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Ayo Olukanni: The People’s Ambassador, steps forward – By Owei Lakemfa

I was a teenager when I first met Ayoola Lawrence Oluwole Olukanni, one of the most politically conscious, perceptive, charismatic and efficient African ambassadors I have ever known.

I had joined a  radical student organisation, the Alliance of Progressive Students, ALPS in the then University of Ife, now Obafemi  Awolowo University, OAU.  That decision changed my life trajectory towards  leaving  a better world.

I  was immediately attracted to Olukanni  who was to become one of my mentors. Some days later, I had enquired about him only to discover he was not a student! He had graduated the previous session and was a youth corper.  Despite this, he and some of his comrades like Ola ‘Fajo’ Fajemisin and Idowu Obasa, travelled frequently from their new stations to mentor us in Ife.

I lived in Lagos and when I went on holidays, I sought him out. He  had joined the Foreign Service.  I was not sure how a radically-minded youth, dedicated to changing  the rotten political system, could survive in this service.  But he not only did, but also made a marked difference  and contribution.  This  earned  him the affectionate sobriquet, ‘The People’s Ambassador’ for his demonstrable  and uncommon dedication  to the wellbeing and welfare not just of  the Nigerian people, but people wherever he served.

When he served in Israel, 1994-1998, he was informally involved with various organisations both on the Israeli and Palestinian sides to find a solution to the Palestinian Question. I knew he  would have been on the radar of the Israeli secret service, the Shin Bet with the possibility of  his accreditation  being withdrawn.  But I knew he didn’t care as he could not stand on the side-lines and make no contribution  to resolving what is basically, a fundamental human rights matter.

Olukanni  served twice at the  Permanent Mission  of Nigeria to the United Nations, UN  in New York.  When I met him during his first tour of duty to the UN, I asked him if he met the then Nicaraguan Permanent Representative Nora Astorga.  In 1978, during the Nicaraguan Revolution, she had lured the ‘butcher’ General Reynaldo Perez Vega, alias ‘El Perro’ or “the dog” to her home and,  got him  eliminated by the young  Sandinista revolutionaries.  In 1984, the United States had rejected Astorga’s appointment as ambassador, so Nicaragua  appointed her as its Permanent  Representative to the  UN. Olukanni said given the alphabetical order  countries sat in the UN, the Nicaraguan and Nigerian delegations sat together.  They became friends and talked a lot about revolutions and change in the world.

Whatever part of the world Olukanni served including the Nigerian Mission to the European Union, ACP, Kenya, Austria and Australia,  he was ever in touch.

He helped to fine-tune  and implement Nigeria’s foreign policy  on such diverse  issues as women,  environment,  human settlement, oil and atomic energy.  For three years from 2007, he returned home  as the Director, Public Communications  Division and Spokesperson  of the Foreign Ministry. In those days, I watched him a number of times interacting with  journalists  as he projected  the activities of the Ministry  and its over 100 Diplomatic Missions  across the world. It was a  season of high visibility for the  Foreign Ministry as the charismatic  Olukanni who was also well  known in the Nigerian cultural  firmament, relentlessly pushed the Foreign Ministry and its policy thrust of Citizen Diplomacy  and Economic Diplomacy,  to the front burner.

One day in 2011, I ran into him at the Abuja Airport. He was on his way to Perth. What is happening In Australia? He had been appointed ambassador to that country  with concurrent accreditation to  New Zealand, Fiji,   Papua New Guinea and Vanatu.

I knew he had come into his own  and would  shine like a thousand stars.  He did.  Levi Obijiofor, A Nigerian professor in Australia on Sunday, April 7, 2013, penned a testimony.  He lived in Queensland, so he and  his family had to travel to Canberra  to apply for the re-issue  of his wife’s e-passport which was due to expire.  He said in the past, he  had an unsavoury experience trying  to renew family passports, but a friend told him that an uncommon ambassador  had taken charge  and transformed the embassy into an efficient system.  He wrote that on arrival at the embassy, a smiling receptionist  asked him his mission: “I told her  I had an appointment to meet  with the  High Commissioner. She picked up the phone, spoke  for less  than half a minute  and asked us to follow her upstairs.  The VIP treatment  was exceptional. I never expected that  a Nigerian diplomat  in an overseas  country  would be so affable, amiable, easy to reach, and accommodating to someone  he has never met. As we were about to settle into the sofas in the waiting room, the High Commissioner  burst out of his office  and welcomed us warmly.   He was unassuming. He spoke in a mixture  of the Nigerian pidgin English and Queen’s English.  You felt as if you were  somewhere in Nigeria, in your classmate’s office…Later, he hosted  my family and I to lunch  in a restaurant  located atop  a mountain  from where you can catch  a bird’s  view  of the city of Canberra.”

Famous Nigerian writer and film maker, Biyi Bandele in 2012, was in Australia for  the premier of his film ‘Half of a Yellow Sun’ when he first met Olukanni: “ It was a pleasant surprise and a welcome  change from the indifferent -sometimes  outright  glacial-reception  we had been accorded  by the Nigerian consulates  in one or two  other countries  in the northern  hemisphere.”

On retirement from the Foreign Service, Olukanni  was in 2018,  head hunted to serve as the  Director General  of the Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture, NACCIMA. He served for five years.

When on March 22, 2025, Olukanni  turned 70, he thought the best way to mark the milestone, was to return to Ilesha where he had attended primary and secondary schools and give something back to the people. He hit on the idea of providing  free eye screening and  vision test for  seventy persons. He broached the idea with Ambassador Eniola Ajayi, an optometrist. She simply asked him to stand aside. She    brought eye care equipment, free drugs and frames.  There were 114 beneficiaries of the programme.

I joked with Olukanni that  his  Marxist ideology eyes  philanthropy with suspicion.  He responded in his lyrical style: “ As a Member  of the Left still Left  on the Left who deems it right  to do  a good cause, there is room for philanthropy. Even if all I get  in return  from these beneficiaries  are loads of prayers, I believe as a Catholic,  that I will not stay long  in purgatory.”