Category: Friday

  • Nigeria’s Triangular Axis of Evil

    Nigeria’s Triangular Axis of Evil

    Monologue

    History is not just a teacher of all times for all living human beings. It is also a permanent school that constantly reminds mankind of the lessons to learn from the various events and experiences of the past as a means of guidance towards the future.

    About 900 years ago, an Arab poet of the second Umayyad Dynasty, in Spain, came up with a bewildering stanza that is now more relevant to Nigeria than his own nation and his own time. An  excerpt from the poem went thus:

    “Here is the period in human life about which we had been seriously warned in the words of Ubayy Bn Ka’b and those of Abdullah Bn Mas‘ud; Here is the period in which truth is meant to be totally rejected; And falsehood as well as evil machinations are to be warmly accepted and upheld as societal norms; Should this period continue to swing dangerously (like a pendulum over our nation) without any positive change, the world will surely forage into a stage in life when grief over deaths will become an aberration even as rejoice over the birth of new babies will become an anathema”.

     

    Observation

    Today, judging Nigeria’s situation, by what we can see and feel against what we are yet to witness or experience, can any prediction be more accurate and more appropriate for our country than the above quoted poem?

    With the seeming ongoing resistance to positive change and persistent entrenchment of evil machinations as we are witnessing today, how can there be any hope for a better future? Yet, the charlatans who use religion as an instrument of threat and intimidation through propaganda and blackmail refuse to see the possible danger ahead.

     

    Axis of Evil

    Today, Nigeria is dangerously entangled in a triangular axis of evil, the consequences of which cannot be foretold with precision. That axis is like a crushing pendulum swinging restlessly over Africa’s most populous country with a threat of ruins. That triangular axis consists of three dominant, vocal  blocks of evil. Each of them is an implacable enclave serving as an abode for its designers. One of those enclaves is the abode of politicians, another is for the palace of the clergy and the third is for the igloo of the media.

    While the Politicians stand out as the engine room of virtually all the evils afflicting our country, the clergy represents the dangerous chimney through which the polluting smoke of that evil oozes out to suffocate the populace spiritually in the name of God. On its own, the media serves as the megaphone for both the politicians and the so-called clergy through the instrumentality of satanic propaganda.

     

    Disappointing Leg

    Of the defined evil axis above, the most disappointing leg is the clergy. From time immemorial, religion had stood out as the societal salt used as a preservative for all other ingredients with which to prepare a delicious soup of life for the consumption of all and sundry at any stage. But with the sudden adoption of ‘ashes’ to replace salt as the main ingredient of preservation in the 20th century, courtesy of the capitalist West, how can the soup of life be tasteful anymore to its consumers?

    Ordinarily, Salt should be salt in its natural form. To pour ashes on it in the name of spiritual preservative is to deprive it of its natural value and render it totally useless to its consumers. Thus, with the importation of a hitherto unknown brand of a religion from the West, which is bitterly coated in capitalism, Nigeria has dangerously become a polluted country with a suffocating smoke. Those who are responsible for this situation are the fraudsters parading themselves as prophets and are issuing satanic statements with which they deceptively rationalize their claim of prophet-hood.

     

    The Role of Money

    Incidentally, the bottom line for all these evil machinations is nothing other than the vanity called money. Let money be removed from Nigeria’s mode of worship today and sanity will return fully to our society with required serenity.

    Today, with importation of ashes as a replacement for salt, religion, like politics, has become a big business in which greedy merchants and charlatans are desperately engaged for unbridled avarice and unlimited aggrandizement at all costs without consideration for decency and even conscience. In that case, of what use is the claim of religion without conscience?

     

    Commercialization of Religion

    Commercialization of religion which enables private individuals to invest in building of castles, as business ventures, has seriously diminished the value of religion in taste and in substance.

    In Nigeria, today, our only respite, as Muslims, is that Nigerian Imams are not engaged in hateful sermons and public incitement to boost their religious businesses that fetch them private, executive jets illegally at the expense of their congregations.

    Were Nigerian Imams also to commercialize Islam and preach hatefully like some self-hipped charlatans in the name of religion, Nigeria would have ceased to be a country by now.

     

    Warning

    Those who take religion as a ‘do or die’ business that must fetch them luxurious lifestyle should know that they do not have monopoly of provocation and threat as the patience of Nigerian Muslims is getting exhausted. Elasticity has its limit.

     

    Yellow Journalism

    When journalism was a real profession in Nigeria, its practitioners knew that they were like Eskimos living in Igloo. If anything happened to Igloo, the Eskimos’ lives became exposed to danger. Today, however, it has become evident that journalism is just a matter of nomenclature.

    What matters to the journalists of today, especially in the Southwest of Nigeria, is the conspicuous immoral padding that reportorial entails. That profession is now virtually a matter of cash and carry in favour of the highest bidder. That is why news reports these days are mere expression of wishes and fabricated stories with which to justify the brown envelopes that serve as padding for most of those parading themselves as journalists.

    As for the politicians, nothing is strange. It is a common knowledge that the enclave in which they dwell is the real home of the Lucifer.

    But to think that their ruinous actions can continue unabatedly is nothing other than self-deception. Where are the politicians of yesteryears? To be forewarned is to be forearmed. Long live Nigeria!

     

    In Remembrance of a Political Icon

    When the demise of Nigeria’s first elected Executive President, Alhaji Shehu Usman Aliyu Shagari was announced a couple of years ago the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA) issued a press statement with which it condoled with all Nigerians including the family of the deceased. The full contents of the statement were as follows:

    When the media waves came up with breaking news announcing the demise of a Nigerian political icon, Alhaji Shehu Usman Aliyu Shagari with a reverberation effect across the world, many Nigerians with rich experience in various aspects of life began to dust their diaries for a recount of the episodes that propelled the deceased to have made history as much as he, himsel, was made by history.

     

    Like an Elephant

    The late President Shehu Shagari’s life was like a huge elephant surrounded by blind men and women of letters and substance.

    To describe the features of that proverbial elephant, each of the persons that surrounded it would only be able to give an account of the area he/she is able to touch on the body of the mammoth animal and not the whole of it.

    Besides, Alhaji Shehu Shagari was such a household name, that no serious political operator or aspirant can afford to discountenance in Nigerian history without incurring an expensive cost.

     

    Religious Concern

    The aspect that concerns the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA) most in Alhaji Shagari’s life’s odyssey was religion.

    It can be recalled that it was he (Alhaji Shagari) as Nigeria’s first elected Executive President, that approved the sum of N10 million each for the commencement of building a National Mosque and a National Ecumenical Church in Abuja at a time when naira was really strong and the foundation of Abuja as Nigeria’s new capital city was just being laid.

    That Presidential gesture, which no religious group rejected, was a confirmation that Nigeria is indeed a multi-religious and not a secular country as being mischievously peddled, in certain quarters, for selfish reasons.

    Today, the two houses of worship are conspicuous in Central I area of Abuja with their grandiose postures, to the finite attraction of foreign tourists who see them as symbols of national unity.

     

    Maitatsine Crisis

    It is historically unforgettable how the late Executive President tackled, diplomatically and militarily, a frightening national crisis engendered by a dangerous charlatan called Muhammad Marwa Maitatsine from Cameroon, who wrecked devastating havocs in most parts of Northern Nigeria, in the guise of religion, during the country’s second republic. It was his presidential determination to keep the unity of Nigeria intact  that checkmated that unforgetable menace.

    Alhaji Shehu Shagari was, though, a quiet and easy going personality, nonetheless, he never wavered in taking necessary decisions in the interest of national unity in the country.

     

    His Lifestyle

    As a Muslim, Alhaji Shagari never hesitated in upholding the principles of justice, fairness and equity which his religion (Islam) emphasizes.

    As a teacher in the early part of his life, he was exemplary in touching the lives of his students positively and in grooming those students for future leadership.

    As a politician, he displayed such a special trait that distinguished him as a template designer and a dark horse in Nigeria’s political racecourse.

     

    His Political Sagacity

    The late President Shagari’s political sagacity was like a major Faculty in the University of Life, into which many forward-looking leadership aspirants in Nigeria were eager to seek enrolment for specialization in African political education.

    Alahji Shehu Shagari was the eminent Dean of that faculty even as the vibrancy of his tenure which remains unequalled, till date, is a testimony to the template he set for Nigeria’s democratic dispensation.

     

    Lesson to Learn

    For Nigerian generations of the colonial era as well as those of the first and second republics, a major falcon of reference vacated the stage forever leaving some of his surviving political peers to mere dreams in non-effective communication.

    Today, the country is still yearning for a replica of his exemplary personality in leadership. We pray the Almighty Allah to give us a leader worthy of emulation in our era. Amin.

     

  • Muslim/Muslim, or  Christian/Christian ticket?

    Muslim/Muslim, or Christian/Christian ticket?

    Monologue

    Temptation, in human life, is the silhouette of Satan. Although that silhouette is cleverly pouched in a cloak of imagination, its vivid reflection behind the screen, is a confirmation that Satan is truly a diabolical reality in both silhouette and picture.

    And, for people who detest its presence in their lives, the only means of preventing it from hooking their hearts is by cultivating an effective resistance to it.

     

    REMINDER

    It will be recalled that yours sincerely made a promise, in this column, last Friday, to entitle today’s article, as ‘Muslim/Muslim ticket’. That promise, aimed at relaxing flexed muzzles, by putting the record straight, over the controversial subject matter that is currently generating an unwarranted brouhaha, reverberatingly, in Nigerian media, would have been shoved aside by an intruding temptation.

    With a genuine token of intended fulfillment, however, the promise was strictly kept in the yoke of my heart, even as some other urgent developments suddenly began to creep into the uppermost chamber of my chest, with impregnable threat to abort that fulfillment with the instrumentality of satanic silhouette.

    One of those developments was a ridiculous viral video, in which some Nigerian miscreants with fanatical religious inclination, were seen, roaming the streets of Abuja with rickety placards, protesting against ‘Muslim/Muslim ticket at the American Embassy’, under the guise of religion. Typical of Nigerian brand of hysteria, that obnoxious scene was nothing other than an   exhibition of a laughable combination of blatant ignorance and unpardonable folly.

