Tag: Dead

  • VIDEO: Popular US based ‘prophet’ Slyvester Ofori shoots wife dead

    VIDEO: Popular US based ‘prophet’ Slyvester Ofori shoots wife dead

    The City of Orlando Police Department has arrested a self-described prophet and founder of Floodgates of Heaven International Ministries named Sylvester Ofori in the murder of his 27-year-old wife.

    The 35-year-old “pastor” was arrested on Tuesday night after he shot his wife Barbara Tommey outside the Navy Federal Credit Union branch where she worked.

    The shooting happened at around 9 a.m. at Navy Federal Credit Union on Gardens Park Boulevard.

    Orlando Police, in a brief statement Tuesday night, said Tommey “was shot near the front door of the business by her husband, Sylvester Ofori.”

    Police said the shooting was captured on security footage.

    “You can tell that she’s trying to get inside. Unfortunately, he shoots her outside of the establishment,” Police Chief Orlando Rolon said.

    Police added that “detectives worked tirelessly throughout the day in order to achieve the following outcome in this case.”

    A search warrant was served at Ofori’s apartment, where he was taken into custody, police said.

    Ofori was booked into the Orange County Jail at 9:39 p.m and now being held without bond.

    He is now being charged with first-degree murder with a firearm.

    Watch the live briefing on the capture of the suspect in the murder of his wife below:

     

    However, a further check showed that Ofori and his ministry have an extensive social media presence – Ofori’s page has 61,756 followers while his ministry Floodgates of Heaven International Ministries has 5,552 followers on Facebook.

    On his Facebook page, Ofori described himself as a prophet and motivational speaker.

    A post on his page on August 23 said: “I truly believe that every single person has to go through something that absolutely destroys them so they can figure out who they really are,”

    The physical address of his church is 44 Coburn Ave., Orlando.

    Its Facebook page says the ministry is dedicated to helping those who need to increase their “prayer life.”

    “We believe that prayer changes things & the bible says that the prayer of a righteous man availeth much,” the page says. “We are praying that God’s will be done on earth as it is in heaven.”

    A website to hire speakers and entertainers says Ofori was born in Accra, Ghana.

    “He attributes his zeal for God to his parents who instilled the fear of the Lord in the hearts of all five of their children,” his bio reads.

    As an anointed and chosen man of God, Ofori “flows in the gifts of the Holy Spirit” and he has Christ-like powers and a knack for interpreting dreams.

    Ofori has healed the sick, cast out of demons, and battled witchcraft, the site says.

    “Clothed in the spirit of humility, he acknowledges that he is totally dependent upon Jesus, as he is able to do nothing of himself,” the bio adds. “He is always careful to give credit to God.”

    However, Ofori’s wife Tommey was the assistant manager of the credit union, where she worked for more than five years, according to a Linkedin profile.

    Her profile further revealed that she graduated from the University of Central Florida in 2015 with a bachelor’s degree in finance.

  • Black Panther star, Chadwick Boseman is dead

    Black Panther star, Chadwick Boseman is dead

    Chadwick Boseman,star of “Black Panther,” died on Friday after a four year battle with colon cancer.He died at 43.

    Before he was cast as the Marvel Studios superhero, Boseman’s career first exploded with his portrayals of Black American icons Jackie Robinson (in 2013’s “42”) and James Brown (in 2014’s “Get on Up”).

    “It is with immeasurable grief that we confirm the passing of Chadwick Boseman,” said a statement posted to his Twitter feed. “It was the honor of his life to bring King T’Challa to life in ‘Black Panther.’”

     

    “Chadwick’s passing is absolutely devastating,” said Kevin Feige, president of Marvel Studios and chief creative officer of Marvel, in a statement. “He was our T’Challa, our Black Panther, and our dear friend. Each time he stepped on set, he radiated charisma and joy, and each time he appeared on screen, he created something truly indelible. He embodied a lot of amazing people in his work, and nobody was better at bringing great men to life. He was as smart and kind and powerful and strong as any person he portrayed. Now he takes his place alongside them as an icon for the ages. The Marvel Studios family deeply mourns his loss, and we are grieving tonight with his family.”

