Kadaria, Kagara and abductors of our collective intelligence ~Festus Adedayo

February 21, 2021

On sighting the headline of her piece entitled Nigerian Media: Let’s Stop Ethnic Profiling!, I initially thought well-respected media mogul, Kadaria Ahmed, was set to confront a media orthodoxy. Though it was plain, unambiguous and self-explanatory, in a moment, I imagined that that piece was about to collapse ancient established theses about the Nigerian media dominance and vain hold on power. This is because I love anyone who audaciously perforates the majesty of principalities and powers, persons, objects or places.

This was what carved a special place of regards in my heart for late Egba-born bard, Sakara music exponent and poet, Kelani Yesufu. Before his very unorthodox thinking, packaged into a line of poetry in his album entitled Atosi, at least among the Yoruba-speaking people of the then Western State, gonorrhea was an ailment that was believed to afflict only society’s greats. It was why the euphemistic acronym for it was arun gbajumo, translated: disease of the notable.
But Kelani, in these very dense Egba dialect lyrics of his which sounded like an ululation, reversed that existing, very ancient perception. Atosi (gonorrhea) could not have been a disease of the notable, he vehemently argued in that vinyl. Why? And Kelani began his narrative. He chanted the disease’s long cognomen – atosi atoha – and many other attributes of its, paying unmatchable tribute to the destructive prowess of the then pestilence of this venereal disease.
Men are afflicted by gonorrhea due to their multiple dalliances and careless libido, he said. Gonorrhea had killed so many people in those dark days of its affliction before the advent of the white man who readily provided a remedy for it. Kelani also dramatized how this venereal disease perforated the mouth of the sufferer’s midriff member, necessitating the victim regularly swallowing inscrutable potions like potassium called kanhun bilala as its remedy. For an affliction that takes its victim on such painful merry-go-rounds and the inconveniences it brings, asked Kelani, was it then right for gonorrhea to be labeled a disease of the notable?

The Kelani thesis momentarily unsettled existing narrative of the clubbing society and notables of the 1970s. Society apparently didn’t look at gonorrhea from that perspective before then. Those who labeled it a social disease ostensibly did that, placing it side by side the affliction of impotency, with the shame and societal ridicule which the afflicted victim went through. For a chauvinistic and charismatic African society like ours, the strength of manhood carried with it a conceit that men wore on their garments like a lapel. So, when comparatively estimated, the African society believed that the man who had multiple women liaisons and who, in the process, was afflicted by gonorrhea, was more desirable than an impotent man.
Such challenge of existing order and narrative was what I thought Kadaria was about. By the way, Ahmed is a Nigerian journalist, media entrepreneur and television host who began her career in London BBC. Her media forays span print, radio, television, online and social media platforms. I was damn wrong on what I thought Kadaria was about after all. In the piece, she shared a sense of foreboding, of doom and war which she said the Nigerian media was spearheading.
Offered as rhetorical interrogation of what she said was the media’s guilt in this grisly drum of war, Kadaria asked, “What exactly will we (media) gain if Nigeria descends into war? How does it advance us, if our fellow citizens turn on each other and begin large scale ethnic killings, against each other? Let me even assume that a few of us don’t believe in Nigeria anymore and want to see it broken into its constituent parts. How does enabling ethnic strife help achieve this objective in a way that guarantees the outcome you want?” The questions were targeted at whetting the ground for a more sweeping accusation: Media reporting of today, alleged Kadaria, has thrown away “the book on ethical reporting” and is now “propelled by emotions” and betrayal of “every moral consideration.”