    But, all said and done, with Allah’s divine guidance, yours sincerely was able to surmount that   unprovoked temptation by resisting it resiliently. Otherwise, it would have prompted a diversion from fulfilling the well intended promise, made voluntarily, as a Muslim.

    Thus, coming up with today’s title, as earlier announced, is, as usual, due to the grace of Allah. Alhamdu liLlah!

     

    Preamble

    It is a global fact, primordially and contemporarily acknowledged, that history is graciously resplendent, with certain fundamental facts and figures that are regularly chronicled in a remarkable archive which serves as an indelible refresher of human memory.

    This assertion reconfirms that history is not just the teacher of teachers, but, also, the principal reminder of the past events and occurrences in human life, as well as in the natural environment that regulates the shapes of those facts, based on relevant circumstances of time and space.

     

    Reminiscences

    Ordinarily, if not for the purpose of fulfilling a voluntarily made promise by ‘The Message Column’, this topic would not have deserved any prominent treatment here today. This is not only because the subject matter, in it, has almost become anachronistic through unnecessary over-flogging, but also because of the big question mark with which the justifiability of that title is being queried.

     

    Points to note

    The case of wrapping religion in the abominable rag of politics is not new in Nigeria. The current trend, which is now being painted in a new colour of confusion, is only making it look like an old wine in a new bottle.

    Dressing politics in a gorgeous cassock of religion, in Nigeria, is as old as the time of incursion of the British colonial democracy into the cultural identity of African setting. And, this is not peculiar to Nigeria alone.

    But, in Nigeria, it all started in the early 1950s, when a doyen of politics in the country, Chief Jeremiah Obafemi Oyeniyi Awolowo, now of blessed memory, devised and adopted a potent campaign strategy for winning political power in Nigeria. The experimentation of that strategy, which   was evidently Christian, in theory and in practice, started in the country’s Middle Belt with the carriage of dresses, foot wears and other material utensils to the Animist areas of that region, where many people were still moving around in nudity, bare- footedly. Using that gesture to lure those people into Christianity could not have been a bad idea if the intention did not transcend that level. But adopting it as a cunning way of currying political patronage was what became abhorrent to those people. After all, Chief Awolowo was not known as an evangelical messiah coming to emancipate them from the manacles of imperial oppression. Thus, when those people realized that the gimmick was a sheer political bait intended to lure them into the dragnet of servitude, the game was brought to an abrupt end.

    Perhaps, that was why no attempt was made to extend such gesture to any Muslim area of the North.

    Besides, since the gesture was intended to play the role of a single stone with which to kill two birds   at the same time, no objective of extending it to the Muslim areas of the North could have yielded any result beyond futility.

    Thus, in the end, the largess proved to be a mere Greek gift which was bereft of any meaningful worth beyond ‘calling a dog ‘a good name’ to be able to lure it to the sharp blade of an waiting guillotine.

    Taking dresses to the Muslim areas of the North, as a campaign strategy, at that time, could only have meant the same as taking limestone from Nkalagu, in Eastern Nigeria to Lancaster in the United Kingdom.

    It eventually took the political intervention of Chief Joseph Sarwuan Tarka of the Tiv clan, in today’s Benue State, who was then just emerging as an acknowledged indigenous leader of his people, to checkmate or even terminate that seemingly deceptive strategy for good.

    And, under Chief Awolowo’s reign as the Premier of Western region, at the time, virtually all the political appointees in his government, including his Deputy, Chief Sanuel Ladoke Akintola, were Christians, in a region where overwhelming majority of the votes that put him in office were cast by Muslims.

    How else can a country or a region be Christianized?

    However, with his trial for treasonable felony and eventual imprisonment, in 1962, as well as the subsequent occurrence of a military coup which later paved way for his release and invitation to serve as Minister of Finance in the military government, then headed by General Yakubu Gowon, in the latter part of 1966, the need for a repackaging of his political strategy became a necessity.

    But when the military handed governance to the politicians, in 1979, the expected correction, from Chief Awolowo, was not affected.

    Rather than becoming sensitive to the ethno- religious plurality of the country, Chief Awolowo chose a fellow Southern Christian, from the Eastern region (Chief Phillip Umeadi), as his Presidential running mate. Yet, he expected the entire North, with its nonesuch population, to vote for him as President of Nigeria.

    On the other hand, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, a Christian Easterner who was very conscious of the need of a national outlook for Nigeria as a country, could only find a Northern mate  Professor Ishiah Audu, an erstwhile Vice Chancellor of Ahmadu Bello University and a fellow Christian, as his running mate. And, no Muslim group or individual raised any alarming voice over it it.

    Also, during the same second republic (1979-1983), all the States in Southern Nigeria, except Lagos, had Christian Governors and Christian Deputy Governors without any brouhaha coming from the Muslim quarters.

    At a time when the political struggle for power was based on regionalism, the frontline Christian champions of that struggle, in the South, were clandestinely planting the seed of religious discord in Nigerian politics in the belief that the Muslims were in deep sleep and the full Christianization of Nigeria should be completed before the latter would wake up from their sleep.

    At the commencement of the fourth republic in 1999, when the North voluntarily conceded the Presidency to the South West, the two candidates (Chief Olusegun Obasanjo and Chief Olu Falae)  for whom the entire country had to vote into office as President, were Christians. And, the Muslims did not complain in whatever form. What else is called Christian/Christian ticket?

     

    June 12, 1993 Election

    When the June 12, 1993 Presidential election, won by Chief MKO Abiola, a Muslim, was annulled, it was Chief Ernest Sonekan, a Christian, that was tipped to replace him as the country’s interim President. Yet, the cry of ‘Islamization’ of Nigeria never ceased to rent the air from time to time. It can still be vividly remembered that President Olusegun Obasanjo’s own crusade for of Northern Nigeria, after he had won the Presidential election, was to choose, the then newly elected Governor of Adamawa State, Alhaji Abubakar Atiku as Vice President, to pave way for a Christian, Boni Haruna, a Christian, who Deputy Governor to Atiku, to become the Governor of the State that is overwhelmingly Muslim in demography. It was, apparently, on the advice of the same President Obasanjo that President Goodluck Jonathan had to choose the new Governor of Kaduna State, Architect Namadi Sambo as his Deputy in order to pave way for another Christian, in the person of Patrick Ibrahim Yakowa, to become the Governor of State. And the Muslims of that State, did not contest it despite their overwhelming majority status. Yet, when Governor Nasir El-Rufai of that state later considered gender sensitivity in politics and chose a woman from Southern Kaduna, Hajiya Hadiza Sabuwa Balarabe as deputy, the issue, a medical doctor, the issue of zoning in power sharing became relegated to the background as the noise of Islamization returned to vogue immediately. And, as usual, it was the South West media that championed that frivolously provocative noise.

    Now, in all these, if we may ask, who is religion-zing politics in Nigeria, to pollute the whole political system in the country for today and tomorrow, Muslims or Christians?

     

    First Republic

    Meanwhile, it should not be forgotten that from 1954 to 1959, when Chief Obafemi Awolowo was the Premier of the Western Region, his duputy was Chief Samuel Ladoke Akintola, a fellow Christian. And, when the duo parted ways, due to an intra party political tsunami, in 1962, the latter formed a new political party in alliance with another party and chose Chief Victor Babaremilekun Adetokunbo Fanikayode, also a Christian, as his own deputy thereby leaving the overwhelming Muslim majority, in the region, to errand running for the ‘masters’. Are the Muslims fools?

    Throughout that time, the Nigerian media did not see or report anything in the semblance of Christian/Christian ticket, even when the NPN Presidential Candidate, Alhaji Shehu Shagari, a Northern Muslim, chose Dr. Alex Ekweme, a Christian from the Eastern region, as his running mate in 1979. As far as the Christian dominated media the  was concerned, at that time, that arrangement was normal. What has never been seen as normal is a situation where a Muslim could peer with a fellow Muslim as the running of governance. And the perceived abnormality in that would then push the Christian Association of Nigeria to take an official position to renounce its official position to Nigerians, in favour of Christianization of the country. It happened in 1993. It is now happening again. Where is CAN’s political destination in Nigeria? And, what kind of Nigeria is the South West media planning for the future of this country?

     

    SECOND REPUBLIC

    When the country’s political system was changed from Parliamentary to Presidential, under General Mathew, Okikiolakan, Aremu, Obasanjo, as military Head of State, in 1978, six new political parties emerged in readiness for a national election with which to grab power. Four of those parties were based in the North while the remaining two were based in the South. The Parties were as follows:

    National Party of Nigeria (NPN) with Sheu Usman Shagari as Presidential Candidate;

    Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) with Chief Obafemi Awolowo as Presidential Candidate;

    Nigerian Peoples Party (NPP) with Dr. Bejamin Nnamdi Azizkiwe as Presidential Candidate;

    Peoples Redemption Party (PRP) with Mallam Aminu Kano as Presidential Candidate;

    Great Nigeria Peoples Party (GNPP) with Alhaji Waziri Ado Ibrahim as Presidential Candidate;

    United Middle Belt Congress (UMBC) with Joseph Tarka as Presidential Candidate

    But a ridiculously laughable scene, shamelessly circulated through the social media, last week, prompted the publication of this article here today.

    In that scene, some idle but blindly fanatical elements carried placards, in protest, to the American Embassy, in Abuja, with the chanting of ‘NO MUSLIM/MUSLIM TICKET’ in Nigeria. Isn’t that laughable? But if such a scene was not circulated, how would the sane world confirm that Nigeria is truly the habitat of idiocy in Africa? Does America, which those latent elements and their godfathers expected to sit in judgment over Nigeria, have anything different from Christian/Christian ticket in their political system? If, for the purpose of argument, such a country is privileged to give a verdict on the issue in question, what yardstick would she use? That obscene sight is a typical example of the difference between education and mere literacy in a foreign language, as analyzed here last Friday. This scenario is capable of raising a question thus: to which embassy did the Americans who invaded American Capitol, in year 2020 carry placards when Donald Trump lost that year’s Presidential election? And, was the crisis not resolved after a while? However, knowing the role of literacy without education in blatantly ignorant like Nigeria, can it be surprising that some hungry miscreants engaged themselves in such a sarcastic comedy.

