Category: Columnists

  • Making the world a hungry place Making the world a hungry place

    •Hunger is the eager devourer of the poor; it is the poor man’s constant fear and closet companion

    This past week, international news networks have spent inordinate time reporting on leaks of confidential American government information concerning two massive surveillance programs operated in the alleged war against terrorism.

    First, the National Security Agency has been gathering information from one of America’s largest telephone services. The NSA basically collected information on all American calls using this service. While apparently not eavesdropping to discern the contents of the telephone calls, the program was still intrusive. It collected information concerning the identity of the parties, their locations at the time of calls, and duration of the calls. While this might seem harmless, such information can become dangerous in unscrupulous hands. It can be mined to uncover more sensitive information about people.

    The second aspect of the revelation is that the NSA gathers pervasive information from nine of America’s large internet companies, including Google, Yahoo, Facebook and Youtube. This time, the retrieved information includes the content of transmissions.

    There are two sides to this story. Both sides are ugly but in starkly different ways and measures. To the chagrin of his liberal allies, President Obama vigorously defends these programs, claiming they strike the correct balance between an individual’s right to privacy and the imperatives of national security. He claims the programs have prevented terrorist attacks. While the presidential words sound reassuring, we shall never know if they are true. Because the programs are shrouded in secrecy, we are ignorant of the scale by which their effectiveness is measured. Since there is no independent and public oversight, we know not if the programs are being abused.

    We do know the temptations of power. Whenever a large bureaucracy is given nearly unbridled power, the bureaucracy inevitably abuses its office. This has been the case since the beginning of civilization and will be an enduring feature. As long as man is mortal, some of us will be seduced by the power given to them. Where power and money are concerned, the tool often becomes the master.

    Consequently, President Obama’s assurances fall to the floor. Most likely, the program has been abused and used for things outside the already wide scope of its stated mission.

    More to the point, the intended mission of these programs troubles many Americans. The American national character values freedom and personal privacy. Americans historically have seen privacy from government interference or surveillance of their personal affairs as the main fulcrum hoisting the freedoms that constitute American constitutional democracy.

    Modern technology now brings traditional notions of personal privacy into question. Advances in communication technology help us interact in ways impossible two decades ago. These advances are mainly used for decent purposes. However, a minority element employs them in mean, dangerous ways. Thus, prudent law enforcement uses elements of the same technology to checkmate the possible harm.

    These leaked programs are stinging reminders that different aspects of that same technological advance may not only be used to fight crime, they may well impair old freedoms to communicate while affording us new abilities to communicate. This is the dilemma of government and modern communications. It is a dilemma neither America nor any nation that aspires to constitutional democracy and protection of human rights has resolved.

    America would not be grappling with this dilemma in such dramatic fashion but for 9/11. That tragic event altered the America mindset. Openness has diminished and safety has become the first order. Most Americans will now tolerate a level of government intrusiveness prior generations would have rebuked. Given the terrorist threat, the President and many people believe they made a pragmatic decision to tip the scales a bit more toward safety and away from unmonitored freedom. While the changed equation seems reasonable in the abstract, human experience shouts caution. Whenever too much freedom is sacrificed for the sake of safety, eventually both are lost. At this juncture, America has not sacrificed too much freedom. However, these programs signal America may be headed toward those troubled waters.

    This brings us to the second untoward aspect of this story. Why blow the whistle during Obama’s term? Ulterior motives to paint Obama as a transplanted African dictator are part of the play. Sadly, Obama may have traipsed into his opponents’ snare by being too lenient with the national security apparatus and being a bit too pliable to the demands of this vast, faceless machine. Loathe to being seen as weak on defense and not wanting to take any heat should a terrorist attack occur, the President has given the national security network all it wants which is probably more than it needs. Politically, this has served him. When the Boston Marathon attack occurred, subterranean leaks did not emerge from the national security agencies that the president had deprived them of the means to conduct their business of protecting the American public. He could not be blamed for lack of vigilance.

    Yet, the price for his political cover is being paid in the coin of the civil liberties for all. In fairness, what confronts him is one of the toughest tests a leader must face. I fear he may have placed too much trust in the national security machinery by giving them too much latitude. He may sincerely believe these people will not abuse the expansion of their surveillance domain. History speaks against depositing such trust in those who see their mission as spying on fellow citizens. Every clandestine organization is infiltrated by a dark element that enlisted in that agency not to do heaven’s work but to do hell’s labor. They join because the clandestine nature of the agency provides them a cover of legitimacy under which they may pursue otherwise criminal inclinations. Some of the mankind’s most depraved criminals have worn police uniforms. The present situation is no different. If Obama actually believes in the fidelity of his snooping machinery, he has been had.

    In a sense, the disclosures will benefit Obama in the long-run, although causing him short-term heartburn. The leaks should make him more vigilant in constraining the domestic snooping apparatus. For a period, even this vast, anonymous bureaucracy will be more circumspect. Hopefully, public scrutiny will recalibrate the balance now struck between liberty and security so that it reflects America’s traditional presumption of freedom and no longer leans toward the intrusive national security state.

    This brings us to the second part of this story. These recent disclosures of potential government overreach seem to be an installment in a larger pattern of attacks against the Obama Administration. Just weeks ago, Congressional Republicans launched broadsides at the White House, alleging scandal in the Benghazi tragedy, the Internal Revenue Service and Justice Department. That these new revelations walk so quickly in the footsteps of the prior allegations is not coincidental. A foul air wafts through the corridors.

    While right-wing critics speak of a sinister Obama conspiracy to undermine American democracy, some of these critics are chin-deep in conspiracies of their own. They seek to depict Obama as the archetypal ruthless African dictator come to trample the roots of American freedom. It is the latest version of the tale that a black man has a tail. Obama might wear a suit and bear a Harvard education; but he is nothing but Daniel Arap Moi or Idi Amin in the making. Thus, these revelations. The disclosures are made in the name of civil liberties. To the extent this is true, the leaks are condign.

    However, an ulterior motive is in play. Conservatives want to scuttle the boat. They detest the very idea of black leadership and fear what it represents for the future. Their task is to make things messy, even ungovernable, so it looks like a black man is incapable of governing the nation. Disclosure of these surveillance programs has been a surprisingly long time coming. The programs began in the Bush years but were keep secret. However, they now explode in Obama’s face as if he prepared the admixture.

    Without proof Obama directed these extant programs into a more nefarious turn, he deserves no more flak than his predecessor. Since Bush was not scathed, neither should Obama suffer. In this regard, Obama should be judged by the standard applied to Bush, no more and no less. However, Obama suffers the special infirmity of race. When they see his black face, many critics see red. They are more foe than critics. Many serve in the Administration itself as career civil servants. That they are careerists does not divorce them from racial or political bias. Many present senior civil servants came into government during the Reagan era and adhere to the ideology of that era. They tell themselves they work for the American government but Obama can never be their boss. It is an abomination to see him as their superior. Thus, they undermine him. The constant leak of sensitive information helps accomplish this task.

    For Obama, more than any other president, the civil service upon which he should rely is not always reliable or even civil toward him. In it, exist fifth columnists working to undermine him. Some of his worst enemies man offices nominally in service to him.

    While this story is salient, a more profound story has goes unreported by corporate media. Steadily, large corporate combines and hedge funds act in concert to seize vast tracts of agricultural land and control the food supply. The net result will not be more food at lower costs. The result will be more artificially modified foods; however, the total food supply will contract and the price of it all shall increase so as to profit those who now engineer this new method of imposing hunger on much of the world’s already supine populations.

    In the northwestern United States, unapproved genetically modified wheat was discovered growing on a farm. The culprit was the international corporation, Monsanto. Yes, the same company that told the world the deadly pesticide, DDT, was safe to spray around children, pregnant women and on crops.

    Discovery of genetically modified organisms (GMO) on a farm seems minor. Not so. It should scare people. It already frightened wise governments in Japan and several EU nations to halt American wheat imports for fear of contamination of their natural food crops and supplies.

    So quick to make a profit, Monsanto and other companies have introduced GMOs into the food chain without understanding the long-term effects of this experimentation. We know not what consumption of these unnatural combinations does to the human body. We equally should be concerned what the proliferation of GMOs might do to the earth.

    Evidence suggests these crops, if not monitored, could spread like weeds or wildfire. By wind, bird, human activity or odd happenstance, seeds could spread. Once spread, they might overwhelm and choke off the more natural strains of a crop. From a few accidental seedlings, a farmer could see his fields decimated, inexorably changed from a natural harvest to this man-made complexity.

