If DSP Alamiyeseigha, the embattled Governor of Bayelsa state knows what is good for him, he should call his lawyers and advisers and draft a sober, apologetic letter of resignation, and give up the fight. He has lost whatever moral ground he may have occupied before now, the conspiracy theory that was contrived around his travails has been watered down. " /> Alami should go: It's over - Nigerian Village Square

25

Nov

2005

Alami should go: It's over PDF Print E-mail
By Reuben Abati
25 November 2005

If DSP Alamiyeseigha, the embattled Governor of Bayelsa state knows what is good for him, he should call his lawyers and advisers and draft a sober, apologetic letter of resignation, and give up the fight. He has lost whatever moral ground he may have occupied before now, the conspiracy theory that was contrived around his travails has been watered down. If he receives any support from any quarters at this moment, such support ought to be taken with a pinch of salt: all because Alami himself has chosen to ruin his chances, destroy his own moral base if he ever had any, by conducting himself in a manner that is unbecoming of a leader and a gentleman. By running away from England under the cover of the night, away from the British judiciary which was probing him on charges of money laundering, by taking evasive action from the law and communicating with his feet, Alamiyeseigha, a man who until now was known and addressed as His Excellency, has shown himself to be a dishonourable fellow, unfit to rule, unfit to sit among men and women of honour and integrity, unfit to preach to the people that he leads about ideals and values...

The drama that he has organised around his return as a fugitive from England is so comical that it merely shows him in worse light. He has managed to entertain Nigerians with the mystery of his escape from London, his smart salute before a guard of (dis)honour and the histrionics that he has put up in the last few days, but all he has done in reality is to raise questions and concerns about the quality of leadership in Nigeria, about the Ijaw nation and the values of its people, and the future of Bayelsa state. I am told that he acted out of desperation: what desperation could that possibly be? Is it desperation borne out of guilt? Or desperation borne out of simple criminality? Alami has told his audience that nobody should pity him, because he is merely paying the price for leadership.

What leadership? He did not explain. Faced with a charge of money laundering in British courts, Alamiyeseigha, and his sponsored agents had argued ad nauseam that he Alamiyeseigha being an important man in Nigeria, leader of a "sovereign state within a federal system" was entitled to immunity within the purview of Section 308 of the Nigerian Constitution, which in their reckoning, is transportable across boundaries, and that by arresting Alami for being in possession of an odious amount of foreign currency, the British was just acting illegally and as a neo-colonial entity. This was a futile argument as the British courts determined that Alami had a case to answer. He was remanded in prison, and later granted bail with conditions, while his case continued to be heard in court. This is the same process which Alamiyeseigha truncated by running away from England. He was required not to travel near any English port. But he did. He jumped bail and escaped. It has been said that he left England as a drag queen, dressed as a pregnant woman using forged documents. He insists that his escape is "an act of God".

All told, by conducting himself after the fashion of a common felon, Alamiyeseigha has brought the people of Bayelsa state and all Ijaws to great ridicule. If he was so supremely sure of his innocence in the matter, he should have stayed back in London to prove his innocence. If he had won victory through due process, he would have been a great hero and his points about conspiracy and the President of Nigeria not liking his face would have deserved more than a closer attention. But to jump bail, subvert the judicial process, only to show up in Yenagoa like a thief in the night, and then turn himself into a major means of measuring the moral fibre of the Nigerian society, Alami suffers a defeat in what he may think is a victory over the British and Aso Villa. When he showed up in Yenagoa, he was celebrated by a group of uninformed youths who insisted on identifying him as a hero. But what we are dealing with is what J P Clark another Ijaw man, has described as "the hero as a villain". This particular hero, anti-hero in fact, has a character flaw which in spite of him confirms his guilt, and the emptiness of his strivings. Leaders are supposed to be men of honour who are socially aware and imbued with a strong sense of ideals and values. In Nigeria, there is so much dissonance in leadership. Alamiyeseigha has proven to be a master of dissonance. He has brought great embarrassment to the Ijaw people, who in their reaction to his travails have shown an ambiguity that is most unimpressive. Nigeria's stature has also been further diminished.

