Why we are honouring Nigerians at Leading From The Streets… Launch, by Onyibe

Magnus Onyibe

Magnus Onyibe, a former commissioner in the Delta State government (2003-2007) media columnist and democracy advocate, will release his new book, titled: “Leading From The Streets. Media Interventions By A Public intellectual (1999-2019)” on Wednesday, May 8 at the Alliance Française de Lagos / Mike Adenuga Centre.

The book is a compilation of articles written and published in the mass media by the author between 1999 and 2019, spanning the entire range of Nigeria’s socio-economic and political life.

Also, the trio of Gen. Yakubu Gowon, former Nigerian head of state; Nobel laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka; and Mr. Lekan Alabi, who wrote an open letter to Gen. Gowon requesting Prof. Soyinka’s release from incarceration during the Nigerian civil war , may meet on stage together for the first time.

According to him, “among those to be conferred with the ‘Leading From The Streets’ awards are Prof. Wole Soyinka, Barrister Allen Onyema of Airpeace, Alh. Aliko Dangote of Dangote Industries, Dr. Olisa Agbokoba, Col. Abubakar Dangiwa Umar (rtd), and Chief Mike Adenuga of Globacom.

Prof. Soyinka, who will be turning 90 years old on July 13, was committed to jail in 1967 by the Federal Government of Nigeria for 22 months because he wrote and published an article in the mass media trying to dissuade the federal government from going to war against Biafra.

“Instead of heeding his wise counsel of urging both sides to come to a negotiated settlement he was incarcerated for allegedly being an accomplice of the separatist Biafran side,” he said. “When the guns from both the Federal and Biafran armies stopped booming, an estimated one million Nigerian souls had been lost with properties and infrastructure worth multiple billions of naira destroyed, mostly in the eastern part of our country. That is a catastrophe from which our country is yet to recover to from, till date. Perhaps owing to his patriotic effort to stop an avoidable war and his intellectual excellence, Professor Soyinka was awarded the Nobel laurel in literature in 1986.”

He said, “Onyema, with his airline Airpeace, has been rescuing Nigerians stranded in foreign countries during periods of conflicts, free of charge. This ranges from Airpeace flying to South Africa during xenophobic attacks against Nigerians to going to Libya, Sudan, and Ukraine to bring Nigerians home when they were stranded during wars in those countries. To cap it all, Onyema/Airpeace has dramatically crashed the cost of flight tickets from about N4m to N1.2m for the lucrative Lagos to London route that had been monopolised by United Kingdom based airlines.”


Onyibe said: “Africa’s richest man, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, has demonstrated passion for Nigeria and Nigerians by investing a whopping $20 billion dollars into building the recently commissioned 650,000 barrels a day Dangote Refinery. The mega refinery is aimed at stemming the hemorrhaging of scarce foreign exchange to Europe for the purchase of refined petroleum products, of which African countries have not been able to produce and had instead been importing.

With the coming on stream of the refinery, the price of diesel has been crashed from about N1,700 per liter to below N1,000 per liter. As we all know, diesel, otherwise known as Automotive Gas Oil (AGO), is critical to the production of goods and services as well as influence the price of transport and logistics. It is the spike in the cost of living owing to the withdrawal of subsidies on petrol and naira that brought about current hardships on Nigerians, especially the vulnerable ones among us.”

For him, “with the recent crashing of the price of diesel by Dangote Refinery, which is a humanitarian gesture, there would significantly be a downward trend of the cost of living in due course. That is apart from the N15 billion that he recently expended in procuring palliatives like rice for distribution to the masses across the country to ameliorate the pervading effect of hunger.” He said Dangite did all of the above not as a public servant, but as an entrepreneur/philantropist. It is for that reason that Aliko Dangote/Dangote Refinery will be honoured with the award.

Onyibe equally noted that Dr. Olisa Agbakoba (SAN) was in the forefront of the struggle to entrench democratic leadership in the country after a long period of military rule. “Through his pro-democracy activism platform, the Civil Liberty Organisation (CLO), he and like-minded Nigerians teamed up to agitate for the exit of the military from political leadership back to their barracks until the military gave way to democratic leadership in 1999. He has remained committed to the pursuit of public good without occupying any public office.”

Col. Abubakar Dangiwa Umar, a retired army officer who had served as military governor of Kaduna state under the watch of Gen. Yakubu Gowon as military head of state, was a disciplinarian and a man that is full of integrity. While in the military, he was immensely popular and could have transitioned into politics like his former colleagues by contesting to become president or governor in our current democratic setting. But he chose to continue to lead outside the corridors of power.


“During the immediate past administration of President Muhammadu Buhari, he wrote an open letter to the president protesting the delay in confirming Justice Monica Dongben-Mensem as President of the Court of Appeal due to some archaic and primordial sentiments. After due consideration of his articulated points, her appointment was confirmed as Appeal Court president by then president Buhari without further delay. For that remarkable accomplishment and related public good that he has spearheaded without being in the corridors of power, Col. Abubakar Dangiwa Umar (rtd) is adjudged as one of the notable Nigerians committed to Leading From The Streets.”

Adenuga, who turned 71 on April 29, is the sixth recipient of the Leading From The Streets award for his dogged determination to positively change the course of history for Nigerians by democratising access to telecommunications services.

Apart from his outstanding role in philanthropy, it is his telecommunications firm, Globacom, that introduced per-second billing for GSM telephone service to Nigerians after the foreign service providers had been operating the per-minute billing system that compelled subscribers to pay for minutes of phone calls even if they only made a few seconds of call. When Globacom made its debut in the Nigerian market, it also crashed the price of SIM cards from N30,000 to N7,900 only, thus precipitating the putting of telephone service in the hands of basically every Nigerian irrespective of their status in society-high or low.

“For that remarkable gesture of positively touching the lives without being wielding political power , Chief Mike Adenuga with his Globacom has been Leading From The Streets, hence he is being conferred with the honour,’ Onyibe said.

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