    The change entails more than a different variant of a crop. GMOs require materially different types of fertilizers and care than do natural crops. Most of these fertilizers and other materials are unaffordable to most peasant farmers. They also can only be purchased from a handful of companies. Once GMOs invade, a farmer is left helpless. He must go to Monsanto or a similar company to pay their toll or risk losing all. As such, introduction of GMO is the equivalent of turning decent farm land into a cocaine addict: Unless it gets its GMO fix, it becomes useless.

    This shall be the plight of the farmer’s worldwide should this danger be let loose.

     

  • Welcome, Opon-Imo; goodbye, Igba Aimo

    Welcome, Opon-Imo; goodbye, Igba Aimo

    As Osun people take ‘Tablet of Knowledge’, they should say ‘never again’ to PDP-type ignorance

    Even Chief Jeremiah Obafemi Awolowo would have turned in his grave on June 3, when Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State presented ‘Opon-Imo’, the magic computer tablet that his administration has been working on for quite some time, to the world, at a well attended ceremony in Ilesha, Osun State. Not a few persons have acknowledged, and rightly too, that since the introduction of free education in the defunct Western Region by the late sage, Chief Awolowo in 1955, ‘Opon- Imo’ remains the second most revolutionary project in education, not just in the geo-political axis, but nationwide.

    The point is that only the mischievous will see an elephant and say it seems they just saw something; when we see an elephant, we should say so. ‘Opon-Imo’ is a milestone. That explained why Nigeria literally stood still for Aregbesola when he launched the computer tablet. The array of personalities that graced the event cut across ethnic, political and religious divides, which is something to cheer in a country where politics is being introduced into virtually everything, and in the most cynical, if not outright damaging manner. This was something that was killed in the June 12, 1993 presidential election (that would be exactly 20 years on Wednesday), but which was annulled by reactionary elements in the country.

    The Aregbesola administration has no choice but to be creative in its handling of education in the state, if it must live to its billing as a progressive government. The government inherited a situation where only about three percent of secondary school leavers in the state had the requisite pass for admission into tertiary institutions. This was an unusual situation in a south-western state which called for an unusual answer. The government quickly held a summit of education stakeholders which looked into the state of education in the state and made far-reaching recommendations. Needless to say that ‘Opon-Imo’ is one of the major responses by the government in tackling the problem.

    So, what is ‘Opon-Imo’? I do not know whether it has a parallel in the world, but I know it is novel in the country, at least no government in the federation, whether federal, state or local has done such a thing. According to Aregbesola, “It is a virtual classroom containing 63 e-books covering 17 academic subjects for examinations conducted by the West AfThe Yoruba, Sexuality Education, Civic Education, Ifa on ethics and life’. This section also contains an average of 16 chapters per subject and 823 chapters in all, with about 900 minutes or 15 hours of audio voiceovers”.

    Aregbesola added, “In the integrated test zone of the device, there are more than 40,000 JAMB and WAEC practice questions and answers dating back to about 20 years. It also contains mock tests in more than 51 subject areas, which approximates to 1,220 chapters, with roughly 29,000 questions referencing about 825 images”.

    In fact, there is so much to say for this computer tablet. But I would not dwell much on that because so many people have discussed these in some details. Suffice it to say that power supply is not a problem for those who might want to look at that aspect of our national life. Already, the UN organisation has said it would adopt ‘Opon-Imo’ as one of the major tools of its West African regional harmonisation efforts in education. This, as well as how ‘Opon-Imo’ affect governance is my concern. A prophet is not without honor except in his own town and in his own home.

    But shouldn’t charity begin at home? You can be sure it won’t, at least not when the issue has to do with progress; and especially so that the charity is coming from an opposition political party. It is instructive that this all-important computer tablet was launched at a time the country’s ruling party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was busy doing nothing, or at best going after some of its leading lights, celebrating and covering its laggards with the ubiquitous ‘federal might’ that the party’s leadership and the presidency keep demystifying by the day with their actions and utterances.

    Rather than bring innovativeness into governance, the ruling party has continued business as usual. The other time we were debating how much to spend on the vice president’s lodge. At a time when the government should be busy dreaming dreams for national development, the whole machinery of government was deployed to ensure the government’s favoured candidate won the Nigeria Governors Forum (NGF) election. Just last Thursday, the PDP suspended another governor (in line with my prediction last Sunday that the party would deal with governors who refused to team up with it in voting for its failed candidate in the NGF election, Jonah Jang). We should expect more of such sanctions over frivolous matters, including governors being nailed over the inability of the party’s leaders to successfully perform their conjugal responsibility on bed, should that suddenly happen. And this is the attitude that the party would carry to 2015 and still expect to win the election.

    If indeed knowledge is power, then one can start imagining what the impact of ‘Opon-Imo’ would be on educational performance in Osun state in the next few years. And, for the benefit of many of our youths who mistake Obafemi Martins for Chief Awolowo due to our shambolic educational curriculum, it is important to stress that what is happening, especially in the south-western part of the country today is not novel to the region; they have their roots in the past. The former Western Region (now Ogun, Osun, Oyo, Ekiti and Ondo states) was the pace setter under Chief Awolowo’s premiership. The region has many firsts to its credit: the first skyscraper in the country (Cocoa House); the first region to implement free education; the first stadium in West Africa (Liberty Stadium, Ibadan; the first television station (WNTV) in Africa (forget the attempt by the defunct National Party of Nigeria (NPN) in the ’80s to turn history on its head by claiming that the first TV station in Africa was established in Libya). We still have such people in the country today who would want to rewrite our unfolding history in their own image rather than in the image in which it occurred.

    If indeed Victor Huho is correct that ‘He who opens a school door, closes a prison’, then we can imagine how many prisons the Aregbesola administration must have succeeded in closing with its giant strides in the educational sector in Osun State. ‘Opon-Imo’ must necessarily remind one of the years of the locust that the PDP rule in Osun was. With ‘Opon-Imo’, ‘Igba aimo’ (the time of ignorance) must have been over in Osun; it must never return. Osun people are not dogs that will always return to their vomit. This, the people will confirm when they go to the polls next year to retain their governor. Goodbye to jati jati.

  • How strong must our federal government be?

    How strong must our federal government be?

    The point at issue is that there is a need to share ruling and sovereignty between federal and state governments in a multiethnic polity

    The title of today’s piece has arisen from the view by the chairman of the Senate Committee on Review of the Constitution (SCRC) that devolution of powers from exclusive to concurrent list together must respect the need to have a strong federal government that can hold the country together. The other possible title would have been since when has the country been falling apart? What the argument about having a federal bureaucratic leviathan to keep the country together appears to be set to achieve is to justify keeping most of the provisions of a constitution that had no input from citizens in the first place and about which citizens in large numbers have complained in their call for a new or people’s constitution. Most of what has been publicised as recommended amendments to the 1999 Constitution are basically Karounwi (just having something to talk about), rather than addressing the real issues.

    We said in this column several times in the past that the amendment exercise is likely to go the way of the Obasanjo Political Reform Conference: nowhere. The reason for the lawmakers to attempt amending the constitution has been sidelined in order to privilege the irrelevant and the redundant. All the talk about not creating new states, introducing a six-year term to replace the current renewable four-year tenure, begging for a special status for Lagos, and passing the buck on revenue by derivation to Revenue Mobilisation and Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC) amount largely to beating about the bush. The concerns of those who called for sovereign national conference and for constitutional conference, both of which the National Assembly tried to pre-empt by insisting that its charge or mandate includes constitutional amendment may at the end of the amendment exercise be ignored.

    Citizens who have been clear on the issue that the present structure cannot be used to create a new and more benevolent structure for democratic and efficient federal governance now have reasons, after going through the recommendations from the SCRC, to beat their chests and say “Didn’t we tell you?”

    That the lawmakers have shown a myopic understanding of devolution in a federation comes out of SCRC’s chairman’s statement that the exclusive list is congested, cumbersome, and unwieldy, and that “there is therefore the need to decongest the exclusive list by maintaining only items of utmost importance to the federation as a whole, while transferring items of concurrent interests to the concurrent list.” In the first place, the states are not begging lawmakers to shed load from the federal list to them, in order to have something to do. The point at issue is that there is a need to share ruling and sovereignty between federal and state governments in a multiethnic polity, which the authors of the 1999 Constitution had made up their minds to ignore.

    From the list of items SCRC has recommended for transfer to the concurrent list, there are three that are clearly stated: Prisons, Stamp duties, and Railways. Is this to be interpreted that all the other 65 items on the list are about the federation as a whole? If this assessment is correct, then the concurrent list will now have 32 instead of the 29 in the current constitution while the federal government will have 65 items instead of its original 68 items, until we are told in plain language how many new items are added to the exclusive list.What is ironical about the cosmetic amendments announced so far is that states can now include establishment and maintenance of prisons and prisoners on their list of functions while they have no hand in law enforcement, including enforcing laws created by state legislators and violation of which can create population for the prisons. Fingerprinting is still on the exclusive list while Prisons will go to the concurrent list, should the Senate have its way. How can such disjunction lead to efficiency?