Kadaria then lapsed into the ready-made typology of media complicity in war in Africa – Rwandan. The Nigerian media had failed woefully to learn a lifelong experience from media involvement in the 1994 Rwandan genocide and yielded its platform as “a tool that enables hate” Kadaria alleged.
“We have given platforms to the worst among us, the extremists and the bloodthirsty. We have turned militia leaders and criminals into champions. Instead of us to lead calm and rational discourse on the existential challenges we face, with a view to promoting actionable solutions, we have succumbed to hysteria and the next exciting click bait headline. And yet for many of us, especially media owners, this place called Nigeria has been relatively good. This country has given many of us more opportunity than the majority of our fellow citizens. We have reaped a bountiful harvest from this place. We have done so well that if, God forbid, this country is consumed and chaos reigns, many of us will hop on a plane and bugger off to the many different countries abroad where our families live in peace, even though they are not native to those places,” she said.
And then, the well-known journalist, who anchored that notorious interview with President Muhammadu Buhari, shortly before the 2019 election, where the president physically and clearly confirmed President Donald Trump’s alleged claim of his being lifeless, chose to bring out scary imageries of war. Said Kadara: “There will be killings in the thousands, limbs will be chopped off with machetes, women and girls will be raped, food will be scarce, fear will reign. The most brutal among us will take charge. And their word will be law. They will not tolerate journalists who try to hold them accountable.”
In the piece under review, Kadaria exhibited a very uncritical mind that is everything but the hallmark of good journalism. If you remove her byline from it, you would imagine that a Federal Government demagogue had penned that piece. It brimmed with cants, assumptions, sophistries and ill-logics that can only be provoked by a poisoned mind. If you were not in Nigeria and not abreast of the narratives of cow that have engaged the polity in the last five years or so, you would think that Nigerian journalists were in a combat of strife and hatred against Nigeria. Or that the practice of the profession in Nigeria is done with a mind to incinerate Nigeria. Throughout the piece, Kadaria never apportioned any blame to the man her 2019 interview irritatintgly buoyed into presidential office for a second term, in spite of his manifest mental and governmental failings. Not for a minute in that interview did Kadaria communicate, either via innuendo or literally, that Nigeria was, with the Buhari she saw in that interview, going to be burdened by an impaired president.

Now, to the gravamen of Kadaria’s claim. I have been to Rwanda, where, between April and June 1994, an estimated 800,000 Rwandans were murdered within the space of 100 days, after the death on April 6, 1994 of President Juvenal Habyarimana. Habyarimana, a Hutu, had his plane shot down while about to land at the Kigali airport. I was at the Kigali Genocide Memorial Park; saw the mangled bones, tombs of reburied carcasses assembled from all parts of Rwanda and the eerie atmosphere of bloodletting in the park. I spoke with victims and victimizers of the genocide. Yes, the narrative of “mosquito” constantly used by Hutu Power, a private radio station which was established by extremists surrounding Habyarimana and echoing their tribe’s extremist narratives, contributed to the genocide, but Habyarimana, as well as men and women of both Hutu and Tutsi tribes had taken the hatred narrative to the cusp, merely having it amplified by the radio.
But let me ask, did Kadaria anticipate a media that should blind its eyes to the ethnic-driven perfidy of the Buhari government or one that should not communicate the different queer narratives of what is happening under Buhari today? Further interrogation of Kadaria is apposite at this juncture. One: does she think the media is making up claims of Fulani herdsmen’s notorious criminal activities or that the media should have blurted out such reports? Second: Perhaps because Kadaria can conveniently be said to have medially helped to brew this Buhari broth, the government was then doing the right thing by looking the other way while the killing, maiming and raping of southerners is going on? Again, does she think that those who are recipients of this violence should have kept quiet? If they are narrating their gory experiences in the hands of Fulani herdsmen, does Kadaria think that the media should have turned its back on the victims? The honest truth is that, if you conduct a comparative analysis of Habyarimana’s guilt in the Rwandan genocide, it may only be a little higher than the war that Buhari is silently provoking by his inexplicable governmental cronyism and silence at the killing of innocent Southerners by Fulani herdsmen.
Those who Kadaria wanted to impress with that piece, or those she intended the piece to earn their kudos or her further retainership, are Nigeria’s jailers. They are those who she ought to have concentrated her expletives and condemnation on. When Kadaria took to penning that piece which she said was borne of her distaste for her media constituency’s alleged recently acquired penchant for baiting blood and beating saber-rattling gongs of war, Bukola Elemide’s Jailer crept up my mind. Elemide, better known as Asa, is a Nigerian-French singer, songwriter and recording artist whose hit, Jailer holds a lot of refreshing narrative of both the current Nigerian situation and Kadaria’s misdirected bayonet.
In Jailer, Asa levels every hill of suffering separating both the oppressed and their oppressors and removes all boundaries hitherto celebrated. Unbeknown to those who believed they occupied some level of ascriptions which insulate them from the Nigerian problems, Jailertells them that the calamities are layered. According to her, the man who holds the fire-brimming burner to the bum of the oppressed and the oppressed are operating on the same wavelength. I’m in chains, you’re in chains too//I wear uniforms and you wear uniforms too//I’m a prisoner//You’re a prisoner too, Mr. Jailer//Oh I have fears, you have fears too//I will die, but yourself will die too//Life is beautiful//Don’t you think so too, Mr. Jailer?

