Thursday, 27 October 2011

Bespoke offering



BY GREGORY AUSTIN NWAKUNOR




"THIS building is very classy," said a guest. "Oh, my God, I'm so excited to be here."
  Another guest said, "I love all the decorative details. It is a state-of-the-art and fully equipped entertainment centre that can host birthdays, funerals, musical concerts, sports festivals and other events. It would be good for a wedding reception, too."
  Those were some of the reactions at the Bespoke Centre, located beside Auto Germaine, along Lekki-Epe Expressway, Lekki, Lagos, which was declared open by Lagos State Commissioner for Housing, Bosun Jeje, on October 9.
  To celebrate the grand opening, the owners of the facility hosted a red carpet event, which attracted celebrities, socialites and high networth guests such as Abiodun Aloba, Mr. and Mrs. Biodun Odejayi, the singer Alariwo, the sports journalist Mitchell Obi, the filmmaker Kunle Afolayan, Kingsley Omoefe and many others.
  The event included performance by artistes such as DJ Zeez, King Wadada, Waconzy and celebrity-packed red carpet.

BESPOKE has three fully air-conditioned halls of different sizes with one conveniently sitting 1,800 (theatre style) or 1,500 (banquet) and each of the two other halls sitting 200 people.
  In the words of Mrs. Abiola Kila Onalaja, the purpose of establishing the entertainment outfit is “to provide clients with a premium event experience, relieving them of facility related concerns by providing them with a world class event facility, backed by an unbeatable level of service.”
  “Our utmost concern while your event last is your comfort and that’s why we have taken time to invest in the best and most modern equipment and furniture to make your event a memorable one,” Onalaja says. “It is built to make every client find it most interestingly possible to create and execute their peculiar events and activities in an atmosphere of poise and comfort.”

Applauding a homegirl



THE alumni association of School of Media and Communications (SMCAA), Pan African University (PAU), recently honoured Ebi Akpeti, author of The Perfect Church, Growing Pains and Castrated.
  The event, held at the Victoria Island campus of PAU (popularly known as
Lagos Business School), was a reunion of sort, as Akpeti’s classmates gathered to honour their own. Her work, The Perfect Church, which was made into a movie by Wale Adenuga Production (WAP), has enjoyed commendable reviews among movie buffs.
  In a presentation, titled, From Script to Screen: Content that Sell, Akpeti said there were billion of people with desperate need for real stories and if writers take the trouble to learn what a story really is and how to spot it, it will give them tremendous advantage. "Just think how many stories pass us everyday," she said.
  Going through her time as a student there, Akpeti thanked all her lecturers in the school who had modeled her especially Dr. Hyginus Ekwuazi and wondered what would have become of her without the don’s gentle admonitions for her to become a better writer.
  The event also featured discussions with the movie producer, Adenuga, producer of the movie, and clips from the film were shown.
  Adenuga commended Akpeti for her ability to write and ‘unusual story’ and further revealed that The Perfect Church would soon be shown on national TV in the coming month. 
  Mrs. Funke Treasure, Vice President, School of Media and Communication Alumni Association (SMCAA), anchored the event.


For Ebi Akpeti, A Writing Perfected From Growing Pains




Ebimoboere Omoaruke Akpeti is an author and banker. Wale Adenuga has made one of her novels, The Perfect Church, into a movie. She speaks on the novel and how she writes despite her tight schedule

By Gregory Austin Nwakunor

DATELINE: March 6, a Saturday afternoon in an eatery in Ogudu, Lagos. The door flung open and Ebimoboere Akpeti glides in with a youthful bounce. She’s casually dressed in a tee shirt with the inscription The Perfect Church in the front. She has a flat heel sandal on her legs.
  This is not the best place to have an interview, but not with a humourous person. Ebimoere is a chatterbox. And you’re sure to enjoy her company, even when dining.
  She smiles to every joke, and creates many. Each character she creates in her novel represents her almost humorous existence. It’s impossible not to notice this on a first meeting.
  Ebi, as she is popularly called, however, says, “these characters are not just extension of my humorous nature, but to give hope to humanity.” She stares into an empty spaces and grimaces.
  “Look at the character Oyinkro in Growing Pains. People were just waiting for the man to die because life was over for him. But did he?” she asks, as if expecting answer.
  “No, because at the end of the story, you would see that he was not only able to get up, he was also able to get back in line! So that’s what my stories are all about.”
  The lady, whose name, Ebimoboere, means the girl that came with goodluck, muses, “writers write about what they know. I write stories about events that hold in our environment. I write about unemployment, drugs, poverty and other issues in our society, and I use fiction to show how people can surmount these challenges.”
She talks animatedly, waving her hands as if offering them as a gift to her guest. “They are to encourage people… you know, just to say that no matter how far you have fallen, you can still get back on your feet.”
  Her latest work, The Perfect Church, is currently making waves. Now shot into a movie, it is showing in cinemas across the country. So, what inspired the writing and what does she think of the movie interpretation? 
  “Well…” She pauses. Pregnant silence follows. “I will say God gave me the ideas. I can’t really say exactly how. I started and completed it in about six hours.”
  She says, wryly,  “I never expected it to turn out like this and that it will one day pay Ramsey Nouah’s actor fees.”
 From Ebi’s seated position, passion lifts her voice and raises her out of the chair, “I was really impressed when I saw the movie and would be forever grateful to Wale Adenuga for investing his millions to turn my dream into a reality.”
  She laughs and flicks her eyes; a shadow of hope rushes in. “Honestly, he has turned this little girl into a true believer. I now know that anything the mind conceives, it can achieve. It’s just for one person to believe in you.  After writing the book, I was wondering how to take my writing to a new level. I was watching super story and then something just hit me that Wale Adenuga is the one that should produce one of my stories in one of his super story series. At that time, I wasn’t even thinking of The Perfect Church. I was thinking of Growing Pains. Anyway, I got his phone number from one of my colleagues in the office, I went to his office one Saturday and met him and gave him the books.”
  Talking slowly, she says, “it’s funny now but when I first gave him the books, I remember the first thing he said, ‘so how much will you pay me for producing your books’ but I wasn’t even expecting money all I wanted was for someone to produce it and keep the rights in my name. He read it, and the next weekend, he called me again and said ‘I read it, I gave it to my wife and she has also read it. I gave it to my daughter, who has equally read it; and all of us have decided The Perfect Church is the script I have been looking for’. That day was one of the best days of my life.” 
  She wears a cheerful mien, as she speaks.  Her round face broadens, convincingly and her dark colour glistens. She says, “and looking through the film and even during the premiere, you could see that he did not spare any expense in making the movie. He got the best actors in the industry and they interpreted the book very well. I am very grateful to him and most especially to the Almighty God for directing me to him.”
  She dabs her face with a white handkerchief. She snorts: “Three things I believe have been responsible for everything that is happening in my life today: God Almighty and the fact that I worship in the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG). From the day I joined RCCG, it seemed liked I had tapped into a covenant with God for a lot of things. My family has been very instrumental in my writings.  Finally, the few places I have built my career such as Purples Consult, The Week Magazine and UBA, where I currently work.”
  Looking back, she now understands that it was all a process and part of what God has done in her life.
 She relaxes and a broad smile fills her face.I see the future as being very interesting and that is all I have ever wanted — a life that is truly interesting, where I can impact lives by what I write. I want to write books that will endure for generations to come. While people are thinking of the next election, I want to think of the next generation and hope that my stories will serve to guide them in their quest to make this world a better place.”
  What’s her goal as a writer? Nobel? Caine? Booker? What really?
  “The truth is, I don’t really have a goal. I don’t aspire to get rich, famous or win any prize, but if I do, it will be good. Writing is something I’m passionate about and something I would do whether I get paid for it or not,” she says, her eyes twitching.
  Her encounter with writing?
  Ebi says in a gripping voice, “I always say it was by accident and I insist that I started writing by chance. There was never a time I sat down to say I wanted to be a writer. What I really wanted to do was sing. I used to sing all the time because as far as I was concerned back then, I was Whitney Houston’s younger sister even though it was obvious that my talent did not lie in singing. I began writing out of a need to fill the emptiness in my heart at a time in my life when I had nothing to do. I created two characters: one, of a deranged man; and a young lady trying to survive on the streets of Lagos. These two people, Oyinkro and Yvonne, became the main characters in Growing Pains.”
  Book opens the eyes of the readers to the ‘double’ life of Akpeti. But you can’t blame her for this. She’s a writer and banker.
  After her Master of Science degree in Finance, for some reason, which she now understands, she just could not get a job.
  “I was jobless for some years and out of frustration, I wrote a story titled Growing Pains. I took the story to a media house for it to be published and when the editor saw it, he was impressed and employed me right on the spot and since then, I have written so many other books. Stories are all around us each and everyday. In fact, it is stories that make sense of the world for me. I was just faithful with the gift God gave me and that was how it all began. I did not want to be perfect, I did not want to be rich, I just wanted to write,” Ebi breathes.
  The lady, who bagged her first degree in Business Management from the University of Calabar, also holds a Master’s degree in Media and Communication to her string of certificates.
  As a media relations’ officer/banker, how does her job impact on her literary calling?
  “I write when I get the urge, which is virtually all the time,” she says. “Balancing time between different types of writing projects is definitely something that I struggle with but the good thing is that my job complements my writing. As a media relations’ officer in a bank, I do a lot of writing and that has greatly improved my writing. When I began to write, I did not aim at perfection, I just wanted to give my all to something I knew I could do and since then, I have become better at writing stories because of the constant use of words on the job. My job is the greatest motivation for my stories and I thank God for it. I would not have it any other way.”
  She says, “people always ask me that question because they wonder how I’m able to write in spite of my daily responsibilities as a full time banker, but it’s never been a problem. Writing is how I relieve myself from stress. Every blessed day, before I sleep, I write something about that day. I just jot it down.”
  In 2006, she was one of the nominees for the Nigerian Media Merit Awards in Capital Market category.

