society
Adron Homes Sponsors Olojo Festival 2025, Celebrates Heritage and Tourism Development
Adron Homes Sponsors Olojo Festival 2025, Celebrates Heritage and Tourism Development
Adron Homes and Properties Limited, one of Nigeria’s leading real estate companies, has reaffirmed its commitment to cultural preservation and community development by officially supporting the 2025 Olojo Festival themed “Tourism for Inclusive Growth with Cultural Rebirth.”
In a press conference held recently at the Palace of His Imperial Majesty, Oba Eniitan Adeyeye Ogunwusi, CFR, Ojaja II, the Ooni of Ife, highlighted the festival’s enduring significance as a symbol of Yoruba heritage and a catalyst for economic and social development.
Representing the Chairman/CEO, Aare Adetola Emmanuelking, the Managing Director of Adron Group, Mrs. Adenike Ajobo, described the Olojo Festival as “more than a cultural gathering, a living heritage that connects the Yoruba civilization to the global stage, strengthening local economies, uniting people, and inspiring generational pride.”
She noted that Adron Group’s sponsorship aligns with its mission to build communities that honour tradition while creating sustainable opportunities.
“Tourism and housing share a common purpose which connects people, places, and possibilities. At Adron, we believe that true development must respect heritage while driving progress for future generations. Supporting Olojo Festival reflects our commitment to inclusive growth and cultural rebirth,” she stated.
The Olojo Festival, recognised as one of Africa’s foremost cultural events, continues to attract international attention while reinforcing Ile-Ife’s status as the cradle of Yoruba civilization. With the support of organisations like Adron Group, the festival is expected to further project Nigeria’s culture globally, boost tourism, and inspire unity across communities.
Adron Group extended prayers for the continued reign of His Imperial Majesty, Kabiyesi Ojaja II, and expressed optimism that the 2025 Olojo Festival would be peaceful, impactful, and a beacon of pride for Yorubaland, Osun State, and Nigeria at large.
society
AIICO Deepens Bonds with Retirees, Holds Annuity Forum in Lagos, Extends to Port Harcourt
AIICO Deepens Bonds with Retirees, Holds Annuity Forum in Lagos, Extends to Port Harcourt
AIICO Insurance Plc, Nigeria’s leading composite insurer, today hosted another successful edition of its Annuity Forum, a yearly engagement platform designed to strengthen ties with its annuity customers, listen to their feedback, and create opportunities for meaningful interaction.
This year marks a significant expansion of the Forum. For the first time since its inception, the event, traditionally held only in Lagos, is spreading its reach to other regions of the country. The Lagos edition sets the pace, with another scheduled to hold in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, targeting annuity customers in the South-South region.
The atmosphere at the Lagos event was lively and refreshing, with customers treated to a mix of business and leisure – including health checks, entertainment, quizzes, and refreshments, alongside constructive conversations on enhancing customer experience.
Speaking at the event, satisfied annuitants expressed their gratitude to AIICO for creating a platform that fosters connection and trust.
His Royal Majesty Oba Ogungbayi Akanni Wasiu, the Onitetiku & Oluowode of Ota, Ogun State, and a retired officer from the Ministry of Education, is one of AIICO’s delighted annuity customers who attended the event. Sharing his experience, he said: “I retired 15 years ago and started my annuity immediately after retirement. I have no regrets because AIICO has paid me every month without fail. I strongly recommend AIICO to anyone preparing for retirement because the company has been very consistent.
Mrs. Judith Chibuogwu, who retired as a Director of Nursing from Lagos University Teaching Hospital, began her annuity with AIICO earlier this year in March. Sharing her experience, she said: “It’s been wonderful. I took the advice to take on an annuity with AIICO, and it has been an amazing experience with the steady, constant payments. Today’s event has also been very enlightening, especially the conversations around retirement life, health, and wellbeing. In fact, I’ve already started talking to my former colleagues who are still in service about AIICO’s annuity.”
The MD/CEO of AIICO Insurance Plc, Mr. Babatunde Fajemirokun, while welcoming the annuitants, stated, “This annual gathering is not just a meeting – it is a celebration of your achievements, resilience, and the trust you have placed in us as your partner on life’s journey. You are not just clients – you are family. This forum is an opportunity to strengthen our bond, share updates on our industry, and reaffirm the promises we have made to you.”
He addressed head-on the negative claims circulating online about the alleged mismanagement of annuity funds, stating “AIICO Insurance ensures that your funds are kept with pension fund custodians – that means there’s no individual within the AIICO team that has access to your funds. This is the case with all insurance companies in the annuity business. – The funds are professionally managed in line with strict regulatory guidelines that have been provided”.
Mr. Gbenga Ilori, Executive Director, Retail Business Division, echoed the sentiment:
“Our business exists because of our customers, and we believe it is important to create avenues for physical interaction and engagement. These forums give us the opportunity to listen, respond to their questions, and hear their ideas on how we can serve them better. They have entrusted their pensions to us, and we consider it a sacred duty to always stay connected to them.