    The complaint that the current constitution had created too many problems for smooth federal governance in terms of the sharing of powers between the national and state governments may be negligible in relation to the confusion that is likely to arise if and when the call by the Senate for autonomy to local governments is approved by all the relevant bodies. In effect, this would mean that state governments would have no supervisory function over local governments that are part and parcel of them. The highlight of giving autonomy to local governments is that civilian governments have succeeded in raising local governments to the level of federating units, a thing that successions of military dictators could not achieve.

    With respect to the Senate’s view on Fiscal Federalism/Derivation: “It is the Committee’s view that fixing the present rate to reflect prevailing reality should be an administrative responsibility vested in the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission,” there is the impression that the Senate conflates or reduces fiscal federalism to derivation. Derivation may be a part of fiscal federalism, but fiscal federalism is much larger than derivation, and there should have been some reflection of this understanding in the recommendations proposed by the SCRC.

    Wallace Oates, in his book, Fiscal Federalism, has said that the concept involves major devolution and fiscal decentralisation. This should include leaving to regions and states or provinces functions and taxation that can lead to efficient provision of goods and services to citizens, rather than keeping such powers and functions with a central government that has no direct constituents. The result of fiscal decentralisation is to increase citizens’ impact on political outcomes and political participation, and to accelerate development. Does SCRC believe that transferring three items to the concurrent list while retaining the principle of federal legislative supremacy on such items as well as avoiding entrenching the principle of derivation in the constitution would take care of the many issues that led to demands for re-structuring? Our senators need to know that we had a constitution until 1966 that clearly stated that derivation would be 50% of revenue garnered from exploitation of petroleum and other natural resources. It would have been safer to put such important information in the constitution than to leave it for a body made up of political appointees.

    It is curious that SCRC has not shown any interest in looking at the percentage of revenue that is given to the federal government and the many functions that the federal government is billed to perform, even when such functions are more efficiently performed at lower levels of government in other federations. In case our lawmakers still have time to look more closely, there are, apart from Prisons, Stamp duties, and Railways, many more items that are better left to the jurisdiction of states:a). Establishment and maintenance of machinery for continuous and universal registration of births and deaths; b). Construction, alteration, and maintenance of roads declared by the National Assembly to be federal trunk roads should be a joint responsibility of the federal government and the state such roads pass through;c). Fingerprints, identification and criminal records; d). Fishing and fisheries in general; e). Insurance;f). ports;g). Mines and minerals, including oilfields, oil mining, geological surveys and natural gas;h). Patents, trademarks, trade or business names, industrial designs, and merchandise marks;i). Police and security services;j). Professional occupations; k). Public holidays; l). Formation, annulment and dissolution of all marriages;m). Establishment of a purchasing authority with power to acquire for export or sale in world markets agricultural produce; n). Inspection of produce to be exported from Nigeria and enforcement of grades and standards of quality in respect of produce so inspected; o). Establishment of a body to prescribe and enforce standards of goods and commodities offered for sale; p). Control of the prices of goods and commodities designed by the National Assembly as essential goods or commodities; q). Registration of business names.

  • A divisive president

    A divisive president

    When the history of this political dispensation comes to be written, the name of the late President UmaruYar’Adua will most certainly be emblazoned in gold. Despite his severe ill health and his attendant short tenure in office, the humble, unassuming but highly intelligent man from Katsina State contributed more to the deepening of our democratic advancement than has been appreciated. Yar’Adua succeeded General Obasanjo, who ran what I have often referred to in this column as an imperial presidency. More accurately, the Ota farmer presided over a primitive presidency. It was a presidency that had scant regard for the rule of law or due process. A presidency that paid lip and hypocritical service to the anti-corruption war; one that removed governors with a minority of legislators and in 2003 and 2007 conducted elections that were difficult to distinguish from armed banditry. It was a presidency that routinely disobeyed court orders, the most notorious being the seizure of Lagos State local government funds for over three years despite the express ruling of the Supreme Court that it had no such powers.

    President UmaruYar’Adua could easily have chosen to follow such a precedent by toeing the path of lawlessness, impunity and power drunkenness. But the man simply had too much decency, integrity, honour, dignity and nobility to descend, literally, into the gutter. For one, Yar’Adua admitted that the elections which brought him to power were flawed and promised far reaching electoral reforms. This was at a time that OBJ and the comical Professor Maurice Iwu were proclaiming the freeness and fairness of the election from the roof tops. Even if the cabal around him exploited his fragile health to prevent the full implementation of the recommendations of the justice Mohammed Uwais panel on electoral reforms which he set up, Yar’Adua put the issue of electoral reforms firmly at the forefront of national discourse. Again, he promised at his inauguration to be a servant leader and to abide by the rule of law. He demonstrated his sincerity in this regard by immediately releasing the illegally seized Lagos State government funds. Furthermore, just as he did as Governor of Katsina State, he publicly declared his assets signalling a commitment to transparency and accountability. Had he been of sound health and lived long, Yar’Adua would have been a great and outstanding president since morning is often an indication of what the day will look like.

    When he assumed office on the demise of Yar’Adua, many Nigerians invested so much hope in President Goodluck Jonathan. They confirmed their confidence in him when he emphatically won the 2011 election to commence his own substantive tenure as president. Many voters claimed that they voted for Jonathan and not necessarily for his party. Of course, there were good reasons for the great faith reposed in Jonathan. In the first place was his high scholastic attainment as the first doctorate degree holder to be at the apex of Nigeria’s political leadership. Second, was his infectious simplicity and humility best exemplified by his famous reference to his shoeless childhood. Thirdly, was his frequent affectation of deep religious faith exhibited by a fascinating willingness to kneel down publicly in humility before revered men of God for prayers. Fourthly, was his manner of accession to office during Yar’Adua’s protracted incapacitation. It took vehement demonstrations and protests by civil society organizations led by the Save Nigeria Group (SNG) for the National Assembly to facilitate his assumption of office through what it described as the ‘doctrine of necessity’. It was rightly assumed that such a beneficiary of democratic social action would be most appreciative and protective of democratic values.

    Alas, Nigerians have been proved sorely wrong. The Jonathan presidency has descended to abysmal depths of arbitrariness, impunity and lawlessness reminiscent of the Obasanjo years. President Jonathan has completely deviated from the path of rectitude and cultured restraint trod by Yar’Adua. The first indication of this negative transformation of the Jonathan presidency was his refusal to reinstate the illegally and immorally suspended President of the Court of Appeal, Justice Ayo Salami, despite the decision of the National Judicial Council that the jurist is blameless of any wrong doing. The moral degeneration of the Jonathan presidency was again exhibited when Jonathan ordered out troops to stop peaceful demonstrations in Lagos against the insensitive removal of a phantom oil subsidy and an almost 100% hike in the pump price of fuel. But undoubtedly the greatest manifestation so far of the transformation of Jonathan into a Nebuchadnezzar, Goliath and Pharaoh all rolled into one is the sordid and utterly dishonourable role of the presidency in the current crisis engulfing the Nigeria Governors Forum (NGF).

    Of course, no one believes the hog wash of the President’s minders that he has no interest in the leadership of the NGF. That blatant lie itself reveals the grave moral crisis in which the Jonathan presidency is mired. It is no secret that Jonathan is obsessed with discrediting, humiliating and hounding the Chairman of the forum, RotimiAmaechi, Governor of Rivers state out of office. The PDP in Rivers state has been destabilized at the behest of the presidency. The House of Assembly has been practically immobilized with members reportedly being induced to impeach the Governor. Amaechi was under severe pressure not to run for re-election as Chairman of the NGF. Governors were coerced and threatened not to return him as their Chairman. The Presidency blatantly told governors that Jonathan could not work with Amaechi as Chairman of the NGF. But the more Amaechi was victimised, the more sympathy he enjoyed both from the general public and the majority of Governors. Thus, despite all odds, Amaechi won re-election as the NGF Chairman by 19 votes to 16. Rather than take the outcome of the election with grace and good faith, President Jonathan has publicly cast his lot with the minority faction of the NGF, declaring Jonah Jang as Chairman of the NGF against all common sense, reason, logic and visual evidence. Jonathan has thus dragged the presidency to the lowest depths of moral depravity yet since 1999. I remember that when formerNassarawa state Governor, AbdullahiAdamu, was removed as Chairman of the NGF and replaced with Obong Victor Attah of AkwaIbom, during the Obasanjo regime, the presidency did not interfere to split the NGF. This was despite the fact that Adamu was Obasanjo’s close confidante and favourite.

