Samuel Olayemi

9K posts

Samuel Olayemi

Samuel Olayemi

@Sam_Olayemi1

Business Angel | Business Leader | Business Process Expert | Logistics Manager | Christian | Songwriter | Peace-loving | Passionate about the family

Katılım Nisan 2023
272 Takip Edilen251 Takipçiler
Alabi
Alabi@the_Lawrenz·
Was on a London Underground train with my wife sitting directly opposite me. She looked ridiculously cute, so I started taking some lowkey “unawares” pictures of her 😭 Next thing, one random bloke clocks me and immediately switches into superhero mode. Started aggressively questioning why I was taking pictures of a woman, already rolling his fist like he was about to defend the entire female population of the London Underground 💀 I had to shout “BRO SHE’S MY WIFE” before this turned into a public service announcement. Meanwhile my wife was just there smiling through the whole thing. …And this is the picture I managed to get after she became aware
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IK@ikknowsball

I fucking love London man. Never ever put ur hands even near a woman with other males in presence.

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Gbonka Ebiri
Gbonka Ebiri@EbiriGbonka·
You still don't get it. You cannot come from the East to enforce your philosophy on what leadership should be in Yorubaland to suit your devious agenda.... There is a reason our fathers checkmated Zik and chased him out of Yorubaland.... It is because we don't like to hear insulting talks like this. You cannot come to Yorubaland..... hold office representing a region that is the ancestral home of Yoruba people... and then claim that leadership to you is not about ethnicity. If you wish to serve all Nigerians, seek federal appointments in Abuja or open a charity.... Anyone who represents Isolo owes allegiance first and foremost to the natives of Isolo before any other people. Talks like this adds insult to injury.... You cannot claim to not see ethnicity in local politics..... The real insult is that no one will dare hold such office where you come from and say things like this.... Yorubaland is not a testing ground for one Nigeria....
Okey-Joe Onuakalusi@HOJ_Onuakalusi

Dear constituents and Nigerians, There have been deliberate attempts to spread false narratives suggesting that my aides are drawn from only one ethnic group and that I favour one ethnic bloc over others. I made it clear in my recent interview that these claims are completely untrue and do not reflect who I am, my values, or the way I have approached public service. Leadership, to me, is about competence, commitment, loyalty, and the capacity to deliver results for the people, not ethnicity, religion, or other divisive considerations. My team is made up of individuals from different backgrounds who have one thing in common: a shared commitment to serving our constituents effectively. I have never believed in politics of exclusion, and I will never reduce governance to ethnic calculations. At a time when our nation needs unity, development, and issue-based politics, it is unfortunate that some individuals still resort to divisive propaganda in an attempt to distract from the real work being done. I remain committed to representing every member of my constituency fairly and without bias. My mandate is to all our people, regardless of ethnic background, religion, or political leaning. Those who know my track record can attest that my focus has always been inclusive representation, people-centred policies, and creating opportunities that benefit everyone. We must reject narratives designed to divide us and instead embrace the values that truly move our communities and nation forward: unity, fairness, competence, and progress. Together, we will work for a new Nigeria

