Wednesday, 24 August 2022

Kayode Akinsola Holds Virtual Mentoring Programme for Law Students, Young Lawyers October 24




As part of his effort in giving back to the society, Barrister Kayode Akinsola is set to organize a virtual mentoring Programme to law students and young lawyers in Nigeria.


The project Director, Barr. Bimpe Adeoye disclosed this during a phone interview with newsmen on Wednesday.


The virtual program is scheduled to hold on Monday 24th October 2022 till Friday 18th November 2022.


The mentorship program is designed for final year  law students and young lawyers in Nigeria.


The lawyer said Akinsola will intimate the participants the solutions to those challenges young lawyers are facing in the cause of their duties and how to navigate through.


According to her ‘there are 10 slots for final year students ,10 slots for law school students and 10 slots for young lawyers’


"This program is like giving back to the society. Young students who are graduates of  law and people who are still undergraduate of law would not be exempted, but the selection process would be based on merit.


"He would mentor them on how to target the best law firms for their internships and how to write a better Curriculum Vitae. Corporate commercial aspect of law will also be part of the sessions” Abioye said.


"The goal of the mentorship programme is to raise a cross section of young minds, who seek understand the applicability of knowledge to their business environments. The mentees are taken through the process of Action Learning and they would be exposed to business solutions in real times.


"The selection process might appear to be rigorous, but it worth the stress in the end. Participants that are interested,  could send an email to info@kayodeakinsola.com 


Over the years, Akinsola have assisted individuals and organisations achieve their corporate objectives. The core of his practice is to develop business plans and execute them. 


"While focusing on market trends, he writes company policy manual that regulates the staff activities. Kayode Akinsola had created business solutions that met and exceeded industry standards.


Kayode Akinsola is a Polymath, Policy Consultant and a business lawyer. With his over decades of his cumulative experience in Consulting, He has enjoyed patronage from many oorganizations in Africa as well as other continents of the world. He is the President of Queens Group Africa, a Professional services firm based in Nigeria.


Kayode Akinsola is an international conference speaker who has written many books and journals to his credit. He is Fellow of the Institutes of Management Consultants as well as Business Diplomacy.

Medicaid Foundation CEO, Zainab Shinkafi-Bagudu, Bags Fellowship of African Institute Of Public Health Professionals

On Sunday, 14th August  2022 in a tasteful event in Birnin Kebbi, Her Excellency, Dr. Zainab Shinkafi-Bagudu, CEO, Medicaid Cancer Foundation, Member, Board of Directors- Union for International Cancer Control (UICC) was inducted as a fellow of the African Institute of Public Health Professionals for her outstanding contributions which have propelled significant innovation and progress in public health and cancer withing Nigeria and beyond.




Induction into the fellowship is a significant milestone in a public health professional’s career, in which their accomplishments are honoured by their colleagues within and outside the profession. Fellows are selected based on their remarkable contributions and impact to improve the health of people everywhere. This year, six (6) members have been awarded this honour by AIPHP because of their scientifically or socially distinguished efforts to advance public health in Nigeria.


In May 2022, the institute organised a 2-Day seminar on “Promoting African Health status through effective cancer prevention and control programs” held in Lagos, aimed to call for systematic action in terms of prevention and control interventions as a matter of social responsibility as well as addressing cancer mortality rates, high morbidity rate, high treatment cost, lack of awareness and misconceptions about cancer disease. Dr Bagudu was a guest speaker via zoom.
Speaking at the investiture in Birnin Kebbi,  Kebbi state,the Registrar of the Institute, Dr. Ayodele Bankole James FAIPH, said Her Excellency was made a Fellow of the Institute after going through her works, service to humanity and achievements as the Founder and the CEO of Medicaid Cancer Foundation, in the area of Cancer locally, Nationally and Globally as a Board Member at the Union for International Cancer Control (UICC). Dr. Bagudu has spent the last seventeen (17) years advocating for cancer control. In addition, she brought her experience as a paediatrician to the role of First Lady of Kebbi in 2015. Working with in as the chief health advocate of the state, Kebbi has achieved many public health milestones. Top of the list is increase in immunisation coverage from 17% in 2015 to 85% today.
During her acceptance speech, Her Excellency Dr. Zainab Shinkafi-Bagudu said “I am indeed very honoured by the conferral of this fellowshi”  She pledged to continue to put more effort into the good works she’s doing, especially in the cancer control space.


