Meet the Lagos State House of
Assembly’s oldest law maker and what he told kidnappers who allegedly
‘kidnapped’ his son, Patrick Okohue reports.
At 66 years,
he could go into the Lagos State House of Assembly record as the oldest
lawmaker in the Lagos State House of Assembly.
At the age
of 36, he already had nine children, a feat he gave accolade to his mother for
having disciplined him, which prevented him from becoming an ‘area boy’, a
parlance used to describe a sp
oilt child.
Very blunt
in his analysis of issues and never hid the fact that he was once ‘stubborn’ in
a positive way, Hon. Ahmed Ipoola Omisore believes he could do whatever the
younger colleagues are up to.
Omisore is
representing Ifako/Ijaiye 2, and he is the Chairman of the Committee on House
Services and Special Duties. The lawmaker is from the famous Omisore Family of
Ile-Ife, Osun State.
“I came from a very big family, very notable and the largest in West Africa. My father was Alhaji Saliu Omisore, Imam of Olorunsogo Mosque and the Baba Adinni of Ile-Ife Muslims and my mother is Alhaja Awawu Adereju Omisore, a native of Ejinrin, Epe, Lagos State and Iya Adinni of Ojokoro Muslims, she celebrated 90th birthday last year August”, Omisore flaunts his family CV. “I am the 58th child of my father and I have 18 younger ones. In my family, number does not matter and we believe so much in education, even ordinary carpenter in my family might be a graduate. I was born on July 8th 1948. I went to Arabic School at my early age. In 1955, the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo introduced free education and I followed a relative, who was taking his own children for registration to a school, and in those days, you could not register for school if your hand does not touch your ear”.
“In those days, it was a great achievement to go to secondary school, and I walked majestically into town and felt like a king. In 1967, I left school and I had Grade 2 Division and I was one of the most brilliant students in school”.
According the 66 year-old legislator, the late Dele Giwa was his classmate at Ansar Ud-Deen Primary School and both moved into Oduduwa College, where they enjoyed the youthful life together.
“I came from a very big family, very notable and the largest in West Africa. My father was Alhaji Saliu Omisore, Imam of Olorunsogo Mosque and the Baba Adinni of Ile-Ife Muslims and my mother is Alhaja Awawu Adereju Omisore, a native of Ejinrin, Epe, Lagos State and Iya Adinni of Ojokoro Muslims, she celebrated 90th birthday last year August”, Omisore flaunts his family CV. “I am the 58th child of my father and I have 18 younger ones. In my family, number does not matter and we believe so much in education, even ordinary carpenter in my family might be a graduate. I was born on July 8th 1948. I went to Arabic School at my early age. In 1955, the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo introduced free education and I followed a relative, who was taking his own children for registration to a school, and in those days, you could not register for school if your hand does not touch your ear”.
“In those days, it was a great achievement to go to secondary school, and I walked majestically into town and felt like a king. In 1967, I left school and I had Grade 2 Division and I was one of the most brilliant students in school”.
According the 66 year-old legislator, the late Dele Giwa was his classmate at Ansar Ud-Deen Primary School and both moved into Oduduwa College, where they enjoyed the youthful life together.
“I played
pranks there and I joined a gang of students, who were not attending classes.
Any idea someone from Lagos brought was always welcomed and one guy brought an
idea that we could rent a house outside the school and dig a hole into the
school compound so that we could sneak there whenever our parents were coming.
We did this throughout the year and at the end of the year, I knew nothing”, he
revealed.
“As at Class
3, I didn’t even know what Amoeba was in biology, and I failed the exams and I
had to repeat the class in 1965, but I learnt my lessons from that. I was very
proud as a senior, and we used to punish junior students, but I became an
object of ridicule, when I repeated the class. I was initially ashamed, but I
swallowed my shame and repeated the class. I was a short distance race athlete,
a member of the Literary and Debating Society, Press club
and Muslim Students Society”. Speaking to crowd of journalists that are covering Lagos State House of Assembly, during the Weekly ‘Time Out with The Press’, Omisore added.
and Muslim Students Society”. Speaking to crowd of journalists that are covering Lagos State House of Assembly, during the Weekly ‘Time Out with The Press’, Omisore added.
“Dele Giwa
was our editor-in-chief for the school magazine. The magazine groomed us in the
act of writing and that actually built Dele Giwa. There were crisis amongst the
Muslim leaders of our town then and Imam Bello and Imam Adeosun fought for the
post of Imam of the town for about 27 or 29 years”.
