23

May

2008

Who am I? PDF Print E-mail
By Chidi Anyaeche

Who Am I

I am Chidi Anyaeche, a native of Ukpor in Anambra state, Nigeria. I was born in January 2nd 1964 in Manchester, United Kingdom to late Engr (Chief) Jim C. O Anyaeche, CEng. KSJ, the Owelle of Ukpor and Dorothy Anyaeche. Dad was a University of Salford, Manchester trained civil engineer and up until his death in January 2005 was one of the finest engineers Nigeria has ever produced. Mum is a retired UK trained nurse, specialised in ophthalmic nursing at Moorefields Eye Hospital, London, UK and was the pioneer chief nursing officer at Guinness Eye Hospital, Onitsha. I am the second of six children; five boys and a girl.

Though born in the UK, I grew up in what was then romantic Nigeria before it got desecrated by reprobates in power like Olusegun Obasanjo, Ibrahim Babangida, Sanni Abacha and the rest of them.

My early memory of Nigeria was attending nursery school at Holy Trinity Primary School, Onitsha just before the civil war. Holy Trinity then was a Catholic run school and the nursery and staffed by cosmopolitan staff; Igbo’s, Irish, Ibibio’s, etc. For a little boy just back from the UK, nursery school in 1960’s Nigeria was bliss with pupils as cosmopolitan as the staff. After the civil war every thing changed and for the worse and still deteriorating forty years after. I will leave this bit for another day.

After the war, in 1970 I was at the age of six initiated into the prestigious Ozo Society in my home town as Ezike Odenigbo – Custodian of Igbo values. So you can see my fight for better government in Nigeria in general and Igboland in particular is celestial. It is not a chance or opportunistic thing like we get people doing these days. I shall make no further comment on this.

Primary school education after the civil war took us to where dad was posted as a civil servant with then East Central State government. Firstly at Onitsha between 1970 and 1972 and finally at Enugu from 1972 onwards at then prestigious Ekulu Primary School. Sadly, Ekulu Primary School like most things Nigeria is no longer prestigious. It is rather pathetic as a school right now. Most Igbo’s of elite parentage like myself passed through Ekulu one way or the other. But in Igboland like the rest of Nigeria, the lunatics have taken over the asylum.

My secondary school education from 1974 to 1979 was at the College of Immaculate Conception (CIC) Enugu. A school set up by Irish Missionaries of Catholic background making CIC a very decent school with catholic ethos, making the school one of the finest in Nigeria. It is said that a fruit tells a tree. The fruits of CIC can be seen towering in all arena of life world-wide. Where there are ten successful Nigerians, at least one must be a CIC product and this is a fact. CIC has produced more governors than any school in Nigeria. The current incumbent in Enugu state is an Alma matter.

My first university education between 1980 to 1986 was at University of Benin, Benin City. Great Uniben as it was and still known. I graduated with honours in Biochemistry. Again Uniben is one of the elite universities in Nigeria with graduates strutting their stuff majestically, world-wide. Governor Fashola of Lagos state, to name a few, being one of us.

After the mandatory youth service, which I served with delight in Kaduna, I found myself back to United Kingdom where my career blossomed straight way. In 1988, I was employed as a scientific officer with the UK Blood Transfusion Service as part of the Department of Health, UK team that researched into the incidence of Hepatitis-C amongst blood donors. My next career call was as a research assistant working in the early diagnosis of ovarian cancer at The Royal London Hospital, London from there I moved on and up as a clinical biochemist with the Cancer Research UK Laboratories working on tumour markers. This was from 1989 to 1998.

In between my working life from 1988 to 1998, I equally had the time to squiz in post-graduate education and starting a family. From 1991 to 1993, I studied for a master’s program in clinical biochemistry at Charing Cross and Westminster Medical School now Imperial College Medical School, University of London, UK and from 1994 to 1996, another M.Sc. program in quality management from Cranfield University, Cranfield, UK. Imperial College and Cranfield being in a class of their own university speaking, worldwide.

Professionally, I am a member of the American Association for Clinical Chemistry inc. (AACC) and Association of Clinical Biochemists (ACB), UK.