     

  • On women and youths

    On women and youths

    Fully refreshed from the Eid-El-Kabir holidays, and invigorated with the excitement that a discussion on women and youth was going to generate, Apero 5, like its precursors, did not disappoint

    The session was reminded of the reality of the indispensability of women at the onset when the Chairperson for the day, Professor Omofolabo Ajayi-Soyinka, Apero’s Mummy Prof, narrated the story of Sango, the Yoruba god of thunder and his wife, Oya. Sango told Oya of his intention to move from the abode of the gods to the abode of humans. To Oya’s question about how he wanted to accomplish the feat, Sango answered that, as the revered god of thunder, he was going in the form of rain. Oya warned her husband against the idea.

    After several attempts at seeking an affirmative response from Oya, Sango asked why his wife was against his plan. When Oya told her husband that it was because he didn’t want Sango to be humiliated because she, Oya, can use her superior power to frustrate his plan to go as rain. Enraged by the audacity of Oya’s claim of superior power over him, Sango’s adrenaline surged. He summoned the clouds. Then, Oya simply puffed out, and the wind cleared the cloud. Sango tried again and Oya responded in kind. Finally, Sango gave up. The moral of the story should not be lost on us. The one who “created them male and female” also gave each a measure of strength that cannot be despised by the other.

    Corroborating Professor Ajayi-Soyinka’s emphasis, the Moderator/Rapporteur for the session, Professor Kola Abimbola, Ajagunna Agbaiye, son of Awise Agbaye, also recalled the story of how all the orisas were sent on assignment by Olodumare to make the earth livable for human beings. On getting to earth, the male orisas assigned great responsibilities for themselves, leaving out Osun, to whom they assigned kitchen duties. After discovering that they could not accomplish anything, they went back to Olodumare in shame. Olodumare scolded them for marginalizing Osun, the only female Orisa among them.  Again, the moral of the story is clear.

    Mrs. Sumbo Oladipo, a professional woman with vast experience dealing with issues affecting the youths, spoke on “Creative Pathways for the Economic Emancipation of Youth”. Describing locusts as arungun or prosperity destroyers, she observed that locusts devastate everything, leading to loss of hope. She noted that locusts look for fertile areas awash in harvest, not desert areas. This is true of the human locusts who saw Yorubaland’s prosperity and successfully sought to feed on it until it was laid bare.

    While Mrs. Oladipo remembered Yorubaland of the late 50s and early 60s as a land of great developmental strides, she noted that the material development wasn’t the only source of the fame that the region enjoyed. She observed that what gave us fame was the foundation of Yoruba culture encapsulated in the principle of Omoluabi. For her, character is key with the Yoruba, with their emphasis on family upbringing and the moral values of truth, honesty and work. Every Yoruba child learned the words of the popular poem, “Ise Loogun Ise” from the cradle. The question is: do we still emphasize these values in the orientation of our children?

    Mrs. Oladipo argued that the most important challenge that we face is the ignorance of our youths about our values; for this ignorance is at the core of all the vices we so much detest in our communities. She therefore argued that we must repair our foundation, which has been destroyed by the inordinate focus on wealth and fame.

    To the question whether Yoruba youths lack economic creativity, Mrs. Oladipo answered in the negative. Our youths, she claimed, are technologically savvy. Therefore, the challenge is not creativity but honesty. She recalled an unfortunate episode when her NGO gave loans to 100 prospective entrepreneurs for startup after training, but only one refunded the loan!

    Mrs. Oladipo ended with some suggestions. First, she observed that we must incorporate skill acquisition and entrepreneurship in our education curriculum. Second, we must develop our educational institutions and equip them with training in Yoruba culture and language. She wondered if all Yoruba states cannot combine their resources to start a higher institution for the training of youths in skills acquisition. Third, she suggested work training, internships, and volunteering for students while still in school. Finally, she suggested mentorship or apprenticeship training similar to the Igbo system.

    Mr. Amuda Adejare, a broadcaster and youth activist, well-loved and admired in media circles, was our next speaker. Speaking on “Youths: How Does the Future Beckon?” Mr. Adejare observed that while the youths want a future where they can live well and thrive in their education and chosen career, and play a deserving role in the development of their nation, the foundation of such a success story had been destroyed by elders’ malfeasance. He referenced the neglect of education by the various state and federal governments, with incessant ASSUU strikes now the rule rather than an exception.

    Adejare wondered what the matter was with our political leaders in the Southwest such that we have always had to make reference to our leaders in the 50s and 60s, as if we have no leaders now. Are today’s leaders honest with the youth? And with their oaths of office? He noted, painfully, that there is loss of the Omoluabi ethos in our land and our culture doesn’t appear to be any more resourceful for the youths because selfishness and greed now seem to dominate their psyche.

    Going forward, Mr. Adejare had three suggestions for the renewal of our youths and creation of opportunities for their future. First, he suggested that there must be a campaign for attitudinal change among the youth and this must be all-encompassing to reach through to the grassroots. Second, Mr. Adejare observed that we must have a united effort among all socio-political groups, including activists with sincerity of purpose. Third, youth inclusiveness must be a permanent feature of our developmental agenda. Finally, Adejare counseled against neglecting the youth, observing that Yoruba youths don’t have a future unless we help them make it happen.

    Our final speaker was Professor (Princess) Adenike Akorede Olaoye, whose life story was a shining example of grit and determination to succeed. Growing up in a family where female children may have less opportunity than their male counterparts to have formal education, she succeeded by the grace of God to become a university professor. Speaking on “Women: Breaking Down Leadership Barriers/Roadblocks to Economic Empowerment”, Professor Olaoye, used her own life story as a springboard to highlighting the significance of women involvement in education and economic development.

    Observing that women are primary caregivers of the family, she argued that even in this role, education is highly important. As the backbones of the home, women should not be relegated to the background. Women must be empowered to participate equally in economic activities, to have control over their lives, and to use their power to uplift their families. While she noted that pioneering Yoruba women were known pacesetters in various ways, referencing Mama Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti, Elizabeth Abimbola Awoliyi, etc., she wondered if we are now enabling our women to excel as they could.

    Among the culprit roadblocks in the path of women empowerment listed by Professor Olaoye are lack of relevant skills, customs and traditions, financial problems and abject poverty, growing population without commensurate policy measures, and religious beliefs which make women dependent on others. To combat these constraints, we need new policies and ideologies of progress and development. For Professor Olaoye, Yoruba nation is an essential component of the needed solution to women and youth despair.

    Apero 5 was another success story. Apero 6 will also be a defining moment. Focusing on the political pathways for the Yoruba, Professor Wale Adeniran, Mogaji Adegboyega Adejumo, Barrister Aderemilekun Omojola, Messrs. Olayemi Afolabi and Seye Oyeleye will discuss restructuring, Yoruba nation, and status quo. With Professors Ibiyemi Mojola and Siyan Oyeweso as Chairperson and Moderator respectively, we look forward to it with excitement.

    Saturday July 23, 2022

    4:00 pm Lagos Time

    Zoom ID: 87834935009

    Passcode: 690337

     

  • Choosing to act

    Choosing to act

    Congratulations, Old Chum! I hear you are into another idealism called APERO. I knew that you were up to something when you went MIA for more than six weeks on the Backpage. But I never knew you would get yourselves into another trouble for nothing! Aren’t you ever tired, especially when your efforts yielded nothing but fake democrats in the corridors of power? “

    Opalaba was going to go on with his familiar tirade if I didn’t threaten to hang up the phone.

    “Well, that’s your usual resort when you have no good response to reasonable inquiry”, he retorted.

    By now every reader of this page knows my friend inside out. Opalaba is a force of nature, wildly patriotic, but unapologetically dismissive of the political elite he accused of ruining “our heritage of progress”.

    “So, my simple question is “aren’t you tired of chasing after shadow?” Can anything good ever come out of this collaboration with the same old folks? I thought by Ghosh that you’re no fool. But aren’t you being made a fool of all over again?”

    Now, I know when my friend is serious apart from when he’s just fooling around. This time, he’s serious and I thought that he genuinely felt for me, and I felt that I owed him an answer.

    “Well, you have a point there”, I responded. “But you remember as well as I do, the axiom that we learned by rote memory in Standard 2: “When at first you don’t succeed, try and try again.” How does one give up when nonagenarians are still pressing on? Even when they are contemptuously ignored by the new breed politicos, they are not silenced. They soldier on in the battlefield fighting for the truth they believe.

    “Beside the elders, I am also inspired by the young folks who see the bleak future and are determined to avert it. These are successful professionals who seek nothing for themselves. They are however united in their disdain for the political class who think that they are smart because they have mastered the art of hustling and deceit. To be honest with you, my friend, I find this cohort a better sample of our common humanity, and I can go to the battlefield of idea and action with them without blinking.

    “I am in Apero because they inspire me, and I share their rejection of the present quagmire of existence that our people are condemned to experience.”

    Let me now address five categories of people with various issues or concerns, who don’t feel attracted to Apero. These include the tired, the wounded, the confused, restructuring advocates, and Yoruba nation activists. I am in a position to address them because I can relate to each of their concerns. I feel the pain of the tired, the wounded, and the confused. I can understand the certainty of the advocates of restructuring, and the courage of the secessionists is not strange to Egbe Omo Yoruba.

    As Opalaba rightly observed, everyone in my generation should be tired. We have kept hope alive for the whole of our lives. We were the generation that welcomed independence with little flags and beautiful souvenirs in our tiny hands. We danced to the melody of Adeolu Akinsanya’s classic: mo là àlá mo dade owo. Mo là ala mo wewu òye, mo là àlá pé Nigeria gba independence, òmìnira ó ní yotomi. (I dreamed of a crown of wealth on my head. I dreamed of royal costume over my body. I dreamed that Nigerian has gained independence. Freedom in abundance.)