“I now
wrote an article entitled, ‘Imam Bello the Great’ and his opponent was
described as ‘Hot Hearted Adeosun.’ The article generated a lot of crisis in
the school and in the town. My father took it upon himself and in 1981, he said
that this Imamship tussle must end and he went to the then Ooni of Ife, Oba
Adesoji Aderemi and the issue was resolved and my father was made the Baba
Adinni of Ife Muslims for his efforts on the matter after 30 years of fighting”.
The legislator said his grandfather, the patriarch of Omisore family later died
in 1941.
“I was very
tough as a young child; there must be action wherever I was. My mother did not
allow me to stay at home, she would ask one teacher or the other to take me
home. I also used to live with my elder brothers. I lived with teachers all my
life, my mother was tough on me, but my father pampered me. I took part of my
mother and father’s attribute. My mother is very eloquent, brilliant and she is
very talented. My father was frank; he is a giver to a fault like a typical
Muslim”.
The communal life in Omisore family thought them brotherhood and how to bear one another’s burden. “We used to wear each other’s clothes and the girls in town knew us with this. I was trained by the Western Region Government briefly and I worked with them. I got accelerated promotion and I was posted to the Cocoa Board in Apapa Wharf, we also worked at Creek Road, Apapa”, he said.
“Later, when I saw the way graduates were being respected, I decided to travel abroad in 1971. We played a lot of pranks then and getting international passport in Nigeria was difficult, so we went to Benin Republic to get international passports with different names. We were about five, four of them travelled. My friends travelled in 1970, but I travelled in 1971”.
The communal life in Omisore family thought them brotherhood and how to bear one another’s burden. “We used to wear each other’s clothes and the girls in town knew us with this. I was trained by the Western Region Government briefly and I worked with them. I got accelerated promotion and I was posted to the Cocoa Board in Apapa Wharf, we also worked at Creek Road, Apapa”, he said.
“Later, when I saw the way graduates were being respected, I decided to travel abroad in 1971. We played a lot of pranks then and getting international passport in Nigeria was difficult, so we went to Benin Republic to get international passports with different names. We were about five, four of them travelled. My friends travelled in 1970, but I travelled in 1971”.
Omisore went to Hamburg in Germany, but because
he has to study their language first, she went to a language school called
Cologne Institute, but the language was so tough, and because of that he
couldn’t secure a job.
He narrated
how he escaped to England and when he got there in July 1971, he initially
wanted to study insurance, but said he needed to have OND to study the course, and
quickly he switched to advertising.
Why advertising?
Why advertising?
“When we
were in school, I was captivated by some commercials like those of Sun Gas, the
rhythm was very interesting. When I told my people that I wanted to study
advertising, they said I would not get a job because my siblings used to study
engineering, law and all that, but I told them I would succeed. We would go to
the library and study, and I took tuition and I passed my exams easily. I won
awards as the best overseas student and I had one of the best results because I
had distinction in advertising”, the former WNBC Ibadan, Oyo State Commercial
Officer stated.
“I went to
join another company that published the first yellow pages. I later started a
school where I trained a lot of people in advertising; I subsequently worked
with Grant Advertising, where I became Deputy Client Director. I later set up
my own company with partners and I set up another one with another partner,
where I was the Managing Director, from there I came to the Lagos State House
of Assembly”.
The former Vice President of Advertising Council and President for four years was also a member of LASAA Governing Council as President of the Advertisers’ Association said one of his reasons in the House was to redefine the bill creating LASAA.
The former Vice President of Advertising Council and President for four years was also a member of LASAA Governing Council as President of the Advertisers’ Association said one of his reasons in the House was to redefine the bill creating LASAA.
“I saw some
anomalies in the bill and we decided to challenge it. The present Speaker of
the House now, Rt. (Hon.) Adeyemi Ikuforiji was the Chairman of the House
Committee on the Environment, and Rt. Hon. Jokotola Pelumi was the Speaker
then, and Ikuforiji said that I could be a member of the House. One day, with
the way I spoke then, they gave us two slots and I got one of it. I have been a
member of the Governing Council of APCON since 1988, Chairman of Advertising
Standard Panel and any judgement we give would go to Appeal Court if it is to
be challenged”.
The
legislator disclosed that he entered into the Assembly through the Community
Development Association (CDA).
“I was
Chairman of Alakuko CDA for six years, first Vice-Chairman of Alakuko CDC. Coming
here is purposeful; I am a ranking legislator, immediate past chairman of House
Committee on Information and Strategy and now the Chairman of House Committee
on House Services”. The eloquent legislator who said he was stubborn when he
can’t get his way positively wouldn’t want any of his children to be stubborn.
