What Obasanjo told Nigerians in Diaspora

Olusegun Obasanjo

Chief Obasanjo at an event in New Jersey

By Isa Isawade

Former Nigerian President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, has told Nigerians in the Diaspora to replicate the togetherness they show outside when they return home to the country.

Obasanjo made this disclosure on behalf of a delegation of eminent traditional leaders and academics that included the Olowu of Owu Kingdom, His Royal Majesty Oba (Prof.) Saka Adelola Matemilola, at an Evening Reception, held at New Brunswick, New Jersey, United States of America (USA), at the weekend.

In a statement by his Special Assistant on Media, Kehinde Akinyemi, Obasanjo told the gathering that Nigerians in the Diaspora were making the country proud in their different areas of endeavour and urged them to be good citizens wherever they are domiciled.

He was said to have emphasised that, “Nigerian nationals are often very united when they are abroad but something else when they return to the country.

“Therefore, I want to urge all to be good citizens, not only where you are, but when also you come home to Nigeria.”

The audience’s chants of “Obj, Obj, Obj ” punctuated his speech.

The man popularly regarded as the ‘Ebora of Owu’ however thanked the Rutgers University management for the warm reception accorded the delegation and for the far-reaching engagements.

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The event was put together by the Center for African Studies, Rutgers University, New Jersey, headed by Professor Bode Ibironke.

It was attended by the leadership of the University; the Representative of Nigeria at the United Nations (UN), Ambassador (Prof.) Tijanni Muhammed-Bande; top academics from other institutions, including Prof. Akil Khalfani, Director of the Africana Institute of Essex County College, Newark, New Jersey and Prof. Yetunde Odugbesan-Omede.

According to the release, the delegation held meetings and engagements in Maryland, New Jersey and Pennsylvania with the aim of signing Memoranda of Understanding (MOU) and forging partnerships and Alliances between Universities in the United States of America (USA) and some of their counterparts in Nigeria.

Dr Adeniyi Ogunkoya, a New Jersey-based Physician and head of a healthcare consortium with plans to establish a mega medical facility in Nigeria made a presentation of what the state-of-the-art facility would look like, a former Secretary to the Government of Anambra State under Mr Peter Obi’s government, Dr Oseloka Obaze, Council Woman Zulfat Suara from Nashville, Tennesse who presented Council Proclamations to Chief Obasanjo and Oba (Prof.) Saka Adelola Matemilola.

Also present were Prof. Afe Adogame of Princeton University; Dr Josephine Aguoji, Vice President, Nigerians in Diaspora Organisation (NIDO); Commander Victor Agunbiade of the United States Navy; Mrs Moni Adesina, Treasurer, NIDO; Jide Akinosho, Finance Director, Global IT & Shared Services (Johnson & Johnson Services, Inc., among other arrays of dignitaries.

Among organisations that were involved in putting the program together are different Yoruba groups, especially the Yoruba Action Council (YAC), led by Dr Akin Awofolaju and Prof. Albert Ayeni; the NIDO, New Jersey chapter, led by Dr Adeola Popoola and the Association of Nigerian Physicians in the Americas (ANPA).

The institutions that participated in the program on the US side were the University of Maryland, IES Abroad, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Princeton University, and PennState University, while some of the Institutions on the Nigerian side include the Gateway Polytechnic, Saapade, Crescent University, Abeokuta, Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta, Olabisi Onabanjo University, and the Bells University of Technology, Ota, Nigeria.

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