Monday, 24 October 2011

The many Caps of a large Heart


BY GREGORY AUSTIN NWAKUNOR


"The most important gold I'm winning now is to save the lives of those who have heart problems. If I'm able to do that, I have won the African Nations Cup and the World Cup put together."



HIS English name is Christian, but he is rarely called that. As a Christian, he wouldn’t be said to have ‘luck’ because the Bible does not recognise that expression. He, however, has the grace and favour of God in him.
  That is Nwankwo Christian Nwosu Kanu.
  Born on August 1, 1976 in Owerri, to parents, who hailed originally from Arochukwu, Abia State, he was very fortunate to be the right man in the right place and at the right time.
  The time?
  The over 19 years he spent wearing national colours as a player.
  On the pitch, Kanu was respected for his precision on the ball. His swift passing and turning power were phenomenal. He was one of the few footballers, who could easily switch from right to left and right again.
  Kanu chose the 1996 Atlanta Olympics as the right moment to implant himself in the hearts of Nigerians.
  Many watched in bated breath, as he scored two fantastic goals in the semi-final against Brazil; and that was it. Nigeria was down 2-3 and two quick goals from him gave Nigeria the desired victory — the last being a golden goal. The first at that level against Brazil. It was not that he scored those goals that mattered, but the manner in which he executed them. They were much like that of legends.
  In a spate of 10 minutes, the man-child proved that talents alone do not take a star go far; what was needed was a limitless supply of determination, grit and drive. Kanu showed he had them. Awesomely!!! An extraordinary gift and determination to claw his way to the top.

Career
STANDING at 6'5, Kanu began to play professional at 15. From that age, the responsibility of delivering had always fallen on his sleigh, gentle shoulder. His glacial composure and deft technical ability came handy for the execution of those ‘King’ Kanu tricks. He racked up 428 professional matches, scoring 117 goals.
  Kanu announced his retirement from international football at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa in June 2010.
  What a player and what a career Kanu has had. Very few players have had so many high and low and still remained in everyone’s heart.
  You ask? What was it that made Kanu such a special human being? Was it as a result of his dazzling footwork? The fact that he survived a career and life-threatening heart problem and had overcome it all to post superlative performances in his football career?
   His magnanimity of spirit?
  His selfless life-style that deviated from what conventionally obtains with a majority of African high-achievers?
  Now check this:
  From childhood, he sowed the seeds of success. He prepared the ground for a bumper harvest.
  According to him, "there's a time to start and a time to finish, it has been a fulfilling ride from day one," Kanu had said after the match. "I thank all the players who cut short their holidays from different places and the Nigerian fans for their endless love and support throughout my career."
 

‘Undoubtedly the most recognised, successful and talented footballer’

A DAY to his testimonial match last Saturday, for several hours, business activities around Lagos Island had come to a halt, as school children and market women trooped out in their hundreds to welcome Papilo and a team of international stars, who accompanied him to visit the country’s premier elite school, King’s College, Lagos, as well as the General Hospital, both in Marina.
   Around him were some of his friends and former colleagues, each of whom had come to give him their ilk a befitting retirement.
  Each owed him one last favour on the pitch, so to say. Among them were former Aston Villa midfielder, George Boateng, as well as ex Black Stars of Ghana defender, Anthony Baffoe and former Bayern Munich defender, Samuel Kuffour.
  Also in the delegation was former Super Eagles coach, Bonfrere Jo and some former Nigerian internationals such as Friday Elahor, Bright Omokaro, Waidi Akanni and Yisa Sofoluwe.
  Among those who honoured were Stephen Keshi, Jean Makoun, Khalilou Fadiga, Jay-Jay Okocha, Joseph Yobo, Taye Taiwo, Herman Hreidarsson and Obinna Nsofor, Michael Essien, Kolo Toure, Stephen Appiah, Kalusha Bwalya, John Utaka, Finidi George, Mutiu Adepoju, Obinna Nwaneri, Yakubu Ayegbeni, Elderson Echiejile, Onyekachi Okonkwo, Raphael Chukwu, Daniel Amokachi, Uche Okechukwu and Ogbonnaya Kanu.
  Africa’s most decorated player and three times UEFA Champions League winner, Samuel Eto'o, said, "Kanu is undoubtedly the most recognised, successful and talented footballer I have ever seen on the field."
  According to him, "it was not hard to honour him by travelling down because he is an icon of the African game and we must honour him. After playing against him, I was honoured and today I came here to show how much we respect and appreciate his achievement, inspiration, motivation and charitable gesture."
   Former Arsenal striker Emmanuel Adebayor revealed that Kanu was his only hero when growing up and as a professional.
  "I cannot hide the fact that I moulded my career in his image and it is obvious that he’s still my inspiration and hero as a footballer," he said.

