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OPINION: ‘I Am Jagaban, They Can’t Scare Me’

By Lasisi Olagunju
“Even a corpse put in a coffin will defeat Tinubu in 2027.” ADC chieftain and northern politician, Buba Galadima, gave that promise at the ADC convention last Tuesday. He was wrong. The corpse, the coffin and the carpenter will be buried by Hurricane Tinubu in the election of next year, unless…
Unless what?
Unless they remember that he is Jagaban Borgu and are ready to pay the price in full. Unless those who want to stop the chief warrior understand that noise is not power; that unity and crowd are not synonyms; and that a patient hunter, with quiet menace and inevitability, always defeats a shouting pack.
Buba Galadima said a corpse would defeat Tinubu next year. He must have read too much of Brian McGrath’s ‘Dead Men Running’. Through the lens of McGrath, we see American politics offering rare curiosities of the dead winning elections. The man lists four notable cases: Clement Miller (1962), Hale Boggs and Nick Begich (1972), and Mel Carnahan (2000)—all victims of plane crashes. Because of legal technicalities, their names remained on ballots after their death. And buoyed by sympathy, they all defeated living opponents. But those were American accidents of circumstance. In our politics, the dead do not run—and they certainly do not win; it is the living, daredevil, organised, and strategic who take power.
Generous Tinubu has already shown his opponents the magic in his pouch. He does not fear the living—and has no patience for ghosts that wander into his path. That is why he is a ‘General.’
It is twenty years, two months ago that Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s friend, the late Emir of Borgu, Alhaji Haliru Dantoro, made him the Jagaba of Borgu. Conferred on February 26, 2006, the title translates to ‘Leader of Warriors’ or ‘Chief Warrior’.
It is easy for me to understand the full import of the title. It has a parallel in Yoruba war hierarchy; its counterpart is Balógun (ọba ológun), the king of warriors. The Balogun used to be above the law; even his son was never wrong. Where a child of Balogun was punished for established wrongs, anarchy reigned.
Those who know told me that the Borgu title symbolises strength, influence, and leadership. My friend, a Hausa linguist, informed me that Jagaba is derived from Hausa: ja (pull) and gaba (front).
Last week in Abuja, the president reached for his war title and flung it at his enemies. Raising his 2027 war banner, he bellowed: “Me? They want to scare me off? It’s a lie. I am Jagaban.”
In that Borgu where Tinubu is the chief warrior, before the white man came, warfare “was a serious business…To an average Borgawa, a military defeat meant death; a Borgawa would never allow himself to be enslaved and would do anything to win, even if the war was prolonged or the country was under a siege.” There is a very rich literature on the wars and warriors of Borgu. One of them is a 1995 seminal piece authored by Professor of African History, Olayemi Akinwumi. The above quote belongs to him.
If you complain that the president has centralised power and the privileges that come with it, know that where he is chief warrior today, a few centuries ago, the ancestors of those who made him Jagaba “controlled and monopolised all the resources coming into the various states” of Borgu. They did it and dared the cheated to talk. That is what history says, I did not concoct it.
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So, if the king made you a hawk, chickens must not feel safe again. The Jagaba uses the magic of Borgu for political banditry in Abuja. It is his war standard.
If I can afford it, I will point out a sharp and inconvenient irony: Borgu’s chief warrior has not been able to save Borgu from the surge of bandit attacks. Media reports say banditry has resulted in at least 42 deaths in Borgu between late December 2025 and early January 2026. The land of the “chief warrior” bleeds while its title is deployed in political theatre at the centre.
History deepens my conviction that this warrior president has crowned himself as king of self-help; audacious: Nineteenth-century accounts were less flattering. In ‘Journal of a Second Expedition into the Interior of Africa’ (1829), Hugh Clapperton described Borgu in harsh terms as a land feared by its neighbours because of its uncontrolled banditry. Governor Ballay of Dahomey said he invaded Borgu because of the “incorrigible” bandits ruling its everywhere. Akinwumi got these from C. Hirshfield’s ‘The Diplomacy of Partition: Britain, France and the Creation.’
The warrior in the Villa reminding his enemies that he is Jagaban Borgu should serve enough caution and notice. Àwí fún ẹni kó tó dá ní, àgbà ìjàkadì ni. Bola Ahmed Tinubu spoke last week like a master wrestler—he has warned before the 2027 bout.