    It is most unfortunate that Jonathan, who was given a pan-Nigerian mandate in the 2011 election, is turning out to be the most divisive leader in the country’s political history. At the rate at which he is going, it will be a miracle if he does not become Nigeria’s Mikael Gorbachev. Here is a President who has not uttered a word to caution his irresponsible and lawless kinsmen who have publicly declared that the country will disintegrate if he is not given a second term in 2015. Why hold any elections if the outcome can be determined before the votes are cast? In 2011, Jonathan opportunisticallydefied the zoning policy of his party to run for election. He rightly claimed that he had the constitutional right to run. He failed to realize that he had a greater moral obligation to respect a gentleman’s agreement and intra-party convention. The outcome was a badly divided country and the descent to violence in the North – a challenge we are still trying to cope with. During the campaign for the 2011 election, Jonathan visited Lagos at least four times. On all occasions, he tried to incite the non-indigenes in the state against the Yoruba. It did not matter to him if he set the cosmopolitan Megacity on fire. All that mattered was winning at all cost. This is surely the President as Machiavellian.

    Now so obsessed and distracted is Jonathan with his 2015 ambition that he is prepared to victimise anyone on his path as well as divide his party and even the country. As Jonathan mutates into a full- fledged dictator, I urge him to reflect soberly on Nigerian history. If the people triumphed over Babangida, Abacha and Obasanjo, they will surely triumph again. The outcome of the NGF election is a pointer to this truism.

  • Namibia will surrender

    Stories from Nairobi didn’t come as a surprise because leopards don’t change their spots. It won’t be fair to tag Kenyans as hooligans. But their soccer chiefs and fans are incorrigible. They tarnish the country’s image with their poor conduct. Otherwise, Nairobi is a serene town that holiday makers would cherish.

    The Kenyan government needs to ensure that honourable men are picked to run their football. Soccer is just a game. It is also a platform for friendship. Football, like other sports, serves as the rallying point for countries to change the perception of the world about their citizenry. Soccer entertains the audience. It is not a theatre of violence.

    I’m sure that the Kenyan government didn’t ask the FA chairman to direct security operatives at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport to barricade the gate, in a bid to stop the Nigerian delegation from leaving the place.

    Knowing that no East African country has ever made it to the World Cup, the Kenyans must have been in a dreamland to think that their resort to brigandage would secure them victory.

    It is scandalous that in an era of civility, the Kenyans could descend to barbarism and thuggery for losing to Nigeria.

    The spectacle in Kenya, if anything, only offered a peep into the level of football development and administration in Africa. One wonders if the ugly trend would ever play itself out in Europe.

    This calls to question the role of the CAF leadership. This is not the first time this has happened to Nigeria, yet there has never been any reprimand from CAF against those who bring the beautiful game to disrepute. Maybe, a change in the leadership would breathe a new lease of life into the federation.

    In Africa, we do untoward things to win matches, including tampering with the visitors’ food, water and, of course, looting of their teams’ locker rooms in the stadium. We harass visitors to secure victory.

    For Nigeria, we have been through this path to Nairobi before. The lesson learnt from previous visits informed the way in which we stormed the Kenyan capital in the wee hours of Tuesday.

    We arrived when the country was asleep. It was deliberate – to ensure our safety. So, for the FA chairman, who statutorily should know when we arrive to have masterminded the assault on the Nigerian delegation is not only appalling, but one incident that the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) should report to the Federation of International Football Associations (FIFA) in Zurich.

    We could have avoided informing the Kenya FA chairman of our arrival. We didn’t disregard him because it would have been anti-FIFA rule. He was told of our arrival schedules.

    With a Nigerian High Commissioner in Kenya, our arrival had to be handled by the officials in Nairobi, irrespective of what FIFA’s rule states on the matter. What the embassy officials did by providing better accommodation for the Nigerian delegation was in sync with our culture. After all we are not called giants of Africa for nothing.

    The other lesson learnt from the unscrupulous manner in which the FA chairman handled our passage through Immigration is that our embassy staff will seek for independent security arrangement for our sports ambassadors. I hope it does not get to that extent.

    Not much can be said of the Super Eagles’s victory over Kenya on Wednesday in Nairobi, since it wasn’t shown live. It wasn’t going to be an easy game. Our victory underlines the vintage Nigerian spirit. I hope that our players can imbibe the culture of ensuring that Nigeria’s participation in top class football competition is topmost on their minds.

    It is important to remind the players that they could in the future be playing Stephen Keshi’s role as coaches, managers or even football federation bosses. They can only do so on the big stage, if they play their hearts out for us during matches.

    The winning mentality in the Eagles is back, courtesy of Keshi’s renowned courage. He has instilled the can-do spirit in the players. They trust him and he believes in them. That is what we need to change the face of the game here.

    However, Keshi should learn to be a team player. He must not play to the gallery. He must reflect before opening his mouth to speak at any public forum. He didn’t need to voice his unhappiness with the team’s travelling plans to the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). Didn’t he shun his employers when such details were being discussed last in December?

    Glad to know that NFF chieftain Chris Green treated the Keshi backlash with maturity. Green categorised what Keshi said to mind games meant to deceive our opponents. Well said Green. This country belongs to us. We owe it to the future generation to make our sporting industry a viable one like we have in other climes.radually, the Eagles’ defence is growing in confidence, with their seamless transition from defensive play to attacking without conceding cheap goals. No one is surprised because Keshi was a dependable defender in his playing days in the Eagles.

    Goalkeepers Vincent Enyeama and Austin Ejide are the regulars. They now understand their defence line. We hope that Keshi has dependable players in these key positions.

    The midfield quartet of John Mikel Obi, Onazi, Sunday Mba and Oduamadi looks formidable. It is instructive to note that Eagles played without injured Victor Moses and Emmanuel Emenike.

    My worry though is that the Eagles’ attackers have been very wasteful with the goal-scoring chances that they create. Goals win matches, not ball possession or dribbling skills. There is no second chance to convert a missed goal opportunity. Most times, such misses are costly at the end of the game.

    Indeed, June 12 is a watershed in Nigeria’s political history. It was on that day in 1993 that Nigeria had its freest and fairest election ever, won by frontline businessman and Pillar of Sports in Africa Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale (MKO) Abiola. The election was annulled by the military for no just cause. Pardon my digression.

    On June 12, Eagles have a date with destiny against the Namibians in Windhoek. Victory for the Eagles would earn the team a berth at the last round where the 10 winners will fight for the five available slots allocated to Africa.

    Namibia should be a piece of cake for the Eagles. They are not a reputable soccer nation. But that is where the Eagles’ problems begin. The Eagles are unable to string together two back-to-back games. Simply put, they are not consistent. When you think that the Eagles will demolish a weak opponent, they totter.

    Having drawn their last game against Namibia at home, the Malawians will do everything under the sun next Wednesday to earn the three points. If that happens, the Malawians will have nine points, depending on the outcome of the Eagles’ cracker in Windhoek against Namibia.

    What this setting portends is that the Eagles must beat Naimbia to move to 11 points. If we beat Namibia, the August 15 last game against second-placed Malawi will offer us two options- a draw, we qualify for the next round of matches; a win also does.

    History has an uncanny way of repeating itself. I must warn the Eagles that they are very poor in fulfilling football permutations, especially for the World Cup, when it comes to the last game of the group. Need I remind Nigerians of the Eagles’ inability to beat Angola when the game was taken to Kano?

    Opinions were divided over where the game should be played. It was eventually played in Kano and the Eagles faltered and Nigeria failed to qualify for the 2006 World Cup held in Germany.

    Nigerians watched in awe as the Guineans celebrated inside the Abuja National Stadium. The Guineans secured the ticket to the 2012 Africa Cup of Nations with the 2-2 draw against the Eagles.

    All manner of excuses were traded between the coaching crew and the NFF. I ask: do the coaches know what it entails to qualify for the next round of matches? Any need for such a question? Ask Samson Siasia why he lost the Super Eagles job? The rules of the competition are sacrosanct to all the parties- players, coaches and NFF.

    The coaches must instruct the players to win both matches, leaving the permutations for those who want to indulge in such an exercise. Good luck Super Eagles; well done Keshi.

  • Taxing growth, democracy and sovereignty globally

    The in- thing in global politics nowadays is for governments to pride themselves on being democratic.

