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Tuesday, 13 May 2014
My father is judge, prosecutor at home – Charlie Boy
Charles Oputa, first son of the late Justice Chukwudifu
Oputa, said that his father was not just a legal icon but also
a judge and prosecutor at home.
Oputa, popularly called, `Charlie Boy in Nigeria’s social
circle’, made this known in an interview with the press in
his house in Gwarimpa, Abuja at the weekend.
According to him, Oputa is an uncompromising upright man,
strict disciplinarian and an overbearing father who never
compromised on whatever standards that he set for his
children.
He said that when he was growing up he felt that his
father’s influence was an albatross on his neck.
Oputa said that he had to rebel against the ‘status quo’ by
taking to the entertainment career which was not in line
with his father’s wish for him.
“My late father was not just a renowned legal icon but he
was also a responsible family man, a judge and prosecutor
at home because nobody could win any argument against
him on all issues
at home.
“While growing up I thought my dad was unnecessarily
overbearing and an albatross on my neck, so I decided to
rebel against him and be far away from his shadow.
“So, when I returned from the USA, I decided to relocate
from my father’s Lagos base to the village and later set up
Charlie Boy Music and Brand through personal hard work
and tenacity of
purpose,’’ he said.
He said that when he made a success of his brand, his
father had no choice than to have total respect for him and
sought his opinion on ‘everything under the sun’.
Oputa said that 10 years before his death, his father became
his best friend and would never take any major decision
without seeking approval first from him.
Charlie Boy said he would miss his father’s friendship and
intimate conversations with him, which he said, bordered on
`everything under the sun, ranging from law, politics, sex
and religion’.
“To underscore this cordial father-son relationship, I
literally died for the two days that he was ill that led to his
death,’’ he said.
Oputa, however, expressed dismay over the fact that the
report of the Obasanjo administration’s Human Rights
Violation Panel which was chaired by his father had yet to
be implemented.
NAN recalls that the late Oputa, popularly called the
Socrates of Nigeria’s Supreme Court, died on May 4 in
Abuja at the age of 96. (NAN)
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