society
Prince Olurebi’s Foundation Brings Joy to Sango Ota with free Eye glasses, School Support
Prince Olurebi’s Foundation Brings Joy to Sango Ota with free Eye glasses, School Support
A non-Governmental organization, Olurebi Foundation, on Wednesday, provided eye screening and free eye glasses for over 500 beneficiaries in Sango Ota, Ado Odo Local Government Area of Ogun State.
In an interview with journalists during the program, a chief and community leader at Ago Gbagura, Hon. Olatunji Abiola Isiaq, stated that Sango Ota generally has been lacking many social amenities because of a lack of leaders. He emphasized the influx of people to the area and that many are not benefiting due to the state of the economy of the country as well as the low standard of living.
“People are having issues with health, and our research revealed that many people are suffering from eye problems, and people spoke with the Prince Olurebi Empowerment Foundation, and they agreed to come and alleviate the suffering of the people in terms of eye problems. This is what brought these free eye glasses. Not only this, we did at Olota of Ota Palace on Nov 1. We are doing Sango here today, and we are going to do more by the grace of God come June 2026.”
He also disclosed that the foundation has distributed free exercise books to four schools in the community and refurbished one of the school’s boreholes when the Headmistress called their attention to it. “OD school 1, LG school 1, 2, 3, 4, and when the Headmistress complained about the non-functioning borehole, we refurbished it, and the pupils are now enjoying portable drinking water.”
Chief Isiaq, who commended the promoter of the foundation, stated that Prince Olurebi is a PhD holder in Entrepreneurship development and a son of the soil, who schooled in Sango Ota and has been in Manchester for the past 30 years and has been contributing to the growth and development of the community and the welfare of the residents where he was born.
“He was installed as Asiwaju of Egba Society in Manchester in 2012 by our revered Alake of Egbaland. He has been a philanthropist of note for a long time.”
In their summation, four of the beneficiaries – Bello Yusuf, Adebanke Kareem, J.O. Sanni, and Olori Mofuliat Olurebi – commended the organizers for the health initiatives, which have given them the opportunity to check their health status and get free eye glasses. They thanked and prayed for the promoter of the foundation that God will grant him all his heart’s desires.
society
DR. JOHN UKPE MEETS HON. DEJI OPARINDE TO DISCUSS AGN CHAPTER IN OYO STATE
DR. JOHN UKPE MEETS HON. DEJI OPARINDE TO DISCUSS AGN CHAPTER IN OYO STATE.
Ibadan, Oyo State – In a bid to strengthen the Actors Guild of Nigeria (AGN) presence in Oyo State, Dr. John Ukpe, Aspirant National Secretary of AGN, has met with Hon. Deji Oparinde, a Nigerian politician representing Afijio State Constituency in the Oyo State House of Assembly.
The meeting, which took place at Hon. Deji Oparinde’s office, was a productive discussion on the potential benefits of having an AGN chapter in Oyo State. Hon. Deji Oparinde expressed his enthusiasm about Dr. John Ukpe’s vision to establish an AGN chapter in the state, describing him as a person with great prospects, ambition, and plans to benefit the association.
“I am excited to meet Dr. John Ukpe and discuss his plans to establish an AGN chapter in Oyo State. He has a wealth of experience and a clear vision for the development of the film industry in our state,” Hon. Deji Oparinde said.
Hon. Deji Oparinde also commended the Governor of Oyo State for his attention to culture and tourism, noting that the state had hosted the first International Conference on Culture and Tourism. He expressed his confidence that Dr. John Ukpe would win the AGN national secretary election and bring opportunities to Oyo State, including job creation, internal revenue generation, and promoting the state’s image locally and globally through film production.
“I have no doubt that Dr. John Ukpe will win the election and bring many benefits to Oyo State. He also promised that the governor himself will be willing to support the guild. In his closing remarks he said, “We are ready to support him and work together to establish a strong AGN chapter in our state,” Hon. Deji Oparinde stated.
Dr. John Ukpe’s visit is part of his efforts to strengthen the AGN’s presence in Oyo State and promote the interests of actors and the film industry in the state. He is seeking the support of stakeholders in Oyo State to achieve his vision and make the state a hub for film production in Nigeria.
Dr. John Ukpe also informed the incoming Vice president south west that the job has been easier and he will give his number of the honourable out when they come into office. The honourable also promised that the governor will be willing to support the guild
The meeting was a significant step towards establishing a strong AGN chapter in Oyo State, and stakeholders are eagerly awaiting the outcome of Dr. John Ukpe’s candidacy.
society
Sambisa Bloodletting: When Boko Haram Turned Its Guns on ISWAP
Sambisa Bloodletting: When Boko Haram Turned Its Guns on ISWAP.
By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by SaharaWeeklyNG.com
“The Deadly Turf War That Shakes the Lake Chad Basin.”
A new and grisly chapter has opened in Nigeria’s long-running insurgency; once bitter rivals in name only, Boko Haram and the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) have for months been fighting not merely for recruits or haulage routes, but for outright territorial control. The latest and most savage manifestation of that internecine war erupted in and around Sambisa and the islands of the Lake Chad corridor, a cascade of assaults that left scores dead, dozens of boats seized and whole communities re-traumatised. Initial field accounts and media investigations put the toll at roughly two hundred militants killed in clashes over the weekend, with Boko Haram reported to have overrun several ISWAP camps and seized key naval assets.
That figure (horrific even in a conflict long accustomed to horror) must be read in context. The Lake Chad Basin has been a theatre of not only cross-border criminality and smuggling, but also of militant adaptation: riverine skirmishes, sudden amphibious raids and the seasonal ebb and flow of civilians and fighters. For years ISWAP and what remains of Boko Haram’s Shekau-loyal factions have alternated between cooperation, coexistence and murderous rivalry. The latest operations, however, were not mere hit-and-run attacks; they were coordinated attempts to seize island strongholds that generate revenue (through fishing taxes and illicit trade) and provide safe havens from military strikes.