    The Chinese and Russsians, astute and unrepentant communists as they are, claim to be as democratic as the nations of Western Europe and the USA, the globally recognized champions of mass democracy. To press home democratic credentials either side point at economic success and growth earned in the process of consummating each side’s version of democracy. The Chinese and Russians practice a form of guided democracy while the West and US flaunt democratic success richly laced with respect for human rights and property laws. Both concepts have been exported round the world with local and national peculiarities. But prosperity and growth have always been used to justify the success of any political system . So for now , the fact that Russia is the largest exporter of oil in the world today and China the biggest consumer puts a shine on their type of democracy which tarnishes immensely the human and property rights version of the west which seem to have led its champions into Euro zone poverty, unstable governments and street demonstrations in the capitals of Europe.

    In addition, nations and their leaders guard their sovereignty jealously even though they rub shoulders democratically as equals in the comity of nations or the UN. That was why during the Cold War, the former Soviet Union and USA jostled for influence and power amongst the nations and territories of the world. This went on until economic realities crashed the Soviet Union and the weight of colonialism created independence prematurely for European colonies while unleashing dictators in democratic garbs on the unsuspecting citizens on the newly independent nations of Asia and Africa. The Soviet Union lost the Cold War when Gorbachev became its leader and introduced Glasnost (transparency) and Perestroika (openness) and when the Berlin Wall collapsed in 1989. There after the US became the sole policeman of the world and the lone super power and it proceeded to make the market economy, privatisation and democracy the global standard of leadership and governance through the agency of the Bretton Wood institutions namely the World Bank and IMF. These institutions subsequently gave loans with conditionalities that crippled the economic and political stabilities of borrower nations leading to social political stability and anarchy.

    Events in different parts of the world this week however indicate a reversal of roles of sorts amongst the powerful nations of the world as well as their cronies and supporters in the comity of nations and as expected amongst their sworn enemies as well. That really is the sumptuous meal for analysis today and I wish you bon apetit.

    I introduce the menu with a quote from the new Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif sworn in this week in Islamabad as PM of his nation for the third time around. Nawaz insisted that Pakistan is not a second rate democracy and that is real food for thought given the political scenario in that volatile nation. In Turkey the PM Tayyip Erdogan refused to cut short a foreign trip over demonstrations on an environmental matter in an arrogant display of power that had his Deputy PM apologizing for police brutality against demonstrators in his absence and his being made to assure his hosts abroad that the spiraling demonstrations in his nation will not go the way of the Arab Spring of two years ago that led to the fall of dictators in Egypt , Tunisia and Libya.

    In Nigeria and Syria the developments and issues revolved around terrorism and its curtailment and the loss of sovereignty directly or indirectly in the process. The EU warned Syria on the use of Hizbollah a terrorist group based in Lebanon in fighting the anti government forces in Syria on the Lebanese border. In Nigeria the US government in Washington placed a bounty of over $7m on the head of the leader of Boko Haram, the terrorist Islamist group that has killed thousands of Nigerians and bombed Churches with impunity in Northern Nigeria as the government vacillated between amnesty and military force in quashing the insurgency which has castrated economic activities in the North Eastern part of the country. The American gesture which the Nigerian government admitted was a welcome development was predicated on the fact that Boko Haram has links with Al Qada in the Middle East as well as Al Qada in Islamic Maghreb spanning North Africa and the Sahel on the fringe of the Sahara Desert bordering the northern part of ECOWAS states. More ominously however Al Qada through its global leader this week called on Muslims to fight the Assad regime in Syria as well as the US and western nations trying to set up a crony state in Syria . Which makes you wonder on whose side Al Qada is, at least in Syria. Now let us digest these issues one by one.

    Let us go back to Pakistan and Turkey and the utterances of the two leaders this week. First the new Pakistani leader Nawaz Sharif asked the US to stop the drone attacks being used to fight the Taliban in Pakistan even though he knows quite well that President Barak Obama recently just reiterated that the US will not stop the drone attacks in Pakistan and Afghanistan because the attacks have been effective. Nawaz also knows that even though he is PM, Pakistan is under the gun and control of the military which has benefitted immensely from the security arrangement whereby the US funds the Pakistan nation and its military to snuff out those the US has classified as terrorists in the mountains of Pakistan bordering Afghanistan. So who is Nawaz Sharif trying to bluff or fool with his rhetoric about second class democracies or the bit on stopping drone strikes? Obviously he was just barking at the moon and he certainly knows that.

    In Turkey, the PM‘s earlier disdain of the demonstrators was a lesson in arrogance. Yet, his attitude was understandable if very mistaken. He had led his party to three back to back elections in recent times and the Turkish economy is booming and growing, but he has forgotten that political goodwill is a highly perishable commodity. It needs to be nurtured and sustained on a daily basis. Like a delicate flower that needs daily watering to survive. Erdogan took his popularity for granted and he is having to pay a huge price to get the heart of his public and popularity back from his followers in Turkey. Really I do not think he deserves the fate of the tyrants who fell during the Arab Spring two years ago in N Africa.

    With regard to Syria and Nigeria , the issue of sovereignty, and a lost one at that for both nations, bestride their horizon like a colossus. For the super powers, for they are back, these nations present a convenient environment to put their foot in the door for a subsequent grand entrance. This is because as in every day struggle of life amongst individuals, there is no free lunch in global politics and diplomacy amongst nations. The reasons for this conclusions are obvious. If the US bounty brings in or rounds up the Al Qada leader for justice, the credit for preserving Nigeria’s security and ipso facto its sovereignty, goes to the US, and not the Nigerian government. That is pragmatic politics and diplomacy. Just as the French preserved Mali’s sovereignty by sending French troops to dislodge the Islamists marching on Bamako, while the AU and ECOWAS dithered and vacillated on when and what to do, to arrest a situation that would have consumed their collective sovereignty and security if the French had not intervened. In Mali’s case the government had literally collapsed and the military had been restrained from staging a coup. In Nigeria there is a virile military and a buoyant political class. Yet the US government placed a ransom on the head of the no1 enemy of the Nigerian nation and the government of the day called that a welcome development .

    Lastly, Al Qada leader’s call on Muslims to fight both sides of the Syrian conflict is indeed a recipe for global anarchy. Worse still it has created a battle ground from which Russia will certainly return from obscurity and isolation to its former position as a world power. This can internationalise the Syrian Crisis and threaten the Strait of Homuz in the Gulf which is the oil life line of Western Europe. The Strait is close to Iran which has of late threatened to close it – a threat the US has not taken lightly. But with Russia on the side of Syria’s Assad and Russia afloat with oil, the scenario will be different and the west may have to reappraise its strategic and military options in the Middle East as a whole. This is because the Syrian Crisis is redefining the concepts we have discussed today and one can only watch in amazement as the situation unfolds unpredictably as it has done these past few weeks.

  • Word to the father

    We need a father-figure to do what fa thers do: keep the family together.

    Without any consciousness of leadership, a father should lead naturally, managing talents, strengths and weaknesses for the stability and growth of the family. As a country, we sorely need such a father-figure, for it is lacking. We need him to harness the resources of the country and manage its strong points and challenges. The country echoes with diverse tribal tongues and interests, but that is why we need someone to turn the diversity into strengths from which everyone can gain practically, not just hear in radio jingles or prepared speeches. We need some melody out of our cacophony.

    Even when the kids move out of the home to foster new generations and break new grounds, they still need the occasional stabilising hand of the father. Without being an irritating intruder, off-putting visitor or overbearing figure, a father knows his stabilising role is for life.

    Nowhere do we need such a stabilising hand more than at the states of the federation. They are the constituent parts of the federation but now, they are no more than a disused vehicle left to run without tyres, fuel or driver. It is a fatal ride. The house of the governors have since cracked and has continued to crack. Its roof has blown open. Its foundation has failed. But the most troubling part is that no one is fixing it. As crucial as the governors are to the health of the nation, they have broken up or have been broken up and continue to break up even further. Now, there is no such thing as one forum or one voice. Even in the small bits into which they have been reduced, they are still cracking up into smaller units.

    What good can come out of such a fragmented house? What significant progress can a country with such divided governors make? Let’s face it: governance is about clear-headed vision and committed action, not contrived speeches of achievements. What vision or action can we reasonably expect from such balkanised and distracted governors. They have lost their soul. Love for one another is gone, as is respect for each other. What is left is mutual hatred and bad-mouthing. They will pretend that the machinery of transforming their states is still intact and that even more work is being done. They will say their states have never had it so good. We know better.

    On Thursday when the Northern States Governors Forum (NSGF) called a meeting in Kaduna, only five of the 19 governors attended. Governor Isa Yuguda of Bauchi stayed away. So did Governor Ibrahim Shema (Katsina) and Governor Ibrahim Geidam (Yobe). None of the three sent a representative. In fact, of all the 19 governors, only five turned up for the Kaduna parley; most preferred to send their deputies or even secretaries. Yet, the NSGF chairman Governor Babangida Aliyu of Niger State said everything was just fine, rationalising that representation was as good as attendance.