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Samuel Olayemi
Samuel Olayemi@Sam_Olayemi1·
@HOJ_Onuakalusi In that same interview, you referred to the indegenes of Oshodi-Isolo as "minority". You are not serious.
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Okey-Joe Onuakalusi
Okey-Joe Onuakalusi@HOJ_Onuakalusi·
Dear constituents and Nigerians, There have been deliberate attempts to spread false narratives suggesting that my aides are drawn from only one ethnic group and that I favour one ethnic bloc over others. I made it clear in my recent interview that these claims are completely untrue and do not reflect who I am, my values, or the way I have approached public service. Leadership, to me, is about competence, commitment, loyalty, and the capacity to deliver results for the people, not ethnicity, religion, or other divisive considerations. My team is made up of individuals from different backgrounds who have one thing in common: a shared commitment to serving our constituents effectively. I have never believed in politics of exclusion, and I will never reduce governance to ethnic calculations. At a time when our nation needs unity, development, and issue-based politics, it is unfortunate that some individuals still resort to divisive propaganda in an attempt to distract from the real work being done. I remain committed to representing every member of my constituency fairly and without bias. My mandate is to all our people, regardless of ethnic background, religion, or political leaning. Those who know my track record can attest that my focus has always been inclusive representation, people-centred policies, and creating opportunities that benefit everyone. We must reject narratives designed to divide us and instead embrace the values that truly move our communities and nation forward: unity, fairness, competence, and progress. Together, we will work for a new Nigeria
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Samuel Olayemi
Samuel Olayemi@Sam_Olayemi1·
@CynthiaOzumba The first recipe for success for change Mgt is to get the buy-in of the staff. People won't cooperate on a change programme they don't own.
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Samuel Olayemi
Samuel Olayemi@Sam_Olayemi1·
@CynthiaOzumba An Ops Mgt person must study Change Management before trying to .ake a change. Oftentimes when someone is brought from outside, they want to do transformational change, perhaps due to the expressed frustration by the CEO. But in most cases, that approach messes things up.../
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Cynthia Ozumba
Cynthia Ozumba@CynthiaOzumba·
Operations Management will humble you! One of my first operations roles, I was trying SO hard to impress my boss. I had just been onboarded and I immediately entered “let me prove myself” mode. So I started organizing everything. Created trackers. Updated sheets. Cleaned workflows. Followed up on pending tasks. Built a full progress report. In my head, I was cooking. I actually cooked. Bombastic side eye 🤫 So I sent a status report feeling very proud of myself because omo, the document was looking CORPORATE 😭 My boss went through everything and asked me one question: “Okay… but which of these is actually slowing the team down right now?” Lol. Everywhere just quiet. I had spent days organizing work without identifying the real operational problem affecting the business. I was managing activity. Not solving the real challenges. So I went back and started differently. Completely different mindset. That was when I understood something about Operations Management and Executive Assistance most people don’t realize early enough... Your value is not in being busy. Your value is in seeing problems early, understanding what affects the business directly, and creating systems that make work easier for everyone else. Anybody can update a Notion board. Not everybody can walk into a scattered workflow, identify what’s breaking communication, slowing delivery, affecting clients, or frustrating the founder… and quietly fix it before it becomes a bigger problem.
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Samuel Olayemi
Samuel Olayemi@Sam_Olayemi1·
@Gviev That was a careless statement. He shouldn't have mentioned any state. He should have let the census do the job. He showed that he was already biased, and that he would tweek the data to achieve his bias.
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Genevieve Mbama 🕊 🇳🇬 🇻🇦
I remember during GEJ regime.. When Festus Odimegwu was DG National Population Commission . Using his clout, he was able to get support of World Bank to cofund the $4B required to conduct a Digital Tech driven National Census During an interview, Festus Odimegwu commented that the Census will prove validity or invalidate many state's publicly quoted population figures. He mentioned Kano state as an example. Boom 🔥🔥...Former Governor of Kano State , Shekaru, went biserk.. Insulted Festus Odumegwu's petsonality and profile as former CEO of Heinekeen ( formerly Nigerian Breweries) and called him a DRUNKARD. He and other Notherners pressured GEJ to sack Festus Odimegwu.... Guess what? GEJ went ahead snd sacked him🤮🤮!!! In those days, all the North needs is cough! And GEJ starts scampering They holla m for blokos😅😅😅😅😅🤣 Do forgot all these their talk for GEJ to contest.....When they say he is the best democrat...they mean, he is one they can easily control
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Samuel Olayemi
Samuel Olayemi@Sam_Olayemi1·
@akinwale_cfi @HighChiefOkoro It is easy to condemn what Oshiomole said because you are not a victor the Xenophobic attacks in SA. If it were the other way round, SA will equally take the same stand as Oshiomole's. You guys are just terrible in your thinking because you don't like Oshiomole or his party.
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Farmer Akin Alabi®
Farmer Akin Alabi®@akinwale_cfi·
Senator Adams must return to the Senate at all cost - Please @HighChiefOkoro how can we make that happen. And he should release a press statement to the Chairman of Arise tv on what happened this morning.. It’s a complete embarrassment to journalism
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Adedayo Adewale 💱
Adedayo Adewale 💱@DIGITALEAGLE777·
@TheYorubaTimes If @HauwaAllahbura or any God-forsaken bastard from the SE evil forest is allowed to be elected again to any office in Yorubaland, our royal fathers and political leaders deserve to be stoned to death! You can't continue to denigrate my culture & institutions & expect a reward.
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The Yoruba Times
The Yoruba Times@TheYorubaTimes·
"Terrorist ni Wan Ma Proscribe Won" – Hauwa Allahbura, the Borno Woman Who Called Yoruba Ronu Movement Terrorists, Now Wants to Represent Apapa in Lagos The tweets are still there. She cannot delete them fast enough. Hauwa Allahbura, a northern woman who fled Borno after terrorists struck, spent months on X (formerly Twitter) unleashing venom on Yoruba people. Now she wants to be the House of Representatives member for Apapa, Lagos. Let us remind you what she said: "YORUBA RONU group would touch everyone." "Terrorist ni wan a ma proscribe won." (They will be proscribed like terrorists.) "I am sensing there's a strong agenda by some YORUBA on X to YORUBANIZE NIGERIA. This attempt would be met with strong resistance." She called a Yoruba movement "scam." She called them "bastards." She compared them to IPOB. She accused Yorubas of trying to take over Nigeria. This is the same woman who also dragged the Ogun State governor. The same woman who fled to Lagos for safety after Boko Haram blew up her home. Yorubas gave her shelter. Lagos protected her. And this is how she repays us. Now she wants our votes. She wants to sit in the National Assembly on the backs of the people she insulted. The disrespect is getting louder. First, it was Igbos taking our political slots. Now a Hausa woman who called us terrorists wants to represent us in Apapa. Apapa residents, this is a test. Will you hand your voice to someone who has no love for Yoruba people? Will you forget the insults just because she is now smiling for the camera? 2027 is coming. Let the tweets remind you. Let the insults remind you. We are not slaves in our own land.
The Yoruba Times tweet mediaThe Yoruba Times tweet mediaThe Yoruba Times tweet mediaThe Yoruba Times tweet media
The Yoruba Times@TheYorubaTimes

