Chief Adebayo Alao-Akala
A former governor of Oyo State, Chief Adebayo Alao-Akala, in this interview with ADEOLA BALOGUN and TUNDE ODESOLA clears the air on some contentious issues
How did you get enlisted into the Nigerian Police?
It wasn’t accidental that I became a 
policeman.  It was a dream I nursed as a young lad. I had wanted to be 
enlisted in a profession where I would wear uniform. I would have loved 
to be in the military but unfortunately, the day I was to write a test 
for the police force was the very day the enlistment into the Army was 
done. I remember enlistment into the Army was fixed for The Polytechnic,
 Ibadan. I don’t know why those in charge did that. My number was WS44 
in 1973. In the police, I would spend one year and become an officer. In
 the army short service, I would spend six months and I would become an 
officer. In the Army short service, there was a limit to where I could 
get to move but for full course, I would spend three years. I then 
decided to go for the police.
Why did you want to be a policeman?
I was a barrack boy. My uncle was in the
 West Africa Frontier; later he joined Ghanaian Army. He was caught up 
in Ghana Independence in 1957 while he was with the Frontier. They then 
asked them that anyone that was interested in joining the Ghanaian Army 
should indicate interest and he opted to stay in Ghana and he 
automatically became a member of the Ghanaian Army. I went to 3 
Battalion Training School and I finished my Form 4 there. I knew how to 
take care of the khaki and I thus decided I wanted to join the force. So
 it wasn’t a mistake or accidental that I joined the police. When I 
joined the police, I discovered that I love the profession and I enjoyed
 it while it lasted.
To the man on the street, the police force is synonymous with corruption; was this so in your time?
It is unfortunate; what you are seeing 
in the police is a reflection of the society. It is what we have in the 
society that we are seeing in the police. So what is happening in the 
police is not peculiar to the police alone; it is in all spheres. If you
 say police force is corrupt, other forces are also corrupt because the 
people are recruited from the society. So, whatever you see now is the 
reflection of the society.
People are of the belief that no 
retired police officer can claim that he did not collect bribe while in 
service; did you collect bribe?
I am telling you now that I did not 
collect bribe. Do you know why I could not collect bribe? Firstly, I had
 the opportunity of working in the Administrative Department of the 
police for about 16 years. As a matter of fact, while I was at the 
headquarters for 16 years, I was being posted from one department to the
 other. I did not want to leave, I was pushed to the field and when I 
got to the field, I asked myself why should I be taking bribe? Let me 
tell you an experience; there was a relation of mine who had problems 
with the police and he didn’t want to tell me. The police asked him to 
go and bring N1, 000. He did not have N1, 000; he then went and sold 
some of his goods to be able to raise the money. While the fellow was 
looking for ways of raising the money, I was aware that he was raining 
curses on the police along the line which means that he might have even 
cursed the money he wanted to give as bribe. So the policemen 
unknowingly too would be mixing bad money with good money and 
spiritually, that has a long way to go in the life of a human being. As 
an officer, I would just do what I could for you. So, I just told myself
 that as God has placed me above you, why should I ask for anything from
 you? If I could help, I would and for God’s sake, an average Nigerian 
knows how to say thank you. If along the line, you say thank you and you
 give me something which I didn’t solicit, that is from you. But if you 
start negotiating bribe as I saw a cop (on the television) that was 
sacked recently, that is sad. An average Nigerian knows how to say thank
 you and if you help him, he would say thank you; why do you have to 
negotiate bribe where you can help?  Where would you even discuss a 
bribe with me? As a matter of fact, if I knew that you had a bad case, I
 would deal with you. That is where I could be ruthless. And for God’s 
sake, I worked under somebody like (Inspector General) Sunday Adewusi 
for many years and I was with him until he retired. So, the way we were 
brought up, you couldn’t take bribe because we were arresting bribe 
takers. I was working with Chief Adewusi (at Alagbon) and in those days,
 the fear of Alagbon Close was the beginning of wisdom.  When you hear 
of Alagbon Close, you will shiver. Then, we were not thinking of how to 
take bribe. And again when I got into the field, having dealt with a lot
 of people, I felt that people might want to deal with me too, so I had 
to be careful. Bribe was not that pronounced during my time.