The Jagaba invocation calls up a history of war, a memory of dominance, and dread. It is a language of power, ancient, masculine, defiant. Both the title and the giver evoke memories of fear and victory.
Marching to 2027, Buba Galadima needs more than a corpse to scare and fall the Jagaba.
I also heard ADC’s national secretary, ex-Governor Rauf Aregbesola, saying at the party’s convention that in Nigeria, “there will be no coronation” next year. He was wrong too. The strongman has bought crowns for himself; he has also bought kingmakers who will crown him.
And I have my reason for saying this. Did the opposition listen to Tinubu that same Tuesday in the same Abuja? With a snide smile, the man said: “Senate President, I will send you to the other side to represent me, and then you can scatter them anyway you like. They’re confused.” Those words were uttered at a public event.
I thought the statement was a Freudian slip; a leak on what the strongman does to opposition parties. But a friend said, “No. I don’t think it is a Freudian slip. It is èmi ni; taa ni ó mú mi? (it is I; who will arrest me?).” True. Who?
On Thursday, the president doubled down. He looked in the mirror, saw the battle gear he had chosen, and approved of what he saw. Bold, even boastful, Bola Ahmed Tinubu told 36 state coordinators of his Renewed Hope Ambassadors at the Presidential Villa, Abuja: “Me? They want to scare me off? It’s a lie. I am Jagaban. I have been through this path before, and if I have to come back over and over again, I will do the same thing.”
Truly earthy, defiant, unmistakably ‘Jagaban.’ There was no hint of retreat in that declaration. No suggestion of fear. Only the certainty of a man who believes he understands both the terrain and the traps laid upon it.
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And there are traps.
When he said “if I have to come back over and over again, I will do the same thing,” you would want to ask: do what again?
Hear Bola Ahmed Tinubu at the same event: “If they (the opposition) don’t want to see the hope in the roads we’ve built, in the children we’ve raised, in the economy we’re growing, we’ll lend them Bola’s glasses. One thing you need from me is a promise that I won’t run away from their fight.”
In the inverted world of our president, the hungry need “glasses” to see food in the waste bin; the hunted need “glasses” to feel safe in the grave.
It is a curious theatre: a beleaguered people asked to borrow corrective lenses of blind power to confirm the evidence of their own eyes.
That is what bats do: when the heat is on, they hang upside down—and call it balance.
Apart from Jagaban Borgu, Tinubu’s other ‘title’ is his acronym, BAT. Like his winged namesake, I should expect him to hear what others cannot hear. But power has powerful earplugs. Surrounded by sycophants, this president hears only applause, not distress.
Science tells us something useful here. Bats do not see their way through the dark; they hear it. They emit sharp sounds and navigate by the returning echoes. Take away that hearing, and the hunter becomes helpless. Early experiments from 18th century Italian priest and biologist, Lazzaro Spallanzani, to modern biosonar research, proved it: blind the bat, it still flies perfectly; plug its ears, it crashes into the night.
That is the danger of insulated power. When a leader loses the echo of the street, the hunger, the anger, the quiet despair, he begins to move with confidence but without direction. And our man has been showing so much of this, celebrating “distance without direction”, apology to Srilata Zaheer (2012) and his colleagues.
The president says no one can scare him from his 2027 goal and he “won’t run away from their fight.” Someone should tell him that it is not fear that unseats power; it is misdirection. A bat that cannot hear will still fly boldly—until it hits the wall.
But before hitting the wall, this BAT thinks he has conquered the forest. And he has proofs:
How many of the major parties, for instance, will be fit and proper to submit their electronic membership registers to INEC before the deadline imposed by the amended Electoral Act?
If a party has no recognised leadership, can it submit anything at all? And without a recognised register lodged with INEC, can it lawfully field candidates?
The law says it cannot.
A retired president of the Court of Appeal hinted at this recently; the old man flew the kite, as it were. He said someone should not have been allowed to be on the ballot in 2023 because the person was not a member of the party that fielded him. That may be a kite for what is coming. Many watched it glide overhead and did not grasp its meaning. We still are too dumb to get it.