From one tiny ball-chaser to a Soccer giant

KANU started his professional career at the then National Division one league side, Federal Works, before moving to Iwanyanwu Nationale in 1992.
  As a member of the Golden Eaglets that were victorious at Japan ‘93 U-17 World Championships, he was signed on by Dutch Eredivisie AFC Ajax in 1993 for €207,047.
  He made his Ajax debut the following year and went on to score 25 goals in 54 appearances. Kanu’s touch and acceleration were palpable and when he came in as one of the subtitutes in Ajax’s 1995 Champions League final win over AC Milan, the difference was clear.
   From Ajax, he moved to Serie A side, Internazionale, for around $4.7 million that summer in 1996 after his wonderful performance as the captain of the Dream Team that won gold at the Olympics in Atlanta.
  Inter was Kanu’s annus horribilis, not because he underwent a medical examination, which revealed a serious heart defect and surgery in November 1996 to replace an aortic valve, but the fact that  after his return to the club in April 1997 to 1999, when he moved to Arsenal, he only appeared 11 times for the club.
  When he was with Arsenal FC (England), he created one of the biggest football fans followership in Nigeria and indeed Africa.
  In 2008, he was voted 13th by the Arsenal fans in their list of the 50 greatest players in the history of the club.
  Kanu also played for West Bromwich Albion, the current club of another Nigerian, Osaze Odemwingie.
  In his two years at The Hawthorns he made a total of 58 appearances – 16 of them as a substitute – and scored nine goals.
  From West Brom, he signed for Portsmouth, his current club, where he won his third English FA Cup, scoring goals in the semi and final matches.


Kanu’s travail
  Kanu’s travails humanised the goals and successes he has had with and for Nigeria. It was after his Atlanta 1996 Gold medal that his soccer career nearly came to a halting end, based on a medical tragedy.
  He was diagnosed with a heart defect that threatened to cut short an amazing career that only a gifted talented, focused and hardworking individual could amass.
  With his firm faith in God, he underwent the heart surgery successfully in Cleveland Hospital, Ohio. USA.
  Kanu, the two-time CAF African Footballer of the Year, was moved by the public's concern towards him during his rehabilitation period; that he set up Kanu Heart Foundation (KHF), with the aim of serving the entire African continent.
  The Foundation was founded in 2000 to help save underprivileged African children by offering cardiovascular procedures.
   “The most important gold I'm winning now is to save the lives of those who have heart problems. If I'm able to do that, I have won the African Nations Cup and the World Cup put together,” said Kanu.
  Officials of the Kanu Heart Foundation (KHF) say the organisation has spent an average of $7,000 on the 250 children it has facilitated their treatment in Israel, India and London.
  It has also brought in cardiac surgery equipment worth over $240,000 to treat children in Nigeria. This equipment is housed at the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (UNTH) Enugu.
  Former Health Minister, Prof. Eyitayo Lambo, while donating his December 2006 basic salary to support the excellent work of the Kanu Heart Foundation, said: "The Kanu Heart Foundation is an initiative of an exceptionally gifted Nigerian who has contributed to safety of lives and remains a national source of pride and an inspiration to other Nigerians at home and in the Diaspora.
  "Nwankwo Kanu has delighted Nigerians, Africans and lovers of football all over the world with his unique soccer artistry and emotion over more than one decade. In a rare gratitude to almighty God for His grace upon his life, and in imbibing him with such uncommon talent, Kanu has dedicated his life and resources to giving (assistance to) children and parents and replacing hopelessness with the bright and prosperous future. This is a unique and laudable manifestation of private-public partnership in the provision of health services to the people of this country. The Foundation Surgery initiative for Nigerians with heart defects should be seen as a challenge by the rest of us, especially our brothers and sisters in the Diaspora."
 

Trivia
APART from philanthropy, Kanu has done well for himself as a businessman, with his holding reportedly worth overN3 billion.
   Sources close to Papilo say he has investments in an airline, huge shares in banks, a hotel (Hardley Suites located in Lagos), a guesthouse in London, and a table water company.
  Kanu also has more than 60 houses in Nigeria and London, all bringing rents to the soccer icon. This is apart from choice cars, including a Ferrari, in his London garage.
 His fashion statement outside the football pitch is quite remarkable and very much in comparison to the pattern of his numerous goals in the biggest league games in Europe.
  Kanu married his heartthrob, Amarachi,  in 2004, and and the marriage is blessed with two boys


