About two decades ago, Nathaniel Iyanda, 63, was well known to many
petroleum marketers and other key players in the oil and gas sector, who
always sought his services as a public relations and advertising
expert.
Iyanda was a pioneer member of the Board of Advertisers Association
of Nigeria. Until May 1997, he was the Public Relations/Advertising
Manager of the defunct Texaco Nigeria Plc (now MRS Plc).
At the peak of his career, he lived in a one-wing duplex in FESTAC
Town. And before his exit from Texaco, he was the chairman of a major
oil marketers’ public relations committee.
Indeed, it was Iyanda who directed the first and only country-wide
public education campaign on the usage of engine oil, which was jointly
sponsored by Agip, AP, ELF, Mobil, National, Texaco, Total and
Unipetrol.
Now, Iyanda lives in Ibafo, a community on the Lagos/Ibadan
Expressway. Gone is the luxury and the comfort that he was once
accustomed to. Instead of enjoying retirement with his family, the
former PR guru lives from hand-to-mouth and manages to earn a living by
distributing beverages to restaurants around the community.
Looking quite frail, Iyanda cuts the picture of anything but the
top-notch corporate executive that he used to be. His home is simple and
modest. The only giveaway is his diction and in-depth knowledge of the
petroleum marketing industry.
“I started working at a young age. After leaving secondary school, I
sat for the London CAM Diploma examination in public relations,
advertising and marketing. At 23 years, I was working with the Marketing
Research Department of the United African Company. That was between1969
and 1975. After that, I moved to the defunct Texaco, where I spent
over 20 years.
“I left Texaco in 1997. The company was downsizing at the time.
Actually, what happened was this: the company wanted to let go some
senior executives, but it found itself in a dilemma. So, the management
came up with this idea of retiring everyone who had worked in the
company for over 15 years. That was how I left the company. Many good
hands left at the time,” Iyanda recalled.
Although he was paid off, things began to go down the hill from that point.
“I invested about N1.5m in stocks and another N1m in fixed deposits.
Although a public relations consulting wasn’t really an accepted
practice at the time, I was fortunate to be a guest speaker on the
subject at several events. I was even retained by Texaco as an external
PR consultant.
“The string of misfortunes began when my contract with Texaco was
discontinued. Even as an external consultant, the Managing Director
still felt threatened by me and so, I left. After that, I went into
multiple streams of businesses; at a time trading in calcium, a raw
material used for paints. Then I moved into the sale of beans and maize.
“The calcium trade is uncertain because your profit is dependent on
those who pulverize the calcium. If you own a pulverizing machine, then
it is much more profitable. My partner, who owned such a machine packed
up; as if that was not enough, I was defrauded of N300,000.
“It was tough trying to break into the beans trade. I have discovered
that there is a cabal in charge of everything in this country and once
you are not a member, you are eventually frustrated out. By 2002, I had
hit rock bottom.”
Meanwhile, all through the years, Iyanda had yet to have a child.
Despite the difficulty, he never for once considered breaking up his
home on that account. His wife, herself an only child, did not find the
situation easy. But the couple held on to their faith and continued to
trust in God.
Miraculously, when life had become most difficult for Iyanda, his wife eventually became pregnant.
“We had been married for 27 years before my wife got pregnant. It was
not easy waiting all the while, but my parents and my in-laws were
staunch Christians. So, they stood by us. In 2003, my wife was delivered
of a baby boy. By then, I was broke and had no money. My stocks had
been made useless by the crash in the stock market and the fixed deposit
account I had was gone because the bank in which the money was saved,
failed. My wife and son were in Ibadan at the time. So, after
discussing with her, we decided to sell our home in FESTAC town and move
to another place,” Iyanda said.
Armed with the proceeds from the sale, Iyanda moved to Ibafo,
purchased a parcel of land and began to build a small house. Despite his
financial constraints, the building contractor allegedly duped him of a
large sum of money, leaving him with nothing with which to begin life
again.
“The plan was to build a small house and start another business with
whatever was left, but the building contractor cleaned me out. The news
went round the Ibafo community. By the time this house was completed,
there was nothing left.
“As God would have it, while we were still in FESTAC Town, my wife
had converted our garage into some kind of store where we sold drinks.
So, she suggested that we go into that line of business. That was how we
went into partnership with a lady friend at Agege, who is a major
distributor of soft drinks. We have been doing that for seven years now
but all we get from it is just enough to go by every day. I finally have
a child but there is no money to adequately take care of him. Things
are so bad that paying school fees is really difficult. Yet, I cannot
give him up because we have waited for a child for so long,” Iyanda
lamented.
Until help comes his way, Iyanda will continue as a drinks vendor, living each day at a time.
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