    Since then, however, the dream has been shattered, and our efforts have been to no avail. What not to be tired of!  But then, I see the remnants of those who fought for our independence still soldiering on. So, I pray for strength for the tired. I pray for healing for the sick. I pray for change in our circumstances. I pray that we be the change that we desire.

    To the wounded, I know how you feel. You have been a warrior in many of the battlefields of our national struggle. You heeded the clarion call of keeping Nigeria one. You were a foot soldier in the war against military dictatorship. You thought the battle was won, only to discover that the enemies you fought and defeated emerged victorious and are calling the shots in the new republic. What is more, the ones with whom you fought side by side have also joined the enemies, and you are now alone to continue fighting for true democracy.

    And you are battered left, right, and center by backbiters and hustlers. You are not made of steel. It is natural to feel wounded. So your instinct is to withdraw into your shell. You are not alone, and while I cannot ease the pain of disappointment, I can counsel against withdrawal, which is not a cure for your pain. You may want to focus on your immediate community, the place that birthed you and introduced you to life. Find like minds and do whatever you can for its development. That’s what Apero is about.

    Now to the confused. Know first that your feeling is normal. At one point or another, we are all confused. Can I make a difference? What can I do to make a difference? What with the various approaches being canvassed?  In the circumstances of our many challenges, confusion is normal. But it is a state of mind that must be overcome and transcended. That’s the demand of rationality. We overcome confusion by a deliberate act of choosing and sticking to our choice. Not doing anything is also an act of choice, but one that is against rationality, hence ill-advised.

    Among the choices that some have made is the political one for restructuring or secession. For the confused, this adds to the challenge. Should I align with the advocates of restructuring or with the activists for Yoruba sovereign country? Adding to the challenge is the fact that, on this question, not a few have made the good the enemy of the better. Another irrational disposition for that matter!

    So let me end this piece by addressing this dichotomy. APERO’s initial mandate was to provide a forum for a rational dialogue on which political pathway the Yoruba must choose in this late hour: restructuring or Yoruba sovereign country. Egbe Omo Yoruba, the primary sponsor of Apero, cannot be accused of sitting on the fence. Before Yoruba nation became the buzzword for many, Egbe Omo Yoruba had championed the cause way back in 1994.

    It is on record that Egbe had a Yoruba flag and anthem on display at its 1997 Convention in Houston, Texas. But Egbe will not impose on anyone. There has to be a collective deliberation and decision on what to do and where to go. This is why Apero has an important session coming up on this topic on July 23 which will feature prominent leaders and activists who have thought deeply about the issues and have been in the forefront of the struggle.

    For you as an individual, however, I make bold to say that neither of these disjunctions should impede your immediate contribution to your local community. I have come to the realization that no matter which political pathway the Yoruba people choose, Okeho’s developmental needs must not be delayed and I have a role to play in its evolving. The young ones in my community cannot wait until the futuristic full realization of Yoruba nation. The elders in need of primary health care need it now, not later, otherwise they will succumb to nature before their allotted time. These are the concerns of APERO. I hope they are your concerns too, even in this season of politics as business when the mindset of “what’s in it for me?” dominates the thoughts of many. Please choose to be among the few.

    Apero Session 5 comes up tomorrow, Saturday July 16 at 4 pm. Lagos Time, under the Chairmanship of Professor Omofolabo Ajayi-Soyinka, with a focus on Women and Youths.

     

    Zoom ID: 87834935009

    Passcode: 690337

    Looking forward to your participation.

  • In Fairness to Nigerian Christians

    In Fairness to Nigerian Christians

    Monologue

    Facts are sacredly constant. They have neither varieties nor alternatives. But they sometimes have an abstract way of teaching practical reality to all people (including Christians and Muslims), who may be doubtful of their existence.

    Naturally, facts have no colours and, can, therefore, not be described as colourful. They are perpetually immaculate even as they are genuinely coated in invisible pouch of bitterness. Perhaps that is why they remain permanently unattractive to most people across nations and generations, who are flamboyantly garlanded in the robe of ostentation and are customarily adapted to only sweet taste of deception.

     

    Preamble

    It is a fact rarely acknowledged, that today’s Muslims, in Nigeria, are perennially indebted to their Christian counterparts. This fact is though taken for granted, because of its abstract feature, its esoteric reality cannot be denied.

    Ordinarily, indebtedness cannot be a crime if it is well shrouded in good and implementable intention for payment,   in full measure, at an appropriate time. Such a timely payment of debt is a fulfillment of promise as a reconfirmation of one Prophetic Hadith that goes thus:

    “There are three signs by which a hypocrite can be identified; when he speaks, he lies; when he promises he reneges; And, when he is trusted, he betrays”. However, payment of debt can, sometimes, be circumstantial. It may be prompt or deferred just as it may be positive or negative, depending on the circumstance that warrants the indebtedness in the first place. Nevertheless, this derivative from the above quoted Hadith may be a subject of different interpretations among scholars.

     

    Question

    How can Muslims be said to be indebted to Christians in a country like Nigeria? That is a lucid question which most readers of this column are likely to ask in a soliloquy while reading this article. However, it should be recalled that, without the incessant verbal missiles being bellicosely hauled at Islam in Nigeria, by Nigerian Christians, especially those of Pentecostal denomination, with the motive of smearing Islam and denigrating Prophet Muhammad (SAW), to prop up their materialistic interest, today’s noticeable consciousness in Nigerian Muslims, about their religion, might never have been aroused. How else can Muslims be indebted to Christians? That indebtedness may now look trivial in the pace of progressive advancement of Islam in Nigeria, but one can imagine where the Muslims, in this country, would have been today, without the incessant Christian jabs of threat coming to them torrentially from every conceivable angle.

    Ironically, however, the Nigerian Christians, too, to whom Muslims are said to be indebted, do not seem to realize the altruistic implications of their ceaseless antagonistic posture towards Islam today and tomorrow. If they had ever thought of it and sat down to sincerely assess its implications, they would have probably seen it as the real impetus that the Muslims need to trigger the necessary consciousness needed in them to foster Muslim unity in this country and strengthen the spirituality of Islam. That same Christian posture, which is now obviously devoid of the real teachings of Jesus Christ, is also the stimulant that spurs curiosity in many non-Muslims, who are eagerly prompted to adopt Islam by conversion today. This means that Christian hostility to Islam in Nigeria is of immense benefit to Allah’s divine religion. As a matter of fact, if the Muslims had not been spiritually cautioned against unnecessary reprisals, over hostility to their religion, this country would have long, been wildly inflamed, by religious wars of attrition.

     

    Observation

    However, if the obviously hostile posture of the Pentecostal Christians, had not been so dominantly injected into Gospel avocation   in today’s Nigeria, the   current Nigerian Muslims would have permanently remained on their imaginary beds, dreaming of an Islamic spiritual mirage.

    If anything, therefore, Nigerian Muslims should be grateful to their Christian counterparts for the regularly engendered   intimidating outbursts, in the media, that keep Muslims unwaveringly stable on their toes.

     

    Expression of Gratitude

    Given the above mentioned assertion, therefore, ‘The Message Column’, on behalf of millions of Nigerian Muslims, hereby doffs its hat to express a big ‘THANK YOU’, in capital letters, to Nigerian Christians for keeping the Muslims of this country consciously awake through ubiquitously negative preaching on the Church pulpits, even to the extent of religionizing politics without thinking of its consequences.

    We are very grateful, not because we appreciate your way of practicing the religion of Christ, but because that method of yours hase become a dose of spiritual consciousness as well as a constant hint of agrand plan ahead.

    At least, today, unlike in the past decades, Nigerian Muslims are so much conscious of their faith that whenever a voice is about to emerge, either from the enclave of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) or from any denominational Church, they (Muslims) can easily guess what the contents would be, and, their readiness for response has automatically become a matter of alacrity. Although, in most cases, Muslims do not react promptly to the incessant vituperations oozing out, like a suffocating smoke, from certain Church chimneys, which is aimed at polluting the country’s socio-political polity with the instrumentality of religion, such random Muslim aloofness is strictly in tandem with the Islamic discipline impacted on the generality of Muslims as a matter of divine norm. After all, it is universally acknowledged that the only invariable reason why a barrel can make the loudest noise is emptiness. And, to respond to such noise, every time it comes up with its nauseating bluster, is an indication of momentary idleness. Incidentally, Muslims, by the effective teaching of the tenets of their religion, are supposed to be so spiritually engaged that idleness will find no room in their spiritual space.

     

    Islam in Nigeria Today

    Today, in Nigeria, unlike in the past few decades, there is no professional field of human endeavour in which Nigerian Muslims are not distinctively found. That alone is enough to warrant implacable provocations from those who had surreptitiously consigned Islam and the Muslims to the periphery of material life in their self-deceptive perception of Allah’s divine religion. But, if not for the constant bullish tendency of Nigerian Christians to suppress Islam and the Muslims, by all means, the latter would not have gone, all out, to seek the so-called Western education which now encourages them to abide by the adage that says “when the going gets tough, only the tough keeps going”. In other words, the arena of the so-called Western education in Nigeria would have been exclusively dominated   by the Christians alone, in the belief that literacy, in English language, (which they ignorantly call education) is mainly for seeking administrative jobs and that only the menial aspect of those jobs should be reserved for the Muslims because their illiterate in English language.

    Those who constitute the engine room of this frivolous concept can hardly remember that the euphoria of literacy in English language that often prompts them to gallivanting arrogantly around does not go beyond Nigerian borders with her French speaking neighbor countries. And that is what distinguishes education from literacy.

     

    Education and Literacy

    In Islam, there is a Clear-cut dichotomy between education and literacy. That is why the Muslims, in emulation of Prophet Muhammad (SAW), lay a very strong emphasis on education that is inheritably beneficial to the entire humanity, rather than on mere literacy that is of temporary benefit to the literate person alone. Aftera all, the most educated human being that ever lived is Prophet Muhammad (SAW) who was an illiterate.