Akpabio… The will of God and man


BY GREGORY AUSTIN NWAKUNOR



IF you are to run into Godswill after working hours, you will certainly miss him out in the crowd; well, except you are lucky to hear him laugh or throw banter at his men as good pals would normally do.
  He is a socialite, a mixer and a good family man, who could be caught sharing cinema seats with one or all of his children.
  Godswill Obot Akpabio was born a gift to humanity. There is something uncommon in him that turns everything he touches to gold. From humility, he rose to nobility. In fact, no generation has his type more than one.
  From his early age, he had proclaimed that the time for change had come. Even without a father, he knew he was destined to change the fate of many.
  Though destiny gave him to his mother with one hand, it took away his father with the other.
  And it came before sunrise.
  The mother doubled as a father, rising to the highest rung of the ladder of hardship and difficulties to raise a future champion — an exemplary leader. Well, as the expression goes, ‘the situation at home was bad, but the boy was good’.
  His mother, seeing him as her only hope in life, painstakingly brought him up, inculcating in him, the value of hard work, discipline and honesty. These trees had since bear fruits.
  His record as governor has raised the bar of leadership, making him a deserving leading light and rallying point. A bastion of development, he is a metaphor for hope. Destiny made him a man for the people, not for self.
  He has governed Akwa Ibom State with policies that have human face because he believes God sent him for the purpose of affecting the lives of people through doing God’s will. To him, development is people-centred.
  Hence, whatever is not for the benefit of the people is not acceptable. There could not have been a better name for him than Godswill; a man God is using to bless a people he named after himself. Governor Akpabio is an exhilarating developing story. He is out of the ordinary.
  He says with a toothy smile, as he took the oath of office for a second time, “we dare not forget that we are the heirs of great revolutionaries who breathed hope into the political fabric of our country.”
  He continues, “many years from now, posterity will look back at this time and take a holistic view of all that transpired in that election. And they will surely be proud that we all stood on the right side of history and sent a signal to our brothers, sisters, friends and foes that nothing shall separate us.”
  His happiness is that his people are now “living in a state where every child, no matter the circumstance of his birth, has equal opportunity to acquire formal education. This is possible with the free and compulsory education programme. We now have a state where every child, pregnant woman and the aged have access to free medical treatment. We now have a state where the educational and health infrastructures have been completely transformed.”
  Amidst a cheerful grin, the governor retorts,  “we now fly in and out of the Ibom International Airport. We are poised to enjoy uninterrupted power supply from Ibom Power Plant as soon the Federal Government grants us the license not only to generate but to also distribute electricity. The Cineplex at Tropicana Entertainment Complex, which we inaugurated last month, has become the star leisure spot in our state. This is just a tip of the iceberg as the emerging radiance of the Tropicana Entertainment Complex beckons.”
  Like Martin Luther King Jr., he is happy that he is happy that Akwa Ibom are living in the midst of ‘our dreams’.We live in a time when our state has become one of the preferred conference spots in our country. When our road network, with our concentric flyovers in Uyo, has become the talk of the country. When no one comes to our state anymore to look for house helps and drivers. And Akwa Ibom people walk tall in Nigeria. We live in a time when key projects like the Ibom Gas Plant and the underground drainage system in Uyo have been completed. We live in a time when we look forward to the immediate commencement and completion of impactful projects like the Ibaka Deep Seaport, the Ibom Industrial City and many more projects in order to establish our state as one of the pivots of the Nigerian economy.”
  Akpabio says the results of his achievements are everywhere for people to see “In over 1,350 communities which now have electricity, more than 205 urban roads have been rehabilitated or constructed anew; five brand new hospitals are now operational, many federal roads have been dualised and constructed and reconstructed; thousands have been employed in various completed projects like the Le’ Meridien Hotel and Golf Resort, the Ibom International Airport, which we met at ten percent completion level, the Ibom Independent Power Plant, the civil service, gas processing plants, the first class construction companies that opened offices in 2007 on my assumption of office etc. I am happy to report that in the last four years over 3000 life-impacting projects have been initiated and completed across the entire state.”
  The 2007 oath-taking resulted in three brand new flyovers, dualized Ekid Itam Road, daulised Ikot Ekpene – Abak Road, new and dualised Uyo to International Airport Road, the liberation of the people of Etim Ekpo/Ika axis, the Nung Udoe Oko Ita, Use Ikot Amama (Ibiono) indigenes, the Enen Nsit Road construction, the Etebi Enwang road construction, the Abak – Ukpom Hospital Road etc. We should also note that our health institutions have been fully revamped and fully equipped and five new general hospitals added. Today we are a proud state with no single incidence of polio. Our pride as a people has also further been heightened with the completion of the state-of-the-art Government Banquet Hall and ten new Guest Houses. These have further upgraded our efforts in the deliberate attempt to turn Uyo into a metropolitan city.

Trajectory of a career
AKPABIO is certainly not a Nigerian politician. If anything, he is a statesman. He is only in politics. And his brand of politics is not for himself. To him, it is service first, self last. This is alien to Nigeria.  “A good Nigerian politician serves self, a statesman scoops home the joy on the faces of his people. And he is always the author of this joy. Akpabio belongs to this people-centred politics,” says Aniekan Umanah, Commissioner, Ministry of Information & Social Re-Orientation Akwa Ibom State.
  The governor made a perfect blend of two noble professions. He also had a brief stint as a teacher, and was an associate partner with Paul Usoro and Co., a leading law firm in the country.
  His teaching background, though brief, exposed him to the educational crises in our society while his legal practice gave him insight into the needs of justice administration in Nigeria.
  He had also called the shots in 2002, when he became the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of EMIS Telecoms Limited, a leading privately-owned fixed wireless company in Lagos.
  To his credit, while in that position, he helped in developing majority of the current crop of management in the telecom industry.
  His genius was recognised even before he became the MD of EMIS and he was elected the National Publicity Secretary of the Association of Telecom Companies in Nigeria, (ATCOM), while he was still the Company Secretary of EMIS Telecoms.
In 2002 His Excellency was appointed the Commissioner for Petroleum and Natural Resources.  He left his stamp of efficiency in this ministry as an astute administrator, and was subsequently re-assigned commissionership duties in key ministries like the Ministry of Local Government & Chieftaincy Affairs and the Ministry of Lands and Housing.
  As a Commissioner in the Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, he was responsible for the supervision of the 31 Local Councils and traditional institutions.
  His immense conflict management skills came to the fore and he commanded the respect of local government administrators and traditional rulers for always standing on the side of truth.
  As a commissioner, His Excellency Chief Akpabio related with people based on their character and not where they come from.
  Completely detribalised, he is imbued with a passion for excellence and driven by a sense of mission and purpose.

Honours
  He is a recipient of over 30 chieftaincy titles from all over Nigeria. They include the Uko Akwa Ibom (awarded to him by the Akwa Ibom State Council of Chiefs), Utuenikang Ibibio, Iberedem Ibibio, Nta Nta Offiong Annang, Atta of Eket and the Nta Nta Oro, to mention a few.
  He also holds the highest national honour of the Republic of Niger, Gold Humanitarian Services Award, which was conferred on him by Niger Republic’s Ambassador to Nigeria, His Excellency, Alhaji Moussa Ibrahim.  
  The honours he receives from educational institutions tell clearly that that is his constituency.
  He has been awarded the Doctor of Law (Honoris Causa) of the University of Nigeria Nsukka; the Doctor of Public Administration (Honoris Causa) of the Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka; the Doctor of Law (Honoris Causa) of the University of Uyo; the Doctor of Law (Honoris Causa) of the University of Calabar; Fellowship by several tertiary institutions of learning (including polytechnics and colleges of education) and professional bodies; Man of the Year 2009 by Daily Independent Newspapers; Emerging Tiger by ThisDay Newspapers; Man of the Year 2009 by the National Daily Newspapers
  He has also been honoured by the National Daily with the award of 2008 Most Outstanding Governor in Nigeria (South South).
   The newspaper said the award was in appreciation of his developmental strides and described the free education program as unprecedented in the region.

