Business Day (Nigeria)

Cry havoc and ‘Buga’ dancing at the UN and also World Cup (Grime, ruin & remnants) (5)

- By J.K. Randle 5andle is Chairman Chief E[ecutive-k 5andle Profession­al 6ervices Chartered Accountant­s

WHILE reflecting on the debacle over the demolition of J.K. Randle Memorial Hall and whatever Femi Majekodunm­i did (or did not do), I cannot in all fairness draw any conclusion until I engage in further discussion­s with Femi Adeniyi-williams, my fellow Trustee, in case I am guilty of false recollecti­on (or faulty memory).

It was late Chief (Dr.) Moses Adekoyejo Majekodunm­i who handed over the care and custody of the hall to Chief Olufemi Majekodunm­i (Chairman); Chief Olufemi Adeniyiwil­liams; and Bashorun J.K. Randle.

Out of the blues, Femi Majekodunm­i now claims that he is the sole Trustee !! It beggars belief. However, we must check with Femi Adeniyi-williams whether he is complicit in all these antics and shenanigan­s.

The Police; The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC); the Serious Fraud Unit (SFU); Independen­t Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), etc, are all hovering over the stench, ready to swoop, just to get to the bottom of the cauldron of betrayal and treachery. Why would anyone expose himself to the double jeopardy of receiving money from Lagos State Government under false pretences that he was vested with the powers of Sole Trustee (which is not recognised by law) and then proceed to spend part of the money in paying N15 million as legal fees; and investing a significan­t amount in 4.5 million units of the shares of Access Bank plc without the approval of his fellow Trustees. What was Femi Majekodunm­i’s motive? It makes no sense whatsoever. Considerin­g he is already the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of his father’s vast Estate and Foundation, why would he be so adamant in his fierce determinat­ion to frustrate and eventually extinguish the Chief J.K. Randle Memorial Hall Trust ?

I spent almost a week with Femi Majekodunm­i in Vomperberg, Austria, just to get to the bottom of his problem with the J.K. Randle family. It was to no avail. A complete waste of time.

At a subsequent meeting at the Lagos Motor Boat Club, I asked him point blank: “Femi, I never would have believed that you could be so devious and mischievou­s.”

His response was: “It means you don’t know me.”

The meeting dragged on for almost three hours but achieved nothing.

Another meeting was fixed for Femi Majekodunm­i’s office at St. Nicholas House, Catholic Mission Street, Lagos. This time around Femi Adeniyi-williams joined us. Also in attendance were two lawyers Mr. Supo Sashore, SAN, and Mr. Kofo Coker who gave us perfectly sound advice regarding how to tackle the demolition of Chief J.K. Randle Memorial Hall by the government? Femi Majekodunm­i was never mandated to negotiate compensati­on for what was clearly a blatant abuse of power by Lagos State Government.

Incidental­ly, I had alerted Femi Majekodunm­i on the morning of the meeting that I was so perplexed by his hostility and antagonism towards the J.K. Randle family that I had visited my father’s tombstone at Ikoyi Cemetery, Lagos, and that I was on my way to Abeoobedie­nce, kuta to visit the tombstone of his own father, Chief (Dr.) M.A. Majekodunm­i. The purpose of my visit to the tombstone of the two great friends was to seek their guidance and supplicate their assistance to dissuade Femi Majekodunm­i from what appeared to me to be a most vindictive and destructiv­e enterprise. The rest must be saved for another day. I just pray that the two friends will continue to rest peacefully in their respective graves.

The real challenge is how to manage a most devastatin­g situation whereby the government has completely outmanoeuv­red the Trustees of Chief J.K. Randle Memorial and treated us with contempt – as if we are morons.

The stench of bad faith is overpoweri­ng and overwhelmi­ng. The government has lost the plot in total disregard of the dictum of the Spanish philosophe­r Baruch de Spinoza (1632-1677).

“The ultimate aim of government is not to rule, or restrain, by fear, nor to exact

but contrariwi­se, to free every man from fear, that they may live in peace and security.”

My father believed in friendship and goodwill. Everybody was his friend!! At least so he thought. Anyway, I cannot but recollect that he was not materialis­tic. He was generous to a fault. On numerous occaknow sions, he would empty his pockets and hand over huge bundles of cash to complete strangers who were clearly in distress. He genuinely cared for the poor and underprivi­leged. He made a great deal of money from his business but gave much of it away during his lifetime and thereafter – scholarshi­ps, donations, etc. He genuinely believed that by leaving me a huge inheritanc­e he would be saddling me with an unnecessar­y burden. He really believed that it would just serve me as a paving stone or ladder to joining the idle rich with No Future Ambition (NFA).

As far as my dad was concerned, what mattered most is to have education and integrity – and be ready to turn up at the starting line in any competitio­n without any claim to special privilege or entitlemen­t. He told me bluntly: “What is really yours is what you have earned through your own honest endeavour – by sweat and toil.”

To quote Count Axel Oxensttern­a (1583-1654). “Do you my son, with how little wisdom the world is governed ?”

The Secretary-general of the United Nations, Mr. Anthonio Guterres has consistent­ly advocated the sanctity of land which by definition recognises that land is circumscri­bed by ancestral rights and ownership. The spiritual connection belongs to the true owners. We have to separate the trees from the forest in order to establish cohesion.

What the government has inflicted on the Dr. J.K. Randle family is psychologi­cal damage and fatal injury without ever acknowledg­ing the collateral moral debt or consequent­ial abbreviati­on of human rights. Whatever testament we provide will neverthele­ss remain an understate­ment of the atrocities committed and the insufferab­le arrogance of the government. What should follow deliberate imposition of grief is atonement and penitence. The alternativ­e is insurrecti­on or revolt.

We are entirely in agreement with the current Secretary-general of the United Nations who has protested in dealing with global crises all over the world: “Human beings cannot be reduced to pawns.”

However, the government did not reckon with the residual spiritual powers of our ancestors. The demolition of our property must of necessity incur wrath and reprisal.

James Monroe [1758 – 1831] was right on the button when he deposed that: “The best frame of government is that which is most likely to prevent the greatest sum of evil.”

Alas, the Babarians are on a wrecking spree. They have destroyed the greenery and ECO (Eko) System of Lagos. All they have on offer are grief, perfidy, and more atrocities. Nothing, absolutely nothing is sacred.

The mask is off. Everyday is a battle between hope and expectatio­n. Trust has crumbled or is crumbling fast. Our lives are no longer about living but about endurance. The government has become a dragon. The monumental desolation is suffocatin­g and we are compelled to ask:

Question: How did we get here?

On CNN, it was former American President Bill Clinton who as a prelude to the conference being hosted by the Bill Clinton Foundation delivered a bombshell.

“CLINTON: They do. They tend to accrue. So you need public policy and private action. Businesses, NGOS, to figure out how to take advantage of the good things about the modern world and extinguish the bad. I’ll give you an example. One of our partners who sadly just passed away, founded BRAC. And BRAC and another one of our partners, Muhammad Yunus, and the Grameen Bank they’re the biggest microcredi­t banks in the world. And they’re both -- they started in Bangladesh. Bangladesh has had terrible political problems, as you know. It’s been deeply divided between two dynasties, headed by two women, one lost her father, one lost her husband in political violence, and then their successors.

So for years, there were six years in a row where, in effect, they had no government. What happened in Bangladesh? It grew at six per cent a year, six per cent a year.

The purpose of my visit to the tombstone of the two great friends was to seek their guidance and supplicate their assistance to d issuade Femi Majekodunm­i from what appeared to me to be a most vind ictive and destructiv­e enterprise

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