     

    Walt Disney Co. chairman Bob Iger said, “We are all heartbroken by the tragic loss of Chadwick Boseman — an extraordinary talent, and one of the most gentle and giving souls I have ever met. He brought enormous strength, dignity and depth to his groundbreaking role of Black Panther; shattering myths and stereotypes, becoming a long-awaited hero to millions around the world, and inspiring us all to dream bigger and demand more than the status quo. We mourn all that he was, as well as everything he was destined to become. For his friends and millions of fans, his absence from the screen is only eclipsed by his absence from our lives. All of us at Disney send our prayers and heartfelt condolences to his family.”

  • Wada A. MAIDA: Sunset at Dusk – Ali M. Ali

    Wada A. MAIDA: Sunset at Dusk – Ali M. Ali

    By Ali Ali

    “Every soul will taste death” Quran (3:185)

    If you love and care for me, tell me while I’m alive. Don’t send me flowers and write a poem when I’m dead. -Allen Lazar

    Late Malam Wada Abdullahi Maida seemed to live all his life mindful of this Quranic verse-that “Every soul will taste death” Quran (3:185) And he chose his flavour very well. He chose the flavour of tolerance and patient. In surah Al Baqarah, Allah (SWT) said “O you who have believed seek help through patience and prayer. Indeed, Allah is with the patient.” [2:153]

    In words and in deeds, late Maida was a man of patience and prayer.
    In the nearly thirty years I have known him, he came across as a man with inelastic tolerance and patient. Supremely mild mannered, he lived for the years I have known mindful that one day he will exit and so chose to be a man of peace and mild disposition. He was an unusual media leader. His exit is a personal loss. He wasn’t just the chairman of the Board of Peoples Media Limited publishers of Peoples Daily where I headed management for half a dozen years; he was a mentor and a father figure. My go to genie each time I ran into a brick wall. Never a day he failed to mentor or nudge me in the right direction. A profoundly decent human being. A dye-in-the-wool journalist and media manager. He made a rebuke or a reprimand looked so tender, you would be ashamed to go before him again. Mild mannered, soft-spoken, incapable of mouthing an unkind word that would disparage your self worth. I have worked with several highflying media leaders across five newsrooms nationwide, none came close to Maida in putting a leash on his emotion no matter the provocation or disappointment. In temperament and in disposition, it was impossible to picture the deceased hurting a fly. If ever there was an “ice king”, late Wada Maida was it!

    I will regret, forever, not penning a tribute when late Malam Wada Abdullahi Maida turned 70 last March. I merely sent him a text and wished more years in good health to which he characteristically replied almost immediately. I did however; tell him that I was going to write one when I was more collected, to which he was neither excited nor indifferent.
    At the time Covid-19 had become a global pandemic. There was near national hysteria. So I deferred writing a tribute wrongly assuming we both had time. I assumed wrongly.
    By April, I became gravely ill .My home state was assailed by mysterious deaths. In one fell swoop; I lost long time colleagues, childhood friends, associates and a stepfather. Composing a tribute took a backseat as I battled to survive myself. At the back of my mind, I knew that a tribute to Wada Maida was a self-assigned task that must be accomplished. Days turned to weeks and weeks turned to months without delivering. Now he is gone. I am doubly pained by procrastinating the tribute and by his sudden exit and
    And here I am, paying homage to man who was the very definition of “tolerance” and “mentorship”. I am sad that he is not alive to read my tribute to his 70-year life trajectory and what he represented to me and a host of others in Peoples Daily and elsewhere in the media world where he impacted intensely.
    When I was hired to lead the management, there wasn’t really a “formal” interview. Garba Shehu, my other mentor, who persuaded me to join People Media merely, asked me to see the late Septuagenarian who I first met in 1991 at a workshop organized by the Centre of Democratic Studies (CDS) in Bwari, in conjunction with the Nigeria Guild of Editors (NGE). Wada had just been elected president after Onyeama Ugochukwu of Daily Times. He was about 41.he was also the editor-in-chief of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN). I was among a dozen handpicked reporters drawn from several media outlets nationwide. Garba Shehu nominated me from the Kano based Triumph.to benefit from that training. Wada’s lanky frame decked in a suit and flawlessly delivered opening address arrested my attention. That marked the beginning of being his ‘mentee’ even without his knowledge.
    I used to go pay occasional visits to his office as Managing Director without any appointment and would be welcomed warmly. Our discussions invariably centered around the media with occasional mention of Shehu who was then Managing Director of the Triumph while I was editor of the broadsheet SUNDAY TRIUMPH.
    The Board of Peoples Daily was peopled by the likes of late Abba Kyari, late Halita Aliyu, late veteran journalist Rufai Ibrahim, Garba Shehu, Bilya Bala, Abdulmumuni Bello, Ibrahim Ismail and the late Isma’ila Isa FUNTUA. Maida chaired this group of eminent persons. Abba Kyari and Garba Shehu had to resign when they got into government in 2015.
    It was this Board that hired me not just an employee but also one with stake
    I reported only to the late patriarch. Board meetings can be stormy. Peoples Daily wasn’t different. Most times, management would be whipped silly; Maida was ever sympathetic and understanding to the chagrin of some of the members. His approach to dealing with Management was patriarchal. One year, the ever-censorious Board was so impressed that a formal commendation letter signed by the chairman was given to Management.
    Late Maida was a teacher in the Boardroom as he was in the newsroom. Effortlessly without being gaudy, he was the sort that would nudge in the right direction imperceptibly without claiming credit. With his death, the tribe of media vets is further depleted. With the passage of late Isma’ila Isa Funtua, Maida was the natural choice to fill in the vacuum of a bridge builder and peacemaker. That was not to be. Exactly four weeks after Funtua sudden passage, Maida followed in almost identical situation. Both died on a Monday in the night and were buried on Tuesday afternoon in same cemetery and prayers held in the same mosque. At 70,he had lived life to the full. May Allah grant him eternal rest and Aljannah Firdausi, his final abode. Adieu my chairman, till we meet again.