"She Called Us Terrorists, Now She Wants Our Votes" – Borno Woman Who Fled to Lagos, Dragged Ogun Governor, Insulted Yorubas, Declares for Apapa Reps Seat

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Ibironke Khadeejah Quadri
For those that knows me from Facebook, you are well aware of some of these hustles, the challenges, the pain, betrayal, battle and the renaissance. I am particularly sharing so single mothers know that you can bounce back, Keep working Hard Keep praying Hard, LIVE within your means always, Never compare yourselves with another woman or someone else for that matter. Ask for help and never be ashamed of your hustle. Train your children financial discipline and NEVER be scared of saying No to them . Holidays are rewards of good grades and I plan ahead for them by paying £300 monthly towards financing it. Bad grades equals No holidays, nothing is free. So they work so hard and are generally well behaved, cultured and disciplined. I have slowed down on hustling now due to health challenges but we are not completely out. God is sufficient. Above all Be intentional with your Gratitude to God , You are not the worst off , trust me on that. I will share more as God leads May the Lord continue to Help us all 🤲🤲🤲🤲
Ibironke Khadeejah Quadri@ronkecarew

Bought houses both Home and abroad, and yes cash down abroad as well Built a house for my parents Bought Cars for my parents Sent 2 of my Siblings to Private University from start till graduation Series of cars for myself , all cash down Sponsored my Hajj and umrahs repeatedly myself Sponsored my Mums Hajj single handedly Survived brutal divorce and bounce back significantly without a significant dent on my finances and not collecting a dime from the Man as alimony or Children support for years. Sponsoring 2 international Holidays for my kids and I yearly Supporting my 3 children through school Went back to study for my Masters. Building a business in Healthcare and by God's grace so many more All with assistance of God, Hardwork, resilience and emotional support from few dependable friends And yes not from any Man but Funds from my Career and serial side hustle whilst maintaining my dignity and integrity. A grateful being and a testament to God's unending goodness plus self belief, hardwork and self assurance.