“We have to acknowledge the great role that Public Health plays in strengthening our health care system. For me, as a Clinician, as an Advocate, as a Mother, Public Health will always be a frontline issue that I must continue to play a role. The burden of Cancer is a Public Health Emergency and it’s one policy makers must recognize if we are to improve cancer awareness and early diagnosis.


Dr Ayoldele said in closing, “Let us honour Dr. Zainab Shinkafi-Bagudu before her people in Kebbi, she is a worthy daughter of Africa, and the African Institute of public Health Professionals will mobilise support for your election as the UICC President-Elect in October and on behalf of AIPHP and members in Kebbi State, we appreciate your good work.”


“I am extremely proud to see Her Excellency honoured as a fellow, for her numerous advocacy and policy accomplishments,” said Hon. Jafar Mohammed, the Commissioner of Health, who was also a fellow member of the institute. He enumerated the achievements of the Kebbi State Government under the administration of Sen. Abubakar Atiku Bagudu across the cancer continuum. Other Members of the Institute who were present at the occasion include, the E.S Primary Health Care Agency, Dr. Abubakar Kaoje, Dr. Aisha Aminu Senchi, Dr. Labbo Gwandu. The occasion was also graced by the representatives of IHP, WHO, NGOs and CBOs in the State.

Tuesday, 23 August 2022

Hamzat, Ogunlewe, Demola Olisa, Others Hail Senator Adefuye @78

 

Eminent personalities within and outside Nigeria on Sunday, the 14th of August 2023 graced the 78th birthday celebration of former Distinguished Senator of the federal republic of Nigeria, Senator Anthony Adefuye at his Lagos residence.

Senator Anthony Adefuye is a top political ally of the presidential flag bearer of the All Progressive Congress, APC, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu and also a member of the Lagos State Governance Advisory Council, GAC.

Those in attendance cut across political, social, religious and ethnic divides.

 Chief among the dignitaries is the Deputy Governor of Lagos State, Dr Obafemi Hamzat and the Chief of Staff to the governor of Lagos State, Mr Tayo Ayinde among other top government representatives who all came in droves to celebrate the man who most described as near to perfect politician.

Other notable personalities at the event includes APC leader in Somolu lagos, Hon. Demola Olisa Adefalujo, former Sole Administrator of Yaba LCDA, Hon. Bayo Adefuye, former Surulere Local Government Chairman, Hon. Ajide, Hajia Nafisat Tafawa Balewa, Dr Mrs Nike Akande, among others.

The one week long celebration event kicked off on Wednesday, 10th August, 2022 as the celebrant hosted all his political associates including over 30 Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu Campaign Support Groups at his residence. DG Bola Tinubu/Shettima campaign organization and Former Minister For Communications, Engr Adebayo Shittu was among dignitaries on this day.

The celebration continued on Thursday, 11th August with the finals of the annual Senator Anthony Adefuye Under 16 football competition for male and female footballers at the NPA sports ground, Surulere, Lagos with some ex internationals in attendance.

On Friday, the Theater Art and Motion Picture Practitioners Association Of Nigeria, TAMPAN held it's annual OLUGBON DAY celebration in honor of the celebrant as part of the events put together for the birthday celebration of the political titan.

The celebrations continued on Saturday as the day was specially set aside for only family of the Adefuyes as Senator Adefuye hosted all his family members both Nuclear and extended, cutting across 4 generations to a family get-together at his residence.

Sunday, the 14th August was the final and the D-Day of Senator Anthony Adefuye birthday celebration and it lived more than expectations as every who is who in the society was either in attendance or sent In a representative.

The Deputy Governor of Lagos State Dr Obafemi Hamzat and other top government functionaries were on hand to accompany the Adefuyes to the birthday Mass Celebration at St Dennis Catholic church Bariga Lagos, from there the celebration proceeded to the Lekki residence of the celebrant where some other political, social and business associates of Senator Adefuye all trooped in to celebrate with one of their own.