    Last month, the election of officers of the larger body was even more dodgy. Two factions claimed victory, one still holding as tightly to its claim as the other. The Chibuike Amaechi camp is resolute and as derisive of the Jonah Jang faction as the Jang party is dismissive of the Amaechi group. Under this sort of messy and disagreeable atmosphere, what can we genuinely expect from these leaders we call ours? Can you imagine Jang and his faction attending a meeting called by Amaechi or the Amaechi group turning up for a parley initiated by the Jang camp?

    Does it matter? Yes. Not that Nigerians have benefitted so much from the governors’ forum. In fact, the NGF essentially and usually worked for the sole gain of its members. But the fragmentation and incoherence of the organisation bode ill not just for them but the entire country. It hurts our claim to democratic growth and further demeans us before the world. It casts us as a people quite unable to come to grips with even the rudiments of organised society. The strife among the governors does not inspire any confidence in the next general election. It outlines the shape of a bumpy, messy ride ahead.

    It is depressing that the governors’ ranks can be so easily breached. But is it a self-inflicted wound or an injury caused by an external hand? Whatever the case, it speaks so terribly ill of a country so large and so potentially blessed.

    For me, the biggest worry, though, is that no one is doing anything about it. The father of the nation, the President is too busy denying any complicity in the governors’ disunity to weld them together. Dr Goodluck Jonathan has nothing to gain from the governors’ fragmentation and resultant incoherence. In fact, he has everything to lose. His advisers should tell him that if he does nothing, his administration will go down in history as one under which the governors’ house crashed. And it could be worse for the country. The role of father falls to him automatically by virtue of his presidency. He must play it.

  • Beware your child may be dangerous!

    This must be the age of ‘unleavened’ evil for want of a more suitable word; a time when we must always expect the worst each day. Evils that never happened before, even in the dark ages, seem to be returning from the pit of hell to torment mankind every new day. A 64-year-old man, Chimezie Osuigwe, who is a former school principal somewhere in Oguta, Imo State is said to have kept his mother’s corpse in his house for about 10 years. It is yet to be ascertained whether he killed his mother and for ritual as suspected. And he won’t say why he embalmed and co-habited with his mother’s remains for a decade.

    From Akwa Ibom State is a recent report that a teenage mother buried her child alive and from Gusua in Zamfara State, 25-year -old Kamal is reported to have killed his mother and two sisters and dumped their bodies in Gusua River. In Odukpani, Cross River State, Samuel Nsa picked up a machete and hewed his father down as if he were a tree. Samuel had allegedly stolen a goat on May 27, 2013 and when the youths brought a complaint to his father, the78-year-old tired of his son’s criminal life, denounced him whereupon an enraged Samuel reached for the machete…The other day in Woolwich, England, we and the entire world saw the two British-born Nigerians butcher a man right in the middle of the road in broad daylight. More disturbing however, is the story of 18-year-old boy, Olanrewaju kayode-Aremu. That Olanrewaju killed his 46-year-old father, Victor kayode-Aremu is not terrifically shocking but the story is in the manner he committed the act.

    At about 10.00pm on May 1, 2013, as the rest of the family watched television downstairs in their duplex house in Eti-Osa, area of Lagos, Olanrewaju had trailed his father upstairs to his room and attacked him with a kitchen knife. His father managed to make it downstairs to the sitting room but son pursued father and right before his mother and younger siblings, Olanrewaju stabbed his father repeatedly as if possessed by a demon. Olanrewaju is said to have stabbed his father about 10 times leaving him no chance to live.

    “I killed my father because seeing him makes me angry,” said Olanrewaju. “The truth is that I always feel sad and angry anytime I see my father. I was just getting angrier when I was stabbing him because he didn’t love me…He forced me to study Geology in the University (instead of his preferred biochemistry)… my dad knew (I hated him) because I am always cold when he is around me.”

    Olanrewaju on why he killed his father noted further that he used to maltreat him. On that dark day of May 1st, he said he had complained that he was ill but nobody paid any attention, not the least his father who had a second wife and never cared.

    The world is surely in distress. The world is assailed by what I want to call ‘cyberpsychosis’ or ‘infomania’. It is the death of abomination; the internet age is damaging our children irretrievably; there is no abhorrent material they cannot find on the net. The more violent and bestial computer games are today, it seems the more profitable for the hawkers. Parenting today has become doubly difficult. For instance, yesterday our parents worried about teenage pregnancy, today it is about young girls in the business of making babies for a fee. It is a tough age to be a good parent; in fact I want to think that a good parent of today may be identifiable by his/her long, shrew-like mouth. Yes she gets that from talking and talking with little result. Here is a supplement I found in my bible (The living Bible, Parents Resource Bible, page 1165) written by ROLF ZETTERSTEN. It is titled: THIS IS WHAT I LIVE FOR. I hereby reproduce it with the title:

    What parents can do

    It is called March Madness, and to millions of basketball fans it is the sporting event of the year. The National Collegiate Athletic Association selects America’s top sixty-four teams and pits them in do-or-die contests. For several weeks the tournament is held in arenas across the country, and roundball fans are glued to their television sets.

    The capper to March Madness is appropriately called the Final Four – when the surviving quartet of teams meets to determine the national champion. The site of the three-game play-off becomes a Mecca for basketball enthusiasts. One year I had the opportunity to attend the Final- four tournament at New Orleans, Louisiana, where more than eighty thousand fans gathered to celebrate and witness the sporting contest.

    All the main events were held at the Superdome, a massive indoor coliseum that normally hosts professional football games. Even though I had no particular allegiance to any of the teams, it was not hard to get swept up in the excitement inside the enclosed stadium. Bands from each school blared fight songs as their respective supporters sang along. The cheerleaders motivated their fans to participate in chants and yells. People were dressed and painted in their team’s colors.

    Of course, once the games began, the cheering intensified. I was sitting in front of a large section of University of Michigan alumni. Every time their team scored, they applauded, hooted and screamed as if their lives depended on it. Many of the fans brought signs with them that conveyed clever slogans.

    I’ll never forget one such poster because it suddenly brought me back to reality. At one point in the game, after the Michigan team made a comeback, one man got up from his seat and began parading up and down the aisles holding a large cardboard sign above his head with this message: This is What We Live for.

    Although many people in the crowd apparently agreed with his theme, it had an adverse effect on me. I suddenly had a healthy dose of proper perspective. I turned to my friend who was also reading the sign and said, “I’m sure glad this isn’t what I live for.”

    I was reminded of the apostle Paul; if he held a sign above his head, it would have said, “For me, living means opportunities for Christ, and dying – well, that’s better yet!” (Phil.1:21). In other words, his existence had only one purpose – to serve and glorify God. And Paul viewed his inevitable death as a promotion because it would take him to the Lord’s presence.

    So what do we live for? “Opportunities for Christ.” I believe they can begin at home, where we demonstrate our faith in simple, everyday ways. We live for accepting and loving our spouse. We live for teaching our children the wonderful truths of God’s creation. We live for demonstrating God’s forgiveness when our family members fail. We live for supporting our relatives when they need help. We live for encouraging children. We live for teaching them God’s Word and leading them to faith in Christ. We live for enjoying quiet moments with loved ones. We live for laughter around the dinner table. We live for achieving the intimacy that God wants us to have. We live for demonstrating the benefits of a disciplined life-style. We live for modeling charity, hospitality, and equality to others outside our family circle.

    Sure, I’m crazy about competitive sporting events. The Final Four, the World Series, the Super Bowl, Stanley Cup, and the NBA Finals are thrilling highlights of every year. But they are nothing compared to the excitement of a family intent on living for God.

    Again, what do you live for in your house hold?

  • This mysterious world

    Ordinarily, today’s article would have focused on two historic events that came up early this week both of which deserve readers’ attention. One of those events took place in Ilorin the capital city of Kwara State where a nomadic settler was honourably given the key to the city by the indigenes. The other occurred in Osogbo, the capital city of the State of Osun where for the first time after Prophet Musa (Moses) a tablet of knowledge was distributed to each of over 150,000 Senior Secondary School pupils as a takeoff of a gargantuan educational project. Yours sincerely was a witness to the one and just heard news about the other. But since both would be better taken together, the need to get the details of the one not witnessed has compelled the deferment of writing on both as hitherto planned, hence today’s topic. As often mentioned in this column, the problem of any genuine newspaper columnist is not a dearth of ideas but a deluge of them. Thus, choosing a theme from those ideas alone out of the many that are throwing themselves to you (as a columnist) vigorously and competitively is enough a problem. By the grace of Allah, ‘The Message’ will vividly bring the happenings in those two events to the readers in the very near future. Meanwhile, today’s article is equally very important. Please, come along:

    Strange Episode

    Our world is mysterious. And the more we make efforts to demystify it the more complex it becomes. Not even humanity’s greatest footprint (science and technology) has succeeded in demystifying the phenomenal web we call ‘the world’. While browsing through the internet recently, yours sincerely stumbled on a strangely amazing episode. A young man of about 28 years was reported missing for some days by his parents in Thailand. By the time his dead body was found somewhere in a bush, journalists in that country were jumping up to write an exclusive story. Bruises of snake bite were found all over his body. And, surprisingly, a monstrous python was also found lying lifelessly by his side. Examining the python, the police also discovered human bites all over its body. The conclusion then was that perhaps a furious duel between man and reptile had led to mutual death. But the story did not end there. The young man was also found to be pants down with a dangling condom firmly fixed to his manhood. This suggested the possibility of a sex attempt. Could he have attempted to rape the python? That was a mysterious question begging for a mysterious answer.