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THEALAUSAMARIAM
THEALAUSAMARIAM@IAMALAUSAMARIAM·
@egi_nupe Iranu! It’s the likes of them that’ll come on the internet and say, “it’s not by having a first class degree, or good grades at all” Oga shut up, make the best out of what you have and stop bitterness.
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Foundational Nupe Lawyer
Entering a university or any high institution of learning with a 150/400 score is just all shades of terrible and mediocrity. There is no justification for this decision at all. Later, this same set of children will be on social media questioning people's first class and academic successes. Thchewww
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JAMB
JAMB@JAMBHQ·
Candidates seeking admissions into Education Programs and Agriculture non-Engineering Courses are now exempted from UTME.
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Samuel Olayemi
Samuel Olayemi@Sam_Olayemi1·
@AYDI_Osun You said you are unofficial. Therefore you are inconsequential. Nobody is inciting violence against her. She is an IPOB apologist. IPOB is a terrorist organization. Connect the dots.
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Adeleke Youth Development Initiative
PRESS RELEASE OSUN APC’S ETHNIC POLITICS IS DANGEROUS, DIVISIVE AND A THREAT TO PEACE — WE DEMAND PROTECTION FOR PROF. CHINWE OBUAKU The Unofficial Aides strongly condemns the coordinated ethnic-driven attacks launched by members and supporters of the Osun APC against Professor Chinwe Obuaku, the Director-General and Special Envoy to the Governor of Osun State on Climate Change and Renewable Energy, simply because she is not Yoruba. Osun State has never been known for ethnic intolerance, hate, or xenophobic politics. What the Osun APC is promoting today is dangerous, desperate, and capable of creating unnecessary ethnic tension in our dear state. Professor Chinwe Obuaku is a respected professional and climate governance expert whose service to Osun State has brought remarkable visibility and progress to the climate and sustainability sector. Under her leadership, Osun State’s climate governance ranking moved from 30th to 6th position nationally. She has contributed immensely to strengthening climate policy conversations, promoting renewable energy advocacy, increasing environmental awareness, supporting youth and women-focused sustainability initiatives, and positioning Osun State within national and global climate discussions. Her contributions have helped integrate climate consciousness into governance, development planning, and public engagement, achievements Osun could not attain during the years of APC administration. Governor Ademola Adeleke deserves commendation for bringing competence and expertise into governance irrespective of ethnicity or background. It is unfortunate that many of those attacking Prof. Chinwe online are themselves living and working outside their states of origin. If people in those states begin to treat them with the same hostility, what message are we sending as a nation? This is exactly how xenophobia begins, and every responsible citizen must speak against it before it escalates. The hypocrisy of the Osun APC is also glaring. During their years in government, several non-indigenes served in various capacities, including as commissioners, advisers, and senior government officials. Even in Lagos and other APC-controlled states today, people from different ethnic backgrounds occupy strategic positions. Why then is Prof. Chinwe suddenly a problem in Osun State? Nigeria’s Constitution guarantees every citizen the right to live, work, and contribute meaningfully in any part of the country without discrimination. The posture of the Osun APC raises serious questions about their commitment to national unity, constitutional democracy, and peaceful coexistence. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, a proud Yoruba man, is married to a woman from Delta State. Former Governor Rauf Aregbesola also found love outside the Southwest. Nigeria thrives on unity, integration, and mutual respect, not ethnic profiling and political bitterness. We therefore call on the Nigeria Police Force and all relevant security agencies not to ignore these dangerous narratives and subtle incitements capable of threatening public peace. The safety and security of Professor Chinwe Obuaku must be taken seriously. Prof. Chinwe has positively impacted Osun State through youth empowerment, innovation, stakeholder engagement, and community development. Osun people have embraced her contributions, and we proudly identify with her as one of us. Finally, we warn those promoting ethnic hatred and division to desist immediately. The law will take its course against anyone found inciting ethnic conflict or public unrest. Osun State belongs to all peaceful and law-abiding people, and we will continue to welcome competence, excellence, and service irrespective of tribe or background. Anthony Olanipekun Spokesperson, The Unofficial Aides Campaign Committee 11th May, 2026.
