HEDA said, “Traditional rulers are custodians of their people’s heritage and symbols of authority and respect. Traditional rulers must possess impeccable character and be above reproach.”
Oluwo’s continued stay on the throne has many far-reaching implications. One of them is the dangerous signals it sends to the younger generation. It queries the lesson our society teaches when standards shift according to influence. What morals are citizens expected to learn when the law dethrones the Apetu and cuddles the Oluwo, two monarchs whose conduct has been far from dignifying?
Young Nigerians already swim in the ocean of cynicism. They watch fraudsters become celebrities. They see convicted public officials receive traditional titles. They observe corrupt politicians welcomed into churches and mosques with front-row seats and thanksgiving ceremonies. They are confused by the invisible line separating heroes from villains. They are confused by felons who use religion as a tactic to gain public approval. The dethronement of Akanbi will elucidate and revalidate integrity over criminality in our society.
In the days of yore, the throne feared disgrace more than death itself. That was why once a king became an albatross upon the land, chiefs quietly delivered a covered calabash to him — a symbolic invitation to embrace honourable exit or death. Our forefathers understood a simple truth that seems lost on us today: a contaminated crown contaminates the kingdom. The spiritual effect of this is enormous. Only the deep can relate. Governor Adeleke, the Oluwo is a disgrace to the Omoluabi ethos of the Osun people. His calabash needs to be broken. Oluwo must go.
Email: tundeodes2003@yahoo.com
Facebook: @Tunde Odesola
X: @Tunde_Odesola
News
UNIBEN Initiates N100bn Trust Fund To Complement Govt Funding

The University of Benin has unveiled a N100 billion Trust Development Fund (TDF) aimed at serving as an alternative source of funding for the institution.
Speaking at the unveiling of the Fund’s web portal, the Vice-Chancellor of the university, Professor Edoba Omoregie, said the UNIBEN TDF was conceived to bridge infrastructure gaps in the institution.
According to Omoregie, he was inspired by a similar initiative undertaken by University of Oxford about 30 years ago.
He explained that upon his return to the university after seven years away, he was confronted with dilapidated infrastructure across the institution’s two campuses, a situation which, according to him, made it obvious that the university needed additional funding beyond government allocations and its Internally Generated Revenue (IGR).
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The Vice-Chancellor said: “When I took office as Vice-Chancellor, I told myself that the first task was to visit the hostels. I went to all the hostels here in Ugbowo and also on the Ekehuan campus. I also visited some of the academic facilities and, for someone who had been away from the university for about seven years, I did not know the facilities had decayed so rapidly.
“I was deeply concerned. I also looked at the books of the university and saw that its finances were in a shambolic state. We could barely pay the electricity bill; the university was disconnected from the public power supply for three months. There was student unrest, and I was in Abuja at the time, watching from afar and weeping inwardly over what was happening to our university.”
He said he immediately began researching ways the university could access alternative sources of funding, while also taking steps to eliminate waste.
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In his remarks, the Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Osagie Ize-Iyamu, disclosed that the formal launch of the N100 billion fund would take place on July 4, 2026.
He said the Fund would pursue strategic partnerships and sustainable development models through grants, Public-Private Partnerships (PPP), Build-Own-Operate-and-Transfer (BOOT) frameworks, endowment structures, and global institutional collaborations.
“Through these initiatives, we envision the renewal and expansion of critical infrastructure, including ultra-modern sports facilities, students’ hostels, hotels, innovation hubs, and agro-industrial development projects,” he said.
News
Gun Battle In Oyo Forest As Police Disrupt ₦10m Ransom Collection Plot

There was a gun battle in a forest in Oyo State on Wednesday after operatives of the Nigeria Police Force disrupted an alleged ₦10 million ransom collection operation by a suspected kidnapping gang in Otefon Village Forest, Atiba Local Government Area.
The operation, carried out by the Oyo State Police Command in collaboration with the Vigilante Group of Nigeria (VGN), led to the arrest of one suspect while other members of the gang escaped with suspected gunshot injuries.
According to a statement issued by the Command, on Thursday, credible intelligence was received in the early hours of 13 May 2026 that suspected kidnappers had gathered in the forest to receive ransom for a victim they had abducted earlier.
Acting on the intelligence, the Commissioner of Police, Oyo State Command, CP Abimbola Ayodeji Olugbemiga, directed operatives of the Anti-Kidnapping Squad (AKS) in the Oyo/Iseyin axis, alongside local security operatives, to storm the area and intercept the suspects.
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Preliminary investigation showed that the gang of about six armed men had, on 9 May 2026, invaded the residence of one Alhaji Bagudu in Ilowa Village, Atiba Local Government Area, and abducted him, demanding ₦10 million as ransom.
The police said operatives first ensured the safe release of the victim before advancing towards the suspected ransom collection point to apprehend the criminals.
However, upon sighting the advancing security team, the suspects opened fire, triggering a gun duel in the forest. The exchange forced the gang to flee into surrounding bushes with suspected gunshot wounds.
One of the suspects, identified as Mohammed Sanni, was arrested at the scene.
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Items recovered include a motorcycle, a mobile phone, a pair of slippers and a cap, all of which are currently undergoing forensic examination.
The Command said the arrested suspect had already made useful confessional statements, while efforts were ongoing to track down other fleeing members of the gang.
Residents were urged to remain vigilant and report individuals with suspicious injuries or movements to the nearest police formation.
The Commissioner of Police commended the operatives and their collaborators for the successful operation and reaffirmed the Command’s commitment to sustained action against kidnapping and violent crimes across the state.
(GUARDIAN)
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