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All of us asking Bola Ahmed Tinubu to be nice and good are naive. We are not being nice to him. The man has spent too long in the streets to mistake goodness for a survival strategy. Leo Tolstoy, writer and philosopher, drew a hard line between ambition and goodness: “In order to get power and retain it, it is necessary to love power; but love of power is not connected with goodness but with qualities that are the opposite of goodness, such as pride, cunning and cruelty.” Our man knows as much as Tolstoy knew.
I am surprised that the opposition people and the whole of the Nigerian people do not know that this is the moment of coup de grâce. Chief Obafemi Awolowo called it a “judelex coup.” In our language, it is simpler: one very ambitious man holding the yam and the knife.
There is a story by Aesop about a small bird and justice. In the story, the bird builds her nest on a courthouse—a place where people go to seek justice. But before her babies can fly, a snake comes and eats them.
When the bird returns and finds her nest empty, she cries bitterly. Her tears are not just because she has lost her babies, but more importantly because the wrong happened to her in a place built to protect the innocent and deliver justice.
Anyone who has conquered all would vibrate the way the president vibrated throughout last week. I think about what Nigerians have as their INEC and what remains of their courts.
Presidency. INEC. The courts. Today, in the mind of the majority, they form a triangle, deadlier than the Bermuda Triangle. A combo of the three has a simple meaning: victory for the man in power; defeat for those outside it, no matter what figure they have.
Our tragedy is not that the dead failed to warn us. It is that we, the living, failed to listen. We ignored their truths, but time has a way of vindicating the ignored.
A part of the people in power today, and a part of the opposition claim their roots in Chief Awolowo’s politics. Have they ever asked how Awo would have described or reacted to what is going on today?
Fortunately, Awo did not leave us guessing. He spoke clearly, clinically, prophetically. On Sunday, 27 January 1980, at an event organised by the Tribune Group to mark the 25th anniversary of Free Universal Primary Education in the old Western Region, he delivered a speech that now reads like a commentary on our present politics.
The speech is published in ‘Path to Nigerian Greatness’ (1981). Listen to him:
“It will be agreed that when someone who is a party to a dispute before a court, unconstitutionally and illegitimately took part in appointing, or indeed, actually appointed, the presiding judge who is also responsible for picking the other members of the judicial panel, that person has successfully staged a judicial coup. When someone who is one of five candidates at an election has the electoral commission, responsible for the conduct of the election, completely on his side to the extent that the commission was prepared to do and indeed did all kinds of infamous manipulations to ensure his victory, then he has successfully staged an electoral coup. When, furthermore, one of five candidates has all the forces of, plus all the instruments of coercion possessed by, the executive behind him to guarantee his victory by hook or by crook, then that candidate has achieved a successful executive coup.”
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That combination in the hands of one man forms a system where outcomes are predetermined and democracy is quietly strangled.
Indeed, Chief Awolowo brilliantly put the three together: judiciary, electoral commission, executive. He called what they did together a “judelex coup de grâce”—or simply, a judelex coup: a fusion of the judicial, electoral and executive arms of government in the service of power.
And now, ahead of 2027, a dangerous mood is spreading. People are surrendering before the contest even begins. They say nothing will change. That the game is fixed. That participation is a mere ritual, not a pathway to anything different from the pain of the present. Plato, reflecting on power and the masses, observed: “Those who are too smart to engage in politics are punished by being governed by those who are dumber.”
Those who are not surrendering are boasting without planning.
I wish I could tell all the sides that democracies do not die only by manipulation; they die by abandonment and by lack of plan by ‘the other side.’
Our husbands know that this moment, as hardship bites, they can sustain power by loyalty, by structure, and strategy. And they are working hard at it, with money, threats and promise of electoral heists that disarm the people.
In America, where we copied this painful democracy, voters often hold the president directly responsible for their economic well-being. In 1932, Herbert Hoover was swept out of office after failing to arrest the Great Depression. In 1980, Jimmy Carter paid the price for stagflation and soaring interest rates. In 1992, George H. W. Bush lost despite victory in the Gulf War. His presidency was undone by recession and a broken tax pledge.
Nigeria is not America. Here, suffering does not always translate into electoral punishment. Petrol prices soar. Living costs rise. Misery deepens. Yet the mandate holds often for those who defend the very policies that worsen the pain. We endure our tormentors; sometimes, we even reward them. Niccolò Machiavelli reminds us of the ruler’s advantage: “Men are so simple… that he who deceives will always find those who allow themselves to be deceived.”