  • Rock guitarist Jack Sherman is dead

    Rock guitarist Jack Sherman is dead

    Rock guitarist, Jack Sherman, who played on the first album by the Red Hot Chili Peppers and co-wrote several of the Grammy-winning group’s early songs is dead. He passed on at the age of 64.

     

    The group mentioned no cause of his death.

     

    “We of the RHCP family would like to wish Jack Sherman smooth sailing into the worlds beyond, for he has passed,” the Chili Peppers said on Twitter.

     

     

     

    “Jack played on our debut album as well as our first tour of the USA.”

     

    The Chili Peppers paid further homage in a second tweet, saying, “He was a unique dude and we thank him for all times good, bad and in between.”

     

    TheNewsGuru recalls that In 1984, Sherman replaced guitarist Hillel Slovak for the group’s first album, “The Red Hot Chili Peppers,” and he collaborated on the second, “Freaky Styley” in 1985, according to the Deadline website.

     

    Slovak later returned to the popular group, replacing Sherman.

     

    The Chili Peppers went on to sell more than 80 million albums.

     

    In 2012, when the group led by Anthony Kiedis was inducted to the prestigious Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Sherman was excluded, despite his early involvement with the group.

     

    The decision, he said, was “really painful,” adding, “I’m being dishonored, and it sucks.”

     

     

     

    Sherman went on to play on albums by Bob Dylan and funk star George Clinton, according to the Guitarworld website.

     

    Rock guitarist, Jack Sherman, who played on the first album by the Red Hot Chili Peppers and co-wrote several of the Grammy-winning group’s early songs is dead. He passed on at the age of 64.

     

    The group mentioned no cause of his death.

     

    “We of the RHCP family would like to wish Jack Sherman smooth sailing into the worlds beyond, for he has passed,” the Chili Peppers said on Twitter.

     

     

     

    “Jack played on our debut album as well as our first tour of the USA.”

     

    The Chili Peppers paid further homage in a second tweet, saying, “He was a unique dude and we thank him for all times good, bad and in between.”

     

    TheNewsGuru recalls that In 1984, Sherman replaced guitarist Hillel Slovak for the group’s first album, “The Red Hot Chili Peppers,” and he collaborated on the second, “Freaky Styley” in 1985, according to the Deadline website.

     

    Slovak later returned to the popular group, replacing Sherman.

     

    The Chili Peppers went on to sell more than 80 million albums.

     

    In 2012, when the group led by Anthony Kiedis was inducted to the prestigious Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Sherman was excluded, despite his early involvement with the group.

     

    The decision, he said, was “really painful,” adding, “I’m being dishonored, and it sucks.”

     

     

     

    Sherman went on to play on albums by Bob Dylan and funk star George Clinton, according to the Guitarworld website.

  • Sad! Popular makeup artiste dies weeks after birthday

    Sad! Popular makeup artiste dies weeks after birthday

    Williams Anuoluwapo, a prominent make-up artiste in Nollywood is dead.