Was that why you had to quit or you quit when you felt you had achieved satisfaction?
No, I did not quit. There was a time in 
the police, even among all the uniform forces, people were being branded
 NADECO. I was branded a NADECO officer and in any of the forces then, 
they could tell you to go anytime. So, some of us were being branded 
NADECO and that was the time a lot of people could not pretend not to be
 aware of the wrong being committed especially during the June 12, 1993 
election. During the time, it was easy for your fellow officer to 
implicate you  by branding you as a NADECO agent and that was how many 
of us were dealt with and were asked to retire.
Were you a NADECO member?
I was not but as a Yoruba person, I had my sympathy for MKO Abiola when his election was annulled.
But some people said you were dismissed from the police.
Dismissed? I was not dismissed from the 
police. Nothing like dismissal has ever come my way and I don’t know 
what they mean by that. You see, don’t rely on politicians and their 
political allegations; politicians would tell you things like that. If 
you go to the Pension Office now, they will tell you how much I am 
taking as pension. Again, nobody would be dismissed and still receive 
pension; the police would have cried out that I am a dismissed officer. 
Again, you don’t have to blame your misfortune on anybody. If you are 
retired as a uniform person, you are retired. After all, I was not 
dismissed; I was given my emolument. What is today’s date? At the end of
 the month, I will receive an alert from my bank signifying that my 
pension has been paid. I always cherish it when I receive the alert for 
my monthly pension. It is not up to my driver’s salary, but at least, I 
am very happy to receive it.
At what age did you leave the police?
I was about 45 years. I served for 23 years before I left.
What did you go into, personal business?
I floated a private investigative 
company where I had staff working for me. Let me just put it this way, I
 went into private business. I retired in 1995 and I went into business 
immediately and in 1996 when politics started I joined politics.
What brought about your popularity as an Ogbomoso homeboy?
I have always been a homeboy. I started 
schooling from primary one to primary six in Ogbomoso and when you 
schooled in that kind of environment, you would naturally come across 
many indigenes of the town as schoolmates. When you went to school at 
your home base, you would have a lot of friends. I had a lot of them 
and, also, the love for my town was also there. Since I came back from 
Ghana in 1970 up to the time I am speaking to you now, I have never 
spent a Christmas outside Ogbomoso. The only time I spent Christmas 
night out of Ogbomoso was in 1980 December when I had to rush to Kano 
during the Maitasine riots – on an official assignment. I actually 
celebrated Christmas in Ogbomoso but I had to leave later in the evening
 when I had to report in Kano same day for the Maitasine riots. I have 
always been spending my Christmas in Ogbomoso. Since 1974, when I could 
afford it, I have always been throwing a party in my house and people 
have always been looking forward to the party every year. I belonged to a
 group called Soun Social Club. It was a club of my age group 
then based in Kano but they allowed interested people to join. Every 26 
December for about 15 years or so, the late Ayinde Barrister always 
played for us and I was one of those championing the cause. So, 
everybody got to know me very well. At that time, my (official) house in
 Lagos literally became Ogbomoso ‘hostel’. If you were looking for job 
or anything in Lagos as an Ogbomoso indigene, you would be told to go to
 Akala house. The only place you could not occupy was my bed; every 
other space, you were free. God later blessed me with a personal house 
in Lagos and I was having an official quarters; my personal house became
 a very ‘big hostel’ for Ogbomoso indigenes. In fact, I was going there 
everyday to meet people and I called the place Ile Iya Alaro. I named it Ile Iya Alaro after my grandmother. So Ile Iya Alaro
 was very popular among Ogbomoso people in Lagos. These were the things 
that brought me into limelight in the town and when I retired, they were
 the ones that called me to come and become the local government 
chairman. And that is why I did not work for it. While everybody was 
struggling to contest on the platforms of Alliance for Democracy and 
Peoples Democratic Party, I used the All Progressive Party platform to 
win election in Ogbomoso. APP was not a popular party in Ogbomoso but 
the people voted for Akala, not APP. When I started politics, Baba 
Lamidi Adedibu of blessed memory noticed my political activities and my 
popularity back home. When the PDP needed Ogbomoso votes in bulk, he 
drafted me to come and be deputy governor.