Those who shouted against misbehaviour in the past are abusing those shouting against it today. They are a proof that George Orwell is right: “The nationalist not only does not disapprove of atrocities committed by his own side, but he has a remarkable capacity for not even hearing about them.” They question our patriotism; they wonder why we do not use their glasses to see.
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OPINION: A Dream Of Nigeria

By Lasisi Olagunju
Monday morning on the pulpit can be very surreal. Today’s lesson is from Camara Laye’s ‘A Dream of Africa’, a 1966 novel of prophecy, the black man and his future. A young man called Fatoman returns for a two-week vacation in Guinea after six years of exile in Paris. He returns to a country whose idea of mystery and power “are no longer to be found where they used to be”; a nation badly fissured by violent partisan politics.
Crestfallen, he goes to his goldsmith father who has lost his trade to wooden objects that lack spirits. Fatoman’s father gives him a sacred white ball of cowrie shells. Father tells son: “Put that inside your pillow-case tonight and ask God yourself to enlighten you about the future of our native land.”
Then he sleeps and in an all-night dream the young man finds himself in prison. He sees what eyes see but the mouth fears to utter. But no word is too big that a knife is needed to slice it. Fatoman wakes up the following morning and tells his father what he saw: “I saw a people in rags and tatters, a people starving to death, a people who lived in an immense courtyard surrounded by a high wall, a wall as high as the sky. In that prison, force was the only law; or rather I should say, there was no law at all. The people were punished and sentenced without trial. It was terrible, because those people were the people of Guinea, the people of Africa!”
Dreams are dangerous, especially when told to the winds. Camara Laye would later die in exile in 1980, another writer punished by history for seeing too much and saying too much. Writers have always been prophets; knowingly or unknowingly, their words often hit the bull’s eye beyond boundaries. The people in the dream are not merely Guineans. Looking at what democracy has done to us, I say they are Nigerians.
Everyone is in a cage built by democracy and democrats. The ruling party has cells for its various inmates. There is hardly any escaping the wall. The warders are the big boys; strong, scented soil men.
The ruling party and the opposition are a consortium of prisons where ambitions are either consummated or cremated. Watch the party primaries across all platforms that are permitted to live.
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Yet, the real war will be fought beyond party walls. Southern Nigeria is not prepared for a northern president so soon after Muhammadu Buhari’s eight years. This month and the next will test the tendons of this nation. The party called NDC fired the opening shot two days ago. At the weekend, it played the North-South game of thrones; it zoned the presidency to the South for four years only.
My Igbo friends spent the whole of the weekend celebrating the NDC decision. They thought and still think the NDC ticket is already Peter Obi’s. But the NDC belongs to an Ijaw man who acquired it for a purpose. Goodluck Jonathan is an Ijaw man. Watch him. He is consulting towards 2027. The NDC belongs to his brother, and all politics is local.
American journalist, Chris Matthews, wrote ‘All Politics Is Local’. He said he had the good fortune to be present in November 1989 as the Berlin Wall was being torn down. While there, he interviewed a young East German:
“What is freedom?” he asked the young man.
“Talking to you,” the East German said without pause. “Two weeks ago I couldn’t do it.”
To the ‘imprisoned’, talking to a journalist was the very definition of ‘freedom.’ But the same question was answered differently by several people the journalist interviewed.
So, because all politics is local, regime campaigners asked me to support President Bola Tinubu for re-election. I asked them to tell me why I should. They said it was because he was my brother. I asked them to ask my brother why his first term closed its eyes to the very bad roads to his brother’s state. They said bad roads were not enough to deny one’s daughter the blessing of bosomy beads. They invoked the idi bebere chant of waists and coral beads. They said they would not use my reason to decide where to cast their votes.
I told them that what I want from democracy is not necessarily what they want from it. That is why boys of the same mother do not contribute money to marry one wife.
READ MORE FROM THE AUTHOR:OPINION: ‘I Am Jagaban, They Can’t Scare Me’
You cannot wax imperial and expect the street to hail you. Small matters matter as much as big things in politics. The one who attends to basic things about the people gets the basic attention from them. In the 1970s, one U.S. senator cultivated the image of being “every bit… solicitous…” For the sake of politics and power, with him, “no chore was too small… If you took out a pencil, he’d sharpen it.”