    The makeup-artiste who is fondly called Kumbalee died in a motorcycle accident on Sunday, August 16, just two weeks after celebrating his birthday.

     

    TheNewsGuru recalls that Kumbalee had shared new photos of himself on his Instagram page to celebrate his birthday just two weeks back.

     

    His colleagues in the industry have taken to social media to express shock at his sudden demise.

     

     

    Actress, Jumoke Odetola, in a tribute posted on her Instagram page, said she was shocked at the news of his demise because she spoke with him a day before his death.

     

    She wrote: ”DEATH IS WICKED!!!

    Just yesterday, you told me how much you missed me.Just yesterday, we were together.Today, you are no more. What is the meaning of life after all? Vanity upon vanity.The memories of you I have is all the positive vibes you exhume. You just know how to bring out the sweet part in me, heartbreaking I will never see that again.”

     

    Adeniyi Johnson, described Kumbalee as a humble person.

     

    ”Rest well bro, you will forever be missed … God forgive all your sins… such a humble guy @kumbaleemakeover”

    Another actress, Yetunde Bakare wrote:” Haaa ?? this one hit me differently ? iwo Olorun oooo ?? such a hardworking young man ?? The way you treat everybody with respect makes you different”.

  • Ex-Buhari’s aide, Wada Maida is dead

    Ex-Buhari’s aide, Wada Maida is dead

    Mallam Wada Maida, former Chief Press Secretary (CPS) to President Muhammadu Buhari has passed on.

    Maida died on Monday night in Abuja, according to a family source.

    Maida was CPS to Buhari when he was military head of state.

    He served as Managing Director (MD) of News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    He later founded and became the Chairman of Peoples Media Limited, publisher of Peoples Daily Newspapers.

    In March 2020, Buhari celebrated Maida on his 70th birthday.

    His demise happened weeks after Isa Funtua, another Buhari’s ally passed on.

  • Only wicked people will spread lies about me being dead- Ebenezer Obey

    Only wicked people will spread lies about me being dead- Ebenezer Obey

    Legendary Juju musician, Ebenezer Obey Fabiyi has condemned those spreading false news about him being dead.

    The revered musician expressed his angst in a video shared by BBC Yoruba on Instagram on Friday.

    “I have been rumoured dead thrice in one month. If those individuals are not wicked, why would they say I am dead when I am alive.Nothing is wrong with me,” he said.

    TheNewsGuru recalls that one of the false reports about Obey’s death alleged that he passed on in London in July.

    In a recent chat, the veteran singer condemned contemporary Nigerian musicians.

    According to him:” I commend the new generation of musicians for the impact they have been able to make. Their generation understands their language and they have lots of followers, which is good.

     

    However, vile things, such as rape, that are happening these days weren’t like this back in the days. It seems people have lost their minds. These days, one finds people raping infants and things like that break my heart. We definitely cannot afford to continue like this. I am happy with how seriously the government is taking the issue, though we still need to talk more. There should be stiffer sanctions for offenders, so it would deter others from committing the same crimes.

     

    The new generation of musicians should be mindful of their lyrics so that they don’t contribute to the moral decadence in society. They should rather use their music to pass positive messages because they have lots of fans who listen to them”.

  • BREAKING: APC chieftain, Lanre Rasak is dead

    BREAKING: APC chieftain, Lanre Rasak is dead

    A prominent Lagos politician and chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief Lanre Rasak is dead.

    Rasak, a member of Lagos APC Governor’s Advisory Council (GAC), the highest decision making organ of the party in the state died on Saturday in Lagos at 74 .

    The deceased, an Epe indigene, was a former Local Government chairman, Commissioner of Transportation and a former Deputy National Chairman of the defunct All Nigeria People’s Party (ANPP)

    Confirming his death on Saturday, the state Chairman of the party, Alhaji Tunde Balogun said the party was devastated by Rasak’s demise.

    He described the deceased as a very loyal influential party man, saying his death was a rude shock.

    “We are sad to hear the news of the death of one of our very influential and loyal party men, chief Lanre Rasak today.

    “We are pained by the exit of this great man who contributed immensely to the progress of our party.

    “Chief Lanre Rasak was a great asset to the party and one of the elders .We are still in disbelief about his exit, we are pained,” he said .