    When Islam first arrived, in the vast territory that later came to be named Nigeria, over one thousand years ago, the attitude of its earliest adherents was to embrace that divine religion basically for the purpose of acquiring knowledge. And, that continued for centuries without any thought of attributing the Arabic literacy that came with it to any material benefit.

    But when the British colonialists perched on the shores of this same territory, in about 1861, with emphasis on mere literacy in their own (English language) which was backed up with certificate, as meal ticket, materialism automatically gained an upper hand, especially in the South West of today’s Nigeria, where those colonialists finally settled down with head office in Lagos, which was later endorsed as Nigeria’s capital city.

    It was, therefore, the effect of materialism foisted on our people, through literacy in English language, that instigated the religious discrimination and intimidation that we are now witnessing in the sphere of what is labeled education in Nigeria. Today, the massive rural-urban migration that has come to drastically reduce the agricultural economy of Nigeria is masterminded by literacy in English language and the South West Nigeria is mostly guilty of this. That is the region where English language has virtually replaced the natural Yoruba language often ignorantly called vernacular. It is through literacy in English language that those who have perpetually enslaved themselves to that colonial language do generate ethos of enmity in Nigerian society especially in the religious sphere.

    There are much more to discuss about this psycho-linguistic issue and its implications for the development of Nigeria. But because of lack of space, now, further discussion on it, in this column, will be deferred to a future date. Meanwhile, readers of ‘The Message’ column are implored to look out for comments of this column, next Friday, God willing, on the currently trending Muslim/Muslim ticket issue that is fiercely   gathering impregnable momentum. God spare our lives.

  • Then the locusts invaded

    Then the locusts invaded

    Since June 11, Apero Yoruba has treated us to a feast of thoughtful reflections on what has become known as the Golden Era of Yorubaland. We heard about (i) Western Region’s exploits in education, health, and rural development, (ii) how the feats were accomplished then, and (iii) how we can do it now.  Since forward movement is the normal course of nature, unless a greater force impedes it, we were eager to know what caused retrogression.

    This past Saturday, we got an answer to that painful question: “We were doing great. Then the locusts invaded.” Apero Planning Committee had thought as much. Our retrogression isn’t natural. Human locusts invaded and ravaged the land, making rubbish of the ripened fruits from the labors of our heroes past. This much was reiterated by Professors Remi Sonaiya and Ropo Sekoni in Apero Session 4. Both distinguished professors, session chairman, Professor Adeniran Adeboye, and moderator/rapporteur, Dr. Akin Fapohunda, came well prepared. And despite the technical hiccups caused by erratic internet connections, a reflection of the heavy toll of years of human locust on the pace-setting region, their resilience and persistence paid off.

    Professor Sonaiya X-rayed the culpability of successive Federal Governments in entrenching bad governance in Nigeria, and she reflected on the reforms needed to reverse the unacceptable situation and reset Nigeria for progress and development. With a nod to her disciplinary background, Prof. Sonaiya reminded her audience of the historic “Cahier de Doléances”, the list of grievances drawn up by the Three Estates against Louis XVI in 1789.

    Sonaiya argued that Nigerians have a longstanding documented list of grievances against their government, including, Justice Oputa Panel Report, and the 2005 and 2014 Constitutional Conferences reports. Sadly, nothing came out of these documented grievances.

    One of the documented grievances is about the structure of the country, which hasn’t worked since 1966 when the federal constitution was unilaterally axed by the military in favor of a unitary system. As almost all our previous presenters made clear, with this singular show of military impudence, the country was set back at least half a century, broken and divided almost beyond repair as the various agitations clearly show.

    In addition to their ruining the structural foundation that the founding fathers had contracted, emerging leadership since 1966 has been characterized by lack of competence, lack of capacity, and lack of character. As Sonaiya put it, they are clueless, arrogant, nepotistic, bigoted and visionless. The result is our experience of insecurity, poor social services, lack of health care, collapse of public education, with multiple millions of out-of-school children, high unemployment and generalized poverty, disregard for justice and the rule of law, and institutionalized corruption.

    Professor Sonaiya observed sadly that the country has wasted significant moments of opportunities to install “a visionary, transformational leadership” at the end of the civil war, upon return to civilian era in 1979 after years of military rule, or in 1999, when the military imposed another constitution and a leadership of its choosing. Now, we have a protracted state of insecurity, with former military generals unable to deliver a country under siege by bandits and terrorists in various garbs.

    Sonaiya also had useful suggestions for a reset if Nigeria must bear the burden she has to carry for herself and for Africa. She, therefore, counseled Nigerians to take the “rising tide” at the flood and secure the fortune that it portends. Emphasizing the importance of “strong and trustworthy leadership”, she declared that Nigerians are demanding for inclusion of youths, women, and people with disabilities.

    For Sonaiya, needed reforms include political restructuring, enhanced security and attentiveness to citizens’ welfare, and electing incorruptible leaders who have integrity and are ethically balanced.  Detesting the common resort to party structure and monetization of elections, she argued for a new constitution and electoral reform that reduces cost of governance.

    Finally, Sonaiya argued that a reset button would require drawing inspiration from the Awolowo era to sell the vision of national leadership in education, health, and rural development to willing and able Nigerians. And for corrupt and clueless leaders, she advocated for a “Committee of Calabash Openers”, akin to traditional Yoruba governance system which did not suffer fools gladly.

    Professor Ropo Sekoni was no less detailed in his analysis of the devastation caused by the human locusts, and in the solutions he proffered. Sekoni’s thesis was that “there has been a growing decline in good governance in the Southwest since 1966 which has arisen from internal and external missteps.”

    Following the World Bank and United Nations, Sekoni defines good governance as “the proper utilisation of economic and social resources of the state for its citizens, in order to guarantee sustainable development with efficiency and accountability along with constant participation of citizens in decision-making in respect of state-related policies and implementation.” He then demonstrated how the elected government from 1952 to 1966 established good governance in the old Western Region.

    On the other hand, the military administrations from 1966 to 1979 and from 1984 to 1998 drew back the hands of the clock of good governance in various ways, from canceling the federal constitution, to posting of governors to Western Region, jettisoning the principle of derivation, taking over extractive industries, and centralization of law enforcement and security. Zeroing in on Agriculture/Forestry, Education, Citizen’s participation in governance beyond elections, and Security, Sekoni described the Southwest since the “Years of the Locust” as one where civilian governors and military administrators share a vision of governance “devoid of transparency and openness required of democratic governance” and one in which governors see the center as their benefactor rather than as co-equals in a federal arrangement.

    This unfortunate vision of governance is antithetical to the progress and development of the Southwest, and indeed, of the nation. This misunderstanding of governance, which is poles apart from the founding vision of the region in the First Republic, has caused retrogression in agriculture, education, security, and citizen participation.

    While Western Region was #2 cocoa producer in the world in the 1960s, it is now in the 4th position, with 0.35% decrease in output behind Ghana, Ivory Coast, and Indonesia. This decline is due to government neglect. Cross River State now produces almost half the total Nigerian cocoa output. Military governors abolished Cocoa Boards and civilian governors haven’t seen the need to restore them. Governors choose rent collection from the federal government over production. How did all these happen? Sekoni asked.

    By the same token, it is pertinent to ask why we have left our forests for kidnappers, bandits and terrorists to hibernate. Forest Management was a priority of our founding fathers. Now we don’t have State Forest Guards. The result is what we are experiencing from terrorists, itinerant herdsmen, and kidnappers.

    A lot has been heard in Apero about education. Sekoni gave us more data to back up the claim of neglect. Whereas in the 1950s, Western Region gave the highest budgetary allocation in the world to education, ranging from 40% to 42%, now a paltry 6% to 8% is our budgetary allocation. And the outcome cannot be more depressing. Out-of-school children in Oyo State is 463,000, making it #10 in the country and the highest in the south. A pace-setter state indeed! WAEC result is not any better in the region as Southeast students are outperforming Southwest students.

    Sekoni, like other presenters, recommended fiscal federalism and a new federal governance structure, together with leaders that are dedicated to progress and democratic norms.

    Along the lines of Sekoni’s recommendation, the Moderator, Dr. Akin Fapohunda, offered the analogy of a building with an original design of separate apartments, each tenant minding her business. That was Nigeria before 1966. After 1966, the walls of each apartment were knocked down, and it was turned into a dormitory with all the headaches and inconveniences that meant. Restructuring, according to him, means restoring the walls so each tenant can live in privacy and as she deems fit.

    A lively chat and verbal discussion followed the presentations. It was another fulfilling experience.

    We are all going to enjoy Eid Al Adha this Saturday. The next Apero is July 16.

    Eid Mubarak!

     

  • Festival without Festivities

    Festival without Festivities

    Monologue

    Were it possible for the dead to wake up from their graves at will, Prophet Yusuf (Joseph), the great son of Prophet Ya‘qub (Jacob), would have resurrected in Nigeria at the request of hungry Nigerians. And, his mission would have been the interpretation of a dream like that of a Pharaoh of some millennia ago, which saved Egypt of yore from the scourge of a looming hunger.

    But, alas, the absence of a Yusuf from the surface of the earth, today, has rendered the situation in this country hopeless. Despite unlimited human and material resources available in this so called ‘Giant of Africa’ Nigeria continues to wallow helplessly under a jaundiced economy like a centipede crawling into a brook of uncertainty.

    By this time tomorrow, Muslims, all over the world, will be celebrating ‘Idul Adha. But unlike their brothers and sisters in most other parts of the world, overwhelming majority of Nigerian Muslims will celebrate that festival without any festivity. At the instance of injustice based on avarice and aggrandizement of a few privileged Nigerians, the ingredients of festivity have been banished in this country. Thus, many worshippers will celebrate this year’s ‘Idul Adha with hunger and despair.

    This iron period in which consistent promise of eliminating the scourge of hunger, starvation and abject poverty seems to have become a pleasant dream turned into a painful nightmare which is an indicator of indefinite despair.