Unfortunately, there is a raging pestilence of minds which think uncritically like Kadaria’s in present day Nigeria. They afflict the rest of us with the impurity of their infectiously dangerous thoughts, in the name of defending the Kingdom of Cow that Nigeria is furiously turning into. Kadaria and her fellow travelers should know that, like the Jailer, we are all in this together and the earlier we got a resolution, the better for all of us.
Last week, we examined the vacuous claim of the Bauchi State governor, Bala Mohammed, that since southerners who had been living in the north for decades were not expelled by their states of domicile, it was unconscionable for northern Fulani herdsmen living in the south to be expelled. Mohammed also justified Fulani herdsmen carrying that deadly weapon, the AK-47. We let him know that that reasoning was fallacious because, whereas the north had no reason to expel southerners. apparenty on the basis of their good behavior, the south had reasons to expel northerners living with them because their existence in their own land because of their recently acquired marauding inclinations.
Now, Zamfara State governor, Bello Matawalle, has joined this race of impure thoughts. After meeting Buhari in the Villa last Thursday, Matawalle told the press that, not all bandits who terrorize some parts of Zamfara and other neighbouring states were criminals. First is that, that statement is a violent attack on language and logical semantics. A la semantics, banditry is “a type of organized crime committed by outlaws typically involving the threat or use of violence.” So, in the name of the twelve angels, how can tigers be described outside of their tigritude, or outlaws, outside of outlawry? And this was a governor who is faced with a violent affliction of hundreds of Zamfara people being killed or kidnapped by bandits, as well as in neighbouringKaduna, Zamfara, Nasarawa, Katsina, Niger and Sokoto, for many years now.
Earlier, Sheikh Ahmad Gumi, who has recently began a weird forest evangelism, harvesting bandits whose hands are brimming with blood of innocent souls, had joined in the chorus as well. These deadly criminals and bloodthirsty hounds who make the forest their hibernation were offended by the Nigerian state and deserve not only federal armistice but amnesty, said Gumi. “The Federal government should give them blanket amnesty,” he said last week. Gumi belonged tothe same set of people who canvassed that Boko Haram insurgents, who have killed thousands of Nigerians and on account of whom the federal budget, earmarked for procurement of armament, is yearly depleted by billions of Naira, be granted amnesty, rehabilitated and given sumptuous financial grants. After meeting violent outlaws inhabiting the forest of Niger State on his latest intervention to rescue the 27 students of Government Science College, Kagara, Gumi had said: “The outcome (of his visit) is very positive. We have many factions and each faction is saying ‘I have complaints and grievances – we are persecuted, we are arrested, we are lynched,’” citing the bandits’ claim.

If we trace the filament that links all these tendentious statements, from Kadaria’s to Muhammed, Matawalle, Gumi and the likes, you will find an identifier, to wit a campaign for a world for the tyranny of Fulani herdsmen and bandits. The campaigners’ ultimate goal is to get carved out for them a Ministry of Banditry or Cattle Matters and a generous state negotiation, in the mould of Niger Delta militants’. If one may ask, why would anyone in their right senses compare the criminality of militants to that of bandits? As said last week, while the former is criminality buoyed by ethnic nationalism, the latter is engendered by undiluted criminality. It is no hidden fact that banditry in the Northwest isfallout of illegal and criminal artisanal mining of lead, gold, as well as other mineral resources. Does Kadaria know all these?

