Memories of the first premier of the defunct Western Region, Chief
 Obafemi Awolowo, came alive earlier this week during a church service 
marking the 25th anniversary of his passage. The cream of the Yoruba 
elite – politicians, businessmen, intellectuals and others gathered for 
the special service at Chief Awolowo’s Ikenne home town in Ogun State. 
Chief Awolowo died on May 9, 1987.
The Rt. Rev. Peter Awelewa Adebiyi, Bishop of the Church of Nigeria 
(Anglican Communion), Lagos West Diocese, called on former President 
Olusegun Obasanjo and ex-Lagos State Governor Bola Ahmed Tinubu to unite
 the Yoruba within the Nigeria nation. He said since the death of Chief 
Awolowo, the Yoruba had been in disarray, unable to choose a leader. 
“Twenty five years of acrimony and in-fighting is enough.  A house 
divided against itself cannot stand.  It is time to forget the past, 
forgive one another and bring together a united nation,” querying: “who 
will bell the cat?  Who will start the process of reunification?” Bishop
 Adebiyi eulogised Awolowo and reeled out his epochal achievements and 
urged present Nigerian leaders to emulate his exemplary record in public
 service delivery and private sterling conduct.
The Bishop said the duo of Obasanjo and Tinubu whom he described as 
notable Yoruba leaders, are pivotal to the envisaged modern Yoruba 
unity. Obasanjo and Tinubu, he said, should form a rallying point for 
the process leading to Yoruba unity. The clergy said the region which 
seemed divided along party line and political ideology could be united 
for the common cause of the race. He drew example from the Ashiru family
 in Ijebu – Ode. Ambassador Gbenga Ashiru and Otunba Bimbo Ashiru, are 
political appointees in government.
He said while the Ambassador is serving under the Peoples Democratic 
Party (PDP) government at the centre, his younger brother, Bimbo, serves
 as Commerce and Industry Commissioner in the Action Congress of Nigeria
 (ACN)-controlled government of Ogun State. He asked if the two brothers
 should become sworn enemies because they serve government of different 
political parties. “We should not allow political differences to weaken 
our strength and destroy the Yoruba. Whether you like or not, Chief 
Olusegun Obasanjo is a formidable leader of the Yoruba and in Nigeria. 
Bola Ahmed Tinubu is a formidable leader whether you like it or not. We 
must use our meeting of today as a beginning for forging new things that
 will come in the Yoruba nation.
“We should initiate new effort, reconciliatory effort because of our 
children and future. We should renew our strength again, forget what 
happened in the past. I subscribe to the idea that you must be 
tribalistic before you can be nationalistic. If you don’t do well at 
home, nobody will reckon with you outside,” Bishop Adebiyi said.  He 
said he would like to be part of the process to unite the Yoruba, 
stressing that should he elect to visit Obasanjo and Tinubu in respect 
of it, none of the two would lock the door against him.
But Asiwaju Tinubu, speaking to reporters later on the question of 
Yoruba unity and leadership, said only the people can make their own 
leaders. He said Chief Awolowo emerged because of mass Yoruba approval 
of his quality work and conduct. “Once you make people the cornerstone 
of your politics, then you are in step with the legacy of Baba Awolowo. 
 Nobody can really step into Awolowo’s shoes  except to continue in his 
vision and philosophy of development, his character discipline and his 
emphasis on true federalism, justice and democracy.  These,” he 
insisted, “are what we should all pursue.” He said while all Yoruba were
 one stock, political unity would be dicey, since the Yoruba had always 
belonged to political parties of their choice, in line with democratic 
tenets and laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
“Historically, the Yoruba have always belonged to different parties. 
 You have the right to belong to any party.  What is important is that 
we must all uphold the values of justice, democracy and the 
developmental ideals espoused by Awolowo,” he said.
“Take the case of Awo, some people never agreed with him but he still
 insisted on running administration of probity, transparency, good 
governance and accountability and brought basic development to Western 
region. Not everybody agreed with him on that. “There were so many 
people that opposed him. That is politics. We cannot sleep, like our 
fathers would say, and face one way. No. We are going to stay divided 
politically there is no doubt about that,” Tinubu said.
Ogun State Governor Ibikunle Amosun asked those who professed to the 
disciples of Awolowo only in words to have a change of heart and live by
 the ideals Awolowo was noted for. “Our late sage, Chief Jeremiah 
Obafemi Awolowo was not only a proud son of Ogun State, he is, even in 
death, greater than we all could imagine. He was an icon of immeasurable
 stature; an administrator of impeccable integrity; a statesman of 
statesmen; and a leader who put the people first.
“This is attested to with the array of individuals and organisations 
represented at this gathering. Chief Obafemi Awolowo touched many lives 
during his sojourn on earth. “As the first Premier of the defunct 
Western Region, the policies and programmes of his administration still 
serve as reference point for governments at all levels over five decades
 after he left office. “The free primary education and unprecedented 
rural and agricultural development engendered by his Administration, for
 instance, positively affected many lives and generations.