    According to him, Rasak will be sorely missed by members of the party and Lagosians in general, and prayed to God to grant his soul Aljanah Firdaus.

    “We also pray that God will grant the family the fortitude to bear the loss.”

     

  • Kashamu: Backstory Of Obasanjo’s Letter To The Dead – Azu Ishiekwene

    Azu Ishiekwene

    From the way he addressed the letter, you could almost guess that he had some difficulty writing it, but Olusegun Obasanjo being Olusegun Obasanjo, he wrote it anyway.

    Usually, condolence letters are addressed to the bereaved family, while others could be in copy. But former President Obasanjo chose, instead, to indulge his pet peeve his own way. He sent his condolence letter on the passing of Buruji Kashamu to Ogun State Governor, Dapo Abiodun, hoping that somehow, the family will get the message.

    Well, thanks to social media, not only Kashamu’s family, the wider public also read Obasanjo’s letter to the dead. It has drawn the extremes of emotions, which the former president has come to represent in public life and which he is used to.

    In the past, the former president has been accused of exaggerations or making up stories in which he is the only legend. This time, however, what he said about Kashamu was true.

    It’s true that in his lifetime, Kashamu, also known as Esho Jinadu, was a fugitive from justice in the United States where he was wanted for drug-related offences.

    It’s true that he exploited every known legal subterfuge, money and politics to frustrate attempts to extradite him to the US. He seemed to combine the invincibility of Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada the Mexican drug cartel boss, with the Robin Hood-like quality of Pablo Escobar, the famous Colombian drug kingpin of the Medellin, who not only laid down the terms of his surrender, but also built and stayed in his own prison.

    In spite of a $2million bounty on his head by the US, Escobar escaped extradition until his “understanding” with the Colombian authorities broke down. He was killed by the national police a day after his 44th birthday, drawing a crowd of over 25,000 to his funeral.

    Obasanjo was correct that there are lessons to be learnt – lessons for him and for all, since obituaries are not for the dead.

    But that is not where the story ends. In an outrage that evoked the tried and tested theory of the leading 20th century communication scholar, Marshall McLuhan, that the “medium is the message,” not a few insist that it was not in Obasanjo’s place to wield the cane.

    The former president, loved and hated almost in equal measure, is medium, message and messenger rolled into one.

    In the specific case of Kashamu, you’ll have to go back beyond the former president’s bombastic letters to his party and to President Goodluck Jonathan six years ago, to get a clearer picture of why the narrative is turning out, sadly, to be a master-class in hypocrisy, an alien concept in Obasanjo’s world.

    When former Ogun State Governor, Gbenga Daniel, was leaving in 2011, he was obsessed, like they all are, with who will become his successor. He wanted Gboyega Nasir Isiaka, a first-class accountant, chartered stockbroker and banker, to succeed him.

    Obasanjo, who was still brooding at being sidelined by the Umar Musa Yar’Adua government, finally had the chance to use his third term through the backdoor after Yar’Adua’s death. And he did. He very quickly returned into reckoning with President Jonathan, but he wasn’t satisfied at just being the big man on the Abuja stage.

    He also wanted to be the local godfather by installing his own man as governor. And that man was Tunji Olurin, Daniel’s sworn enemy and Obasanjo’s battering ram in a few South-west battles, especially in Ekiti State. Since only one man could be governor in 2011, that man had to be Daniel’s man, Obasanjo’s man – or a third force. The die was cast.

    It wasn’t long before the Ogun State House of Assembly became fractured, with the main group backing Obasanjo (who now had the Abuja upper hand) and the other faction backing Daniel, who was fast becoming a lame duck.

    But there was a problem. Even though Obasanjo had temporary advantage, he didn’t have the structure and grassroots support to win in a straight fight with Daniel, a lame duck who, nonetheless, still had loose change to quaff.

    Obasanjo turned to Kashamu for help. After a protracted trial in the UK in 2003 and serving a five-year jail term, Kashamu had narrowly escaped extradition to the US on grounds that the UK judge was uncertain about his identity. On his return to Nigeria, Kashamu, wealthy as shekere, plunged into politics, investing in grassroots politics through the Omo Ilu Foundation.

    In politics where money is almost everything, Kashamu’s money did two things: It fed the poor among the grassroots in Ogun (later extending his influence beyond Ogun), and also made him a serviceable tool in the hands of Obasanjo, a man more famous than the raven for his stinginess.