Trivia
GODSWILL likes cooking, but because of state function, this aspect of him seldom occurs, but he is a good cook.
  Expect to see him in on suit and possibly, red tie, for any formal occasion and traditional, if the occasion demands. But in the evening you’ll surely catch him on jeans and long or shot sleeve. He likes flat slippers or canvass.
  His Excellency is happily married to Mrs Ekaette Unoma Akpabio, and the marriage is blessed with four beautiful daughters and a son. He and his wife share a great passion for the underprivileged and for service to the community.
  Umanah says, “His Excellency is a God-fearing man and devoted Christian of the Catholic Faith. Inspite of his high political office, he humbles himself and seeks the face of God for exemplary leadership.”
  According to Umanah, “every year, there is always a solemn assembly to dedicate the state to God. Apart from the yearly service, monthly prayer sessions are often held on behalf of the state for God’s intervention in the affairs of His men.”
  In fact, he has also bagged the ‘Nehemiah Award’ of the African Church. In its citation, the Church described the massive infrastructural development of Akwa Ibom State as “unequalled in the country.”
  The National Youth Council of Nigeria earlier honoured him as the “Youth Ambassador of Nigeria.  
  Other recent awards include: Governor of the Year, 2010 by Tribune; Best Infrastructural Development Governor, Ben Television, UK Governor of the Year South South, City People Magazine; Best Governor Infrastructure 2009, Encomium Magazine; Best Governor South South, Encomium Magazine; Excellency Recognition Award As Best Governor South South by Global Excellence Magazine.
  Prior to his emergence as Governor, the Africa Independent Television/Raypower FM in the South South Region honoured him with the “Excellence in Governance Award” in 2005. 

BORN on December 9, 1962, in the cold and frosty Ukana Ikot Ntuen, Essien Udim Local Council of Akwa Ibom State, to the family of Chief and Madam Obot Akpabio, he had his first formal education at Methodist Primary School, Ukana.
  That was to be followed by a secondary education at the Federal Government College, Port Harcourt, Rivers State, where he obtained his West African Senior Certificate Examination/General Certificate of Education at Ordinary and Advanced Levels. 
  Thereafter, he proceeded to the University of Calabar, where he bagged a Degree in Law. And on completing his studies at the Nigerian Law School, he was called to the Nigerian bar.
  At Federal Government College, Port Harcourt, he was appointed the General Senior Prefect. And later in the University of Calabar, his charismatic mien endeared him to the students and he was elected the Speaker of the Students’ Parliament.

Uche Jombo… Putting all the ‘damage’ on screen



BY GREGORY AUSTIN NWAKUNOR


UCHE Jombo is no longer afraid of paparazzi that follow celebrities wherever they go. She’s very comfortable with the ‘public property’ aspect of her life, so, she’s not disturbed by their camera or prying eyes.
  She gives a wink to a friend, who tries to shield her from the swarm of photographers massing at the entrance of a hotel in Victoria Island, where she’s concluding deals on her forthcoming movie premiere. Uche smiles as a photographer clicks away.
  Since she made her entrance in the Nigerian film culture, Nollywood, over a decade ago, she has rocketed to one of the country’s A-list actors.
  Though, in the recent years, she has devoted more time to the business side of filmmaking, her enduring popularity on the scene will be tested today, as her first solely produced film, Damage, will be premiered at Silverbird Cinemas, Lagos.
  An advocate for social issues, the Glo ambassador, who is also a scriptwriter, says, “Damage is a collection of three movies.” 
  Uche ensures that each of the three stories addresses important problems affecting individuals, families and society. 
  “The Damage movies came about as a result of advocacy because we wanted to blend real stories, experiences and a total overview of human experience. It concentrates on family violence, spousal battering, and particularly, effects family violence can have on the children. A man and his wife love each other immensely yet their day to day life can only be described as a ‘cat and mouse’ situation as they fight violently almost on a daily basis,” she says, ensconced in an easy chair.
  Damage sees her act alongside Kalu Ikeagwu, as a married couple in an abusive relationship. The film highlights the psychological effect it could have especially on the children.
   “In the movie, a young and naive village girl sees her dreams come true when an American returnee asks for her hand in marriage. With promises to take her abroad once she finishes her education, the girl couldn’t have asked for a better future. But on getting there, she realises that all that glitters is not gold,” Uche says.
  So, what is the Damage film going to teach the audience?
  Damage is a story that needs to be told. Domestic violence is a social issue that has a lot of women suffering in silence. So, I decided to shoot a film about it. It is necessary to show how it affects not just the couple, but the children in the home,” she retorts. “Family violence and how it reflects on kids that grow up in this kind of environment. It is an issue that we sweep under the rug in our society.”
  She says, “it is an area which has not really been touched in Nollywood. Damage depicts two violent people in a marriage and is presented mostly from the point of view of the children in the home. The two lead actors in this story seem to have forgotten at some point in their marriage that they were no longer alone in the relationship.”
  The lady, who’s a pretty sight to behold when she cackles, “what I hope to achieve is simple: to educate, inform and entertain. We have our social responsibilities, but how we choose to address it is totally up to us. I want people to watch a movie, enjoy it and leave with thought that it's real and can happen to anyone not just characters of a movie. This is a different kind of advocacy.”

UCHE takes a deep breath; her finely chiseled features, milk chocolate and sinuous body glistened. leans on the wall while nursing a bottle of mineral water.
  Does she think Nigerians are ready for a theme as this?
  She answers crisply, “they are more than ready! When I first shot the film, people thought it was too graphic… that I needed to edit some scenes out. Then incidentally, in the news, a lady (God rest her soul) Titi Akolade lost her life as a result of domestic violence. It all made sense then. Women are not just the victims but men too.”
  Is the story a personal experience or what?
   Looking down, the executive producer narrows her eyes to make it squint as she makes a point. “No, no. I can say I have always stolen from lives when I write,” she laughs in satisfaction.
   “Challenges while filming?” she asks.
  “A lot,” she says. While not counting the obvious fight scenes wounds, I will say it was filming the opening red carpet award ceremony of the movie. Not only was the scene difficult to achieve, we had to film it twice because, according to the owner of where we were using, Nigeria gave money to shoot and he needed more money. If as a film maker in this country, I film an award scene where young Nigeria brands are honoured and I ask for a flag to cover the flag poll at the background, does it mean Nigeria gave me money to shoot then? I will like to say with all seriousness that rebranding this country starts with our mindsets not Nollywood, to rebrand Nigeria is not Nollywood's problem alone, it's a 'Nigeria' problem.”
 On the decision to embark on the project, which she describes as ‘ambitious’, Uche says, “I am at a point where I want to introduce myself as a filmmaker and not just a writer, producer or actress. I am aiming for a certain level of professionalism in my career although I still get scripts. Right now I am trying to tell my own stories the way I want.”
So is she fulfilled with what she has done?
  “Yes, I’m fulfilled,” she laughs. “The last script I sold, somewhere along the line, something was lost and the producers did not achieve what I had originally written. The film did well and people liked it but I was not happy with the final product so I said to myself that it was the last time I would sell my script to anybody.”
  She is happy with the quality of films being produced by new Nollywood producers, whom she says, “are trying to do movies the way it should be done within the limited resources available to them.”
  There’s short silence, Suddenly, Uche blurts out, “poor quality movies and the never ending part six of Nollywood movies, lately, has made many not to think seriously of the industry. But the industry is second highest in terms of output, I think it's a thing of joy and also something to be sad about, because to whom much is given, much is expected, bad movies might be part of Nollywood but cannot define it.”
  Her reaction to comment that Nollywood is full of junks?
  “If you want to help the industry, by all means, you are welcome, if you want to be part of the way forward, by all means, let's work together. If you are not pleased keep, ‘the Nollywood insults’ and direct them to the bad movies alone, till you have invested in the industry, you have no right to condemn,” Uche retorts.