It does not matter what Alamiyeseigha says, he cannot remain as Governor of Bayelsa state while he remains a prisoner of his own guilt, not knowing whether he would be abducted by the British or not. He cannot attend meetings of the Council of State, as a fugitive who is on the wanted list in Britain. He cannot remain as Governor when his tomorrow is in so much doubt. He has sounded so far as a man who is ready to drag down the whole of Bayelsa state with him if he must. Since his mysterious return, he has been exploiting the emotions of all Ijaws and using blackmail as a shield; his agents have been trying to prove his innocence. The pity is that Alami has not been charged to any court in Nigeria. Here, if he so wishes he can steal all the money in the Bayesla treasury. If the people of Bayelsa are okay with that, so be it. But Alami has a case to answer in Britain. He is being accused of violating the laws of England. If he has anything to say, let him go and do so in the courts of England not on the streets of Yenagoa.

As for those persons who have been packaging Alami as a victim and who have been mouthing the asinine line: "If Ijaw man thief Ijaw money, wetin concern Tony Blair inside", may the good Lord forgive them for they do not know what they are saying. All Ijaw must feel embarrassed for this is a difficult moment for them as a nation. They are being blackmailed emotionally to defend not a principled fighter, not a spirit of Ijawland, but an Ijaw leader who danced naked in a foreign land. The questions that would be asked are: what do Ijaws stand for? Where is the ancient and modern glory of the Ijaw nation? These are difficult questions. Alami must save his own people the embarrassment by stepping aside. Let him return to England and act like a honourable man. He has ridiculed the lawyers that he employed to argue his case, and not surprisingly, his lead counsel is so embarrassed, he has refused to comment on this resort to self-help. He has also jeopardised the integrity of his sureties: they will lose money and face if they cannot produce the accused person in their care.

But where were the British? Alamiyeseigha's escape is a bad comment on British security. Alami has demystified the British and across Nigeria, questions are already being raised about the integrity of the British security network. Did the British collect bribe like Nigerian policemen? Did they work out a deal with Alami to embarrass the Nigerian government? If there is such a deal, what are the details? What is certain is that more Nigerians have lost respect for Britain in the last few days. How could the British who prevented the "exportation" of Umaru Dikko from Britain now allow Alami to escape? Is this the cynicism of the British at work or the opportunism of free enterprise capitalism? Whatever it is, the British have been relieved of the political burden of prosecuting a leader of Nigeria's oil rich Niger Delta in their courts. The Federal Government nearly ruined the case by showing an over-anxious interest in the trial: now Obasanjo has to clean up the shit in his backyard and deal with the Alami mess.

One of the points made by the embattled Governor on his return is that he has proven the "Nigerianness" in him. This may have been a slip of the tongue, but it is the truth. For indeed, there is an Alami in every Nigerian leader. We are a country of desperadoes to such an extent that when we criticise Alami and sound holier than thou particularly the sanctimonious crowd in the PDP and Aso Villa, what we are actually criticising is an aspect of our lives which has now been exposed due to a twist of fate in a foreign land. What has Alami done? One, he showed up in England with sums of money whose source he could not explain when he was asked to do so. How many big men in Nigeria can confidently explain the source of their wealth? You could be as poor as a church rat in January and become a multibillionaire in March, nobody will ask any questions. Because Nigerians love miracles, they will attribute the sudden change of fortune to a miracle made possible by a certain pastor's intervention.

Two, Alami told the British that he is entitled to immunity. This is typical Nigerian-speak. In our country, every big man is free to do as he wishes. He is above the laws of the land and there have been celebrated cases of persons conducting themselves as if they were the law itself. Three, when Alami became convinced that the judgment of the British court may not favour him, he fled. This is also quite Nigerian. It is the standard practice around here that public persons do not respect the courts of the land. Not even the ruling Peoples Democratic Party or the President. We live in a country where individuals can overrule a court of law, as the PDP Chairman, Ahmadu Ali once did in the Anambra/Ngige case and as President Obasanjo, the Ebora of Aso Villa, has always done. Alamiyeseigha simply transported these "Nigerian" attributes to England, and placed them on display.