EXIT OF EWART BECKFORD, U-ROY

The reggae world lost a pioneering icon last week. He is Ewart Beckford, better known as U-Roy. Beckford was a king of the microphone, beginning his career as a disc jockey in 1961. It is almost impossible for anyone who had anything to do with this Jamaican-popularized music in the 1970s, 80s and 90s not to have had U-Roy barge into them. He was said to have passed on on February 17, 2021 after undergoing surgery in a hospital in Kingston, Jamaica’s capital city amid suffering from diabetes, blood pressure and a kidney disease.
Born on September 21, 1942, one of U-Roy’s most famous offerings to the reggae world was Dread in a Babylon and Natty Dread (1976), the latter spiced up Mighty Diamonds’ Have Mercy.U-Roy also voiced the ‘Version Galore’ album and was known for bringing bravura and uniqueness to reggae rap, atop the blaring of rhythmic songs underneath. He was renowned for popularising this vocal style which was popularly known as “toasting.” He produced further albums, some of which are, Rasta Ambassador (1977), Jah Son of Africa (1978) and Pray Fi Di People which was released in 2012. U-Roy also featured on the album True Love done by Jamaican iconic old group called Toots and the Maytals. The album, in 2004, won the Grammy in the Best Reggae Album category,
No one could duel with U-Roy in this “toasting” singing, pretty and mellifluous conversational chatter genre as he successfully overturned the paradigm of Jamaican music. The uniqueness of U-Roy’s contribution to reggae ranged from the cadence of his rapping voice, his shimmering howl mid-singing and his lyrical audacity. He was known to shout in the midst of his lyrical sessions and such shouts added huge difference to his music. U-Roy was a great Rastafarian who, like biblical Nazarenes, adhered to the injunction of keeping their hairs, which grow in locks, sacred. U-Roy will be sorely missed by the reggae world.

YORUBA/HAUSA CLASH: Akeredolu, Makinde Visits Shasha, Calls For Dialogue, Peace.

Chairman of the Southwest Governors’ Forum, who’s also the Executive Governor of Ondo State, Arakunrin Rotimi Akeredolu on Sunday visited shasha, where the clash between the Hausa/Yoruba took place.

Governor Akeredolu who was led to the Shasha market by his Oyo State counterpart, Governor Seyi Makinde, under the auspices of the Southwest Governors’ Forum, pleaded with elders among the Yoruba Community in the area to call the youth to order as efforts are being intensified by government to find lasting solution to the avoidable violence which occurred last Friday.

Governor Akeredolu said: “We have come to plead with you that no matter how angry, we should not react violently. I know many things may get us angry, but as we know, we have been living together for long. Let us think about the past, let us consider our peaceful coexistence in the past. Let us be calm.”

I cannot in good conscience continue to sit at any Panel of Inquiry to heal wounds and end police brutality, when fresh assaults are being perpetrated with impunity ~ Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa, SAN

The Arrest, Detention and Dehumanization of Protesters at Lekki Toll Gate Are Unacceptable

My heart is very heavy. I’m saddened and devastated. My soul is sorely troubled at this time.

For decades before the advent of this administration, Nigerians have risked their lives, liberties, their times and their energies, their resources, to win back this country on the side of democracy and good government, from military dictatorship. Some have paid the supreme price with their lives.

I have been monitoring events at the Lekki Toll Gate since morning, and I am totally overwhelmed with the images, videos and sundry evidence of police brutality of armless civilians, who ventured to protest at the Toll Gate. In one particular video, I saw citizens of Nigeria being dehumanized, striped half naked and cramped together in a rickety bus. This is totally unacceptable.

While we are yet to come to terms with the events of October 20, 2020, it becomes worrisome that the security agencies have not learnt any positive lesson from those occurrences. I commend the protesters for their peaceful conduct.