Now that you mentioned Chief Adedibu, was he instrumental to your emergence as governor?
Yes, he was greatly instrumental.
What of the impeachment saga?
I don’t know anything about the 
impeachment saga but Baba Adedibu used the impeachment to weaken my 
boss, the governor (Alhaji Rashidi Ladoja). I don’t know anything about 
the impeachment and that is the truth.
It is believed that you betrayed your boss (Ladoja).
I was loyal to my boss to the last. If 
it was not because of constitutional requirement that I had to be 
governor, I wouldn’t have been governor. As a matter of fact, those who 
did the impeachment did not have me in mind (to be governor). They 
thought they could even impeach me and put someone else there. That was 
why it was not difficult for me when the court said that I should revert
 to the position of deputy governor, after all, I was deputy governor to
 him, not to someone else. That is why I always pride myself that I was 
once a deputy governor, a governor, a deputy governor and a governor. I 
was not part of the impeachment; those who orchestrated it did not want 
me. They had their plans; they wouldn’t have put me in the position but 
for the constitution. As a matter of fact, did you know what happened? I
 ran away (after the impeachment) and they were looking for me. They 
couldn’t do the swearing-in because they couldn’t find me. I ran away to
 Osun and it was a friend of mine, now Senator (Ayo) Adeseun, that came 
to (Osun) to fetch me. I didn’t want to follow him but they knew they 
could always send somebody like him to look for me.
You thought they were not sincere enough?
Not that I thought they were not sincere
 enough, they were not sincere at all; they had their own plans but the 
constitution did not allow them to carry out their plans.
In the tussle between Osun and Oyo
 over Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomoso people believe 
that you wanted the university to be the property of Oyo simply because 
you are an Ogbomoso indigene.
Why can’t it be the property of Oyo State?
But what was in the public domain was that LAUTECH was a patrimony of the two states as established by the founding fathers.
That is a lie. LAUTECH belonged to the 
then Oyo State before Osun was carved out of it. After Osun was created,
 we still believed that we could still have it together, so we then 
allowed joint ownership of the university. But there is no law that 
allows that joint ownership. You know that Oyo cannot enact law for Osun
 and vice versa. So how can there be a joint ownership law? 
Unfortunately for Osun, the university is situated on Oyo soil, so how 
can you enact law for something that is not on your soil? But gentlemen 
agreement, administrative agreement, yes, we had that. We said the two 
states would co-fund it, six months apiece. While they acquire the 
school of health science in Osun, they could enact law for that but in 
my own wisdom, when  Osun created Osun State University which is solely 
owned by Osun and they are running it like a private university. They 
have campuses in all their major cities. Oyo did not have anything; 
LAUTECH conferred half ownership on us in Oyo, so in essence, we have 
half university; there is no university we can call our own. I then 
decided that since Osun has got its own university, we too should have 
our own. But before we have our own, I said we should prepare the 
ground. The ground that I wanted to prepare was that there must be a 
teaching hospital and there must be a college of health sciences in 
Ogbomoso. And I can say it without fear of any contradiction that as at 
today in Nigeria, LAUTECH has the best college of health sciences in 
Ogbomoso; go and look at the building and the contents, the lecture 
theatres and everything. After building the teaching hospital in 
Ogbomoso, I said let us share the assets of the university, the movables
 and the immovable. Years back before I came in, they had stopped 
capital projects and any capital project that was done in Ogbomoso was 
done by Oyo State and anyone done in Osogbo was done by Osun State. So, I
 then said let us share the assets and go our separate ways. University 
of Ado Ekiti used to belong to the old Ondo State and when Ekiti State 
was created, they shared the assets peacefully. Ondo State believed that
 the university was not its own and when it was time, they shared the 
assets. So if they could do that, why should ours be different? I said 
you Osun, you have your own university, so let us go in peace. I then 
proposed that even though it could not be 50-50 between us again, I 
promised them their admission quota for the next five years, they 
disagreed. I then decided to fight it out. But initially, Oyinlola 
agreed when the National Universities Commission intervened that we 
could go but there was a change of government in Osun and the new 
governor disagreed. But he was lucky I did not win election.
