BREAKING: NIGERIA’S AMBASSADOR TO SPAIN; DEMOLA SERIKI IS DEAD

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The death has been announced of Nigeria’s Ambassador to Spain, Demola Seriki.

Seriki was said to have passed on in the early hours of Thursday surrounded by his family in Madrid, Spain.

He had served Nigeria at different times as Minister of State for Agriculture and Water Resources, Minister for Mines and Steel, Minister of State for Defence, and Minister of State for Interior.

As a practising Muslim, it is expected that Seriki will be buried according to Muslim rites as soon as possible.

Born 30th November, 1959; Seriki resumed as Nigeria’s ambassador to Spain, in January 2021, with concurrent accreditation as a permanent representative of Nigeria to theĀ United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO).

In 1978, Seriki had started his career as a clerical officer in the Lagos City Council, City Hall, Lagos, and had a brief stint at the International Bank for West Africa Ltd (IBWA), now Afribank.

 

As a junior public servant, Seriki was not satisfied with his clerical job, because his secondary school qualification would not guarantee him promotion into the senior ranks of public service. So, he proceeded to New York where he studied for and earned Bachelor of Arts and Master of Science degrees in Accounting, Finance, and Management from the City University of New York. He also attended Harvard University’sĀ John F. Kennedy School of Government, where he completed a Senior Executive Education and earned a certificate in National and International Security.

 

Upon completion of his studies, from 1984 to 1986 Seriki became a teacher and counselor at New York’sĀ John F. Kennedy High School,Ā Walton High School, andĀ Springfield Gardens High School, teaching accounting and business mathematics.

 

Seriki was a qualified teacher in business, accounting and mathematics.

 

From 1986 to 1987, he worked at the Rochester, New York, firm of Koskolowsky and Co. (certified public accountants), as Assistant Manager (Auditing). He was also Customer Representative/Assistant Manager at Dollar Dry Dock Bank, New York City.

 

On returning to Nigeria,[4]Ā Seriki joined Equity and Trust Finance Company Limited, from 1987, as business manager until he was appointed chairman of the Lagos State Sports Council in 1992; a position he held until 1994. More than anywhere else in Nigeria at the time, Seriki’s tenure as chairman of the sports council coincided with political instability in Nigeria during the struggle for democratic rule by theĀ National Democratic Coalition, Nigeria, (NADECO) and civil society organisations, following the then military junta’s annulment of Nigeria’s general elections won byĀ M.K.O. Abiola. This period witnessed regular youth demonstrations and riots on the streets of Lagos.

 

In spite of the political instability, Seriki was instrumental in engaging young talent in sporting activities at the state and national levels. He applied his experiences as a grassroots organiser to orient local youth towards sporting activities, with educational institutions as platforms for youth participation in grassroots sports development programmes. Hence, Seriki was named Best State Chairman of Sports Council, for 1993, by the Nigerian Basketball Federation (NBBF). He was granted Honorary Life Membership in the Table Tennis Association in 1993, in recognition of his public administration expertise and passion for sports development in Lagos State.

 

With the Nigerian military due to hand over power (which they ultimately failed to do) in 1993, to elected civilians, Seriki left public service to start the Perpetual Investment and Finance Company Limited (PIFCO), as well as to launch a career in politics. The annulment of the 12 June 1993 general elections had led him into private business. From 1994 to 1999, Seriki was vice president of Rosedale New York based Perpetual Associates International (USA) Inc. (an international consulting firm serving multinational oil and aviation companies). He returned to PIFCO Nigeria Limited, from 1999 to 2007, as Executive Director for Business Development and Marketing.

In 1992, Seriki was the senatorial candidate for Lagos Central District constituency, on the platform of the defunctĀ National Republican ConventionĀ (NRC)

 

In 1998, he was elected a member of the federal House of Representatives from the Lagos Island federal constituency on the ticket of the defunctĀ United Nigeria Congress PartyĀ (UNCP). This victory was short-lived, with the abrupt end of theĀ General AbachaĀ regime and the inception ofĀ General Abdulsalam Abubakar’sĀ transitional regime.

 

With the emergence of the 4th Republic, he was appointed a National Fund Raising Committee member in theĀ Peoples Democratic PartyĀ (PDP) for the 1999 National elections. The PDP also appointed him as a member of the Candidate and Party Relations Committee for the Obasanjo/Atiku presidential election. From 2000 to 2002, Demola Seriki emerged as the PDP Party Chairman of Lagos Island Local Government Area, and later, in 2003, as the party’s flag bearer to the House of Assembly, representing Lagos Island federal constituency. In 2005, he began serving as Secretary of the Lagos State PDP Disciplinary Committee. In 2005, until 2006, he was appointed as the Lagos State vice-chairman of the PDP, after which, in 2007, he campaigned to become senator for the Lagos Central senatorial district.

