He designed the flag in October 1959, a year before Nigeria gained independence. He was paid – 100 pounds, equal to $ 281 in 1959.
The 79-year-old Akinkunmi now lives in one of the poorest areas of Ibadan. His house painted in colours of Nigerian flag is a distinctive feature in the area and it can only be reached by foot. However, Akinkunmi doesn’t have a car. He doesn’t even have a phone. He lives separated from his wife for two decades after his health started deteriorating and now his only companion is his 28-year-old son.
Akinkunmi’s son built a house for his father painted with the colours of Nigerian flag. Photo: Al Jazeera |
After Akinkunmi was forced to retire from civil service in 1993 due to his progressive illness, his pension payments were so irregular that he could not even feed himself. His neighbours had to come to his rescue, handing him food and clothes.
Sunday Olawale Olaniran says that when he first saw Nigeria’s forgotten hero in miserable condition, he started to cry Photo: Al Jazeera |
However, Sunday also says that despite Akinkunmi’s terrible living conditions, he never heard anything negative from the old man. “He would only say ‘God bless Nigeria,’ or ‘Nigeria is moving forward and will keep moving forward’”, Olaniran says. He also remembers that when he appealed to the press even the journalists couldn’t believe first that Akinkunmi was still alive.
Michael Taiwo Akinkunmi’s statue near his house commemorates his deed for Nigeria.Al Jazeera |
Akinkunmi received his first award from the federal government in October 2010, during Nigeria’s celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of independence.
The very first model of the green and white Nigeria’s flag designed by Michael Taiwo Akinkunmi in 1959. Photo: Al Jazeera |
But Akinkunmi says that these days most of all in his life he enjoys walking through his neighbourhood in Ibadan.
Last year in his annual independence address, then-president Goodluck Jonathan listed a number of goals reached by his administration, but, at the same time, admitted that Nigeria was facing many challenges.
At the same time, the former Lagos state governor Asiwaju Bola Tinubu explained why he didn’t feel optimistic about celebrating Nigeria’s 54th Independence in an elaborate fashion.
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