More and more people are placing their trust in AIICO for their annuity needs — today, we serve over 25,000 annuitants across the country, and the number keeps growing. This is why we are taking the forum beyond Lagos, with the South-South region as our next stop in a few weeks.”
With a large and growing number of annuitants nationwide and monthly disbursements of over N1.7 billion, AIICO Insurance has built a reputation as a leading player in Nigeria’s annuity market. The company continues to back this leadership position with unmatched customer service, strong financial performance, and innovative engagement platforms like the Annuity Forum.
The journey continues in Port Harcourt, where AIICO will bring the Annuity Forum experience to annuitants in the South-South. This marks the beginning of a broader mission to take the Forum across Nigeria’s geopolitical zones over time, ensuring that retirees everywhere can share in the warmth, interaction, and assurance that define our commitment. For AIICO, every retiree deserves not just timely income, but also a community that celebrates and supports them throughout their retirement journey.
About AIICO Insurance Plc
AIICO Insurance is a leading composite insurer in Nigeria, with a 60-year record of accomplishment in delivering quality service to its clients. Founded in 1963, AIICO provides life and general insurance, health insurance, and investment management services to create and protect wealth for individuals, families, and corporate customers.
society
Festac Residents Protest Over Deplorable Roads, Demand Urgent Government Action
Festac Residents Protest Over Deplorable Roads, Demand Urgent Government Action
By Ifeoma Ikem
Residents of Festac Town in Amuwo-Odofin, Lagos, have once again raised their voices against worsening road conditions that continue to disrupt daily life and cripple businesses in the community.
On Sunday, hundreds of aggrieved residents staged a peaceful protest across major streets of the estate, demanding swift government intervention to fix the decaying infrastructure.
What was once a well-planned estate has become an obstacle course riddled with potholes. Motorists now navigate dangerous stretches that damage vehicles and delay movement.
“Every week, I spend money fixing my car’s suspension,” lamented a taxi driver who joined the demonstration. For mechanics, the bad roads have meant booming business — but for ordinary residents, it has become a drain on already strained finances.
The protest drew a diverse crowd: traders, parents, health workers, business owners, and community leaders. Many carried placards with bold inscriptions such as “Fix Our Roads Now” and “We Deserve Better.”
“We cannot continue to suffer like this,” said Mrs. Agnes Uche, a mother of three who walked with her children. “School runs, hospital visits, even simple errands are a nightmare because of these roads.”
Community leaders also warned of deeper consequences if the government fails to act. Flooding and further infrastructural collapse loom large, with broken drainages already turning into breeding grounds for mosquitoes and sparking fears of malaria outbreaks.
Dr. Kola Ajayi, one of the organizers, stressed that the protest was not political but a matter of survival. “We are not asking for luxury,” he said. “We just want roads we can drive and walk on safely.”
The economic impact is equally severe. Delivery vans avoid certain areas, businesses lose customers, and transportation costs continue to rise. “It is strangling commerce,” a shop owner observed.
This is not the first time Festac residents have cried out. Over the years, several appeals and petitions have been met with promises but little visible action. Sunday’s demonstration, residents insist, is a renewed call for accountability.
Local youth groups vowed to keep the pressure on until reconstruction begins. “We will not stop until bulldozers move in,” one organizer declared.
As the peaceful walk came to an end, the message was clear: Festac residents want roads that match the legacy of their once-model estate — not pathways of frustration. This time, they say, the government must listen.
society
Nigeria’s Wealth Must Not Be Buried in a Family’s Account
Nigeria’s Wealth Must Not Be Buried in a Family’s Account.
By George Omagbemi Sylvester — published by SaharaWeeklyNG.com
“Stop the looting; start the lifting; our oil, our schools, our future.”
Nigeria sits on a treasure trove – OIL, GAS, ARABLE LAND, MINERALS and a HUMAN CAPITAL POOL BRIMMING with TALENT. Yet year after year, decade after decade, those riches vanish into a narrow CUL-DE-SAC: private bank accounts, shell companies, luxury mansions and politically-protected empires. This is not accident. It is deliberate. It is theft dressed in law, in contracts and in the cloak of impunity. Make no mistake: when a nation’s wealth is siphoned into a few family accounts, the country dies a little more each day; its hospitals crumble, its children go hungry, its schools rot and its future is mortgaged to foreign lenders.
The scale of the damage is not rhetorical. Nearly half of Nigerians (an estimated 45–47 percent) live in poverty today, a backslide from gains made in previous decades. This is not HAPPENSTANCE; it tracks directly with a failure to translate national resources into public goods and inclusive growth. When resource rents are privatized, the social contract ruptures. The numbers come from the World Bank and national poverty assessments: tens of millions of Nigerians count themselves among the dispossessed while national treasure is diverted.
Corruption in Nigeria is structural and systemic, not episodic. Transparency International ranks Nigeria among the countries with the lowest public-sector integrity scores, placing it deep in the lower third of the global table. That ranking is not just a badge; it is a diagnostic: weak institutions, opaque procurement, entrenched patronage networks and a justice system that is slow or selective. When you have that ecosystem, state wealth becomes private wealth.
