In his generation, not many stand out like him. He was
honest, intelligent, humble, considerate, committed, loyal, dependable, and
focused.
Born 7th December 1968, he attended Mount Camel
Secondary School, Ilorin, Kwara State College of Technology (now Kwara State
Polytechnic), Ilorin and the University of Lagos where he studied Mass
Communications. He had done courses and attended conferences in several
countries, which equipped him well enough for the challenges of his passion: to
live and work for humanity in the quest for a better society.
He was groomed early enough by his journalist father to read,
work hard, be humble, and concerned about others. He created humor out of
serious situations that could have resulted in scuffles and yet proffered the
best solutions to knotty issues.
He was the author of so many communiqué after several
meetings as a student’s union, trade union and civil society activist. If you
had him in attendance at any meeting, be sure to have the best communiqué that
captures exactly what was collectively agreed as the outcome of the
interactions, even if he disagrees with any part of the discussions.
His father worked as the Ilorin Correspondent of The
Sketch newspaper, now defunct. His father is a realist, professional,
progressive and every bit of him was in his beloved son who didn’t just start
reading newspapers in secondary school but also sold newspapers without
consideration for profit.
Olaitan Kabiru Aremu Oyerinde, until he was assassinated
early Friday, 4th May 2012, was the Deputy General Secretary of the
Nigeria Labour Congress but on leave of absence to work with the immediate past
President of the NLC, now Governor of Edo State, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole as
his Special Adviser (Special Duties) and Principal Private Secretary between
November 2008 and 4th May 2012 when he was gruesomely assassinated
by agents of retrogressive politics right before his young family at about
1.30am that Friday morning.
Before joining the Secretariat of the NLC, Olaitan did his
youth service and eventually worked with the West African Economic Consultants (ECONSULTANTS) as a Research Officer in
1990 and later left to formally join the trade union movement as Assistant
General Secretary of the Iron & Steel Senior Staff Association of Nigeria
(ISSAN). He left ISSAN for the NLC in 2001.
While at the University of Lagos, Olaitan was a rallying
point as the secretary of the radical student movement, the Patriotic Youth
Movement of Nigeria (PYMN), the coordinating organ of all progressive movements
of the Marxist extraction in all tertiary institutions at the time. It was
during this period that the state unleashed severe attacks on the students’
movement nationwide. Students Unions, academic and non academic unions were
ferociously attacked by the General Ibrahim Babangida military regime. But, the
movement under the leadership of people like Olaitan Oyerinde, Gbenga Komolafe,
Gbenga Olawepo, Sylvester Odion-Akhaine, Adewale Bashar, Bode Ojomu, Ogaga
Ifowodo, Bamidele Opeyemi, Bamidele Aturu, Lukman Saliu, Bala Jubril
Mohammed(of blessed memory), Comfort Idika (now Ogunye), Juliet
Affiong-Southey, Chima Ubani (of blessed memory), Segun Jegede, Lanre Ehonwa,
Chris Ndiribe and others, worked with older comrades to resist the attacks and
defended the rights of every Nigerian to education.
The attacks by the military were preparatory to the economic
warfare unleashed on all Nigerians through the Structural Adjustment Programme
(SAP), a neo liberal killer economic policy forced on Nigerians by the
Babangida regime. Indeed, the Babangida regime for whatever reason was one with
the worst anti people policies in the history of Nigeria. His regime downgraded
the national currency. He had a political programme that was designed to
entrench the military perpetually in office. His attack on the academic
community reduced, till this moment, the quality of education in Nigeria.
Radical lecturers were violently thrown out of their quarters because, as the
regime claimed, they were “teaching what they were not paid to teach”. Dr.
Festus Iyayi, as President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU),
Dr. Osagie Obayuwana of the Faculty of Law, University of Benin, Dr. Tunde
Fatunde of the same university all had varying degrees of heartless state
attacks. Festus was not only sacked, he was irresponsibly thrown out of his
official quarters by agents of the regime.