All these exposures; academic and otherwise contributing in making Odenigbo a thorough-bred.

In 1994 I got married to my wife, Ebere (nee Okoro). Eby as she is fondly called by all who know her is originally from Arochukwu in Abia state, Nigeria. The marriage is blessed with three children – a boy, Jideofo and two girls, Adaobi and Ekenenna. Eby is a wife in a million for it is not easy being Odenigbo’s wife, a career woman and a mother of three children in the western world. The saying that besides every successful man is a woman is simply true as far as I am concerned. I also make haste to state that it is a blessing to marry an Aro woman.

I left the research world in 1998 to seek pastures anew in the commercial world, firstly as a product manager with the UK subsidiary of the French diagnostic company, CIS Diagnostics Ltd. CIS was then the healthcare arm of France Atomic Energy Authority – there is an overlap between nuclear fusion and in-vitro diagnostics in areas like radio-isotopes like Iodine125 and 131, etc.

From CIS, I strutted my stuff in other enterprises and very successfully too including being a consultant to a UK company with business interest in Nigeria where I was responsible for the Nigerian operation. This greatly exposed me to Nigeria, far from the ordinary.

Currently, I work as a Diagnostics Sales Manager with a top UK company as well as a consultant to another UK based diagnostic company covering Africa and the Middle East.

Besides family life and work, I equally play a role in the community. Here in the UK, I am the vice chairman of the Nnewi Catholic Diocese and in Nigeria in 2006, I was made a patron of the Catholic Women Organisation (CWO) Enugu Diocese reflecting my strong Christian and Catholic faith and upbringing.

The Lord Jesus in the scriptures mandated us to “Love one another as he has loved us”. This message though simple as it seems is one of the most difficult of human tasks to accomplish for the world and indeed Nigeria would have been a much better place if we show love to one another: No more racism, tribalism, corruption to name a few of the vices that infect us.

As Odenigbo – Custodian of Igbo values, my celestial mission and passion is to see my people love one another thereby eliminating the ills of our society so that we all can live a life, fulfilled. It is not too much to seek. I aim to achieve it.

Linked below are pictures of my loving family holidaying in Turkey in April this year.

___________________
From left is our last daughter, Ekenenna followed by my loving wife Eby, our first daughter Adaobi and our son Jidefofo.

From left: Ekenenna, Jideofo and Adaobi.
___________________

 

To God be the glory.

Odenigbo Chidi Anyaeche

London 

UK 

 

Your Comments

Please make The Square an enjoyable experience for everyone by refraining from gratuitous ad-hominem contributions, defamatory comments and off-topic posting. Such posts will be removed.

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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 23.05.2008 08:57

I am Chidi Anyaeche, a native of Ukpor in Anambra state, Nigeria. As Odenigbo – Custodian of Ig...Read the full article.

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aringaransoaringaranso is offline

 # 2 | 23.05.2008 09:31

Can't understand the essense of your article or should I say self-advertising piece????

seems you've got no mortars to launch at Gov.Obi this time.

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Dr DamagesDr Damages is offline

 # 3 | 23.05.2008 09:32

Aren't you forgetting something?

Like... I am Chidi Anyaeche and I approve this message.

Or

Please note: This is for entertainment only.

And the ultimate:

Please consult your doctor if your head continues to swell up after five days of reading this. And if you feel like bowing for me, it may be a sign of diarrhea. Make your way to the nearest humility test machine and hook yourself up. Watch the reading of your egometer, if it fluctuates from 90 to 102, it is a sign you do not know how much you need to know before you know how little you know. In any case, expect nausea and vomiting as part of the disgusting impact of not getting over yourself. In extreme situation, you might feel dizzy, as if the world is on your feet, when you start feeling that way go for confession. If you do not know what to tell the Rev. Father just say, “Father, despite my vast education in the finest colleges on this earth, I have no clue what the cardinal sins are. I suspect that I have broken them all. Please ask Mary to pray for me. Bad sons.