Senator Anthony Adefuye was a political disciple of late Yoruba leader, Chief Obafemi Awolowo and one of the strongest political allies of the presidential candidate of the All Progressive Congress, APC, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

London Conference: Nothing Unusual Happens Until Someone Does Something Unusual -Dr Okafor

 



The London spirit and Prosperity conference has enter day 3 with mind blowing Testimonies of how God Liberates many families and deliver some from battle stronger than them

The day 3 of the Prophetic conference was also climax with the words of God, healing and Deliverance

In his sermon with Topic "Ancestral and bloodlines noises and how to silence it" The lead pastor of Grace Nation international Dr Chris okafor emphasized that there is no battle that cannot come to end, he said the only battle that cannot come to end is the one you do not understand, the man of God said you must understand the battle you are facing otherwise it will consume you. Lot of people are fighting battles but did not know how to come over it, Dr okafor remarks that what you don't know is greater than you

There is no battles that you are fighting that is new, it has always been there, until you do something unusual before unusual things can happen in your life

Dr Chris Okafor affirmed that every battles have it's own key to solution, until you understand the kind of battle you are facing an apply the unusual principles,the battles remains, but when you deploy the unsual methodology, the battle become things of the past,the man of God remarks

The realms of the Prophetic at the conference took a new dimensions with accurate prophecy, Deliverance of all kinds,healings from different affliction to mention but few

The Generational prophet of God Dr Chris okafor attended to various case files of participants one after the other at the conference profiling permanent solutions, the Apostle of altars also visit altars behind people's predicament exposing the strong man behind those altars and setting the captive free, he also set the Marine kingdom on fire, there were instant Testimonies of Miracle babies everywhere at the conference


Meanwhile the Harvest of Babies conference 2022 will begin at the international Headquarters of Grace Nation in ojodu Berger Lagos Nigeria on Wednesday 24th -28th August 2022, over 2000 miracle babies will be receives by mother's, this is another opportunity for mother's to carry there miracle babies, don't be left out,

Teen Music Star, Phatiah, Wows Audience at 2022 Teen Think and MTN ATHF in Rwanda

 



At the 2022 of the Teens Think event which was an educative, interactive and leadership platform meant to provide avenue for teens to explore and utilize their potentials in a digitally savvy dimension of this undoubtedly forward-looking era, Fatiah Kanyinsola Ojediran, the teen music prodigy popularly known as Phatiah was on hand to do what she knows how to do with proficiency.

Like the never disappointing personality that she is which has been proven through her music efforts such as ‘Love Is All We Need,’ ‘Jeje’, ‘Education’, including her solo efforts and collaborations with other music acts, Phatiah definitely gave her age mates the inspiration needed for the event through her pop infused music.

Aside the inspiration, motivation and impetus she provided through her performance on 26th of July 2022 at the Radisson Blu Hotel, Ikeja, Lagos, venue of the event, Phatiah certainly displayed to the admiration of those present, making a bold statement that she has step up with her stage craft, it was a blend of talent, exposure and experience all as tripodal incentives for the event.

After her scintillating performance at Teens Think in Lagos, the teenage music sensation, Fatiah got an invitation to perform on an international stage at the MTN sponsored ATHF festival held in Kigali, Rwanda.

The 2022 A Thousand Hill Festival (ATHF), an international music festival which had the likes of music icons such as Kizz Daniel, Sheebahkarungi, Bruce Melodie, Kivumbi King and others performing was indeed a landmark event for the rising star.

On Saturday, 13th of August 2022, Phatiah mounted the stage to render her notable tracks such as ‘Love Is All We Need’, to preach a message for humanity well-being, and “Halleluyah” her collaboration with Zlatan Ibile which is yet to be officially unveiled to the public and her teeming fans.

No doubt, Phatiah’s performance in Kigali, the lovely capital city of Rwanda is a testimony to the fact that Phatiah’s experience of performing on big stages such as the Lagos State Government’s One Fiesta Events, Lagos State Annual Thanksgiving, Kogi State Government Inauguration, private and corporate events reflected in the experience and confidence she exuded through her stage performance.



No doubt the “Jeje” crooner, Arise O’ Philanthropy awardee, Enya and Emperor Award winner, who has not rest on her oars since her debut, “Education” was released is indeed growing by leaps and bounds, stretching herself beyond barriers and breaking fallow grounds from national to international terrains.

Prophet Oladapo Kingsley Organizes 3-Day Open Revival

Prophet Oladapo Kingsley

 

It's another time to encounter the God of miracles as Prophet Oladapo Kingsley, the shepherd in charge of Oneness In Christ ministry has organized a three days open revival tagged ALL HAIL THE POWER OF JESUS.