Tinubu started his presidency spending heavily on projects that pleased his friends’ fancy while neglecting the backyard of his poor relations. As road users groaned on broken federal roads in the South West, he committed unimaginably vast resources to his Coastal Road. I once called it a road from somewhere to nowhere. That is what the road means to people where I live and where I work. You cannot take all the money to the coast and expect applause from the hinterland. There is no monkey in Idanre again.
But two weeks ago, politics appeared to have given the strong man a change of heart. He presided over a meeting of his cabinet and awarded road contracts that may give the face of his regime a well-done political makeup. He remembered home.
Consider the geography of the approvals. Dualisation of the Ibadan–Ijebu-Ode Road, stretching 56 kilometres at a cost of N295 billion; the Osogbo–Akoda–Gbongan Road, 59.2 kilometres for N101 billion; and the Osogbo–Iwo–Ibadan Road. All in the South West. Other zones, East and North, got theirs. Like Thomas O’Neill, the 47th Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, Tinubu is translating a national contest “to the local, retail level.”
Presidents do not need roads; they fly. Which is why we must thank the eagle for remembering creations without wings. We thank those around him who reminded him that those roads exist. We only plead that these awards do not end as weightless paper roads designed as vote-catchers. They will indeed be weightless if they are not done before the elections, or they are started and abandoned after the elections.
An epochal governorship election will hold in Osun State in August this year. The incumbent, Ademola Adeleke, is recontesting and remains deeply rooted on the ground. It will take more than federal might to uproot him. In Oyo State, the incumbent governor, Seyi Makinde, has the state firmly in his grip; he is reportedly eyeing the president’s seat. Both governors are widely celebrated as high performers who belong to opposition parties. For the president’s party to make real impact here, therefore, it must have real positive things to show the people. It is not too late to do so.
READ MORE FROM THE AUTHOR:[OPINION] Awolowo: Legacies And Prophecies
Which is why the contracts came at the right time. So, on paper, Tinubu’s contract approvals are infrastructure decisions—big, bold and long overdue. But in substance, they form a carefully plotted map of political warfare. When a government suddenly remembers roads that years of power ignored, it is not governance speaking; it is politics, with timing as its loudest voice. It is the language of a second-term conversation, spoken in concrete and kilometres. Yet, we say thank you. But please, do the work beyond the announcement.
This moment will be read beyond asphalt and contracts. Would these last-minute contracts have been awarded if everyone had migrated into the president’s lair? Politicians often take for granted those they consider their property. Like dogs, they would sleep themselves into death were it not for the fleas of defeat that keep buzzing, threatening to bite.
So, we must keep flashing our voter cards as potential red cards. Sometimes, it works.
In December 1927, Catherine Mitchell Taliaferro asked, “To vote or not to vote?” She ended her piece with a warning that still resonates: “No one ever cleaned a house by deserting it to insects and vermin.”
Taliaferro’s warning was simple: democracies decay when citizens surrender the public space to predators. Nigeria now enters a season in which power will test institutions, friendships and even nerves. From now till January next year, the dreams in Nigeria’s nights will be of wars and rumours of wars.
But is it all gloom without hope of redemption? I go back to Camara Laye’s Fatoman who tells his father: “I also dreamed of a Lion, a great Black Lion, who saved us, who brought back prosperity to us, and who made all peoples his friends.”
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[OPINION] Awolowo: Legacies And Prophecies

By Lasisi Olagunju
An old firm of architects with a rich history of project design and delivery sent a letter to the Sierra Leonean government on September 15, 1960. In that letter, the firm listed some of the projects it was handling in Nigeria. The multi-storey building called Cocoa House in Ibadan was on that list.
But the story of Cocoa House began long before that letter was written. The 26-storey structure did not emerge as an idle elephant on Ibadan’s skyline. It was Obafemi Awolowo’s answer to the need for a total-package commercial edifice. The architects described it as a multipurpose venture “aimed at providing office space as well as leisure facilities through a nightclub, swimming pool and cinema complex.”
That perhaps explains why the skyscraper came with a roof garden and has in its shadows, what the Transnational Architecture Group describes as “a circular building clad in mosaic, topped with a dome,” complete with “a splayed cantilevered entrance leading to a swimming pool with beautiful concrete diving boards and viewing gallery.”