“Talking about stubbornness, I am very stubborn, even till now. You can be sure I am stubborn, but with a difference, in those days, there was moral training, you had to greet elders, our stubbornness in those days was different. I have some stubborn children like me; one of them is just graduating after spending 10 years in the university. Not that he was not brilliant, but because of stubbornness”, he disclosed.
“Talking about stubbornness, I am very stubborn, even till now. You can be sure I am stubborn, but with a difference, in those days, there was moral training, you had to greet elders, our stubbornness in those days was different. I have some stubborn children like me; one of them is just graduating after spending 10 years in the university. Not that he was not brilliant, but because of stubbornness”, he disclosed.
“There was a
time I had to go and plead in his school because he left school without the
permission of the university to Akungba in Ondo State to fight over a girl in
the university there, and before he got to school, they had called his school
and I had to go and beg them before they allowed him into the school”. Speaking
further, he said.
“Also, about four years ago, he came from school and I gave him some money and I still had some money with me, but the following day, he called me on the phone and was shouting that he had been kidnapped, I asked him to tell me where he was kidnapped, he said it was outside the school and I said he was on his own. The second day, the leader called and said ‘Mr Man, I am talking to you, we are going to kill your boy.’ I asked them to give the phone to my son again and he repeated that he was kidnapped outside the school. I asked the leader, ‘how many children do your parents have,’ and said five, I said, ‘I can afford to lose the boy, I have 15 of them, so you can kill him”.
“Also, about four years ago, he came from school and I gave him some money and I still had some money with me, but the following day, he called me on the phone and was shouting that he had been kidnapped, I asked him to tell me where he was kidnapped, he said it was outside the school and I said he was on his own. The second day, the leader called and said ‘Mr Man, I am talking to you, we are going to kill your boy.’ I asked them to give the phone to my son again and he repeated that he was kidnapped outside the school. I asked the leader, ‘how many children do your parents have,’ and said five, I said, ‘I can afford to lose the boy, I have 15 of them, so you can kill him”.
“I shouted him down and I stopped picking
their calls. The following day, the boy called my driver that he had been
released. I was having about N4 Million from which I paid his school fees then,
he went to organize amongst his friends to play me, it was a big joke and a
lesson that you don’t give up as not all kidnap cases are real”. Speaking on his age and still remain agile, Omisore explained that age was a matter of number, and that there was hardly anything young people do that he cannot do.
lesson that you don’t give up as not all kidnap cases are real”. Speaking on his age and still remain agile, Omisore explained that age was a matter of number, and that there was hardly anything young people do that he cannot do.
“If I’m your
colleague, there is nothing you do that I cannot do. Asking about women, I am a
ladies’ man, I like them, they like me, until I get to the grave, I would not
stop admiring them, so I watch what I do, what I eat and even my stature, which
is natural. I would be 66 and it has nothing to do with what I do”.
“If you want
to be old, you would be old, if you want to be young, you would be young, and
it is a thing of the mind. When it comes to my political ambition, I got to the
Assembly at the age of 60, I am a fulfilled man, I graduated in the United
Kingdom in 1974, and I worked for 32 years, I am a community man, if I came in
at the age of 60, so you would still have to give me time. Legislature is a
different ball game unlike the executive, where they say you can only serve two
terms, the more you are here, the more you know the job. It was in the third
year of my first term that I started to know what I should know”.
On while he
is still a legislator and never wanted to step aside considering his age. Hon
Omisore said. “In your first term, you are a trainee legislator, in your second
term, you are established and in your third term, you would be grounded. It is
like going to meet the Deputy Speaker of the House, Hon. Musibau Kolawole
Taiwo, who has been here for 15 years, I have just spent seven years and you
want me to go”.
“I came in
as a CDA man from Alakuko. It is the problem of my people that was uppermost in
my mind, when I came. Where Ojokoro is now is farther than where it was then.
Anytime we went to the US or UK, whatever others do, I also do, and they know
me for that, they cannot beat me to it”. Having many children, runs in his
family. Infact as he puts it, it’s hereditary. “My grandfather, the real
Omisore died in 1941, he was survived by 99 sons and 58 daughters yet ‘abiku’
worried him so much. We are one of the largest families in West Africa, for
those who come from a background of one or two children, if you try to have
many children you would regret it”, he quipped.
“Like Ijaw
children, if you throw them inside water, they would not die, but you cannot do
that for others. My own is in-born and it is not deliberate. I had nine
children at the age of 36, today, I have 15 children, my first two children are
doing well in Britain, but don’t copy others. Iyiola Omisore is a son of my
elder brother; his father is an oba in Ile-Ife. We only belong to different
political families; our fathers were in the progressive party. Our father,
Omisakin Omisore founded the Action Group with the likes of the late Chief
Obafemi Awolowo”. According to him, his family belongs to a Right –wing
progressive party ideology.