The call has been made for people far and wide to come experience salvation, refreshing, healing, deliverance and various forms of the miraculous


The three days revival programme will be from the 28th to 30th of August, 2022; time 5-8pm daily. The venue is 20, Showole Street, Ewupe, Singer bus-stop, Sango, Ogun State.


Guest ministers; Lanre Matthew, Tosin emmanuel and Becca Voclas , will also be there to impact the lives of people.


Apostle Kingsley whose ministry has been a blessing to many home and abroad is inviting everyone who needs Gods touch in any areas of their lives to attend with faith.

Monday, 22 August 2022

Oracle of Minna, Visionary of Nigeria *by Chidi Amuta

IBB

 

(In line with what has become my annual tradition every August, I devote this column as a tribute to my friend and compatriot, General Ibrahim Babangida, as he marks his 81st birthday this week)

 

General Ibrahim Babangida, the former  military president, has never told anyone that he is a politician nor has he seen or ever described himself as a politician. Even in 2007 when he was pressed into a political purpose by friends and loyalists, he allowed only his disciples and vast followership to confer the title of ‘politician’ on him. In the midst of that vague attempt, I confronted him with the fullest implications of his possible entry into partisan politics and contesting an election in typical Nigerian political tradition: ‘Can you, in all honesty, join market women to dance at a public square rally?’  Not waiting for an answer, I asked further: ‘Can you clown, tell open lies or promise people what you cannot deliver?’ He looked me straight in the face and retorted with an unprintable, but familiar friendly disapproval: “f..k off!”. Nonetheless, he deeply appreciated my acute reading of his personality. My point was to draw his attention to the incompatibility of his essential personal decency with the rough and tumble of Nigeria’s crass and untidy political culture. 

 

The passage of time has not dulled Babangida’s topicality in one sphere: politics. And yet his persistent relevance in national politics is something of an anachronism, just as the man himself has remained an enigma. Instead, he has remained a proud self -confessed lifetime soldier. He is mostly a grand centurion approximating the Roman tradition of that noble calling.

Yet, since he departed office in 1993, every political season has been prefaced with the question: Who will IBB support or endorse? But he supports all and endorses none. In spite of this non-committal stance, each electoral season has taken off with a spate of relentless pilgrimages to Babangida’s retirement home in Minna. Every political hopeful, aspirant or candidate considers his ambition legitimate except it has been validated by the Oracle of Minna.  Consequently, his abode has assumed the stature of a political Mecca or even Jerusalem or both. 

 

In typical Delphic fashion, the myths around Babangida have intensified and deepened as he has gotten older. The man known for walking on both sides of the pavement at once is on home ground when it comes to political double speak: ‘We do not know those who will succeed us, but we know those who will not’. ‘Our ideological choice is clear: a little to the right and a little to the left’!

Like all sensible oracles, Babangida in old age has perfected this natural penchant for Delphic double speak. Oracles, in order to retain a certain aura of mystique and keep their pilgrims entranced, need to adopt a tongue that is replete with riddles, which compel devotees to go home, decode and reflect. To his numerous political pilgrims and visitors, Babangida neither pledges support nor withholds it overtly. To all comers, however, he has a generous understanding. Instead, he imbues all comers with hope eternal. In the process, he transcends every pilgrim’s wish for an immediate prescription for a cure -all answer. 

 

He makes every pilgrim’s visit his own by using each occasion and its accompanying media coverage to renew his own unflinching commitment and allegiance to Nigeria. He wishes all pilgrims well, but uses their pilgrimage as a vehicle to pronounce his sincere wishes for the nation. His seasonal political wishes mirror whatever irks the nation at each given moment. 

In the current season, his message has ranged from the inevitability of youth takeover of power to the urgent need for power devolution and rotation within the context of a decent democratic polity. No pilgrim leaves Babangida disappointed or unacknowledged. No one leaves Babangida’s presence with any assurance of victory. But you get a renewed hope in our country and confidence in what you can contribute to its leadership. The blessing of each encounter with Babangida is in coming face to face with the enthralling magnetism of a man of destiny, a legend of our time and place. 

