Former Managing Director of the News Agency of Nigeria , who was also
the first female president of Nigerian Guild of Editors, Remi Oyo has passed away
at age 62.
Mr. Dele Bodunde, NAN Deputy Editor-in-Chief confirmed Oyo’s death to DailyPost Thursday morning.
“It is true, Aunty ti lo (meaning Aunty is gone in Yoruba),” he said in a phone chat.
“She died Wednesday at about 1:30pm at a London hospital.”
“Its a great loss not just to all of us at NAN, but the Nigerian media at large. This is a sad moment.”
Official statement on the news of her dead is expected later today. Oluremi Oyo is survived by her husband, children and grandchildren
She began her journalism career in 1973
in the Nigerian Broadcasting Corporation, now known as the Federal Radio
Corporation of Nigeria (FRCN), as a reporter.
She later joined NAN as a Desk Editor in
1981 and left in 1985 as a Principal Editor, the first woman to attain
such a high position in the Agency.
In NAN, she was responsible for editing
copies for the General News and Foreign News Bulletin and headed the two
desks at different times.
Owing to her professional astuteness, she was put in-charge of the control of news going out of the Agency.
In her role as the Control Editor, she had the responsibility for ensuring the standard for which NAN became known.
“All stories transmitted by the Agency had the stamp of Dame Oyo,’’ the statement said.
She worked in NAN up to 1985 when she
left to take up an appointment with Inter Press Service News Agency
(IPS) as the Nigerian Bureau Chief.
She later became the Chief of IPS West African Bureau.
Oyo was elected President of the Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) and served for two consecutive tenures from 1999 to 2003.
She was the first woman to be so
honoured and she had also served first as Secretary of the NGE, the
professional body of editors running the country’s media industry.
“As President of the Guild, she set up a
functional secretariat which still exists today at the NAN complex,
Iganmu, Lagos by the National Arts,’’ the statement said.
Oyo was educated at the University of
Lagos, where she studied Mass Communication at the Diploma level
and graduated with distinction and the best graduating student.
She held a master’s Degree in
International Relations from the University of Canterbury at Kent and
also earned a post-graduate Diploma in International Relations from the
Nigeria Institute of International Affairs (NIIA), Lagos.
In honour of her patriotism, the former Head of State, General Abdulsalami Abubakar, appointed her as a member of the 1999 Constitution Drafting Committee.
She is a recipient of Nigeria’s National honour, the Officer of the Order of the Niger (OON).
She has also received many other awards,
including the National Council of Catholic Women Organisation of
Nigeria, Nigerian Institute of Management (NIM), and the Nigerian
Institute of Peace Administrators.
“On Jan. 7, 2011, His Holiness, Pope
Benedict XVI, imparted Apostolic Blessing on her for the prestigious
award of Papal Dame of the Order of St Gregory the Great,’’ the
statement said.
Her union with Vincent was blessed with two children, Otome and Okiemuote, and three grandchildren.
A devout Catholic, Oyo was
Vice-Chairperson of the Parish Pastoral Council of SS Joachim and Anne
of the Catholic Church, Ijegun, Lagos.
Her primary education was at St. James
Catholic Primary School in Ilorin and she attended St. Louis Girls
Secondary School, Bompai, Kano.
R.I.P.
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