It is perhaps why he is being lionized in Bayelsa as the "conqueror of the British Empire". The Nigerians who have also been defending him and placing the blame at the doorsteps of President Obasanjo are also being Nigerian. They have asked: why is Alami being persecuted when other Governors commit the same offence and they pass through London all the time? In other words, Nigerians are no longer shocked by any kind of malfeasance. If someone commits a crime, we are not moved by the nature of his crime, instead we rationalise it: he should be declared innocent because he is not the only person who commits that kind of offence, he has been caught only because he is unlucky or he is being persecuted. And thus, what we are faced with is a country without moral boundaries. But thank God for a few voices of reason who in the face of blackmail, intimidation and violence still insist on the truth. The members of the Bayelsa House of Assembly are not saints themselves; it is true that they are being pushed by Abuja, but if they succeed in removing Alamiyeseigha, they would have done Nigeria a favour: they would save us from the British who may be playing games out of self-interest.

For His Excellency, the Executive Fugitive of Bayelsa state, it is over. Resign now, get on a boat across the border, and run...



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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 25.11.2005 00:14

If DSP Alamiyeseigha, the embattled Governor of Bayelsa state knows what is good for him, he should call his lawyers and advisers and draft a sober, apologetic letter of resignation, and give up the fight. He has lost whatever moral ground he may have occupied before now, the cons...Read the full article.

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ImpostorImpostor is online

 # 2 | 25.11.2005 00:33

Which is a more National Disgrace: That the Nigerian President was given a list by the United States of corrupt Nigerian Governors, and the amount of the stollen Nigerian monies and other Nigerian Assets, but President Olusegun Obasanjo tucked the list of names into his hip pocket and ignored all the public clamour to reveal all the names.

That Obasanjo's wife, his inlaws, and other members of his family were in the fore front of the Ikoyi Housing scandals where Obasanjo publicly admitted all that, but shut up any further questions, or the EFCC probe.

That Nigeria has no Oil Minister under Obasanjo.

That the Nigerian Foreign Minister, or minister for foreign affairs sits idle at home while Obasanji is junketting round the globe and has no time to run Nigerian domestic jobs.

That Obasanjo set up a National Conference, the CONFAB, and languished billions of Naira just to use the occasion to announce his intentions to stay in office for a third term.

That Olusegun Obasanjo did not criticize or condemn the corrupt way and means that brought back Adolphus Wabara to Abuja as Senator of Abia State; and he, Obasanjo in fact backed Adolphus to become Senate President.

That in the on-going war against corruption which Obasanjo is leading, that he, Obasanjo, up till date has not sent a bill to the National Assembly to ammend the constitution regarding the immunity granted him and his other executives from prosecution for at least, 'criminal offences'.

That in the face of mounting criticisms of Ibrahim B. Babangida by most Nigerians about Babangida's illegally acquired wealth, even worse than Abacha's, that President Obasanjo refused to set up investigations into such allegations, and never asked even the National assembly to do so.


All ye cowardly Nigerians and whimps who all of a sudden are so worried about your National immage being damaged by Alamieyesiagha's sudden bail jump, where were your images during all this times, when Gov. Dariye jumped bail from the same England and landed in Nigeria and resumed his duties as Governor. Who set the precedence?

All ye political one issue dramatizers, where were you when the Northern generals and past Nigerian leaders laundered all those funds that even the corrupt English people voluntarily requested Obasanjo to come get. In fact those of you that could read, all saw that long list of Nigerian men in Uniforms and their billions in pounds. Did you not?
You all still carry the green passports and walked about your businesses until now, all of a sudden, a South South also corrupt governor under Obasanjo's witch hunt becomes the biggest fish. How stupid are all of you, including me also, that we fall for this joke, and publicity ploy!!

Well ladies and men of Nigeria, it is time you all began to show that you are not in the same leach of corruption by sideling real corrupt cases in chase of easy and cheap means for a way out.

There's not one blood among Nigerian residents that's not so corrupt. If you haven't stolen money, you have given out a bribe of some sort. True or false? So it makes a corrupt culture that difficult to see corruption unless it becomes that of a governor jumping bail.