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Samuel Olayemi
Samuel Olayemi@Sam_Olayemi1·
@therealchinwe In states in the South East, they don't even give employment to indegenes from other South East states, not to talk of Nigerians from other regions. Have you ever condemned that practice? Let's start from there.
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Prof Chinwe Obuaku
Prof Chinwe Obuaku@therealchinwe·
Funny how some Nigerians want acceptance, opportunities, and protection abroad, yet become uncomfortable when an Igbo woman works in Osun or another Nigerian succeeds outside their ethnic region. Chinwe is Nigerian. She has a right to live, work, contribute, and thrive anywhere in Nigeria. We cannot condemn xenophobia in South Africa while practising ethnic exclusion at home. A country cannot progress when competence is constantly filtered through tribe. Nigeria either belongs to all Nigerians or it belongs to nobody.
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Samuel Olayemi
Samuel Olayemi@Sam_Olayemi1·
@therealchinwe @0nrewaju Why didn't you include Enugu Abia, Owerri, or Anambra in your list? Hypocrisy on display. By the way, it is not about working in those places you mentioned, but getting a government APPOINTMENT. Are there no indegenes of Osun who equally qualified for that role?
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Prof Chinwe Obuaku
Prof Chinwe Obuaku@therealchinwe·
What is actually “totally fvcked” is the mindset that still measures competence through ethnicity instead of capacity, contribution, and citizenship. The irony is that many of the same people complaining today would defend Yoruba professionals working in Abuja, Port Harcourt, Kano, London, or Johannesburg without hesitation. But suddenly, an Igbo woman working in Osun becomes a civilizational crisis? That contradiction is intellectually embarrassing. Neither Awolowo nor Akintola built their political legacies on ethnic paranoia. They were nation builders with strong ideological convictions about development, education, governance, and progress. Reducing their memory to tribal gatekeeping does injustice to their actual legacy. Nigeria cannot keep demanding national unity rhetorically while practising ethnic exclusion socially and politically. Competence is not tribal. Citizenship is not tribal. Nation-building should not be tribal either.
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Prof Chinwe Obuaku
Prof Chinwe Obuaku@therealchinwe·
If not for politics, you really wouldn’t have electorally deficit individuals with chronic voter-rejection syndrome trying to intellectually audit a man who has clearly mastered the sociopolitical biomechanics of mass appeal. Some of you still think governance is a TED Talk mixed with LinkedIn vocabulary and three PowerPoint slides. Meanwhile, Adeleke has already understood something posthuman politics keeps proving globally: in the age of affective democracy, emotional connectivity, symbolic accessibility and populist resonance now outperform elite performative intellectualism. In simple terms: the people actually like him. You can write all the epistemological dissertations you want on “capacity” but elections are not marked by external examiners. They are marked by human beings with PVCs.
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Foundational Nupe Lawyer
If you earn the same amount, a woman won’t respect you If you work in the same place, a woman won’t respect you. If you are of the same age, a woman won’t respect you. If she earns more than you, a woman won’t respect you. If you go broke and she contributes more, a woman won’t respect you. If you lose your job and she begins to provide for the family, a woman won’t respect you. This is not about love, it’s pure nature. The one who doesn’t disrespect you from the above list is the one who is an exception.
RICH@TWEETARRAZZI