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nikenike is offline

 # 4 | 23.05.2008 09:57

and your point is :icon_ques:icon_ques:icon_ques:icon_ques:icon_ques

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Dr DamagesDr Damages is offline

 # 5 | 23.05.2008 10:05

Chidi,

Knowing the kind of noble-vanity man you are, I am sure your evening will entail gathering your wife and kids around the computer to read great things people are saying about you here.

You can be sure that before the day ends, someone will tell you exactly the thing you want to hear: After you, na Peter Obi.

I don’t blame you. They said, if you get it, flaunt it. It wasn’t just for girls only.

So, Eby, Jideofo, Adaobi and Ekenenna,

As you guys read this, please ask Daddy to answer the questions he was asked here weeks ago? Daddy kind of chickened out on us all. And we know he is no Sissy. Those fine institutions of higher learning that he went to do not produce Sissies.

Answering those questions will give Daddy a higher profile that he desperately seeks than putting on his Sunday dress to pose for all.

The link below will take Daddy to the questions.

http://www.nigeriavillagesquare.com/articles/rudolf-ogoo-okonkwo/ten-simple-questions-for-chidi-any-2.html

I bet you all will agree with me that they are simple questions. So get Daddy to answer them.

Thank you all.

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January80January80 is offline

 # 6 | 23.05.2008 10:06


=Dr Damages;4295045656>Aren't you forgetting something?

Like... I am Chidi Anyaeche and I approve this message.

Or

Please note: This is for entertainment only.

And the ultimate:

Please consult your doctor if your head continues to swelling up after five days of reading this. And if you feel like bowing for me, it may be a sign of diarrhea. Make your way to the nearest humility test machine and hook yourself up. Watch the reading of your egometer, if it fluctuates from 90 to 102, it is a sign you do not know how much you need to know before you know how little you know. In any case, expect nausea and vomiting as part of the disgusting impact of not getting over yourself. In extreme situation, you might feel dizzy, as if the world is on your feet, when you start feeling that way go for confession. If you do not know what to tell the Rev. Father just say, “Father, despite my vast education in the finest colleges on this earth, I have no clue what the cardinal sins are. I suspect that I have broken them all. Please ask Mary to pray for me. Bad sons.



ROTFLMAO!!!! Damages, I'm with you on this! Oh my God. I was confused when I started reading it and then at some point I was skipping lines and whole chunks of text just waiting for...the point! I mean, there had to have been something. But...alas, there was none. But who knows, maybe the author was testing the resilience of his new computer keyboard and needed to write something really long. Abi to what else can one attribute this kind of own-trumpet-blowing? lol. Very funny indeed.

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Chief KaluChief Kalu is offline

 # 7 | 23.05.2008 10:31

Life has really favoured you. But flaunting all these is not necessary. Ultimately nothing matters! I can only see the massaging of a depleted ego!
If I am one of your children, I will feel thoroughly embarrassed!

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mulanmulan is offline

 # 8 | 23.05.2008 10:37

Chidi,

Your introduction will be quite useful I am sure for those your critics who bond easily (Ekulu, CIC, Uniben, Aro in-law etc) or are easily cowed (born in the UK, Ozo at 6, solid career etc) but what was glaring for me was disappointment. To think you started as a researcher and yet you churn out poorly researched low quality articles, hmm...must be the business has clouded your faculties.

And I also think it is irresponsible of you with all your exposure, to put your minor children in the public sphere. Please remove those names and pictures and put your certificates if that makes you think we'll take you more seriously. The ego is a terrible thing to massage...

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aringaransoaringaranso is offline

 # 9 | 23.05.2008 11:00

Only if you know what you've done to yourself and family by this cheap popularity seeking piece.

I'm sure you didn't even get the consent of your wife and children before pasting their pictures here.Oh!,I forget,you are the breadwinner of the house.

You might be 44,but I don't see the maturity in you.

Your likes remind me of what my grandpa used to tell us that book no be sense.

If not that the Ozo system has been corrupted,who would have bestowed the title of "Odenigbo" on you.

As Mulan said,pls do yourself a favour by removing your innocent children's picture.

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calistcalist is offline

 # 10 | 23.05.2008 11:08

This resume does not qualify for the available vacancy

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