On this board, I was one eloquent critique of the case of DSP, governor of Bayelsa State. He is a thief, and lowly Nigerian. But I have changed my conviction that his trial in England would be worthwhile. NO, it is not. England is not the Nigerian policing. Yes, it was so great that they helped expose him, but who the hail are English people to try a Nigerin, Chief Executive of a State? Be he in high crime or not.
Your fear was that if he returned to Nigeria he would be exonerated by our Nigerian constitution. Yes, fear, but who wrote this constitution? Is it not Nigerians that wrote this constitution? And for justice sake, which country in the world that has a working democracy can jail Alamieyesiagha?
Presidence. Was Dariye jailed? Impeached? What is Dariye doing now? Were Nigerians not gullibly cowed by Obasanjo's inaction? What could Obasanjo really do? Nothing, I agree.

Those of you who fail to understand the mindset of Bayelsans and why they should take to the streets jubilating his arrival are rock heads.

The Yorubas and Hausa/Fulanis have stollen Nigeria to dirts. It's one Bayelsan thief among all you thieves, so it's time to position Timi Alaibe for the Next Governor. Cool. Hope you know who this Timi is. Timi as Director of Finance and Administration NDDC and the retired Onyema Ugochukwu are two of the biggest robbers Nigeria ever had.

I don't have to advocate the a support for the Bayelsa Gov's freedom because he is already free. Granted free by the laws of Nigeria for which all of us have tacit consent. Anything to the contrary is open dictatorship.
So, Mr.Alternative View, take all the laundry list of your idealistic conjections to your church and pray that God help open your eyes, because there were too many things greater than Diepreye Alamieyesiagha you aught to have been more ashamed of.
Sometimes, if not all times, readers on this forum should watch out for these one dimentional intellectuals and one issue dramatizers. Could be a propaganda scheme, choreographed and paid for by corrupt social engineers.

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MangoMango is online

 # 3 | 25.11.2005 03:19

Rueben's article is well written. Impostor's post is full of truths, facts. However his logic is deeply flawed.

If a million people are milking you dry, and you are able to catch and punish one of them, that is a step in the right direction. That is a good thing. We cannot try ALL corrupt people at the same time. If OBJ starts to prosecute ALL corrupt politicians at the same time, it will tear Nigeria to shreds as 99% of Nigerian politicians are corrupt. This is the only way it can be done.

Tafa Balogun has returned most of the money he stole, is now a convicted thief, and will spend 6 months in jail. 6 months is little, but it is a step in the right direction. If Alami goes the same way, he becomes another example to our corruption politicians. They will be more wary of corruption. Also, who knows who the next one will be? Atiku?

Really, I don't care whether this is a witch-hunt or not. I don't care whether the politicians being targeted are all Ibos, or Yorubas, etc. The common denominator is that they are corrupt. If one of them goes down, I'm happy. OBJ may have targeted Alami, but did OBJ put £1m in cash in Alami's home in London?

So OBJ is corrupt? As concerns the fight against corruption, I don't care! As long as he is bringing down other corrupt politicians. If he is corrupt, his time will come. Do you think Jesus Christ will come from heaven to wipe out all corrupt politicians and cure them of their wickedness? No. It is the same corrupt politicians that will wipe themselves out! That is the legacy of democracy. In the fight for power, they will cancel themselves out and we will all be better for it.

Some day, somebody might come to power with the guts to tackle people IBB. Right now OBJ is not powerful enough to do that. Let him take out those that he can. Hopefully someone else will carry on the fight.

Let's be grateful for small mercies.

Thanks,
Mango

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Abdulmumin Yinka AjiaAbdulmumin Yinka Ajia is online

 # 4 | 25.11.2005 04:02

Dr. Abati, thank you for this piece, its refreshing to know that there is still a sense of reasoning left in fellow Nigerians, as for the last commentator, he/she is a sad commentary on where we are as a people, a people decimated by poverty and warped state of mind. Regardless of whatever ill facing the Nigerian people, there is no excuse for the Alaimeyesigha debacle.