     

    Preamble

    Generally, today, there is nostalgia in the land, not only for the days of oil boom when life was relatively comfortable for all and sundry but also for the era of abundant farm products when the thought of feeding was not much of a concern for most citizens. Nigerian Muslims and non-Muslims alike are today yearning for the return of those days when wives could confidently ask their husbands for festival gifts and children could demand for new dresses, shoes and wrist watches from their parents. Those were the days when festival seasons were really festive and the graph of marriage carried some indices of value. Those were the days of friendliness among neighbours, sincere wishes among colleagues, mutual confidence among spouses as well as general peace and tranquility in the society.

    Now, those days are gone. And, they seem to have gone forever. Today, we have found ourselves in a situation against which we had long been warned in a couplet rendered by an Arab poet quoting two disciples of Prophet Muhammad (SAW) i. e. UbayyiBnKa’b and Abdullah BnMas’ud thus:

    “This is the period in which truth is rejected in its totality while falsehood, corruption and betrayal of trust are held aloft; should this period linger with its woes and tribulations, the world, may soon assume a situation where people will neither rejoice over the birth of  new babies nor grieve over the demise of dear relatives”.

     

    Sensible Questions

    Nigeria is fast becoming a dramatic entity mysteriously coded in parables. It may take an unprecedented revolution to dislodge some Nigerian economic vampires who subjected the citizenry to that situation. Ordinarily, in normal circumstances, a forward-looking country would have encouraged her citizenry to ask some probing questions thus: Who are we? Where are we coming from? And, where are we going from here? Those are some of the questions which all rational human beings should ask themselves from time to time. If only to re-package their self induced destiny

    But such questions have been rendered irrelevant in Nigeria because the circumstances of life in this country have changed the priorities of ordinary citizens. The only question now in vogue, which virtually everybody in government seems to be asking tacitly, is this: ‘what personal benefit will I get in this office?

    That very question is the real drama that permanently engages the attention of Nigerian civil servants days and nights. It is the question that robes Nigerian Police in a garment of open shamelessness with a banished conscience. It is the question that crowns money as a demigod which forbids human feeling. It is the question that fosters greed and fetters Nigeria to the stake of endemic corruption. It is the question that presents mirage to Nigerians as the only valuable substance worthy of pursuit.

    What can we say of a man who fixes his eyes on the sun but does not see it? Instead, he sees a chorus of flaming seraphim announcing a paroxysm of despair. That is the parable of the country called Nigeria. Like the Israelis of Moses’ time, Nigerians have become gypsies wandering aimlessly and wallowing in abject poverty in the midst of abundance. What else do we expect from Allah beyond the invaluable bounties with which He has blessed us?

    Nigeria is not lacking in forest and arable savannah. She is rich in rivers and mountains all of which are great resources for people who are seeking reasonable comfort and are not self-deceptive. What this country lacks is a class of responsible and patriotic leaders who can sincerely highlight its priorities according to the yearnings of the ordinary people. That food is becoming a threat to Nigerians today is an irony emanating from naivety and massive corruption entrenched on her soil, especially since 1999 when the current democracy first beamed a ray of hope to the people but which did not take much time  before turning into despair.

     

    Cost of governance

    In Nigeria today, the cost of running the government alone is enough to render the country bankrupt. The retinue of federal ministers and a galaxy of Presidential and gubernatorial Advisers as well as the unlimited allowances of the legislators are major causes of poverty in the country. Even America with her huge economic resources, large population and financial wherewithal has only about ten functional ministers at the federal level. Why must we have separate ministers for agriculture and water resources? Where is the federal government’s farm to justify this? Why must we retain an obnoxious immunity clause in our constitution which facilitates monumental corruption for the serving Governors who, until recently,  are merely hypocritically chased around but never caught for trial on the allegation of embezzlement after they might have left office? And, now, the new political cliché is ‘State Pardon’ for unrepentant official thieves.

    Besides, what informs the idea of the so-called constituency allowances running into billions of naira for our legislators without anything to show for it at a time when innocent women and children are crying for food? No one would have thought in 1999 that artificial hunger could be added to the abysmal level of poverty in Nigeria despite the unprecedented rise in price of oil in the international market. The ubiquity of beggars and lunatics in our cities and towns is a confirmation of this assertion.

     

    Style of Governance

    Governance in Nigeria has become an artful trick adopted by a cabal to bamboozle the populace into blind submission to the whims and caprices of heartless politicians.

    Now, despite the undeniable fact that Nigeria has become a country without roads, without electricity, without functional rail transportation system, without jobs for majority of the able-bodied citizens and even without food on our tables, we were still being cajoled into believing that Nigeria, the only country without coins, would become one of the 20 biggest economies in the world in year 2020. Wasn’t that a deliberate and audacious deception? And, now, that 2020 has come and gone, where is Nigeria on the map of economic progress?

    No country in history has ever been known to have achieved economic vibrancy by magic. Nigeria cannot be an exception.

    The government needs to be told, in no ambiguous language that no miracle can yield any economic success based on the ramshackle foundation laid down by one man (from the prison) who, as President, could hardly reason beyond the siege mentality of a prisoner. A fire brigade approach to food crisis in a country like Nigeria is a shameful reaction to an avoidable melancholy.

     

    Egyptian Experience

    Yusuf (Joseph), the son of Ya’qub (Jacob), did not know that he could have any solution to a fundamental problem of a country other than his own. Neither did his brothers who sold him into slavery know that he could be a solution to a major problem in another land. But the accident of history never ceases to play itself out with repetition. Without Yusuf, only Allah knows what the history of Egypt would have been today. And without a Pharaoh’s dream of drought, the story of Yusuf would have been totally different from what we now know it to be.

    If Egypt had any major plight when Yusuf was in prison in that country, it was Pharaoh’s dream. It turned out that Yusuf’s imprisonment in Egypt was a blessing, not only for Egypt but also for Yusuf and his family. What could have been a repeat of that episode, when we took the first shot of Nigeria’s fourth republic in 1999 when a new formidable foundation was supposed to be laid, only turned out to be a regrettable bizarre. The rest is left to history.

    Yours sincerely was a student in Egypt in the 1970s when the hostility between that country and Israel was fierce. Egypt was then an ally of the (now defunct) Soviet Union while Israel was polically a satellite of the United States by proxy. Not only did Egypt suffer isolation from NATO member countries of Europe and America but the Soviet Union which was supposed to be her main ally was also not forthcoming with any meaningful assistance beyond the supply of scanty weapons. Thus, the Egyptian government had to take its destiny in its own hand by buckling up firmly in order to fend for her people at that critical time.

    Realizing the importance of food supply, especially in a war situation, what Egypt did was to mobilize all her agricultural resources around River Nile and forgot about any food importation. The result was tremendous and thus, the fear of food insecurity was averted.

    In the mid 1990s, Uganda, a sub-Sahara African country, found herself in the position of ancient Egypt. A colossal drought broke out in that country killing thousands of people and virtually wiping out the entire cattle in the country. No Pharaoh had any dreamed premonition and no Yusuf was in a prison to translate any dream into a solution.

     

    Ugandan Experience

    What the Ugandans did to find a solution, at that time, was to reset the country’s agricultural focus. Rather than concentrating on tilling the land and rearing the cattle, which drought had eroded, a new focus was brought to bear. Uganda took to ‘bee farming’ as a relieving alternative. The seriousness which the government of that country paid to the new focus was such that Uganda today is a country to reckon with in the production and supply of honey and other bee products to the European communities. A substantial amount of honey consumed in Europe is currently supplied   by Uganda as well as Kenya and Tanzania. And, those products have become the second biggest foreign exchange earner for Uganda after coffee.

    Today, Nigeria is not afflicted by drought or famine. Neither is she engaged in any political war. Yet, the Nigerian government has learnt no lesson from any of the above named countries simply because there is oil in large deposit. Now, the general fear in the land is that of hunger even in times of festivals.

    The narrative of how Nigeria arrived at such a deadly scourge is irrelevant for now. What is relevant is how to get out of it. Like Egypt of yore, Nigeria will need a Yusuf to unravel the mystery surrounding the dream that brought this scourge about.

     

    An Irony

    It is ironic that people who live by the river bank can’t get water to drink when those living in the desert can find a reliable oasis to combat any drought. Given all the resources with which we are endowed, Nigerians should have no business with poverty let alone food crisis.

    Capitalism, which was once an economic ideology propelling mercantilism, has moved a step ahead, especially in Nigeria where official theft has become a profession. Capitalism is now a religion through which its adherents worship money. To such adherents, accountability is a mere riddle which only the poor may wish to unravel.

    It is only in the interest of those in government, especially those in the executive and legislative arms, who are most active in sharing public funds, to let the national wealth spread across board legitimately if only to avoid the current Nigerian elite situation where every house has become a prison in which the occupants are voluntarily jailed. To ignore the rule of law and shun justice in a land blessed with milk and honey is to cultivate insuperable trouble, permanently, with insecurity in all its ramifications. Today’s silence must be seen as a terrible omen for tomorrow’s mourning. To be forewarned is to be fore armed. God save Nigeria!

     

  • Prioritising people

    Prioritising people

    Apero Sessions 1 and 2 focused on how the Golden Era of the Yoruba prioritised people’s wellbeing as the ultimate responsibility of government. Speakers on education and healthcare emphasized The Awolowo Administration’s total commitment to this responsibility. Apero Session 3 focused on Rural Development and Employment Generation and the question of how it was done then and how it can be done now.

    But first, there was an unfinished business from Session 2. Professor Isaac Adewole, former Minister of Health had a conflict of schedule on June 18 and his presentation was moved to June 25. That was a presentation we couldn’t afford to miss, and zoom participants soon knew why. With an introduction of the speaker by Professor Tunde Bewaji, who also skillfully directed the discussion, all was set for a productive session.

    Professor Adewole has been collaborating with DAWN Commission on health issues in the Southwest (SW), and his presentation was based on that project. Like previous speakers on health, he observed that the goal that The Awolowo Administration set itself for Western Region was Universal Health Coverage, which meant high quality of healthcare, at no cost to individuals, and no long commute for healthcare. No Nigerian government now thinks of doing this.