 

There is a cruel irony about Babangida’s persisting credential as a compelling political oracle among the Nigerian political elite. Even more baffling is the overwhelming belief in his political indispensability. Politicians and indeed the general populace just believe he has the magic to make things happen and that no major political development can take place without his knowledge. But here is a man, who carries the burden of the annulment of the June 12, 1993 election, which would have enthroned M.K.O Abiola as Nigeria’s president. That tectonic political development is seen by many as the single most far-reaching disruption of Nigeria’s democratic journey to date. And yet the author of that incident has now been consecrated by the political elite into a deity, whose endorsement is required to proceed with any credible political agenda. 

 

The answer is simple. Babangida embodies the myth of eternal possibility. For a brief moment, Nigeria was led to believe in big dreams and its inherent greatness. To date, nostalgia for the grand vision that he inspired remains intact. I daresay that the essence of the Babangida magic was all about his way with power. It has everything to do with his personal magnetism, a personal charisma that disarms all who come into close contact with him. In his political actions, it is that distinctive political footwork that made the public come to see him as the political equivalent of Argentina’s late soccer legend, Diego Maradona. 

 

Yet there was always that Machiavellian streak in Babangida’s power plays. That dexterity enabled him to navigate the brackish divides of Nigeria’s nasty calculations of old-time politicians and ambitious military officers.  He was able to survive in that perilous landscape and survive as the last man standing. This is an attribute that many envy, but cannot achieve.  In spite of the tragedy of June 12, the Babangida’s myth has managed to remain intact for over three decades after he left office. Consequently, the Nigerian populace has come to concede that he was a man for all ages. In a sense, he saw and acted ahead of his time. The essence of Babangida’s enduring aura, myth and legacy is perhaps the visionary quality of his intervention in national politics.

 

In the international context of his time, a close parallel can be drawn between Babangida and the other world leaders with whom he emerged almost at the same time in history. Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher and Mikhail Gorbachev held sway about the same time as Babangida of Nigeria. Like these other great leaders, Babangida instituted far-reaching reforms in the economy of the country sometimes ahead of even the main current of world history along the path of reform. He switched Nigeria from a mixed economy to a free market one. He privatised wasteful government enterprises and transferred them into the hands of the private sector. He streamlined the political system and instituted a two-party ideas-based political system. He recognised the rural majority and women in the scheme of national affairs. He was convinced that government has no business in business. 

 

To a great extent, Babangida ruled ahead of his time. But the general negative blanket of military rule clouded an appreciation of his vision, hence the nation failed to take full advantage of his foresight. Three decades after he left office and after a considerable initial period of public disaffection, Babangida has bounced back and persisted as a constant refrain in national politics without openly brandishing the membership card of any party. Beyond the hubris of the June 12 disaster, the Nigerian public has over these years come to a delayed realisation of the authenticity of Babangida’s vision and the redeeming value of his intervention. 

 

Like Reagan, Thatcher and Gorbachev, he faced virulent political opposition during his tenure. Like these other world leaders, he acted in response to what he perceived as the urgent and fundamental challenges of the moment: economic deregulation, aggressive privatisation, reduction of government presence in the economy as well as a fairly transparent political process through a bottom to top democratic transformation. Decades afterwards, Ronald Reagan has become the gold standard in US conservatism economic renewal. Margaret Thatcher has become another name for the Tory legacy of privatisation and economic prosperity in the United Kingdom. Similarly, the legacy of Gorbachev in dismantling an unproductive Soviet behemoth and replacing it with a freer more prosperous Russia has become an inspirational era for the younger generation of Russians. 

 

What links Babangida to all these great world leaders at the turn of the millennium is the visionary quality of his intervention and the courage to pursue the reforms implicit in that vision. Specifically, Britain’s Margaret Thatcher recognised Babangida’s courage and historical value hence she is on record as having encouraged him to transform into an elected civilian leader if only to consolidate his reforms. Arguably, if Reagan and Thatcher were still alive today, they would, like Babangida, have become oracles and literal political deities to the younger generations of American Republicans and British Conservatives.

 

Babangida’s vision was clear and unambiguous. He strove to enthrone a free market economy and two-party liberal democracy with clear ideological options. Above all, he sought to bring about a fair society in which our diversity will be fully deployed towards the development of the nation.

This was the Babangida mission and vision. He brought to this multiple mission a personal charisma and style that were distinct. The magnetism of that aura and style endeared him to a populace that was not always united in their embrace of him and his policies. Yet, his appeal and pull have endured even in the decades since he left power and office.  