For a government that had worked hard at providing free education for all, putting affordable healthcare and food security as priorities, with “life more abundant” as its central mantra, a space for work and leisure was simply the icing on the cake, the crown on a kingdom of values.
There were many more edifical monuments in brick and policy from that government. But because time kills witnesses to history, counter-historians are, today, on the prowl, poisoning public memory with insidious distortions. To what end, we can only speculate.
Late American sociologist and professor, C. Wright Mills describes “the present as history and the future as responsibility.” Because revisionists continue to undermine the past, poison the present, and threaten the future with deliberate inversions of truth, I put a date to what I started with and insert dates into what comes next.
The Nigerian government established a commission in April 1959 to project the country’s tertiary education requirements for the following 20 years. At the head of that commission was a British botanist and educator, Sir Eric Ashby. The commission did its work and submitted its report. But the report ignored the educational aspirations of the Western Region.
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Professor J. F. Ade Ajayi wrote in 1975 that the majority report of the Ashby Commission recommended that the jointly owned University College, Ibadan, was sufficient to serve the educational needs of the Western Region while other regions could have brand-new universities. The commission, Ajayi said, failed to grasp the urgency with which the West viewed universities as instruments of regional development.
The response of the Western Region under Chief Obafemi Awolowo was swift. The West immediately assembled its own team to work on its own university. The result was the establishment of the University of Ife, today known as Obafemi Awolowo University. Significantly, the solid policy foundation for that university had already been firmly laid before Awolowo left office as Premier of the Western Region on December 12, 1959.
The story of the University of Ife best explains Awolowo’s philosophy of education and development. Education, to Awolowo, was central to human and societal progress. He valued it, mobilised his people around it and funded it robustly throughout his years as Premier. Western Nigeria still preens like a peacock today because, at its foundation, it had a leadership that understood the meaning of knowledge and the place of education in the making of a valuable future. Those who lacked that grace are today a problem to everyone. As philosopher Alfred North Whitehead warned: “In the conditions of modern life, the rule is absolute: the race which does not value trained intelligence is doomed.”
A remembrance service holds every May 9 in honour of Awolowo and in celebration of his good deeds. This year’s was held last Saturday with the Bishop of Remo and Archbishop of the Lagos Ecclesiastical Province of the Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion), the Most Reverend Michael Olusina Fape, saying in fewer words, and in a more elegant way what I have struggled to say above: remembrance in all cultures comes either as honour or infamy. “Nobody will want Judas to come again. Only the righteous are remembered fondly for their deeds.”
“There’s something special about Chief Obafemi Awolowo,” the bishop continued. “He was a man of faith who believed in God wholeheartedly, and this reflected in his leadership, which impacted positively on the people. His name has continued to re-echo in all spheres of human endeavour — education, agriculture, health and many others.”
Preaching on the theme, “What Will You Be Remembered For?” the cleric, with a heavy heart, expressed disappointment with politicians who parade themselves as progressives and disciples of Awolowo without reflecting his values in governance. According to him, many who wear the progressive label today are, in reality, retrogressive because they make life harder for the people they govern.
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‘Progressive,’ like ‘democracy,’ has become a debased and abused word in Nigeria — loudly proclaimed, but rarely reflected in governance or in the condition of the people. I recommend ‘The So-Called Progressive Movement: Its Real Nature, Causes and Significance’ by Charles M. Hollingsworth to anyone watching today’s powers loudly parade themselves as progressives. Hollingsworth argued that the progressive movement was not always truly progressive in the historical sense, but often quite the opposite. Nor was it genuinely democratic or constitutional in spirit; rather, it was essentially a class movement aimed at the arbitrary control of other classes.
The heart of progressivism is selfless service; otherwise, the badge becomes a mask for masquerades plundering the sacred grove. No one becomes good suddenly. Goodness is rooted either in nature, in nurturing, or in both – upbringing and legacy.
As we remember Awolowo almost four decades after his transition, we should look at the tree from which came the beneficial fruit.