A MATHEMATICS and Statistics graduate, she cut her teeth in movie making in 2010, when, alongside Emem Isong and Desmond Elliot, co-produced Hustlers and Holding Hope.
  Besides acting, the Abriba, Abia State-born actress wrote scripts of movies such as Celebrity, Games Men Play, Girls in the Hood, A Time to Love, Be My Wife, Perfect Planner, Price of Fame, and To Love Forever and others.
  In recognition of her contribution to the film industry in Nigeria, Uche has received awards such as Best Actress by AfroNolly Group in London, England (20080, the City People Entertainment awards for Best Actress (2010), Life Changers Award, (Nollywood Personality of the Year) United Kingdom, Humanitarian Award for Haiti in New York, USA, Abriba Youth Honour of Pride Award (2010), Abia State Honours Award (2010). She is also a brand ambassador for Globacom.


Important dates
• World Premiere in Lagos— Silverbird Cinemas, July 31, 2011
• Opens in cinemas around the country from August 5.
• UK Premiere and Tour with Tiwa Savage (London, Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds):  August 26 to 29
• USA Premiere: September
• Canada: February 2012

Otegbade… ‘I’m a change agent’

BY GREGORY AUSTIN NWAKUNOR



THE first time she spoke on the project, it was in far away South Africa. We were on the road to Bloemfontein from Pretoria to watch Super Eagles play Greece in the last FIFA World Cup, and she was very excited. Our discussion lasted for some minutes, but it seemed like a whole day. “I’ll get in touch with you when we get back,” she promised. And I didn’t get any feedback on Project Jazzback. But this afternoon, as I was busy squealing the fire that razed the Artistes’ Village of National Troupe of Nigeria, my phone rang and it was Kemi Otegbade.
  “This is the time to discuss Project Jazzback,” she exclaims, triumphantly, as if she had unearthed some big secret. “It starts this month and I want the greatest support that can be given to it.”
  When I finally got to her office in Surulere, Kemi was all excited. She and some jazz artistes sat around a table discussing. They all looked cheerful as they talked. She was glamorous; a phrase Hollywood often uses to describe its own. She regales herself in glamour and sure paparazzi mob her. But the story is not about glamour. Just jazz. The genre of mature minds.
  Why do you want to bring back jazz culture?
  There’s a sudden silence. I could feel the silence as they cut through the atmosphere. I stare at her blankly for a moment and was happy to see her emotions masked in her answer. “I will say, Jazz was never dead; it was just in the cooler. The frontrunners of jazz in Nigeria either died, got frustrated or moved to another calling probably because they were not making money. But a lot of them still crave for and listen to the music in our homes, in our vehicles but we hardly go to places where we can get the feel of live performances, which are incomparable,” she smiles.
   Otegbade exhales, “we miss the legend Fela… you know, his instrumentals that could take the listener to heaven and back.”
  The lady calls her aide to get some bottles of mineral water. As we wait for the drink, some other questions gobble up.
  Already, there are some jazz festivals in Lagos, what difference is Project Jazz Back going to make?
  “That’s a good one,” Otegbade gurgles with satisfaction. She says, “just over a year ago, we had regular monthly sessions of Jazz at African Bar of Lagos Oriental Hotel, the turnout was great, it was made possible by support of some jazz lovers and the artistes, who performed mostly out of love and to get a platform. The response indicated that there had been a deep hunger and void that needed to be filled, hence with Project Jazzback; we want to bring back our jazz. There are so many great artistes in the genre without platform since hip-hop and funk had taken over. With Project Jazzback, and support of corporate world and government, the artistes will be fulfilled and thereby reduce the number of miscreants that have in the streets.”
  She adds, “already, plans are afoot to have a major jazz festival in the country. It may not take the shape of Cape Town or North Sea Jazz Festivals, but the truth is that it is going to be one of the most regarded festivals in the country.”
  Which city will then host the event?
  “not confirmed yet. The details are still being worked out. Once it is concluded, you’ll get to know.”