    In view of the present situation, Professor Adewole asked: “what is the way out?” His answer was to recover lost ground for the welfare of the people. The statistics are sadly daunting. The population of the SW is 39,742,130, which is 19% of the Nigerian population. Nigeria’s status as the #10 most populated nation is a “demographic disaster” in the making, as Adewole put it. Unfortunately, it is a disaster that we are not reckoning with as a nation. While the Abuja Declaration on health prescribed 15% of annual budget for healthcare, actual budgetary allocation is 4%. Out-of-pocket medical expense is 70%. This means that many will forgo seeking care, others will incur heavy healthcare debt, and still others will die.

    From Prof. Adewole’s presentation, currently SW lags behind other zones in many aspects of healthcare. Maternal mortality is highest in the SW. Malnutrition in SW is worse than Southeast (SE). There are more underweight children in the SW than other zones. SW is #4 in the procurement of mosquito nets for children. The prevalence of malaria is worse in SW. In antenatal care SW is third behind SE and Southsouth (SS). SW is last in provision of drinking water and the menace of open defecation. Public health facilities in SW lag behind SE. Northcentral (NC) beats SW in health distribution. With these data, where is SW’s sense of pride? Whither our First in Africa status? The answer is blowing in the wind.

    For solution, Professor Adewole prescribed workable ideas: Invest more in healthcare. Make Primary Health Care play its role as a gatekeeper. Reverse the decline of dispensaries and maternity centers. Establish Ward Health System with a Ward Health Committee in every Ward. Commit 15% of budget to healthcare. Let states leave Teaching Hospitals to the Federal Government and focus on Primary Health (PHC) Centers. Pay healthcare workers on time. Establish model PHC with essential machines, supplies and vaccines. Involve the private sector and the diaspora population in healthcare financing. Treat health as pro-development and accord it a priority.

    From Healthcare to Integrated Rural Development (IRD), there was not a dull moment in Apero 3. Chairman of the day, Professor A. G. Ayoola, an agricultural economist with years of experience, identified education and IRD as Chief Awolowo’s topmost programs. He highlighted the preparatory work that Awolowo did, including leading a committee to Israel to understudy Farm Settlement, Cooperative Societies, and Healthcare, arguing that this gave the administration a head-start in the development of the region.

    Professor Adewumi Taiwo, also an agriculturist with many years of experience, looked back at the Golden Era, observing that the federal system of governance helped Chief Awolowo and his team to develop and implement their ideas for development. Welfarism was their ideology and priority for action. They asked such questions as: how can we get water nearer to the people? How can we expand social services to benefit the people? What industries should we establish to create wealth for the people? Believing that agriculture must be the vehicle for the development of the region, they developed policy papers, and sourced funds to invest in rural development. This was the origin of the Farm Settlement project as an instrument for the fast development of the region.

    Professor Taiwo explained that The Awolowo Administration’s development objectives included making farmers more prosperous; granting them access to land; educating them on effective production system; and helping them with product marketing. After visiting Israel, the leadership came up with a strategy. They established six Farm Institutes across the region with Fashola as the coordinating centre. They also established thirty Farm Settlements with 640 acres each for cattle, poultry, and piggery. They imported cattle breeders from Mali. Engineering units fabricated tools and machines.

    According to Taiwo, trainees trained for two years at the Farm Institute after which they were deployed to the Farm Settlement closest to their homes with equipment and stipends. They had access to extension workers who offered technical advice. Government bought their produce at harvest time and Marketing Boards processed produce for export. Cooperative societies offered facilities for savings and loans.

    The scheme was enormously successful. Professor Taiwo referenced some alumni of Farm Institutes and Farm Settlements who became big time farmers. These included the proprietors of Olaogun Farms, Lala Farms in Ilora, and Ogun River Basin Farms. In his concluding message, Professor Taiwo averred that the IRD scheme, which worked effectively during the Golden Era, can also work now to generate employment and wealth for our young people.

    The final presentation was from a young entrepreneur, Mr. Rotimi Olawale, CEO of JR Farms, which he co-founded with his wife, Jibike. This agriculture Power Couple are in their mid-thirties! They have farms in Nigeria, Rwanda and Zambia. They are into Cassava flour, roasted coffee beans, and agro-consulting. Over 8 years, their impact has been felt in nine nations in three continents, with a network of 4,000 coffee farmers, employing more than 300 direct and indirect labor, with more than 30 million end-users of their products.

    Mr. Olawale decried the unhelpful mindset of Yoruba youths who see agriculture as a dirty job, think that SW is not ideal for farming, that agriculture cannot create enough jobs, or that it is poverty-ridden. On his part, Olawale is convinced that agriculture is wealth-generating, that it was used to build infrastructure in the Golden Era, and that Yorubaland has a favorable environment for every food crop and livestock. For him, agriculture can transform SW into an economic power zone of the nation.

    The challenges Olawale sees include youth misconception, infrastructural gap, bureaucracy, poor education, poor policy implementation, and inadequate investment in the sector. To overcome these challenges, Mr. Olawale’s recommendations include developing data/driven, people-oriented agricultural roadmap for SW; mobilizing investment in agriculture; promoting agricultural education; optimizing agriculture; and promoting priority crops and value addition and export.

    For workable programs, Mr. Olawale prescribed agricultural incubation/processing centers for training and easy start-off of agricultural business. Rwanda is doing this! Second, food standardization center for export in partnership with gold standard organisations such as USDA and EU. This will prevent the rejection of our products in overseas markets. Third, for access to market by farmers, create a SW Commodity Trading Platform. Finally, school farms in primary and secondary schools should be brought back.

    Professor Modupe Adebayo (nee Aka-Basorun) rounded up the session with an impeccable summary of all the presentations. She skillfully highlighted the vital points and recommendations which will help further work. It was another feast of ideas with great potentials for Southwestern renewal and renaissance in agriculture for employment generation and wealth creation.

    Now we move on to the “Years of the Locust, 1966 to date” and what we must do to fumigate the land.

    No discrimination. No intimidation. Just an enlightened dialogue for homeland renewal. Join next Apero:

    Saturday, 02/07/22 at 4:00 pm Nigerian Time

    Zoom Link:

    User ID: 87834935009

    Passcode: 690337

  • In search of Uhuru

    In search of Uhuru

    Say oh Lord! The Sovereign of all dominions! You bestow power to whomever You wish and withdraw power from whomever You wish; You exalt whomever You wish and abase whomever you wish; In Your Hand lies all that is GOOD. You embed the night into the day and the day into the night; You bring forth the living from the dead and the dead from the living. You grant sustenance to whomever you wish beyond reckoning” Q 3: 26-27

    Monologue

     

    Life is like a horse that surrenders itself to humans for riding. If it surrenders itself to you today do not be reckless in riding it. You may become the horse for life to ride on tomorrow. Nights are pregnant. They invariably give birth to wonders during the days. All pleasant or unpleasant events found in the records of history were conceived in the nights. The belly of nights is a mystery that cannot be easily explained through the successes or failures of human dreams.

     

    Observation

    Man is a mere spectator watching the environmental drama going on around him in the theatre of life. He only reacts to that drama randomly as it affects his immediate interest. The main actor in that drama is the phenomenon called destiny. And, the only antidote for the poison that destiny may sometimes constitute in the life of man is to be clad in the armour of faith.

    In history, great empires and nations have reputation for rising to the peak of their glory at a time. And, at another time, they are known for falling unexpectedly to the abyss of life’s dungeon, when they might have reached the elasticity limit of their power wielding. And as it is with nations, so it is with rulers. In this situation, what obtained in the past still obtains in the present. This confirms that humans are like flakes of history they rise today and fall tomorrow according to the dictates of momentary tempest.

     

    Comment

    Nigeria is fortunate as a nation to be endowed with large-hearted men and women who have tentials to enhance that rare fortune but fail to utilize such potentials.

    “The occurrences of life, as you can see them, change from time to time like weather. A person who is gladdened today may be saddened tomorrow”. In that circumstance, how much a man is able to cope with the harshness of life or relish in its comfort depends depends largely on the treatment he gaves clemency when the latter is at his disposal. Yet the world surges ahead without looking back at actions or reactions that dot the various lands of circumstances of life. Thus, within the twinkling of an eye, the Almighty Allah may change many things in human life to the amazement of man.

     

    Efficacy of prayer

    At a time in Nigeria when the elasticity of hardship unleashed on Nigerians by the country’s leadership was fast approaching its elasticity limit, we raised up our hands in prayer to the Almighty Allah to grant us a leader who would truly and sincerely serve the nation rather than someone who would turn himself into a master to be served by the nation. This was in response to Allah’s covenant with mankind when He said: “And, when my servants ask you (Prophet Muhammad (SAW) about me, tell them that I am very close to them and I answer the prayer of any well intentioned seeker, if he/she seeks my favour. Let such seekers trust My willingness to accept prayers so that they may be guided aright”. Q. 2: 186.

     

    Analysis

    Based on the above quoted verse of the Quran, we raised up our hands in prayer thus:

    “Oh Allah! Give us a leader who will know that the greatest wealth of a nation is her human resources and develop such wealth for the future of the nation. Imbue us with a leader who will know the meaning of education and therefore give our schools and Universities priority in government policies. Appoint a leader for us who will be a good example for the country, abiding by the law and not choosing which of the court rulings to obey. We pray for a leader who will hold security of lives and property sacrosanct, not one who will be indifferent when his personal interest is not affected by insecurity in the land. That prayer was divinely accepted. But with our habitual greed, carice and untamable aggrandizement, we chose to reject the divine bounties of Allah in the satanic belief that Allah’s choice for us is not as good as our own ephemeral choice of vanity.

     

    We need a Leader

    Today, we are back to a new season of prayer askkng Allah to give us a leader who will sincerely stand by his oath of office and not one who will rule by his wills and caprices on the basis of religious bias and ethnic sentiment to the detriment of the country’s constitution.