Writing under the pen name, John West, in the Daily Service of March 8, 1959, Alhaji Lateef Jakande gave remarkable insight into the making of the man called Awolowo:
“To understand Obafemi Awolowo, one must know his father. For he is a chip of the old block if anybody ever was. Those who knew him say David Shopolu Awolowo was one of the first Christian converts in Ikenne. He was converted in 1896. His industry was proverbial: he was honest, truthful, hated hypocrisy and never minced his words. A successful farmer and sawyer, Awolowo was also a capable organiser and was the president of about five thrift societies.
“David was not a politician. But his own father was; the latter having acquired a taste for public life from his grandfather. David’s father was head of the Iwarefa, the Executive Council of the Oshugbos who were the rulers of the town in those days. And in this office, he left a record of strict impartiality and firmness in the administration of justice. His own grandfather was also an astute politician. He was the Oluwo of Ikenne, next in rank to the Alakenne and head of the Oshugbos — and wielded great power and influence in the public life of his day.
“And so we have all the ingredients that go to make up the Awolowo we know. It is given to few to combine so well all the sterling qualities of his noble ancestors.”
That heritage produced a leader who understood both the psychology of colonial domination and the tragedy of post-colonial failure. In ‘Path to Nigerian Freedom’, published in 1947, Awolowo wrote with painful foresight: “Given a choice from among white officials, chiefs, and educated Nigerians, as the principal rulers of the country, the illiterate man, today, would exercise his preference for the three in the order in which they are named. He is convinced, and has good reason to be, that he can always get better treatment from the white man than he could hope to get from the chiefs and the educated elements.”
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How hauntingly relevant does that sound today? Across the country, 66 years after independence, swelling numbers of disappointed Nigerians now openly romanticise colonial order — not because colonialism was good, but because post-colonial leadership has failed to justify independence in the eyes of ordinary citizens. Some even sadly ask Donald Trump to come and rescue them from Nigeria the way Moses rescued the Israelites from Egypt.
George Grant (1918–1988) did a reading of Socrates and concluded that the price of goodness is the heavy burden borne by those who choose to stand for truth and morality in societies ruled by injustice. To be good in a bad world, Grant argued, often demands sacrifice, suffering and, sometimes, personal ruin. Awolowo did well and, because he did well in a perverse world, he had to endure severe emotional torture and physical restriction. He was falsely accused; witnesses were called against him before a commission of inquiry, yet he was denied the opportunity to cross-examine them. He suffered, but survived it all.
Where did he get the strength?
John West’s 1959 piece provides a window into that defining trait of Awolowo. According to him, Chief Awolowo had been taught by his father “the Shakespearean injunction, to beware of entering into a fight but once in, never to disengage himself from it until he has beaten his opponent or he himself has been worsted in the encounter.” John West added that anyone who had Awolowo as an opponent knew “to his cost that that lesson was not taught in vain.”
In one moment of deep emotional reflection, William Shakespeare wrote in Julius Caesar that, “The evil that men do lives after them; the good is oft interred with their bones.” Yet, in the case of Awolowo, the reverse is very true. Thirty-nine years after his transition, the good he did continues to define standards of leadership, governance and public morality in Nigeria.
Perhaps that is the ultimate meaning of legacy. It is someone’s deep thought that long after power fades, after wealth disappears and after noise quietens, what survives is character, vision and sacrifice. Awolowo understood this truth early. That is why, decades after his passing, Nigeria still invokes his name whenever leadership fails, whenever governance loses direction and whenever the people search for standards against which to measure those who govern them today.
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UNIBEN Student Killed, Two Injured

A yet-to-be-identified student of the University of Benin was on Sunday evening shot dead by masked gunmen at the Ugbowo campus of the institution.
According to eyewitness accounts, the student was shot at close range inside his GLK Mercedes Benz, while two persons who were with him in the car sustained injuries. The masked gunmen fled the scene after carrying out the dastardly act.
The two other victims were said to have been rushed to the University of Benin Health Care center.
The victim had reportedly finished his exams in the Political Science department about an hour earlier before he met his tragic end.
READ ALSO:UNIBEN Bans Students’ Sign-out Celebration
One student said, “They shot him at close range and there was no way he could have survived the attack. Two others who were in the vehicles were also injured and rushed school’s health care center.”
Operatives from the Ugbowo Divisional Police Headquarters were at the scene evacuating the remains of the victim.
The DPO of the Divisional Police Headquarters SP Emmanuel said it was still too sketchy and are yet to issue an official statement
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