I cannot in good conscience continue to sit at any Panel of Inquiry to heal wounds and end police brutality, when fresh assaults are being perpetrated with impunity. Consequently, I am presently consulting with my constituency within the civil society, as to my continued participation in the EndSARS Judicial Panel.

I hereby demand the immediate release of all those arrested in connection with the peaceful protest at the Lekki Toll Gate today. On no account should anything happen to any of them while in the custody of the police.

I appeal for calm on all sides, in order not to escalate the worsening security situation across the land. I cannot fail to point out the fact that the present administration of President Muhammadu Buhari is a product of protest and civil disobedience. Let history vindicate the just.

Aluta Continua, Victoria Ascerta!

Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa, SAN
Lekki, Lagos.
13/02/2021

Makinde Receives Official Report From LAUTECH Negotiation Committee, Says College of Agriculture and Natural Sciences to Begin Operation in Iseyin Soon.

When we inaugurated this committee on November 27, 2019, we gave the members a clear mandate, secure a divorce from Osun State in a manner of speaking and get Oyo State sole ownership of the Ladoke Akintola University of Technology (LAUTECH), Ogbomoso. Today, I am happy to officially receive your report. I see you have returned as brave warriors, having fulfilled your mandate.

I remember that on the day of the inauguration, Professor Ayodeji Omole, who served as the committee chairman, promised that you will discharge your duties with integrity and courage. And I must say kudos because you have done exactly that.

So, on behalf of myself, the Oyo State Executive Council, the staff and students of LAUTECH, the people of Ogbomoso in particular and the good people of Oyo State as a whole, we say thank you for a job well done, thank you for getting the job done.

Even while we were on the campaign trail, we had always known that there are no two ways around resolving the incessant strike actions and other issues related to LAUTECH ownership. We were not insisting on parting ways because we do not love our brothers and sisters from Osun State. No. As I have said on several occasions, this severance of relationship is not going to negatively impact the students and staff from Osun State. But it had to be done, for the sake of easier administration and to move LAUTECH as an institution towards our goal of a world-class university. In fairness to all, this was the only solution.

Let me once again, use this opportunity to thank my brother, the Executive Governor of Osun State, His Excellency, Governor Gboyega Oyetola for putting aside all differences, especially partisan politics, all through these negotiations. We appreciate his applying wisdom in taking a stand for what is best for the staff and students of LAUTECH.

I thank Professor Olu Aina who led the negotiations for Osun State. Also, I commend the versatility of Dr Sulaimon Ramon-Yusuf of the National Universities Commission who midwifed the negotiations. 

I am pleased to say that I have signed the Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomoso Bill 2020, into law.

It is now time to move forward with our plans. We will apply to the National Universities Commission (NUC) to convert from a university of technology to a conventional university so that courses such as Law can be taught at the institution. We will appoint the Governing Council to birth new management within the next couple of weeks.

Let me use this opportunity to remind us all one more time that the safety and security of Oyo State is everybody’s business. We must not allow any individuals or groups to disrupt the economic gains that we have made so far. I have always spoken about the economic importance of LAUTECH to the people of Ogbomoso. These benefits cannot be enjoyed if our dear state is plunged into anarchy because some people will not allow the state security agencies to do their jobs. We must all unite to keep the peace in our dear state.

Conclusively, let me talk about a related announcement we made last week. You will recall I promised that we would announce the creation of a higher institution in Iseyin. Well, we have decided that the College of Agriculture and Natural Sciences will open its campus in Iseyin this year.

So, let me once again thank the members of this committee for your good work and we wish you the best in all your future endeavours. We appreciate your service.

~ Governor Seyi Makinde, February 11, 2021

US Consulate Opens Education Advisory Centre in Ibadan

The United States Consulate, Lagos, on Wednesday inaugurated an Education USA Advisory Centre in Ibadan to provide opportunities for Nigerian students to study in America.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the opening of the centre was performed by Mr. Stephen Ibelli, the Public Affairs Officer, United States Consulate and Mr. Olasunkanmi Olaleye, Oyo State Commissioner for Education, at American Corner in Ibadan.