    We pray for a leader who will not crudely and greedily discard certain provisions of the constitution in a desperate bid to rule us despotically forever. We pray for a leader who will see himself as a servant rather than the master of the nation and therefore address the citizenry with due respect in decency and gentleman’s language.

    We pray for a leader who will be just enough to spread the privileges and opportunities in the land across board without any atom of discrimination. We pray for a leader who will not destroy the legitimacy of his leadership and start running away from his own shadow at the tail end of his tenure. And, finally, we pray for a leader who will be large-hearted enough to be gallant in defeat and magnanimous in victory; not one who will be so vindictive as to play tribes against tribes, unions against unions and religion against religion.

    We believe that the leadership qualities for which we are hereby praying are those that embody civilisation in all its ramifications. And, we are confident that Allah will be merciful with us in accepting this prayer.

     

    Agitations

    However, while we are eagerly anticipating the acceptance of this new prayer, some myopic and visionless agents of the Lucifer are still vigorously agitating for balkanization of this country in anticipation of their selfish material gains. Such vissionless elements do not see any lesson to learn from the experience of Southern Sudan Sudan or that of Southern Cameroon. Where are we going from here?

    Oh Allah, we are at Your door, raising up our hands to You in prayer and placing our final hope on You without an iota of doubt. Kindly guide us to build a nation of hope and to elect a leader who will be loved and admired by all and not one whose natural trade in stock is hidden hatred for certain citizens and open indignation for others. To You we pray and from You alone we expect mercy.

     

  • Nigeria’s triangular axis of evil

    Nigeria’s triangular axis of evil

    History is not just a teacher of all times for all living human beings. It is also a permanent school that constantly reminds mankind of the lessons to learn from the various events and experiences of the past as a means of guidance towards the future.

    About 900 years ago, an Arab poet of the second Umayyad Dynasty, in Spain, came up with a bewildering stanza that is now more relevant to Nigeria than his own nation and his own time. An  excerpt from the poem went thus: “Here is the period in human life about which we had been seriously warned in the words of Ubayy Bn Ka’b and those of Abdullah Bn Mas‘ud; Here is the period in which truth is meant to be totally rejected; And falsehood as well as evil machinations are to be warmly accepted and upheld as societal norms; Should this period continue to swing dangerously (like a pendulum over our nation) without any positive change, the world will surely forage into a stage in life when grief over deaths will become an aberration even as rejoice over the birth of new babies will become an anathema”.

    Observation

    Today, judging Nigeria’s situation, by what we can see and feel against what we are yet to witness or experience, can any predictionbe more accurate and more appropriate for our country than the abovequoted poem?

    With the seeming ongoing resistance to positive change and persistent entrenchment of evil machinations as we are witnessing today, how can there be any hope for a better future? Yet, the charlatans who use religion as an instrument of threat and intimidation through propaganda and blackmail refuse to see the possible danger ahead.

    Axis of Evil

    Today, Nigeria is dangerously entangled in a triangular axis of evil, the consequences of which cannot be foretold with precision. That axis is like a crushing pendulum swinging restlessly over Africa’s most populous country with a threat of ruins. That triangular axis consists of three dominant, vocal  blocks of evil. Each of them is an implacable enclave serving as an abode for its designers. One of those

    enclaves is the abode of politicians, another is for the palace of the clergy and the third is for the igloo of the media.

    While the Politicians stand out as the engine room of virtually all the evils afflicting our country, the clergy represents the dangerous chimney through which the polluting smoke of that evil oozes out to suffocate the populace spiritually in the name of God. On its own, the media serves as the megaphone for both the politicians and the so-called clergy through the instrumentality of satanic propaganda.

    Disappointing Leg

    Of the defined evil axis above, the most disappointing leg is the clergy. From time immemorial, religion had stood out as the societal salt used as a preservative for all other ingredients with which to prepare a delicious soup of life for the consumption of all and sundry at any stage. But with the sudden adoption of ‘ashes’ to replace salt as the main ingredient of preservation in the 20th century, courtesy  of the capitalist West, how can the soup of life be tasteful anymore to its consumers?

    Ordinarily, Salt should be salt in its natural form. To pour ashes on it in the name of spiritual preservative is to deprive it of its natural value and render it totally useless to its consumers. Thus, with the importation of a hitherto unknown brand of a religion from the West, which is bitterly coated in capitalism, Nigeria has dangerously become a polluted country with a suffocating smoke. Those who are responsible for this situation are the fraudsters parading themselves as prophets and are issuing satanic statements with which they deceptively rationalize their claim of prophet-hood.

    The Role of Money

    Incidentally, the bottom line for all these evil machinations is nothing other than the vanity called money. Let money be removed from Nigeria’s mode of worship today and sanity will return fully to our society with required serenity.

    Today, with importation of ashes as a replacement for salt, religion, like politics, has become a big business in which greedy merchants and charlatans are desperately engaged for unbridled avarice and unlimited aggrandizement without consideration for decency and even conscience. In that case, of what use is the claim of religion without conscience?

    Commercialization of Religion which enables private individuals to invest in building of castles, as business ventures, has seriously diminished the value of religion in taste and in substance.

    In Nigeria, today, our only respite, as Muslims, is that Nigerian Imams are not engaged in hateful sermons and public incitement to boost their religious businesses that fetch them private, executive jets illegally at the expense of their congregations. Were Nigerian Imams also to commercialise Islam and preach hatefully like some self-hipped charlatans in the name of religion, Nigeria would have ceased to be a country by now.

    Warning

    Those who take religion as a ‘do or die’ business that must fetch them luxurious lifestyle should know that they do not have monopoly of provocation and threat as the patience of Nigerian Muslims is getting exhausted. Elasticity has its limit.

    Yellow Journalism

    When journalism was a real profession in Nigeria, its practitioners knew that they were like Eskimos living in Igloo. If anything happened to Igloo, the Eskimos’ lives became exposed to danger. Today, however, it has become evident that journalism is just a matter of nomenclature.

    What matters to the journalists of today, especially in the Southwest of Nigeria, is the conspicuous immoral padding that reportorial entails. That profession is now virtually a matter of cash and carry in favour of the highest bidder. That is why news reports these days are mere expression of wishes and fabricated stories with which to justify the brown envelopes that serve as padding for most of those parading themselves as journalists.

    As for the politicians, nothing is strange. It is a common knowledge that the enclave in which they dwell is the real home of the Lucifer.

    But to think that their ruinous actions can continue unabatedly is nothing other than self-deception. Where are the politicians of yesteryears? To be forewarned is to be forearmed. Long live Nigeria!

    In Remembrance of a Political Icon When the demise of Nigeria’s first elected Executive President, Alhaji Shehu Usman Aliyu Shagari was announced a couple of years ago the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA) issued a press statement with which it condoled with all Nigerians including the family of the deceased. The full contents of the statement were as follows: When the media waves came up with breaking news announcing the demise of a Nigerian political icon, Alhaji Shehu Usman Aliyu Shagari with a reverberation effect across the world, many Nigerians with rich experience in various aspects of life began to dust their diaries for a recount of the episodes that propelled the deceased to have made history as much as he, himself, was made by history.

    Like an Elephant

    The late President Shehu Shagari’s life was like a huge elephant surrounded by blind men and women of letters and substance.

    To describe the features of that proverbial elephant, each of the persons that surrounded it would only be able to give an account of the area he/she is able to touch on the body of the mammoth animal and not the whole of it. Besides, Alhaji Shehu Shagari was such a household name, that no serious political operator or aspirant can afford to discountenance in Nigerian history without incurring an expensive cost.

    Religious Concern

    The aspect that concerns the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA) most in Alhaji Shagari’s life’s odyssey was religion. It can be recalled that it was he (Alhaji Shagari) as Nigeria’s first elected Executive President, that approved the sum of N10 million each for the commencement of building a National Mosque and a National Ecumenical Church in Abuja at a time when naira was really strong and the foundation of Abuja as Nigeria’s new capital city was just being laid.

    That Presidential gesture, which no religious group rejected, was a confirmation that Nigeria is indeed a multi-religious and not a secular country as being mischievously peddled, in certain quarters, for selfish reasons.

    Today, the two houses of worship are conspicuous in Central I Area of Abuja with their grandiose postures, to the finite attraction of foreign tourists who see them as symbols of national unity.

    Maitatsine Crisis

    It is historically unforgettable how the late Executive President tackled, diplomatically and militarily, a frightening national crisis engendered by a dangerous charlatan called Muhammad Marwa Maitatsine from Cameroon, who wrecked devastating havocs in most parts of Northern Nigeria, in the guise of religion, during the country’s second republic. It was his presidential determination to keep the unity of Nigeria intact  that checkmated that unforgetable menace.

    Alhaji Shehu Shagari was, though, a quiet and easy going personality, nonetheless, he never wavered in taking necessary decisions in the interest of national unity.

    His Lifestyle

    As a Muslim, Alhaji Shagari never hesitated in upholding the principles of justice, fairness and equity which his religion (Islam) emphasizes. As a teacher in the early part of his life, he was exemplary in touching the lives of his students positively and in grooming those students for future leadership.

    As a politician, he displayed such a special trait that distinguished him as a template designer and a dark horse in Nigeria’s political racecourse.

    His Political Sagacity

    The late President Shagari’s political sagacity was like a major Faculty in the University of Life, into which many forward-looking leadership aspirants in Nigeria were eager to seek enrolment for specialisation in African political education.

    Alahji Shehu Shagari was the eminent Dean of that faculty even as the vibrancy of his tenure which remains unequalled, till date, is a testimony to the template he set for Nigeria’s democratic dispensation.

     

    Lessons to Learn

    For Nigerian generations of the colonial era as well as those of the first and second republics, a major falcon of reference vacated the stage forever leaving some of his surviving political peers to mere dreams in non-effective communicationToday, the country is still yearning for a replica of his exemplary personality in leadership. We pray the Almighty Allah to give us a leader worthy of emulation in our era. Amin.