But above all, the problem with our country is the lack of rule of law, I have maintained elsewhere on this forum that, "THE LAWS OF A NATION SHOULD REFLECT THEIR MORAL BELIEFS AND PRINCIPLES IN ORDER FOR IT TO BECOME SACROSANCT". what we have in Nigeria today is a halfhearted reform agenda that has been personalized in a few individuals, the El Rufais, Ezekwesilis et al, but as unfortunate as this may sound, this reform agenda will not succeed unless all Nigerians are made to be stakeholders in the Nigerian project! If the supposed intellectuals of the reform agenda are sincere, they ought to have sat President Obasanjo down and have a road map for him, about the goals of the reform agenda and a clear path towards success. They didnt do this, some of them like El Rufai are wallowing in their own self importance, taking over statutory local council responsibilities, burning local trader's imported textiles and parading themselves as the new annointed ones. Whatever gain El rufai may have achieved in FCT through some of this reckless behavior will not endure for long because it is not based on sound moral laws.

They have frequently quoted Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore but unfortunately they have chosed to ignore his teachings.

What would I do differently? The first thing that ought to happen in Nigeria is going back to the basics, the constitution needs to be rewritten by elected representatives of the people, remember the 1999 constitution was handed over by the military regime. After the constitution, a responsible president would ask the judicial commission to conduct a thorough audit of Nigerian judges in order for the judiciary to purge itself of any undesirables(those that will interprete our laws have to be men and women of unquestionable moral integrity), after this, a responsible leader ought also to present a social security bill aimed towards fighting poverty, the protection of the infant, the weak and the elderly.

A leader would also fight for all citizens and seek to put an end to the indigene/settler dichotomy in Nigerian politics, this is an abberation in a country that is supposed to be a federal republic, there ought to be clear ways of establishing residency in a given state and such that a citizen of Nigeria cannot be denied this basic right regardless of how the supposed indigenes feel.

The security of lives and properties should be paramount, in this regard, security ought to be devolved between all tiers of government, the present structure is a Unitary in a supposedly federal republic.

There is so much that is wrong with Nigeria as it stands today, in order to fix it, we have to do it the right way. There is no two ways about it. Nigeria will only become a civilization, when its leaders are comfortable that they have indeed passed down a structured society to the next generation, one in which they know that in whatever way the political wind might blow, their interests and over all Nigerian interest would be protected. This is certainly the legacy of Lee Kuan Yew, a society where public business is conducted in the public domain and built on the back of its people, certainly El Rufai and his Aso Rock boss do not have such clear vision otherwise they would have been fighting tooth and nail to enshire the enthronement of rule of law in Nigeria.

May the good lord bless Nigeria with real leaders, the ones with compassion and a sense of deep conviction.

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UnregisteredUnregistered is online

 # 5 | 25.11.2005 10:26

Reuben Abati's article is full of "Britain this, "England that". The man is a regular colomental. Why should we expect any country to fight corruption for us? What if Alaimeyesigha were eventually to be acquitted by the British court? Would that make him any less corrupt? Would Nigeria be gutsy enough to arrest an american governor and ask him not to leave Nigeria if he was granted bail? na inferiority dey worry all of us.

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GodwillGodwill is online

 # 6 | 25.11.2005 10:43

Reuben, Mango and Abdulmumin thanks for your well written pieces. I must also thank Impostor for writing despite his depravity. Impostor's malaise is borne out of the Nigerian syndrome. Many Nigerians especially those of us that have migrated cannot rationalize Nigeria ever turning around for good. Sad as it may, it is the truth and the reason for Impostor's poor expression of his frustrations.

Again, Reuben, Mango and Abdul highlighted numerous problems confirming the fact that the Nigerian problem is multisectoral. Corruption has pervaded all spheres and aspects of our society. What baffled me the most regarding the Alice Alami's investigation is our corrupted banking sector. We do not have banks in Nigeria. What we have are money-laundering and 419-clearing agents. There is a need for true reforms in this sector. Working in the bank (especially treasury or Forex) is one of the three easiest means of becoming rich in Nigeria. Also in the group is owning a church and being a government officer. They are easier ways to get rich than armed robbery.