 

Seriki’s campaign sought to ensure education and gainful employment of youths in his district. His political vision aimed to ensure quality education for youths in the rundown areas of his senatorial district, by gaining the support of the federal government through special federal government support schemes, to rejuvenate literacy in such densely populated parts of Lagos State described by him as the most cosmopolitan and populated in Nigeria. Seriki also sought to advance gender sensitivity in politics and in public service opportunities.These key issuesā€”along with housing, infrastructure development, and securityā€”have remained cornerstones of his approach to politics.

 

In 2011, Seriki defected from the PDP to the Action Congress of Nigeria.

 

In early 2021, Seriki was appointed by The President Muhammadu Buhari as Nigeria’s ambassador to Spain.

 

Minister of State for the Interior (2009 to March 2010)

 

Seriki worked in tandem with the Minister of Interior in the formulation and implementation of policies towards the realization of the ministry’s mandate. He chaired the Nigerian Civil Defence, Immigration, and Prisons Services Board and assisted in overseeing areas such as coordinating and ensuring harmony with the ministry’s mandate. He was responsible for overseeing the Nigeria Prison Service, Federal Fire Service, Seaman Identity Certificate, and Registration of Marriages, according to governing laws of Nigeria.

 

Minister of State for Defence (2008 to 2009)

 

Seriki served as the Minister of State for Defence between 2008 and 2009. His responsibilities included overseeing the Military Pensions Board, in order to attain the objectives envisaged by the federal government. He, in tandem with the Minister of Defence, worked to formulate and implement policies within the purview of his mandated schedule.

 

Under Seriki, there was effective oversight of the operations of the Armed Forces Resettlement Scheme and the welfare of ex-service personnelā€”including the Nigerian legion. He also oversaw matters relating to the honourable interment of deceased Nigerian armed forces personnel in war graves, as well as the documentation and preservation of Nigerian military history in military museums, including maintenance of the National Cenotaph. He coordinated the annual commemorative activities of the Armed Forces Remembrance Day Celebrations.

 

During his tenure as minister of state, Seriki was appointed chairman of the Defence Health Maintenance Limited, a holding company for military health maintenance initiatives. During this time, he was also the chairman of the Ministry of Defence HIV/USDoD joint initiative to ameliorate the lives of HIV/AIDS-infected servicemen and their families. He was a member of the Joint Development Authority of Nigeria-SĆ£o TomĆ© and PrĆ­ncipe.

 

Finally and significantly, he was responsible for the supervision of the joint services organisations andĀ parastatals, such as the Nigerian Defence Academy, Armed Forces Command and Staff College, National War College, Defence Industry Corporation of Nigeria (DICON), Nigerian Armed Forces Resettlement centre (NAFRC), and the Tafawa Balewa Square Investment Limited.

 

Supervising Minister for Mines and Steel Development (October 2008 to December 2008)Edit

 

Seriki had a short but remarkable stint holding this portfolio. He undertook various national initiatives through his supervision of the privatization of federal government enterprises in the solid minerals, steel, and aluminium industries. He advised the federal government on key matters relating to policy formulation and implementation to realize set growth indices in such industries. Seriki oversaw activities of Nigerian parastatals such as the Geological Surveys Agency of Nigeria, the Nigerian coal corporation joint venture Enugu, the National steel and raw materials agency Kaduna, the national metallurgical development centre Jos, the metallurgical training institute Onitsha, Ajaokuta Steel Company Limited, and the National Iron Ore Mining Company Limited. He was also key to ratifying the decisions of the Ministerial Tenders Board and the Procurement Planning Committee.

 

Minister of State for Agriculture and Water Resources (2007 to 2008)

 

During this, Seriki’s first appointment to national service, he worked alongside the minister in setting out policies on the agriculture and water resources needed to galvanise the employment, industrial, and social development of this sector of the Nigerian economy. He helped focus on the development and review of the National Water Resources Master Plan and also helped oversee ministerial activities in cash food crop production; livestock, fishery, agricultural research; agricultural disease control; agricultural statistics; strategic food reserve; and the distribution of essential inputs schedules within the ministry. Under his watch he ensured the aggressive implementation of the national policies and water resources development and distribution through irrigation dams, underground water supply, and water resources research and statistics programmes. He coordinated bilateral relations with governments on water resources and supervised activities of the river basin development authorities and the National Water Resources Institute. He was also elected the chairman the council of ministers of the Niger Basin Authority (NBA) in Niamey, Niger, in 2008. He was prominent as the country’s spokesperson on agricultural sector engagements at regional and international levels.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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