    No one asked questions about the source of Kashamu’s wealth: not the people who didn’t care to know or Obasanjo who knew but didn’t care. Proof that he knew is available in volume three Page 259 of his memoir, My Watch, where he quoted extensively from a paper on drug trafficking in West Africa by Lansana Gberie. But what Obasanjo knew was obviously not as important as the money he needed.

    The Kashamu’s money tap flowed and flowed in support of Obasanjo’s candidate, Olurin. It also continued to flow to the grassroots where Kashamu stealthily cornered the party structures with his booty.

    At a point, top members of Daniel’s cabinet including the state’s attorney general and commissioner for justice at the time, Akinlolu Osinbajo (SAN), called the attention of Jonathan to Kashamu’s case in the US and flagged the source of his wealth.

    The more they tried to make it an election issue, which it should have been, the more the pro-Kashamu crowd, headed by Obasanjo, blocked it, promoting Kashamu instead as an illustrious son of Ogun.

    In the end, the Ogun State PDP became factionalised, fatally undermined from inside to the advantage of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) candidate, Ibikunle Amosun, who emerged governor.

    Olurin, Obasanjo’s candidate was second; while Isiaka, Daniel’s candidate who moved from PDP to the People’s Party of Nigeria (PPN), came third.

     

    The 2011 governorship election in Ogun set the stage, but Jonathan’s second term bid was the last straw: Obasanjo and Kashamu, former allies in the governorship election in Ogun State and Daniel’s mutual foes, found themselves on different, radically irreconcilable sides of Jonathan’s ambition.

    Obasanjo took a stand against Jonathan. Kashamu, a businessman keen to expand his reach in Nigeria and beyond, stuck with Jonathan. As a reward, he was made the PDP leader in the South-west, knocking Obasanjo off the party’s pecking order.

     

    It was a humiliation too much for the former president to bear. He unleashed a vitriolic attack on the party and President Jonathan accusing them of getting in bed with a drug dealer and a fugitive and threatening to quit the party.

    The matter grieved him so much that he mentioned it extensively in his memoir, My Watch. Not that any of it was news to him. He just didn’t care, as long as it served his interest to turn a blind eye. And what did it matter, anyway, constancy is not a virtue in politics, especially our own variety.

    What Obasanjo said about Kashamu was true, but it’s unlikely that he would have said it if Kashamu had remained in his corner servicing his ego and taking his order, a la carte. He doesn’t need to remind the public that we can say what we like about him when he passes. There’s no need for that. Obituaries are for the living and what is already being said about him while he’s alive couldn’t be worse.

    Kashamu’s death is a lesson which doesn’t need Obasanjo’s hypocrisy to be learned. Obasanjo’s life, on the other hand, is incomplete without hypocrisy.

    Ishiekwene is MD/Editor-In-Chief of The Interview

     

  • Buhari mourns Walter Carrington, calls him long time friend of Nigeria

    Buhari mourns Walter Carrington, calls him long time friend of Nigeria

    President Muhammadu Buhari has expressed sadness over the demise of former United States Ambassador to Nigeria, Walter Carrington, describing him as a “long time friend of Nigeria and an astute and courageous diplomat.”

    The Nigerian leader made his feelings known in a statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Malam Garba Shehu, in Abuja on Wednesday.

    Buhari, in a tribute, praised the late ambassador whom he said “openly supported the people of this country when they fought for the return of democracy following the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential elections won by the late Moshood Abiola.”

    ”The story of the Nigerian democracy under the Fourth Republic will not complete without a mention of the heroic roles of the likes of Ambassador Carrington.

    “On behalf of my family, the government and people of Nigeria, I commiserate with the family of the deceased, his friends and admirers as well as the government and people of the United States.”

    In July, Buhari had congratulated Carrington on his 90th birthday, recalling the role he played in steering Nigeria back to democracy.

    President Buhari expressed his personal appreciation and that of the Federal Republic of Nigeria for the extraordinary support of the Ambassador for democratic causes in Nigeria and around the globe.

    “Thank you, Ambassador Carrington!’’ the president said.

    Carrington, born in 1930 was an American diplomat, who served as the United States Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Senegal and Nigeria.

    He was appointed by U.S. President Bill Clinton in 1993 as the US Ambassador to Nigeria, where he remained until 1997.

    He married a Nigerian medical doctor Arese Ukpoma who announced his death today. Arese is now 62 years old.