 

As he has repeatedly insisted, he was one leader, whose eyes were consistently fixated on the verdict of history. Therefore, the symbolism of this brief event has immense significance. It bore all the markings of the essential Babangida leadership: a consistent preoccupation with lasting legacies, a sense of historical permanence, a touch of imperial grandeur, an enduring vision of national greatness and, ultimately, a quest for a grand strategy for achieving national greatness.

For Babangida, these attributes were not a mere patchwork of fleeting military showmanship. He set out to fill a conspicuous void in the nation’s leadership culture, namely, the embarrassing absence of a compelling big vision and a grand strategy for nation building. For good and hardly for ill, Babangida’s legacy, in this regard, is in the articulation and rigorous pursuit of big dreams for Nigeria and the adoption of a grand governmental strategy to pursue that vision. 

 

The combination of grand vision and grand strategy is the rare tool that distinguishes great nations from the common run of nation states. For every nation, a grand vision implies the adoption of a national big dream passed down from generation to generation. Nations propelled by such big dreams are capable of achieving feats that far outstrip their geographical size or their human and material resources. It is perhaps a combination of grand vision and great greed that could have equipped the small nation of Britain to pursue the idea of ‘Rule Britannia’ which emboldened it to conquer and colonise expansive stretches of the world as far afield as India, Nigeria, Australia, New Zealand, Palestine, East Africa and the Falklands. 

 

The United States of America, a large country, founded on a creed of greatness is the bastion of freedom and democracy, which was destined by God to lead the world in pursuit of happiness and global power. The street mobs, who beheaded Louis XVI and Maria Antoinette stormed the Bastille in 1789 France and armed the successor republic of the French Revolution with a grand aspiration and vision. This is captured by the mantra of ‘freedom, equality and egalitarianism.’ That vision and its pursuit fired the subsequent ambiguous exploits of the French republic at home and abroad. 

 

I doubt that our founding fathers ever rose above petty peer group bickering over regional and ethnic supremacy to articulate a coherent grand vision for the future Nigerian republic. 

Perhaps this is one reason why successive Nigerian leadership has been mired in endless searches for some propelling vision (Vision 2010; Vision 2020!!).

A grand strategy is what translates a grand vision into the lived realities of citizens. It is perhaps in the Babangida administration that we approach the rudiments of a coupling of a grand vision with some governmental grand strategy for national greatness in the history of Nigerian politics and leadership.

 

Foreign policy is usually not the favorite turf of transient military dictatorships. Their sense of mission is usually defined by a certain tentative brevity and quest for domestic political legitimacy and international acceptability. But foreign policy is a major carrier of a nation’s vision and global mission. 

As military president, Babangida served early notice that he would be different. His grand vision of Nigeria could only be identified by a bolder more assertive and even more powerful Nigeria. With the Kissingerian Prof. Bolaji Akinyemi as foreign minister, the Babangida administration pursued the kind of bold and activist foreign policy that befits an ambitious power. 

 

Yet, by far, the most consequential institutional landmark of the Babangida administration was the far-reaching attempt to institutionalise a mandatory two-party political system for the country. The birth of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and the National Republic Convention (NRC) was the height of idealistic institutional engineering. The current prevalence of two major parties in our political system would seem to vindicate Babangida’s vision. 

A grand vision and a mostly intellectual grand strategy in a complex country was a risky combination. Yet Babangida remained undaunted in his commitment to his nationalist and visionary ideals. He even had an idealistic notion of the type of leader that should succeed him as, hopefully, the last military leader of Nigeria. 

 

On 27th July, 1992, at the International Conference Centre, Abuja,  Ibrahim Babangida delivered what could be considered his valedictory address. He was addressing the inaugural session of the newly elected National Assembly. On this occasion, he waxed philosophical by prescribing an ideal leadership type for the nation he was about to hand over to civilian rule: 

    “I submit for your consideration…the concept of a visionary realist as a prescriptive model of   leadership…This model stresses the ability for effective implementation of vision rather than one that wallows in demagogic appeal. This model also calls for the leader who should consider himself as part and parcel of the social and political order rather than a figure situated above it…” 

 

As we look forward to the 2023 elections, the question of appropriate leadership remains an abiding concern among Nigerians more than ever. It may be time to look back at Babangida’s prescription for the pragmatic visionary idealist as a fitting leadership model for this moment in our national history.