In the US where I reside, a person may not deposit more than $3,000.00 cash in an account at one time or more than $10,000.00 in total instruments at one time without incurring a call from the IRS. And I must tell you that a call from the IRS is the most undesirable thing. You can't win against them. But I also know that there is a Federal Inland Revenue Service in Nigeria. So what do they do? I'll stop right there.

We ought to be able to ask people where they get their sudden wealth. Things must change in Nigeria. If the British hadn't asked Alice same questions we would never have know that he was, is, and will remain a thief. We would not have known his thieving mechanism. This is an expose. I commend the actors.

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EezeeBeeEezeeBee is offline

 # 7 | 25.11.2005 10:53

By what means does Reuben Abati determine that Mr. Alamaiseigha has embarassed ALL Ijaws? The man has embarassed HIMSELF.

HE is the accused thief
HE is the felon on the run from the law
HE is the bail jumper
HE is the one accused by the EFCC of a myriad of financial improprieties.

HE is not ME. I am not HIM.

Saying Alami has embarassed ALL Ijaws is like saying Tafa Balogun has embarassed all Yorubas. It is wrong, short-sighted and unseemly coming from a journalist of Reuben Abati's supposed stature.

As I've said before, anyone who begins a statement with 'ALL blah blah blah...' has put his/her deficiencies of reasoning on the front burner and in the display wondow. Indeed, it would be as STUPID and as WRONG as saying 'All Yorubas are known for is....'. I don't care what you could fill in the blanks with. It would be WRONG!

YES Alami should go. Going is itself insufficient. If I had my way he should be jailed for life!

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MMIRIKWE.MMIRIKWE. is online

 # 8 | 25.11.2005 11:19

I agree that the governor, Should be jailed, Both in england and back home, But he is not going to suffer this alone, He must as matter of fact be jailed with those sitting on the money that flows from God,s given wealth from thier land, The Nigerian government must also stand prosecution for this man,s inhumanity aganst this oil rich land.

Mmirikwe Germany

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ShefferSheffer is offline

 # 9 | 25.11.2005 11:41

A respondent wrote:
"We ought to be able to ask people where they get their sudden wealth. Things must change in Nigeria. If the British hadn't asked Alice same questions we would never have know that he was, is, and will remain a thief. We would not have known his thieving mechanism. This is an expose. I commend the actors."

There is no active arrangement or regulation in place in Nigeria which demands the monthly publishing of the expenses accounts/sheets of any of the tiers of government - in order that discerning minds may verify things. Nobody regularly accounts to anybody. The fight against corruption can start from a legally enshrined monthly, quarterly and yearly accounting - and the accounts must be balanced. The problem we've got today is that no one knows what happens to funds received by state governments. And any department of government (including the dark horse executive) that makes such a call would itself be required to show its accounts. A case of the less said about corruption, the better for the corrupt.

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I Love NigeriaI Love Nigeria is offline

 # 10 | 25.11.2005 12:12

Alamieyesiegha,

Has disgraced himself as felon, criminal and looter

And this is not a reflection of the honesty, integrity and surdinesss of character of he average Ijaw/Izon person....it not in any way a reflection of my character as a Nigerianor for that matter any other Nigerian!

EXCEPT OF COURSE those morons who are singing his praises and hailing him as if he has not deprived Nigeria of development money .... as he has siphoned resources for his personal use.... and that is the only issue in all of these.

IMPOSTOR and some others, commenting here merely repeat scurrilous epithets and invectives against President Obasanjo, all based on beer parlor rumors, pepper soup joint allegations that are not verifiable and all other sundy cliches that we have all heread before and we know them for what they really are .... RECYCLED GARBAGE!!

We ought support , encourage and participate in the reforms in Nigeria!

Leave President Obasanjo alone! His reforms will change Nigeria to what we all want! just
watch....

Majority of Ijaws have nothing to do with Alamie's criminalities, his idiocy and Profligacy...

Nigerians should debate public issues and assiduously avoid the introduction of ethnic elements.... particularly, when it is the personal criminality of one person is at issue...

Why should Ijaw have to answer for Alamie?
Why should Hausas have to answer for ABacha?
Why should the Yorubas have to answer for armed robber Oyenusi or Tafa Balogun?
 

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