WHAT have been the bottlenecks, challenges and difficulties of getting jazz back, since the effort started?
  She grins, “ the basic challenge has been funding.”
  Otegbade gives a deep breath and says in a rather subtle tone, “a lot of money is being spent on bringing foreign artistes, and promoting other types of music maybe because jazz lovers are not the regular ‘wuz up’ crowd. But I can tell you, as an agent of change, that has never bothered me.  During our monthly sessions, the attendance cut across generations, we had guests from 16 to 60s who were having the time of their lives listening to quality music. And yes, we danced and danced.”
  She chuckles politely. She has a bone structure that is arranged in such a way that a smile from her, whether grin or long laugh, appears naturally on her face and gives her an air of beauty.  “We know why jazz has been relegated to the background so we begin by pinching all stakeholders to wake up to a positive change jamboree. Jazz is universally acceptable, we are ready to take it to nooks and corners, churches, halls, clubs, open house etc. through Project Jazz back but we need collaboration with interested stakeholders.”
BEFORE the jazz mission, she had been involved in projects such as Corporate Nigeria Stakeholders Forum, Nigeria-Benin Economic Forum, Ghana-Nigeria Business Summits, Nigeria Games Village, South Africa under NTDC and the first and second Nite of Movie Stars.
  She says, for some of these projects she was solely in charge while in some others, she was a visible part of a consortium. “Basically, one learns from every job. We are not your regular party planners even though we plan and co-ordinate unique private and public parties. We have handled project events more often. As this is our sixth year, the list is very long,” she demurs.
  What has been the motivation for the Projects you handle?
  “I believe any project I lend my name to must not fail because integrity is the key word. These are some people, if their names are mentioned for anything, not necessarily business, you will just run for cover because they may be chronic liars or of dubious nature. So, when one’s corporate image is at stake, one needs to be thorough and careful,” Otegbade retorts.
  The lady, who speaks with frankness, says her involvement in Naija Village during the 2010 World Cup in South Africa is not only a long story, but highly emotional. She says, “it is a bundle of experience, stress and betrayal. But I will not exchange it for anything in the world. It started like an experiment and ended like one, but it was a very much worthwhile experience. I will always remember the role Ambassador Buba Marwa played. He is ever a calm sea, a real diplomat.”
  You said you were a change agent, what do you mean by that?
  “Yes, I will say it again. I am a change agent. I always believe something good can come out of somebody or an environment. I am a die-hard Project Nigeria fan. My friends and associates believe if I refuse to get close to somebody, the person must be beyond redemption, I believe no matter how bad somebody is, he/she must have something good. Nobody is absolutely useless, even a stopped clock is correct twice a day. I believe once the source of a problem is determined, one can device means of positive change.
  For example, somebody who is always aggressive and defensive is likely not to have enjoyed the warmth of a loving family in his growing up years. He is ever aggressive because he has not tasted comfort, warmth of love,” she smiles.
  Was childhood all smooth for her?
  “Yes it was. But don’t expect me to say it was 100 per cent smooth. There were some ups and downs. I was born and bred in Lagos with great network in Lagos, but love my village, Ilesha.” She drops her guard as she rocks back and forth on the swivel chair in her office.
   Really, Ilesha, Osun State? One will assume you are a Lagosian? Why has it been difficult replicating some of your Projects in Osun?
  “Oh God!” she screams, “but my state was not part of the script.”
  Well, she cracks. “I used to spend most of my holidays in Ilesha when my parents were alive but since I started working, I have not done any project in the state probably because there has been no opportunity so far, but if it comes, why not? My Ijesha friends and I have been toying with having an Ujesha Ragga Nite — a nite of comedy, as you know, the Ijeshas are natural comedians with our funny language and playful everyday curses. I think the Waffarians are only ahead of us in comedy because they are more streetwise and cunnier – apologies to my Waffi peeps.”
A GRADUATE of Business Administration, she says, “at times, I wonder if I studied something else. I’m enjoying my job despite the stress; it occupies my time so much that there is absolutely no time for gossip or mischief. I was in the banking industry for nine years in various departments before I started out on my own and so far, it’s been very challenging but fun.”
  How does Kemi Otegbde chill out?
   “I read a whole lot of books, watch movies or facebooking. Sometimes, I can be a facebook addict when workload permits; to think Iwas begged before I joined facebook, funny now. But once a week, I try to hangout/step down with quality friends who add value.”
  The lady, who doesn’t wear her religion like cross, says,  “I have a deep and personal relationship with God such as you can have with your friend. So, at every point I’m communicating with him. God has always been there for me.”
  What book would be top of her wish list?
  She answers, anything motivational. “Any book that can teach me something different from what I knew, as long as it is not written in gutter or dirty language.”
Dresssense?
  “Anything that can make me carry myself in pride and comfort, once in a while subtly daring,” she smiles.
  Any message for Nigerian women?
  “The time for us all to be agents of change is now, we should all go out to register, encourage our men, wards, children, relatives, then vote according to our conscience. No mother will watch her house burn and continue sleeping, let us all shape the destiny of our great country…. enough is enough. Yes, yes we can…” she surmises.

Oputa... In the sands of time



BY GREGORY AUSTIN NWAKUNOR

IT is evening. There’s a red sun in the sky signifying approaching dusk. Chaffing wind blows to keep the temperature low. A cab parks in front of Charly Boy’s Punk Palace in Gwarimpa, Abuja. The engine hums softly. It’s still new, so, the exhaust breathes almost invisible haze of smoke. A man walking along the edge of the road crosses where the driver is, and asks where he is headed. The man walks away disappointedly.
  There is a gentle tap on the ornate gate, and the small door opens. A security man comes out, and throws some question at the intruder before finally throwing the main door open.
  Inside, there is large gathering of friends, kinsmen and media personalities. The whole place rocks with greetings: hugging and warm embraces.
   ‘Ajie’ Chukwudifu Akunne Sylvester Oputa walks into the living room accompanied by some family members including the Royal Punkness and self-acclaimed Area Fada, Charles Oputa. The elder Oputa sits on a three-sitter leather couch, his walking stick gently placed on the table in his front.
  Peggy Noonan, in When Character was King, says, “presidents tend to come from something. When you look at books that carry their stories, you see that they’ve usually been born to people who have things, to mill owners or ministers or millionaires. They enter the world as heirs to some kind of stability or standing, which gives them advantages both obvious and not.”
  Even at 86, he is still active. Apart from his physique that has shown signs of ageing, his memory is still as sharp as when he was younger.
  This is exactly true of Oputa. He absorbed the habit of achievement from home, though, without a father or mother.
 
ON October 2, 2010, the Justice Oputa Foundation (JOF) was launched. Tagged Celebration of integrity, the event brought together members of the judiciary, civil society, media, public and private sector.
  How does he feel at 86 and with a Foundation for humanity just established?
  He smiles, relishing a deep excitement and says, “I feel fine, happy, and contented. I’m fulfilled.”
  Justice Oputa adds, “looking back professionally and church wise, taking all together, I feel a bit happy.”
  The Foundation is an initiative committed to raising the bar on jurisprudence and good governance through its campaigns against poverty and, for social, democratic, human and environmental justice up to shoring up the dignity of African people, making use of the instrumentality of assured food security system.
  According to Justice Oputa, the Foundation is aimed at youths. “It operates from the deep understanding that it is virtually impossible to address the malaise bestriding the continent without sound, people-oriented governance constructed on sustainable developmental modem. This modem demands essentially that the legitimacy of state should squarely rest on its capabilities to deliver core values in the provision of basic needs to the citizenry.”
  He adds, “JOF aspires to eliminate poverty and injustice, as part of a global movement for change working together with like-minded organisations, partners and allies around the world to bring about lasting change.”
    
 JUSTICE Oputa is among the very few people, who have used their knowledge selflessly to fight for the downtrodden and uplift humanity. His indelible mark in pursuit of justice will forever remain in the annal of Nigerian history of justice, equity, and ultimate respect for rule of law.
  This, perhaps, informed the decision of Pan Ndi-Igbo Foundation USA, Inc. to bestow on him, in 2006, Lifetime Achievement Award.
  In a statement, PNF USA underscored the qualities of the man, who has worked tirelessly for the common man. 
  “This award is given to someone who has exemplified him/herself in various works of life with ardent commitment to serving humanity. An individual who advocates for human rights, compassion, honest leadership, etc., Justice Oputa, a renowned jurist, a legal scholar and a man of the people, excelled the criteria set for the coveted award.”
  A few months ago, you would have found the knighted justice, who is the ‘Ajie’ (the oldest man) in his village, doing a lot of exercises; but he has stopped active engagement and does only stretching up in bed.
  He says, “when I was younger, I used to run two or three miles and this has helped me greatly.”
  Oputa says, “growing old is a bad habit that active people never want to cultivate. Well, I stay long hours in my study, but it doesn’t affect me.”
  He adds, “I’m still reading and writing at my age.”
  What kind of book does he read now in his old age?
  “Books?” he asks. “Philosophy is a natural option for me to read, history follows, law is alright because that’s been my livelihood.”
  Nigeria, at 50, has it been a success story?
  The erudite justice looks up, and says: “Well, we have tried as a nation. Progress may be slow, but ‘slow and steady’ wins the race.”
  He adds, “each generation has its challenge; life is not a bed of roses; it is an uphill struggle and how you encounter and tackle it that matters.”
  How will you compare the kind of education you received to what children are receiving these days?
  There’s a sudden change in the old man’s countenance. He fumes: “What we are doing now is a travesty, unfortunately, everything has been devalued and depreciated.”
  He says, “in the past, there was serious competition; in my first year at CKC, everybody in the class scored between 80 and 96 per cent. Competition was keen.”
  Justice Oputa, however, believes that all the blames should not be put on government. “You don’t wait for government to do everything for you. We owe ourselves the duty to develop our intellect. Government will only provide the facilities: Libraries, books, building, and transportation, everything that is required for you to have a conducive environment to read. The rest is yours to develop.”
   On non performing leaders, Justice Oputa says, the greatest judge is the populace. “This is the time to shun leaders who are not performing. We need leaders, who are looking forward to satisfying the yearnings of the people.”