“At the national level, his performance during the short period he 
served as the Federal Commissioner for Finance and the only civilian 
Vice-Chairman of the Federal Executive Council under General Yakubu 
Gowon regime still resonates several decades after. “He played politics 
of commitment, principle and ideology.  When his peers vacillated on 
national issues, he came up with fresh ideas on them. Issues he raised 
at that time remain burning issues in our country, even today. “No 
wonder he was described as the best President Nigeria never had and 
during his life time. He was rightly described as the ‘issue in Nigerian
 Politics’.
“Chief Obafemi Awolowo lived his life in service to the people. He 
was known, by both friends and foes, to be a serious-minded federalist 
and advocate of the rule of law, who wanted the best for his people and 
country. “No wonder, there are several people today who claim or pretend
 to be adherents of Awolowo’s ideals. The question is: how many of them 
have the moral ethos, principles and commitment to positive ideological 
bent like Chief Awolowo? “It is because he left a legacy worth emulating
 that almost every politician in the Southwest sees his name as a launch
 pad for their political careers. “My advice however is that those who 
share the same ideology or believe they have been influenced by 
Awolowo’s socio-economic and political thoughts should move from being 
lip service disciples to living and demonstrating such ideals,”
“At this period of our national life, Nigeria is in dire need of 
people who play politics of self-sacrifice, commitment and focus.  Papa 
had graciously provided us with a time-tested compass to get to the 
right direction.
“For us, we are committed to continuing with the good work the Great 
Awo started. That is why we remain on course, like he did earlier, with 
the fulfilment of our Five-Cardinal Programmes of Affordable Qualitative
 Education; Efficient Health-Care Delivery; Increased Agricultural 
Production/Industrialisation; Affordable Housing and Urban Renewal; and 
Rural and Infrastructural Development/Employment Generation, all of 
which make the fulcrum of our “Mission to Rebuild” Ogun State. “I want 
to believe that if Papa should look back now, he would be pleased with 
what we are doing. Papa will be happy with the way we have re-introduced
 functional free education, providing free text-books and instructional 
materials like his close associate, the late Chief Olabisi Onabanjo did 
in 1982.
“He would be happy with the Health Care Centres and our determination
 to ensure all the 236 wards in the state at least have one Public 
Health Centre, well equipped and manned by good medical personnel in the
 next few years. “Chief Awolowo will be happy with our revolutionary 
policies in Agricultural Production and how we hope to make our state 
the food basket and home of the largest number of Agro-Allied 
industries.
“Chief Awolowo would be too glad to see our efforts in opening up the
 rural area through good roads, bore-holes for water services and 
provision of transformer in all 236 wards for efficient rural 
electrification. “Papa will be glad at our determination to rebuild the 
infrastructure in Ogun state and attract investors from all over the 
world to establish leading industries in our state.
“We are sure that at the end of our tenure of office, Ogun State will
 be the premier State in Nigeria as the Western Region under Chief 
Awolowo was a pace-setter in Nigeria in the 50s,” Amosun said.
In attendance were Governors Ibikunle Amosun (Ogun), Dr. Kayode 
Fayemi (Ekiti) Rauf Aregbesola (Osun) Abiola Ajimobi (Oyo), Olusegun 
Mimiko (Ondo), Chief Segun Osoba (Ogun). Tinubu (Lagos), Gbenga Daniel 
(Ogun), Segun Oni (Ekiti), Lateef Jakande (Lagos) and Gen. Adeyinka 
Adebayo (Old Western region). Others are former Head of State, Gen. 
Yakubu Gowon, Amb. Folake Marcus – Bello, Chief Edwin Clark, Chief Ayo 
Adebanjo, Chief Olu Falae, Senator Biyi Durojaiye, Omooba Michael Subomi
 Balogun, Gen. Alani Akinrinade (rtd), Gen. Oladipo Diya (rtd), Senator 
Anthony Adefuye, Senator Femi Okunrounmu, Pa Reuben Fasoranti, Chief Ayo
 Adebanjo and Chief Olanihun Ajayi. Also in attendance were monarchs 
including the Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuade and Olugbo of Ugbo 
Kingdom (Ondo State), Oba Obateru Akinruntan, Bishop Bolanle Gbonigi, 
Prof. Olukayode Oyediran, Pastor Tunde Bakare, Mr Yinka Odunmakin, Mr. 
Akin Osibajo and some members of Amosun’s cabinet – Alh. Yusuph 
Olaniyonu (Information and Strategy), Mrs Elizabeth Sonubi (Women 
Affairs), Mr Segun Odubela (Education, Science and Technology) and Mrs 
Funmi Wakama (Senior Special Assistant to Governor Amosun on Media and 
Communication).
 
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