Dr. Patrick Wilmot, a versatile academic at the Political
Science Department of the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria was not only arrested
and detained; he was disgustingly thrown off the borders to London, despite
being legally married to a Nigerian.
These attacks predates other more severe attacks on the
socio-economic and political rights of all Nigerians as the regime eventually
rolled out the massively rejected SAP and eventually sank the entire country
into a hollow political fate with the selfish annulment of the 12th
June 1993 Presidential elections.
These events brought out the unequalled qualities in Olaitan
as an astute and energetic organizer, brilliant writer, and selfless leader,
loyal, dependable and a skillful revolutionary machine.
Olaitan was part of several organizations. When the then
Military Governor of Lagos State, Brigadier Raji Rasaki forcefully evicted the
poor from Maroko in favour of the rich in 1988, Olaitan was one of those who
rose to the occasion and got the evacuees organized and fought for an
alternative shelter. When landlords were becoming overbearing against the
rights of tenants in Lagos, Olaitan was among those who formed the Nigerian
Tenants Association to fight for and protect the rights of tenants. When the
Babangida regime imposed SAP on us, Olaitan was on the protest line with us in
1989. When Nigerians had to be mobilized against the entrenchment of military
dictatorship, Olaitan was always on the protest line under the auspices of the
Campaign for Democracy (CD). He was indeed the Chairman of the Lagos State
Branch of CD during the pro democracy protests era. CD worked with several
organizations, including trade unions, to ensure the military never had a space
in their obvious desire to continuously circumscribe our collective rights.
Indeed, Olaitan was not involved in anything unrelated to
organizing for progressive human development. He was frank and brutal in
expressing his opinions on issues passionate to him. He was very humorous at
the right time. At some point, you will feel he could perform better than our
commercial comedians. You will wish him off if your first contact with him was
during one of his humorous moments. His humor was one of those veritable tools
he used to get ordinary people on the street, derisively called “Area Boys” to
understand why only through organized mass protests they will be liberated.
Olaitan’s commitment to work, any productive work- at his
formal workplace or organizing for political change with informal organizations
can never be doubted. He was time conscious and he knew the difference between
play time and when work is on.
Olaitan was passionately kind. He was depersonalized and
detribalized. Even with his Yoruba name and identity, most people who had known
him for decades didn’t know where he came from because it didn’t matter anyway.
The murder of Olaitan is though a devastating loss to the
Nigerian radical movement, but a severe personal loss to me. He was like a
younger brother to me from our first meeting till our last. He stayed with me
during his youth service in Lagos. We worked together at the West African
Economic Consultants (ECONSULTANTS) until 1990.
From our first meeting in 1985
till our last meeting on Monday 30th April 2012 when he last visited
Labour House, Abuja; I saw deep commitment to our collective struggle for a
better world vibrating in him.
His brilliance, patriotism, organizational discipline, hard
work and selfless commitment to our collective desire for human development are
legacies not a few will ever forget. These legacies generated the massive
condemnation and cries that followed the callous and heartless murder of this Youngman
just before his next birthday on 7th of December, when he would have
been 44 years.
He died fighting, as part of a team leading the rescue of a
state abandoned in poverty, maladministration, underdevelopment, and total
infrastructural collapse. Edo State is today better in infrastructures than
when Olaitan and Oshiomhole resumed at the Government House, Benin City. And
perhaps, this may be why he was murdered in cold blood. Olaitan, after all, was
not from anywhere in Edo State. So, they made him the lamb that had to be
slaughtered for their inability to resume the privatization of state resources.
Whoever is connected, even in the remotest way, to the
assassination of Olaitan Oyerinde is today stinking with his blood and will
forever be followed by angry flies while Olaitan remain golden in our hearts
and in history.
We must reinvigorate his memory by refusing to agonize but
deepen our organizing work until victory.
Olaitan was a colleague of inestimable value, an
unforgettable brother, a dependable friend, and a highly committed comrade
whose patriotic zeal will continue to fire our collective commitment until
victory.
Though we miss you, but your spirit and legacies live on.
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