Ayo Ogunsola Obe - The Indomitable Vanguard of Democracy and Human Right in Nigeria's History
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Obe was President of the Civil Liberties Organisation, Nigeria’s first and oldest indigenous human rights organization, from 1995 to 2003, a period spanning the despotic rule of General Sani Abacha and Nigeria’s return to civilian rule in May 1999.
Ayo Obe was for many years the President of the Civil Liberties Organisation, which was at the vanguard of Human Rights Struggle in Nigeria. She took over from Mr Olisa Agbakioba during General Sani Abacha's military era. For many years,
she has been a strong voice in human rights, legal and social movements, as well as democratic reforms in Nigeria. She Strategized, planned and mornitored how Nigeria moved from Military rule to Democracy.
The story of Nigeria’s return to democracy cannot be told without including her. She was born on May 24, 1955 in the United Kingdom and attended the University of Wales where she obtained her LLM degree. Obe is also a Columnist and TV presenter.
She was the President of the Civil Liberties Organisation (CLO) and was among the strong voices that advocated for the actualization of Chief MKO Abiola’s 1993 presidential election victory. She has been listed as one of the heroes of June 12.
Her passport was seized in March 1996 while leaving Nigeria to attend a meeting of the UN Human Rights Committee in New York. The government action was not unconnected with her activism.
For the past few decades, she has been an important figure in the country’s social, legal,
and human rights movements. From 1999 to 2001, Obe chaired the Transition Monitoring Group, an election-monitoring and democracy-building coalition of Nigerian non-governmental organisations. She also represented human rights NGOs while at the Police Service Commission (PSC)
from November 2001 to 2006. She was part of the team that championed the campaign ‘Bring Back our Girls’ in 2014, when 276 female students aged from 16 to 18 were kidnapped by the Islamic terrorist group Boko Haram from the Government Girls Secondary
School at the town of Chibok in Borno State, Nigeria.
She serves as a managing partner in a Lagos based law firm named Ogunsola-Shonibare and sits on the board of multiple civil society organisations such as Goree Institute and Vice Chair of the board
of the International Crisis Group.
Obe chairs the Board of Trustees of the Gorée Institute (Senegal) and is Co-Vice Chair of the Brussels-based International Crisis Group. In Nigeria, she is a member of the boards of the CLEEN Foundation (formerly the Centre for Law
Enforcement Education), the Z.O. Dibiaezue Memorial Libraries and the community-based Ajegunle Community Project in Lagos.
Obe was Chair of the Steering Committee of the World Movement for Democracy from 2004 to April 2008 and ex officio was on the
African Democracy Forum’s steering committee. She participated as a member of the International Advisory Group of the Managing Global Insecurity project of the Brookings Institution, and New York and Stanford Universities. Obe has also been a panelist at the Oslo Forum,
the Beijing Forum and the Women’s Forum.
She is an active member of the #BringBackOurGirls campaign, and coordinates the African Book Group in Lagos.
She is a participant in the #BringBackOurGirls campaign, which was created to push for government action in the wake of
the abduction of 276 girls from a secondary school in Chibok local government area of Borno state, Nigeria. Her weekly segment on IDEAS radio show is supported by the Mac Arthur Foundation and gets Nigerians thinking in a more critical way about issues relating to integrity,
their democracy, ethics and accountability.
She Strategized and Planned the progress of Nigeria through countless organizations including bodies for People with Disabilities
And this is not even all!
Respect ⭐
Source:
Wikipedia
City People Magazine
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Baba Keji: Over 120 Years Old Man Who Has Served Three Alaafin of Oyo
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Pronunciation of His Name – Kéjì: For those who understand how signs are etched on words; Kéjì is pronounced “mi do”. Bàbá (do mi) Kéjì (mi do). Bàbá Kéjì (Do mi mi do). This is the correct pronunciation of Bàbá Kéjì’s name.
In his heyday, while he was relatively young,
Baba Kéjì was always around the Alaafin.
He was Alaafin’s companion.
At times, he usually joined the Alaafin on brief hunting inside the palace.
The palace of the Alaafin of Oyo is full of mysterious beings. Alaafin, himself, is a mystery and an enigma!
Iyiola Omisore - Politician who won a Senatorial Election while in Detention
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A Chatered Engineer, Businessman and Politician. Iyiola Omisore came into political limelight in 1999 following his emergence as the Deputy Governor of Osun State during the Former Governor Bisi Akande-led Administration. The going between the duo was good until 2002
when Omisore ran into trouble water following the gruesome murder of a Former Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation, Chief Bola Ige.
A week before Ige's death, there was a rift between Omisore and his boss Chief Bisi Akande, over the death of an
There lived a drummer whose name was Ayanda alias Minimini. He was called so as his drumming was nice to the ears. He was marvellous at drumming, he was good looking and was the choice of many ladies, he therefore, was a womanizer. He was prosperous and popular, all these
were because he had always done what an Orisa-Idile called ‘Monini’ had asked him to do, for some years, Monini had asked him to provide Ipese-ebo which he would quickly do, the previous year, Monini asked him not to search for a new lover, which was difficult for him but he
Do you know the Yoruba history in Jamestown, the oldest district in Accra Ghana?
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There is an old and thriving Yoruba community in Ghana tracing back to more than three centuries of establishment. The presence of Yoruba people in Ghana traces back to before the concept of the modern Ghanaian nation and are therefore Ghanaian citizens by law.
The Yoruba communities became established through various waves and layers for centuries before the colonial era. The earliest wave were long distance merchants, artisans, labourers and explorers who settled in both southern and northern Ghanaian locales such as Salaga,
Joshua Beckford – Youngest Person to Ever Attend Oxford University at the age of 6 (Six).
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The story of Joshua Beckford, a six-year-old child known as the smartest child on earth
Joshua Beckford is the youngest student at Oxford University. Joshua Beckford, a Nigerian kid, entered Oxford University at six and graduated from the Department of History and
Philosophy at the premature age of 14.
Despite having a high-functioning autism diagnosis, Beckford was said to be a quick learner. He was able to read, write, and comprehend the alphabet as a 10-month-old infant. At the age of two, Beckford could read with ease, and by the