What would have happened?
I would have made it a reality.
But if Osun could have its own state university, what stopped Oyo from owning its own?
This is our own landed property. LAUTECH
 belongs to Oyo State; it’s on our land. I prepared the ground before I 
started fighting and when I brought the accreditation team, they opened 
their mouth and could not close it. What I wanted to do that time was to
 change LAUTECH to multi campus with campuses at Isheyin and  Igboho. It
 was just a pure convenience for my people because Osun could not have 
one and a half universities while we would have half. But they were 
lucky I didn’t win election.
Your successor, Chief Abiola Ajimobi has faulted the quality of roads your administration constructed.
He is entitled to his own opinion; let 
him do his own that is of quality. Look at me, I am a quality man 
myself, with due respect. Look at my house, I used quality materials. 
So, why would I do something that is not of quality; something that I 
want to leave as legacy for unborn generations?  With due respect, I go 
with quality and if you are not of quality, you can’t flow with me. 
Everything about me is about quality. He is entitled to say what he 
wants to say and if I were him, I would just keep quiet. Let him do his 
own that is of quality.
It was alleged that you demanded 
for N1bn from the civil service for your re-election but in the process,
 the civil servants too helped themselves to several millions of naira.
I don’t know anything about that. You 
see, when you don’t know how government operates, you don’t talk like 
that. Anybody talking like this is very senseless; he doesn’t have any 
sense. Am I a signatory to the service account? I did not ask anything 
from anybody.
You talked about quality, is it in terms of dressing too?
In terms of everything, Akala is a man of quality. Look at me, I am a man of quality, with due respect. I use quality materials.
Is the use of jewellery part of it too?
Yes, I have been using jewellery as a 
young man. Do you know what they called Ghana before, Gold Coast. I 
lived in Ghana and that was where I got used to it early in my life. We 
make statement with our looks in Ghana. In those days when we were in 
Ghana, your wife bathed you and took care of you. I am from Ghana, so I 
have been using jewellery (he sends for an album). I want to show you 
some pictures. Pictures that I took some 40 years back, you would see 
chains on my neck. Look at my hand chains and rings in this picture. 
That is how I was brought up.  Even when I was in (police) uniform, I 
wore my chain with my uniform.
Is it not was illegal for you to wear necklace with your uniform?
It was not legal but my uniform would cover it.
Is it part of your own fashion to bleach?
Bleach? That is stupidity; you are 
asking a very stupid question, how can I bleach? You are very stupid to 
ask that question. What do you mean by that? What gave you that 
impression?
(He pulled up his clothe and singlet to show his fair complexion.)
Is this bleaching? Have you seen the 
cream that I use that makes me bleach or did you know me when I was 
black? So if you want to write that, put it there that I said you are 
very stupid to ask me that kind of question. Don’t ask that kind of 
question again. What you don’t know; you ask. You don’t even know my 
parents. Is my wife complaining or my children? I don’t know what gave 
anybody the impression that I bleach. You don’t know me; do you know 
what it takes to bleach?
Does your wife still bathe you?
She can’t carry me anymore; we are old. 
Don’t forget that the First Lady is not my first wife. My first wife is 
an old woman like me and she is still with me. She was also brought up 
in Ghana and that’s why I was able to marry her. Most of the people in 
Nigeria cannot keep up with my lifestyle of cleanliness.
What lesson of life did you take away from Ghana?
A  lot. It is what has been helping me 
till now. I took forthrightness away from Ghana. In Ghana, you don’t 
steal or cheat. If you hear of any stealing there, it is those who came 
to reside there. We were very straightforward with our fellow human 
beings. You don’t make your neighbour unhappy. Even till date, there is 
no serious armed robbery in Ghana. In Ghana, when you know how to do 
anything, you know how to do it very well. Even when they came here (to 
Nigeria), they always mastered what they chose to do.
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