We must be precise about who benefits and who loses. In the past years, Nigeria’s anti-graft bodies reported significant recoveries (nearly half a billion dollars in one year) a sign both of the scale of grand corruption and the capacity of law enforcement when political will aligns with teeth. Yet recoveries are only part of the picture: they point to an enormous stock of looted assets and a flow of stolen revenues that have already damaged infrastructure, education and health for generations. Recoveries are APPLAUSE-WORTHY only if followed by institutional reform that prevents RE-LOOTING. Otherwise, they read like mopping the floor while the tap remains open.
Why does this matter? National wealth is the fuel for public services. When royalties, taxes and export receipts are diverted to private coffers, the obvious consequences follow: SCHOOLS lack TEACHERS, HOSPITALS lack MEDICATION/TABLETS, ROADS remain UNBUILT and SECURITY FORCES are UNDER-RESOURCED. The International Monetary Fund and World Bank have repeatedly warned that revenue leakages and weak governance constrict fiscal space for development and leave ordinary citizens exposed to austerity that benefits no one but the already wealthy. The IMF’s policy teams have documented how mismanagement and corruption eat into budgets that should be used for human development.
This is not a problem without solutions. Though solutions demand ferocity; legal, institutional and civic. First: transparency. Every contract, every licence, every major procurement in extractive sectors must be published, audited and put in the public domain. Citizens have a right to know how much was earned, how much was spent and who benefited. The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative and similar frameworks exist for a reason: sunlight is the antiseptic that kills many corrupt arrangements. Countries that have enforced publishing and independent audit have seen substantial reductions in leakages and higher public trust. Lack of transparency is the first oxygen upon which looting breathes.
Second: strengthen legal institutions and make enforcement impartial. It is not enough to recover stolen assets when prosecutions are rare, sentences light and legal processes drag on. The EFCC and other bodies must be independent, funded and legally insulated from political interference. Fast-track courts for corruption cases, asset-freezing orders that take effect immediately and international cooperation to follow illicit flows must be scaled up. The recent record of asset recovery shows capability; but capability must be matched with consistency and due process.
Third: redesign public finance to minimize single-point vulnerabilities. RESOURCE-DEPENDENT economies must create sovereign wealth vehicles with strict governance rules; independent boards, multi-year budgeting rules and mandatory social spending floors that cannot be altered by one executive’s whim. A WELL-GOVERNED sovereign fund transforms resource volatility into predictable investment in education, healthcare and infrastructure. When properly governed, resource wealth becomes a buffer, not a temptation. The IMF and World Bank have repeatedly endorsed these mechanisms.
Fourth: rebuild civic culture and elite responsibility. No law can substitute a society that tolerates theft. As economist and global thinker Dambisa Moyo warns about dependency and poor governance, SUSTAINABLE GROWTH REQUIRES ACCOUNTABILITY and ELITE COMMITMENT to NATIONAL WELLBEING; not personal accumulation masquerading as public service. And as a salient voice in Nigerian public life, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala has long reminded us that fighting corruption requires citizens at every level; there are no bystanders in a functional democratic fight against kleptocracy. These are not empty slogans: they are the moral spine of reform.
There will be pushback. Those who have enjoyed privatized state wealth will invoke NATIONALISM, BUREAUCRATIC COMPLEXITY, or “POLITICAL WITCH-HUNTS.” Ignore him. This is not about revenge; it is about recovery, fairness and survival. It is about replacing patronage with performance, secrecy with scrutiny and capture with competence.
Let us be blunt: ACCOUNTABILITY IS NOT A COSMETIC EXERCISE. It will require targeting HIGH-LEVEL ENABLERS; accountants, lawyers, bankers and foreign intermediaries who design and conceal schemes. It will require cooperation from international financial centers, tougher ANTI-MONEY-LAUNDERING ENFORCEMENT and a refusal to treat recovered assets as political bargaining chips. When the law is crisp and the will is fixed, stolen wealth returns to public use to build SCHOOLS, to widen CLINICS, to make POWER available for factories and farms.
Finally, Nigerians must demand a different social bargain. Vote, protest, litigate and monitor. Civil society must be endowed, not harassed. Journalists must be free and protected to follow stories that lead to offshore accounts and private islands. Citizens must refuse the bargain where family enrichment substitutes for national stewardship. The country’s wealth must be a NATIONAL INHERITANCE and not a FAMILY HEIRLOOM buried in an invisible account.
To paraphrase the blunt truth of our times: wealth hidden in a family account is wealth wasted for a nation. Every naira that disappears from public books is a teacher who will not be hired, a clinic that will remain without medication/tablets, a road that will never be paved. If we do not act, we consign our children to inherit a nation of truncated promise.
This is not pessimism. It is a call to arms. Nigeria’s riches are not fated to enrich only a few. With transparency, legal rigor, institutional redesign, international cooperation and civic insistence, we can finally ensure that what belongs to Nigeria benefits Nigerians. We must refuse the theft of tomorrow’s opportunities to pay for today’s ostentation.
“STOP BURYING OUR WEALTH IN PRIVATE GRAVES” should be more than a slogan; it should be a NATIONAL DEMAND. The time to speak it aloud, loudly and collectively is NOW.
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