 WHAT is his take on immunity clause in the constitution, when rules are turned upside down?
  He asserts forcefully: “Let lawyers wake up and check immunity clause and see how it has been implemented in other places. L. Warren in America; Lord Denning in England; they were all vocal in saying that if the law does not keep pace with social change, it has lost its salt. Law has to keep pace, and if legislation is wanting, lawyer should initiate the process of change.”
    The erudite justice says, “if the law is to serve a forward-moving society, it has to be forward-moving too; and not only forward-moving, but forward-looking as well.”
  He adds, “if the Rule of Law imposes on such individuals a duty to obey, and they don’t, democracy is gone. It becomes a dictatorship.”
  Oputa reasons, “no country can exist with anybody being above the law.” He adds, “what does Rule of Law mean?... Behave lawfully, obey rules and regulations. In order to be free, obey the laws of the land. Nobody should be above the law.”
  Justice Oputa is his own best critic. He doesn’t go to deliver any judgment without first taking critical look at the issue involved.
  “Don’t deliver judgment in a hurry. Write it three or four weeks before, then read again and again.”
  He says no case is as important as that of Fundamental Human Rights. “It is crucial to a happy society; a nation where no man is oppressed; a society where law has found its objective.” 
  The old man recites a line in the 1960 national anthem: “With peace and plenty, Nigeria may be blessed.”
  However, on the issue of backlog of cases in court, he says, justice delayed, is justice denied. A man who is not worthy to be a clerk of court is made a judge; what do you get? In those days, you don’t ‘campaign’ to become a judge. It comes as a surprise. The danger is, if you’re too ambitious, you may not be as hardworking as an industrious lawyer, who didn’t want to be a judge.”
 
BORN on September 22, 1924 to Chief Oputa Uzukwu and Mrs. Nwametu Oputa, Chukwudifu knew little of his parents. He was only three months old when his father died, and his mother died when he was barely six months old. His upbringing was thrust on his grandmother, Ogonim Enesha, a notable trader with the Royal Niger Company.
  She made provision for him, most especially his education. “My grandmother was there for me. She took a very good decision by sending me to school,” he says.
  She sent him to a catechist who instilled a sense of discipline in him and provided the necessary Christian upbringing.
   Sylvester, as he was called then, attended the Sacred Heart School, Oguta from 1930 to 1936, and (C.K.C) Christ the King’s College, Onitsha 1937 to 1940.
  After secondary education, he got admission to the Higher College, Lagos. However, as a result of the emerging World War II, he was moved to the famous Achimota College, Gold Coast (now Ghana), where he obtained the B.Sc degree in Economics in 1945.
  It was also at this period that he studied at home to obtain B.A (Hons.) in History from the University of London.
  On his return to Nigeria from the Gold Coast, he took up a post as a teacher. His first school was the African College, which also had on its staff prominent Nigerians such as Chike Obi, the famous mathematician, and Dr. Pius Okigbo.
  Later on, he transferred to the Kalabari National College (KNC), Buguma, where he was made the principal. One of his pupils was Professor Tamunotoye David West, former petroleum minister.
  His search for knowledge led him to study law in England, and by June 1953, he received his LL.B (Hons.) degree. He was called to the English Bar-Grays Inn, London, on November 26, 1953.
  He returned to Nigeria in 1954, and enjoyed a highly successful private legal practice for the next 12 years.
  As a legal practitioner, he appeared in virtually all the magistrate and high courts of the then Eastern Region of Nigeria, as well as the court in the Region of the Cameroun.
  He also made regular appearances before the West African Court of Appeal, the Federal Supreme Court and the Supreme Court of Nigeria.
  He was the leading counsel in the Harcourt Commission of inquiry into the Oguta Chieftaincy dispute (1958/59).
  Among his other representations are: Leading Counsel in the Ukelonu Inquiry into the Nembe Amayangbo Dispute (1959/60); Leading Counsel in the Harding Commission of Inquiry into the Onitsha Obiship dispute (1960/61); Chairman of the Commission of Inquiry into revenue collection in East Central State (1975). This Commission first recommended the use of the tax clearance certificate as an instrument of revenue generation for the state. This became a worthy example, which was soon taken over and adopted by Federal Government.
 
THE year 1966 marked the beginning of his career on the Bench with his appointment as a judge of the High Court of Eastern Nigeria.
  How did he find himself on the Bench?
  “It came as a surprise. When I stood up to present my case one morning, the judge asked me on which side do I belong: Bench or bar? It didn’t occur to me that I had been appointed a judge until the judge said it was announced on radio in the morning. From then, my career on bar ended. Though it condemned me to penury, I accepted this as a service to the nation. It is part of sacrifice needed for the development of our jurisprudence.”
  During the next 10 years, he discharged his duties creditably, serving on several divisions of the High Courts of the region and later, East Central State.
  Another major landmark in the career of this eminent jurist occurred in 1976, when he was appointed the first Chief Judge of Imo State. He held this position for about eight years until July 2, 1984; and during the period, he helped to set up a solid judicial structure for the fledgling state.
  His exit from the state judiciary was due to his elevation to the position of Justice of the Supreme Court of Nigeria.
  Life on the Bench and the Human Rights Violations Investigation Commission — The Oputa Panel and the National Political Reforms Conference?


  “It is there for posterity and the people to assess,” sighs the old Jurist.
    He has received numerous awards and honours from Christian organisations, including the highly revered Knight Commander of St. Gregory the Great; Knight Commander of St Sylvester: and Knight of St Mulumba.
  Chief Gani Fawehinmi: His Time and Age. A critical assessment of his contributions to Nigerian law and Jurisprudence; Law as an Instrument of Nation Building; To restore the dignity of Man. The role of the university; Shananhan, the Apostle of Light, The irony of Christian Witnesses; The role of the Christian Elite in the religious and civil life of the country and many other papers have been presented by the highly respected jurist.