Ibelli said: “We are here today in Ibadan working with the commissioner for Education on promoting education and studying in USA.

“While stating that there were more than 14,000 Nigerians studying in America, he said the quality and high standard of American education would assist them in helping their country with wonderful skills and knowledge.

Ibelli said the centre would advise and help students to understand the US education process so that they could apply to American universities.

Olaleye expressed appreciation to the US government for bringing the opportunity to Ibadan, saying it was the first out of the additional four service centres in Nigeria.

“It is going to be an education advisory service centre for students in Oyo State and the entire Southwest who may want to study in universities in America.”A lot of our students have been denied visa because they didn’t know what to do.

“So this will be the first point of call for every student who wants to travel to US and that is the first advantage that we have here. They don’t have to go to Lagos again; they can do it here.

“When they have all the information and equip themselves with it, they can now apply for their visa in Lagos or Abuja.

“Another thing is that this will give us the opportunity to benefit from the American government’s educational programmes, particularly in terms of getting scholarships from their universities, especially for our straight A’s students wanting to go to the university straight from secondary school.

“Even those who may want to proceed for post-graduate studies too can benefit from scholarships in American universities,” he said.Mrs. Chinenye Uwadileke, Education USA Adviser, US Consulate-General, Lagos, said the opportunities attached with education in US could not be over-emphasised.”

My Utterances Were Not Intentional, Igboho Begs Ooni

Chief Sunday Adeyemo Igboho has requested for forgiveness from His Royal Majesty, Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ojaja II, as he said that the safety of the people is his driving force.

You will recall that OduduwaNews reported on Wednesday the viral video where Igboho abused the Monarch of selling his own people out, and being a slave to the Fulani because of Money.

In the late our of Wednesday, Sunday Igboho released another video, stating his reasons for defending the people, and what prompted his utterances to the respected monarch.

“No one can be happy with the way Fulani are killing our people on our land and collecting ransom from us, on our land. My words are not Directed to the Monarch, but if I abused him, I’m sorry, he would forgive me” he said.

PDP Zonal Leadership Lifts Suspension on Hon. Taiwo Iyiola, Says Procedures Unknown to Party’s Constitution

The Zonal Leadership of the People’s Democratic Party on Tuesday, 2nd of February, 2021 lifted the suspension of Hon. Taiwo Iyiola, Chairman Ibadan North East Local Government of Oyo State.

In the State Signed by the Zonal Secretary of the Party Hon. Daisi Akintan and directed to the State Chairman of the party, he alleged that the State National Working Committee doesn’t not give Mr Taiwo Iyiola a fair hearing before approval his suspension from office.

“It was confirmed that he (Hon Taiwo Iyiola) was arbitrary suspended by the State Working Committee without any preliminary hearing as demanded by the party’s Constitution, therefore, this action falls short of procedures as laid down by the party’s Constitution” the statement reads.

“Exercising its power as stated in section 61(2)the Zonal Working Committee has hereby set the suspension of Hon. Taiwo Iyiola as chairman Ibadan North East local government aside forthwith”

FG Extends NIN-SIM Linkage by Eight Weeks.

The ongoing National Identification Number and Subscriber Identity Module integration exercise has been extended by eight weeks, the Federal Government announced on Tuesday morning.

It said the new deadline was now April 6, 2021.

Director, Public Affairs, Nigerian Communications Commission, Ikechukwu Adinde, who disclosed this in a WhatsApp message to our correspondent, said the extension was conveyed by the Minister of Communications and Digital Economy, Isa Pantami.

Source: Punch.

Insecurity: Makinde Visits Igbo-Ora Says Continuous Dialogue and More Effective Community Policing is the Way Out.

His Excellency, Governor Seyi Makinde of Oyo State on Sunday visited Igbo-Ora area of Ibarapa land follow the incessant crisis between the Residents, Farmers and Fulani Herdsmen.