    On a personal reflection, yours sincerely guessed that the man might have lured a young, beautiful damsel into a hideout perhaps for a marathon sexual orgy. But on getting to the point of action, the damsel decided to show her true self by turning into a python, and a duel ensued. Or why would a young man wear condom and remain half naked in such a circumstance with such a brutal reptile? This story quickly reminded me of a topic I wrote in this column some years ago which was entitled ‘THE WORLD OF JINN’. Linking that topic to the episode just relayed above may provide a possible clue to the mystery surrounding the death of a man and a python almost arm in arm. I therefore decided to recall the article if only for the benefit of those who did not read it when it was first published. Please read on:

    The Terrestrial World

    “We live in a world of mystery. A world in which things don’t look what they seem. Yet we base our daily lives on mere assumption. How we sleep, how we wake, how we escape dangers around us, all these are known to Allah alone. The forces of this terrestrial world are numerous and mysterious. Some are visible, some are hidden. The planet inhabited by man is a garden not meant for man alone. There are kingdoms of other creatures: the animals, the birds, the reptiles, the plants, the insects, the worms and the aquatic creatures all of which exist interdependently. And through their coexistence, the ecosystem gains its harmony. For each of the above creatures there are races and tribes which in technical language are called species. Yet there are other creatures that cannot be seen by the naked eyes of man without the aid of technology. Some of these include the viruses and the bacteria. Unknown to man, every one of these creatures has its way of glorifying Allah. And, if asked to describe the features of Allah, a vivid description of itself will be given. This shows that every creature perceives God in its own image. Allah Akbar!

    The World of Jinn

    The world of Jinn is another world entirely. It is a world wrapped completely in mystery. The details of how man and Jinn came to share the planet called the earth are known only to Allah. But who actually, are the Jinn? Jinn are beings created by Allah from the flames of fire and given free will. They live on earth in a world parallel to that of man. But they are invisible to human eyes in their natural form. The Arabic word “Jinn” is from the verb “Jannah” which means to hide. Some other words from the same verb root are given names such as Janin and Janan which mean embryo and heart respectively to reflect their hidden nature. Jinn, like human beings, are in races and tribes. Their activities are elicited by their various cultures and traditions. Some of them are called fairy. Some are called demons and some are called devils depending on their roles in the lives of human beings. In Islam, the unbelievers among Jinn are called Shaytan (Satan) the plural of which is Shayatin and their paramount king is called Iblis. We first heard of Iblis in some verses revealed to Prophet Muhammad (SAW) by Allah in the Qur’an.

    Shortly after the creation of Adam, Allah asked the Angels, with Iblis in their midst, to prostrate to him (Adam). They did but Iblis refused. And, when asked why he refused to obey the command of Allah, he said he (Iblis), created from the flame of fire was superior to whatever was created from the soil. That was the beginning of hostility between man and Jinn as declared by Iblis on the premise of envy. Noting this hostility, Allah warned Adam and Hawau (Eve) to steer clear of the antics of Iblis and his disciples in order not to be lured to perdition. But with cunning and intrigue, Iblis succeeded in demoting the first human couple. The rest is history.

    Types of Jinn

    Jinn are of various heights, sizes and colours just like humans. They also have different languages and cultures depending on the race or tribe to which they belong. But one unique feature with which they are commonly endowed and, which man lacks, is the ability to change into anything they want at will. Jinn are believed to have lived on earth for millions of years before the creation of man. It was from the experience of their lawlessness and bloody existence while they held sway on earth that the Angels got the idea which informed their initial objection to the creation of man. Without such experience the Angels would not have attempted to advise Allah “not to put on earth again those who would vandalize it and shed blood therein” as contained in Q. 2, Verse 31. Neither would they have known what is called blood.

    Jinn are everywhere in the world today. They are in every home, community, country and continent. Jinn live in people’s homes as much as they live in people’s hearts and wombs. It is possible to marry jinn as a wife or as a husband without knowing. It may sound odd but the truth is that most people keep jinn in their homes in the name of children. There are Jinn in the schools, in the markets, in the industries, in the offices, as well as in the Mosques and Churches.

    The Jinn in Human Environment

    The constant human tampering with the ecosystem has compelled the Jinn to change their style of living. Hitherto, they lived in the forests, in the mountains, in rivers, in trees and in certain animals. But as towns and cities emerge from the ravages of the forests and mountains the Jinn take to human homes as abodes thereby sharing from man’s immediate environment in all aspects. Today, Jinn do not only live in human houses, farms and offices, they also live inside their hearts, brains and blood. If there is anything called colonisation in the real sense, it is the occupation of human space and time by the Jinn. That human marriages which were once sacred do not last any longer and societal harmony, once taken for granted, has become a luxury are a sign of Jinn’s demonic grip on earth. Most people in authority who we call Presidents, Kings, Queens, Governors, Ministers and law makers have significant traits of Jinn which have transformed into humans. Politicians particularly fit very accurately a Hadith of Prophet Muhammad (SAW) which described a hypocrite as a person who lies while speaking and reneges on promise and betrays trust. Here in Africa, only a few Heads of States do not show the traits of Jinn, judging by their utterances and actions. And that is why decisions of those so-called leaders were based on ‘a do or die’ affair as in the case of Nigeria and Zimbabwe in recent times.

    In Arabic language, a person is said to be demonised (majnun) when his/her conduct is devoid of human feeling. To be demonized is to act deliriously especially where human touch is expected to take the front burner. It is not a surprise, therefore, that some people in authority reflect some traits of megalomania in their bid to display power. Such people are, no doubt, from the yoke of Satan. However, Jinn, as special creatures, do not represent all that is bad. There are good ones among them. Some of them are even more pious than human beings. In Islam, the good Jinn are said to be the disciples of Ifrit.

    Jinn in the Qur’an

    In the Qur’an, Jinn are mentioned about 35 times in relation to their activities and good or bad nature. A whole chapter of the Qur’an (chapter 72) is dedicated to the Jinn especially the good ones among them. It is about this category of Jinn that Allah revealed to Prophet Muhammad (SAW) thus: “Say it is revealed to me that a group of Jinn listened to Allah’s revelation and said: “We have heard a wonderful revelation (The Qur’an) giving guidance to the right path. We believe in it and shall henceforth serve none besides our Lord. Exalted is His glory. He has taken no wife neither has He begotten any child. The ignorant ones amongst us have uttered wanton falsehood against Allah even though no man or Jinn is supposed to tell what is untrue of Him…” Q.72, Verses 1-7. Just as good people are scarce so are good Jinn. The latter associate only with good people and relate to them as comrades in faith. In the same vein, the evil Jinn relate to evil people in the spirit of give and take. No evil Jinn can be so friendly with any human being as not to demand 10 advantages in return for only one he has offered. Men who cultivate friendship with Jinn for the purpose of getting rich quick usually and invariably pay dearly for such. When you hear of mysterious death of a wife or that of a husband or even that of a child, watch out, a Jinn is at work somewhere around. Such Jinn are not known for serving man for free. They see us as permanent rivals who must be dealt with for displacing them on earth. And their active way of dealing with human beings is to offer carrot which they know that evil men will not reject. To them, carrot is not a free offer. It must be followed by stick. It is not by accident that children are born these days with two heads, four legs and at times without faces. The workings of Jinn are more effective in the dead nights or in the day when the sun is at its peak. Pregnant women who wander about at these odd times are likely to have encounters with the evil Jinn. And, in such a situation, the Jinn easily supplant the foetus in them leading to the bearing of strange monsters in the name of children.