I don’t have a problem with her stance. The issue is where she said disrespect comes naturally. She literally implied she would disrespect her partner if they’re in the same income bracket. Then a man earning 1000x more than her, claiming to be in his right senses, will still approach her for a relationship? A few years later, he’ll use his traumatic experience with her as relationship advice for other men 😂😂

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Samuel Olayemi
Samuel Olayemi@Sam_Olayemi1·
@Mr_JAGs @Riddwane Hatred for BAT is the reason. Period. What has changed in them? Nothing, except that they now feel cheated by the group they supported.
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Pst Okezie JAMES Atañi 🦨
This is an IGBO PASTOR saying anyone who votes for President Bola Ahmed Tinubu GCFR @officialABAT will d!e.. He is a chronic IPOB supporter by calling those k!lling his fellow South Easterner "unknown gunmen" when it has been established that it is IPOB ESN that has been behind the mayhem in the South East I will find his church anywhere it is situated in Nigeria and worship there. Na me and this man till I see him face to face
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Samuel Olayemi
Samuel Olayemi@Sam_Olayemi1·
@EngeesBishop I have been longing to visit Akwa-Ibom. I have read about many beautiful things about the place. Generally, Akwa-Ibom people are very nice. They don't talk down on you. They don't struggle with you on what is urs. They are peaceful people. P.S: I like the sound of their language
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Iko-obong Bishop🇳🇬
Iko-obong Bishop🇳🇬@EngeesBishop·
Yoruba people are literally happy with the kind of development that is going on in Akwa ibom, i just observed that they don't talk down on Akwa ibom just to feel superior. The Other tribe should just do better please
Iko-obong Bishop🇳🇬 tweet mediaIko-obong Bishop🇳🇬 tweet mediaIko-obong Bishop🇳🇬 tweet mediaIko-obong Bishop🇳🇬 tweet media
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Samuel Olayemi
Samuel Olayemi@Sam_Olayemi1·
I am a global icon. I am a phenomenal personality. I bring light to nations.
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Àlúbàríkà 🇳🇬
The Hatred is too much o! I put up a post about an Igbo man in the Federal house and his decision to favour Igbos for a training trip abroad, against his host community - something I strongly believe was wrong, Igbos getting 25 slots and Yorubas 4, that was so not balanced! The thing is that people drew daggers, they fired from all cylinders, Igbos and Yorubas on that post cursed each other, pointed fingers, opened old wounds, threatened one another as 2027 approaches....and it left me wondering and asking the question How Did We Get Here? How did we develop this kind of hate for one another? Were we pretending to like the other person because we just wanted something from them or what? How have we become so intolerant of one another? Who bewitched us? I, Chief Ify Onyegbule (JP) was born on Adeniran Ogunsanya, grew up in Surulere (Yeside Abeke, Muyiwa Opaleye, Cele Bus stop on Adetola when I lived with my parents) and lived in Shitta as an adult then to Akanbi arimi before moving to Ikosi when I worked with TVC those days and presently I live in Alausa/Agidingbi axis. Im in my 50s and I dare say that I have lived 4 years of these in Owerri since my governor appointed me DG. Why am I telling this story? Its just to let you know that the South West has had a positively significant effect on my life and im eternally grateful for that. Just so you know, im also at a stage in my life where I dont need to coat anything to be liked or accepted by anyone because many on that post made it look like so! For those who know my history, my trajectory as it is, you can put a tab on my work history and for those who do not know, I have worked in places that no one has looked at my state of origin or even questioned my competence based on where I come from. A yoruba man, a popular one at some point, hired me as Station Manager in Abeokuta (the hot spot of Broadcasting, if we think about OGBC and the many personalities that passed through that place) did it mean there were no Yorubas who could do the job at the time? The answer is No...he just wanted me to do the job because of what I could do and how I could get it done...and I didnt go there to taunt my host, abuse privileges or even necessarily impose myself to the detriment of the people who accommodated me in the community. I won't forget my landlord who made sure my water container was filled if at some point they pumped water while I was at work, he made sure to fill it to the brim. He looked out for me like a father would his child. There is something called integration and it's worked for me in this my life, i get to a place and I embrace the people and their culture as much i can. I speak a bit of Yoruba, I have a Yoruba name, I eat their food, I wear their clothing when I have to and i simply mingle with the people, there isn't anyone who wouldn't like that you try to get through to them. At Rockcity FM, I changed the programming when I assumed the position, I created some programmes to be presented in the local language, I started the Paper review in Yoruba and some mornings we had the show presented in the local language...and it made sense 😀 and people bought into these programmes. Dr. Niran Malaolu my then boss used to call me Madam Owonikoko because I was focused on Money for the station and for me because if things worked well at the station, i get paid. There were young vibrant people there at the station and some got the oppprtunity they've always dreamed of and we created programmes also in the local language. I have worked with many yorubas in the past who respect me because of my experience, achievement, work ethic and my ability to fit into any work environment and I respect them also for being there and helping me to get work done. I also expect that many Yorubas that have found themselves outside their home, have found ways to live amongst their hosts because that's very key.
Àlúbàríkà 🇳🇬 tweet media
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