Why this flare-up now matters (and why it should alarm us) boils down to three brutal facts. First, when jihadi factions fight each other, civilians pay the price: reprisals, forced displacements and collective punishments typically follow. Second, the victor in a factional fight can absorb weapons, boats and fighters; materially strengthening itself for renewed attacks on towns, garrisons and humanitarian convoys. Third, infighting makes conflict dynamics less predictable and therefore harder for security forces and relief agencies to plan for or to counter. For communities around Sambisa and the Lake Chad islands, the immediate consequence is the collapse of whatever fragile protection existed and a fresh round of displacement and hunger.
UNIDIR → Building a more secure world.
On the ground, the fighting reportedly featured dozens of motorised canoes and heavily armed gunmen which is a reminder that the Lake Chad is no backwater but a strategic corridor. Reports say Boko Haram fighters swept across several ISWAP-held islands, capturing boats and weaponry and inflicting heavy casualties on ISWAP personnel. Local vigilante sources and intelligence leaks described scenes of charred camps and the frantic flight of surviving fighters toward mainland villages. If confirmed, the seizure of riverine assets is strategically significant: control of boats equals control of movement, supplies, taxation points and crucially, escape routes.
Scholars and analysts who have followed the jihadist evolution in north-east Nigeria warn that this is not a mere squabble among thugs; it is the latest phase of a long adaptive conflict. Vincent Foucher, a leading researcher on the Lake Chad jihadist landscape, captures the larger truth: “jihad in the Lake Chad Basin is here to stay.” The line is blunt, but the point is stark; these factions are resilient, they learn from one another and they exploit gaps in state capacity to regenerate. That resilience helps explain why gains against one group are often temporary and why civilian recovery remains painfully fragile.
A tactical victory for Boko Haram in Sambisa (if sustained) raises grave long-term risks. Where one faction consolidates, it does not merely defend borders: it governs, taxes and recruits. It also acquires the spoils of war, captured materiel and the bargaining chips of prisoners and local informants. ISWAP, by contrast, has built an internationalised technical edge in recent years, claiming sophisticated propaganda, reportedly better coordination with transnational ISIS networks and more disciplined battlefield practices. The competition between a predatory, territorially assertive Boko Haram and a bureaucratised, outward-looking ISWAP is not abstract: it shapes attack profiles, civilian targeting and the geography of violence.
What should the Nigerian state and regional partners do? First, stabilisation requires not only kinetic pressure but also rapid civilian protection and humanitarian access. Too often, military wins are undone by the absence of safe returns, reconstruction and meaningful local security arrangements. Second, the region needs sharper, coordinated intelligence (maritime and riverine surveillance in particular) to prevent future seizures of boats and to protect displaced fishing communities. Third, long-term deradicalisation and socio-economic investment in affected communities remain essential; without economic alternatives and credible local governance, the vacuum will be filled again. These are not novel prescriptions, but the Sambisa incidents make them urgent once more.
There is a cautionary counterpoint, too: factional fighting does not automatically benefit the state. When insurgents bleed each other, they can also become more ruthless or more opportunistic; consolidating areas where they can operate freely, or launching terror attacks to signal continued potency. The 2016 schism that birthed ISWAP taught analysts that fragmentation can produce new, more adaptive organisations rather than a longed-for weakening. That lesson is especially important for policymakers tempted to celebrate intra-militant carnage as a win.
For the ordinary people of Sambisa and the Lake Chad littoral, the technical arguments about strategy are cold comfort. Families who returned to their farms after government assurances now find themselves running again; fishermen who paid protection to one group discover their boats confiscated by another. Humanitarian agencies warn that renewed violence will reverse months of fragile progress: food stocks will run low, clinics will close and education (already the first casualty of this insurgency) will be postponed indefinitely. The indirect death toll from hunger, disease and interrupted health care will be the slow, shameful shadow of this weekend’s headlines.
Finally, the Sambisa clashes are a reminder that Nigeria’s security challenge is not merely military but political. Long-term peace will not be won by force alone. It requires the restoration of state legitimacy, accountable local governance, economic opportunity and regional cooperation across Nigeria, Chad, Niger and Cameroon. Until those building blocks are in place, the islands of Lake Chad will remain prize and prey in equal measure and Sambisa will keep teaching the same brutal lesson: in a failed security market, violence simply repackages itself. As Vincent Foucher warns, the jihadist presence here is unlikely to vanish quietly; the only question is whether a savage contest for spoils will give way to yet another calibrated threat to civilians and statehood.
—
Reported and written by George Omagbemi Sylvester for SaharaWeeklyNG.com
society
ThisDay Publisher, Nduka Obaigbena, To Unveil Leekeeleekee January 2026
ThisDay Publisher, Nduka Obaigbena, To Unveil Leekeeleekee January 2026
Nduka Obaigbena, the media guru and successful entrepreneur has just announced the forthcoming launch of Lekeelekee. This initiative is already gathering applause from various media stakeholders across the country.
Lekeelekee is a new media platform set for January, 2026.
Obaigbena has also made a Clarion call for massive support for reforms to sustain economic growth in Nigeria.
The platform is designed to challenge the dominance of US and Chinese companies in global content distribution and give Nigeria a stronger voice in the global media space.
The announcement was made during Nduka Obaigbena’s speech at the 21st All Nigeria Editors Conference (ANEC) 2025, held at the Presidential Villa in Abuja today.
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