    Cohabiting with the Jinn

    While good Jinn live or mill around Mosques and cemeteries with the intention of cleansing those environments, the evil Jinn live in the toilets, refuse bins and the like. That is why Muslims are not supposed to talk inside the toilet except for emergency. And they should not stay a second longer than necessary therein. Most people do not know the danger inherent in leaving the toilet doors of their homes ajar especially when such toilets are un-kept. It is an ignorant way of providing abode for evil Jinn who fuel matrimonial crises from time to time and use reptiles and insects like spiders and wall echoes to harass the inhabitants. The situation of the world today is such that human beings are the ones living in the midst of Jinn and not vice versa.

    Using wealth, women and wine as fetters, Satan seems to have conquered the world from the orient to the occident by gild-washing evils and trivialising good even as his agents are active in furthering his course on all fronts. Today, there are men everywhere but no husbands are available. Women are as numerous as the sands of the desert but only a few of them can be called wives in the Islamic or African cultural sense. Today, parents are scorned by their children. Students treat their teachers with disdain. Teachers take undue advantage of their students before letting them cross the huddles of examinations. Doctors and nurses who were once seen as good Samaritans are now the merchants of death and sellers of foetus and human parts. People who are designated judges are the custodians and incubators of injustice. Religious sanctuaries have been turned into satanic shrines where men and women are duped or satanically hypnotised daily. Those we once venerated as clergy have audaciously become Lucifer reincarnate. Fathers impregnate their daughters. Mothers seduce their sons into abominable sex and gays are consecrated as Bishops.

    Allies of Jinn

    All the abominations against which we were warned in the Qur’an and the Bible have now been turned into ‘profitable’ trades and professions. And the yardstick for measuring which crime should be punished and which should not is the social status of the criminal. If, for instance, you are not a legislator, a minister, a Governor or a chief executive of a bank or a politician of note, do not pilfer. If you do and are caught, you will liable to the full wrath of the law. And on the other hand, you can only be said to have embezzled and not stolen if you are one of those wielding power in the country. In other words, embezzlement is for the upper class while theft is for the pedestrian masses. And the one deserves official forgiveness while the other must forced to pass through the whole length of law process. The law of the land has no meaning to the satanic forces governing the country. Once you belong to the right cult you are above the law. As a result of this, Nigeria, a country of natural boom is now a nation of satanic doom.

    The Big Question

    Who will rescue this land from the scourge of demons? Prophet Muhammad (SAW) had proffered solution to all these evil forces when he asked the Muslims to listen to the words of Allah by reading the Qur’an and speak with Him (Allah) by prostrating in prayer. Those are two things that the evil Jinn do not want to see or hear of. They flee from where the Qur’an is constantly recited and from where human beings often prostrate to Allah. As Muslims, which of these can you not do to save the future from the bondage of the present?

  • Readers’ parliament 23

    Once you’ve solved your current problems, you will be rewarded with a whole new set of harder problems,” I have not read a crisper, more honest stuff in a long while. We have a youth population with a searing reality of intellectual poverty, folks reeking of pleasure inebriation and materialistic rum. Thus even hollow orations sound off as extraordinary, demanding the spectacle of mentally barren youths. You rock! 08035711153.

    Olatunji, Expensive Folly is wonderful and thought –provoking. Problems don’t have prototype solutions. I am sorry for we hapless unemployed (often tagged: unemployable) youths of this country that get ripped off those so-called motivational speakers. 08063656865. Dan. Port Harcourt, Rivers State.

    You have addressed a matter which bothered my heart greatly. Celebration of motivational speaking is founded mainly on the get-rich quick malady of our time. The lack of depth by most of them is reason why they cannot even tailor foreign opinion to meet present challenges. Motivation works for those who have found their bearing; it is not for the blind. How do you motivate a young man who has no vision but wants to be a millionaire? This is part of the decadence of our time. 08037128706. From Steve Aiyanyo. Abeokuta. Ogun State.

    Mr. Olatunji Ololade, I have just finished reading your piece on motivational speakers. I enjoyed it for the bitter truth contained therein with regard to our misguided youth who are forever looking for shortcuts and props rather than face the realities of life and living. It’s a must read for my students next week. 08034027080. From LKJEJE, Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile Ife, Osun State.

    Yes sir, most of the motivational speakers are shallow but no sir, they shouldn’t be done away. You are clearly not an entrepreneur so won’t be able to understand that a modicum sometimes will make the difference. Please advocate instead for regulation of the trade. Ultimately, a five per cent success rate is okay. 08186054747. Funso Patrick. Abuja.

    Expensive folly…just gone through your write-up. With people like you around, there is hope for Nigeria. Keep it up. 08037943652. Sunday.

    Olatunji, thanks for your article today. I have never trusted my faith in motivational speakers at home and abroad. They are worse than used-car salesmen. Listening to an Aliko Dangote for instance can only encourage me better. There are too many unknowns in this world for mathematical deductions to be trusted. I tell my children: Work-pray-work hard. 08033246068. Engineer Tunde.

    Very good write-up, many true facts but not sensitive to others’ views and religious inclination. You ended with describing favourite pastors’ literature as some retrogressive crutches, that’s not good enough. Read through some of the books and you will be shocked at the depth. Do better next time. 08033398515. Dr. Silvanus Owei.

    Ololade, you spoke my mind in your column. I thought I was the only one that was concerned with the fraud that the so-called motivational speakers are committing in Nigeria. All they do is regurgitate quotable quotes from foreign stars and they make money for this. I pity young Nigerians that fall for this cheap fraud. 08061198625. Suraj.

    Hello mate! Quite a while! Very good outing…just going through. Please keep it up. No disagreement on this. 08063521699. Dr. Omotoso SIB.

    Expensive Folly refers: simply put, you are gift to the nation by transcendental enlightenment and liberating courage. I only wish our drowning youth would ever read and accept your precept. I have written you before when you wrote about what should be the true honour our women should seek. Hope to meet you some day. 08131927550. Chris. Auchi, Edo State.

    I just read Expensive Folly (1) and I can’t help but agree with everything you said. It’s high time we youths stopped searching for relevance where there is none. 08064941239.

    RE: Expensive Folly. You are not just a writer, you are an institution sir. Our main problem in Nigeria and Africa is not corruption, but “quality” ignorance across board. 08032070130. ART.

    You are ahead of this generation. Your lingua and lexical gusto is immense. Just hope more people appreciate this talent. We need more of you in journalism. 08033385566.

    Please my friend, your Expensive Folly (2) on the stable of Reality Bites is wonderful. Are you aware that those motivational speakers are also in churches as pastors? There, they deceive the congregation that prayer in tithe is the only ingredient to actualizing their earthly dreams. A girl who lacks those essential matrimonial qualities runs to a church with the belief that such pastors can command husbands from the sky for her and pathetically, the pastor accepts the role knowing full well that it’s not possible. Don’t you think this is another religious fraud? 08037750540. Victor. Port Harcourt, Rivers State.

    Thanks for revealing the ultimate realities of life. As for the youth…those that have ears, let them hear. Keep up the good work. God bless you. 08036626976.

    Olatunji, you forgot to add to your list of fraud: modern day “pastors” in various “churches” who preach prosperity daily as if that’s the sole reason for which Jesus came. 08023071877. VIC IBE.

    Your article, Expensive Folly is the best I have read in a while. You spoke the hard truth. I hope other Nigerians will get to read it. Keep up the good work. 08099666230. Nwachukwu. Ibadan, Oyo State.

    Great write up. I appreciate it. 08185808210.

    Blame it on gullibility being a prominent aspect of the Nigerian culture. 08037285269. S.A. Alawode.

    Dear Olatunji, your write-up is the gospel truth in the face of the reality we have on ground in our present day Nigeria. I believe every individual has a path in this life, it’s just for him to trace the path and pray for God’s guidance and protection every step of the way. Life has no manual. 08035744872.

    Hello Olatunji, your article exposed a group of fraudsters and “foetal adults.” But I know that our young ones and even many mature adults suffer from “Hurried Life Syndrome” and this must be addressed. I think that Robert Frost calls on all who really want to make a contribution to humanity to choose to service and live with universal and timeless principles. I think there are genuine and authentic trainers who live their talk…It’s ridiculous to see a young person talk about life when he hasn’t seen anything. Well, I guess we will always have the tares and the wheat growing together, and like you said, life itself is the greatest teacher. Keep up your good work until we meet. Yours for the best of humanity. 08033912712. Mrs. Ofovwe.

    Re: Expensive Folly (2). Before now, I thought I was the only one that saw the danger in what these so-called motivational speakers are doing to the society. Thanks. 08032644356.

    Olatunji, thanks for your rescue mission. I hope all the parties involved in the “Expensive Folly” could find time to read your piece. Though I just read the second part of it, I think you did not go the full hug by noting that these “life coaches” have permeated the churches. You now hear “everything you want, He will give you” with no room for God shaping your life the way He wants. 08069394351. Pastor Chudi.