You will recall that OduduwaNews Published the Vacation Oder given to the Fulani Herdsmen living in that region by Chief Sunday Igboho, and two Fridays ago, he stormed the region to wipe out the fulani herdsmen following the expiration of 7 days ultimatum which he gave them for them to vacant the area. In response, the State Government frown at such order, and has since began a alternative means of solving the crisis.

The Governor in his speech, while holding a Stakeholders meeting in Igbo-Ora, late Sunday evening said

“As promised, we were in Igbo-Ora, Ibarapa zone, this evening. As part of our community outreach, we met with stakeholders, including residents and security agencies, to ensure that issues are resolved through continuous dialogue and more effective community policing.”

PERSONALITY INTERVIEW: YOUTH IN AGRIC BUSINESS

OduduwaNews: Can we meet you sir.


Onifade Dolapo: I’m Dolapo Onifade Shakirullah by name, I’m a farmer, copywriter and business consultant.
I’m a student of Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife.


OduduwaNews: The popular phrase in town since the last recession is “Youth in Agriculture” What’s Youth in Agric, from your own perspective?


Onifade Dolapo: Youth in Agric, to me, means a lot of things.
This approach is telling us that we need more youth in Agriculture sector, that youth must think creativity and innovation to solve a lot of problem in agriculture sector.
Youth are the only ones, who can think creatively and bring more changes to how people do think about agriculture.
Youth in Agriculture, will be able to solve more unemployment in our country.
There are lots of aspects in Agriculture, that really need more youth to tap into.
Our fathers, don’t really have strength to tap into it.


OduduwaNews: “Youth Agric, will it be able to solve more unemployment in our country” Has there been any positive progress?


Is there any motivating factor to encourage more youth participation?


Onifade Dolapo: Yes, there is positive progress from individual.
To be candid, more youth are now going into agriculture everyday, they have seen the prosperity, that we can’t do without it.
They have seen it that, if Agriculture sector goes wrong, every other secrets will not be able to work well.
But, in other for it to be more positive progress, we need our government to train and finance, those youth who are really ready to be active in Agriculture sector.
Onifade Dolapo: “Is there any motivating factor to encourage more youth participation”
If we really want to motivate and encourage more youth in agriculture, we have to show them, how they can make money in Agriculture.
Agriculture is a business, we have to show them, how to do the business successful.
Nothing really motivates more in business, than making good money from it.


OduduwaNews: This leads us to government contribution
Aside the media noise from our government, are they making concerted effort to make Agric business thrive?

Onifade Dolapo


Onifade Dolapo: They are trying in their own way, but, this thing is not getting to the real farmers.
If you’re not into politics, you might not get anything from government to help you succeed in your agriculture business.
Apart from general polices, like closing our boarders, reducing some tariffs on Agricultural equipment and the likes, that’s only contribution, that’s getting to everyone of us.
But, distribution of agricultural equipment, finance etc, they are merging politics with it.


OduduwaNews: Wow. What has been your own personal experience getting support, Grant and Agric aids?


Onifade Dolapo: To be sincere, I haven’t gotten any personal support, grant and Agric aids from government.
I have applied for all those things before, I even spent money to get forms and the likes, at the end, they use politics to share those benefits.
I have been using my own personal money to finance my farm projects.


OduduwaNews: What advice do you have for those youths who are indecisive in joining the Agric business?


Onifade Dolapo: They should seek for knowledge first, before they invest in any aspect of agriculture, they should see it as a business and have passion for it.


OduduwaNews: Any message for the Nigerian government on the Insecurity of farmers?


Onifade Dolapo: My message for them is that, they should provide means for those Fulani to be rearing their cows, they should stop open grazing and there should be enforcement of existing laws to punish all recalcitrant Fulanis, that usually use cows to eat farmers crops.


OduduwaNews: Is there any other thing you want us to know?


Onifade Dolapo: The only thing, I still want you to know is that, any youth that’s going into farming, he should not rely on rain for his crops, climate has changed, so many farmers lost millions of naira last year due to climate change.
They should think of, irrigation system for their crops.


OduduwaNews: Thank you for your time sir.

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