“My brother,
Iyiola Omisore was a member of the progressive family, but by error of omission
or commission, he got himself out of progressive politics, he was the deputy of
former governor Bisi Akande then in Osun State, he was in a haste to become
governor, so he lost his bearing and got edged out of progressive politics, he
moved to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and he became a torn in the flesh
of our party”, he disclosed further. “He is my brother, if you talk about
radicalism, he is behaving like the Omisores, he is not as bad as he is being
painted, he wants something and he is displaying the attributes of his
political party and I am displaying that of my party. I am an embodiment of
progressive politics”.
The legislator bemoaned the activities of most politicians in Nigeria and said people joined parties to make money.
The legislator bemoaned the activities of most politicians in Nigeria and said people joined parties to make money.
“If there is
a political party, where you don’t contribute, you have to take whatever they
give you. Democracy is about 400 or 600 years old in other countries. So, we
are still growing, but the fastest way to allow people to make their choice is
independent candidacy, I don’t know why the National Assembly is shying away from
this. If you don’t choose me and I feel I want to contest, I would do so and if
I win I may come back to your party. But, the people are just being given the
party’s candidates”.
On the poor moral values among present generation of youths and children, the legislator fingered women as responsible for such moral debasing children.
“I want women to be careful the way they handle their children, most of these ‘area boys’ are more brilliant than some of us here. Some women bring home bastards, some of them smoke when they are pregnant and this has a spiritual connotation. Holy Spirit would not follow negative people”, he advised.
On the poor moral values among present generation of youths and children, the legislator fingered women as responsible for such moral debasing children.
“I want women to be careful the way they handle their children, most of these ‘area boys’ are more brilliant than some of us here. Some women bring home bastards, some of them smoke when they are pregnant and this has a spiritual connotation. Holy Spirit would not follow negative people”, he advised.
“Take care
of your children because whatever they become start from childhood. I once met
an ‘area boy’, miscreant who had master’s degree, we should pray for these boys
because they could be redeemed. If not for my mother, I would have been an ‘area
boy’, some of my mates turned out to be ‘area boys’, tipper drivers and all
that. It was my mother, who treated me with iron hands and prevented me from
being wayward”.
According to the legislator, the unequal distribution of wealth and injustice begets problems and crimes. He said a situation where the poor are oppressed that such society is in trouble.
“Where you have a kind of feudalism and the rich is oppressing the poor there would be problem. I once had a friend, who I followed to his place in Bauchi State, many years back; there I saw people paying homage to his father. I asked him what they were saying, and he said they were telling him; ‘our grandfather served your grandfather, our father served your father, we are serving you today, and our children will serve your children’.” he disclosed.
According to the legislator, the unequal distribution of wealth and injustice begets problems and crimes. He said a situation where the poor are oppressed that such society is in trouble.
“Where you have a kind of feudalism and the rich is oppressing the poor there would be problem. I once had a friend, who I followed to his place in Bauchi State, many years back; there I saw people paying homage to his father. I asked him what they were saying, and he said they were telling him; ‘our grandfather served your grandfather, our father served your father, we are serving you today, and our children will serve your children’.” he disclosed.
“All sorts
of things were going on there and it has backfired now, religion is just a
smokescreen, so they are just paying the price in the north now. Even in the
south, what we are seeing is a revolution that is waiting to explode. In my
constituency, I have about 3,000 unemployed youths; we are trying to do
everything to help them but it is not enough. They asked us to submit only five
names out of 3,000 people. We should know that revolution is imminent in Nigeria
if the rulers, including me, do not change our ways. If the children of the
poor do not get better, the children of the rich are not safe”. On the
challenges of being a politician and legislator, Omisore said it’s a problem
because many people would come to you for help.
“I once wrote about the challenges of an elected officer on my Facebook. We have failed to educate the people about our job, many of them don’t know the differences between us and the executive, and they make all sorts of requests from us. They would tell you, ‘I want to pay school fees,’ and all that”, he added.
“I once wrote about the challenges of an elected officer on my Facebook. We have failed to educate the people about our job, many of them don’t know the differences between us and the executive, and they make all sorts of requests from us. They would tell you, ‘I want to pay school fees,’ and all that”, he added.
“But, I have
to give the people credits. We once asked a foreigner, if they experience such
in their country, he said that ‘a madman would not allow whoever takes his
luggage to go scot free.’ He said that the wealth of 30 or 100 people are in
one hand, there is poverty in the land. When their children are getting
married, they send the requests with the invitation cards; you are bad if you
are not giving them money. Unfortunately, Abuja is being used as a yardstick
for what we are earning in the states”.
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