Category: Columnists

  • Government can’t be charmed

    Government can’t be charmed

    Politicians grumble a lot. The Gen-Z ones among them are in a hurry, restless and desperate for power. They can hardly stay on the queue and wait patiently for their turn.

    That’s what led four of them to the same watcher of signs and times – the babalawo who claimed ability to see tomorrow. They had heard of his power of prediction and efficacy in the use of charms.

    Their complaint was that the appointment of Secretaries to Local Government and Supervisors had been delayed by the state government. The four men believed they would make the list, but their main regret was that the process of appointment had dragged on for four months after council elections.

    Local Government chairmen are already working and drawing salaries while they were left in the cold.

    The man with the mystical powers promised to help.

    Their request was that he does something that would make the appointments happen within seven days.

    He gave them a cowry to speak to silently, assuring that the oracle will harken to their petition.

    Of course, they parted with joy after paying the babalawo.

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    Seven days after, no appointment was announced. Nine days, then 14 days, then 21…

    In annoyance, they returned to the babalawo to inquire as to why his assurance failed.

    The seer was surprised too. Then, he started to inquire from them what they told the oracle through the cowry.

    According to them, they told the oracle to spur the state government to announce appointments within seven days.

    The babalawo exclaimed: ‘I see. That’s your fault. The oracle would have been looking for the government, but could not find it!”

    They rejected his explanation and doubted his powers.

    But, the babalawo took pains to explain the bitter truth about how these things work.

    He said: “Charm can catch Governor A, B or C, especially if you mention his name. He is a person who has blood running in his veins.  He can be determined. He is known. But no charm in the world can catch any government, local, state or federal.”

  • As cynics rage over collapsing food prices

    As cynics rage over collapsing food prices

    I felt for former Edo State governor and current Senator representing Edo North in the National Assembly, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, after the barrage of verbal attacks unleashed on him by uncouth social media warriors during the week. His offence? He granted an interview on a television station, wherein he stated that some Nigerians were saying that food items had become too cheap.

    Responding to a question as to whether the radical reforms promised by the All Progressives Congress (APC) led government were being implemented at the expense of the average Nigerian, Oshiomhole admitted that the government promised radical reforms. He, however, dismissed insinuations that the reforms are hurting the average Nigerian, insisting that the concerns raised by the host were not supported by evidence or verifiable facts.

    “Who are the average persons?” he asked. “You pick these things from the mouths of people.”

    He then issued the interlocutor a challenge, saying, “Have you gone to see people complaining? There are Nigerians now saying food is becoming too cheap.”  

     The engagement had occurred against the background of earlier public outcry that food prices were too high. In fits of exasperation at a time that a 50kg bag of rice sold for more than N100,000, yams competed with gold and pepper with diamonds, online warriors literally tore into President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, calling him unprintable names and wondering whether there was still a government in place.

    In response to the outrage, the Tinubu government initiated policies that resulted in the collapse of food prices. But rather than commend the government for being responsive and responsible, stakeholders in the food and agricultural sector, who felt short-changed by the turn of events, have chosen to condemn it. Thus, for the Tinubu administration, it is a case of damned if you do, and damned if you don’t.

    Read Also: Why food prices are crashing, by minister

    Upon my mother’s death in May last year, I travelled to the village for the obsequies. There, I met a brother-in-law of mine who had retired to the village after decades of service in the banking sector. In our discussion on the state of the nation, he was livid about high food prices, blaming it on President Tinubu’s reluctance to reopen the borders for foreign rice and other food items to come into the country.

    By the time I returned to the village in December (about seven months later), my brother-in-law had grown even more bitter with the President than he was previously. Ironically, the source of his anger this time is that food prices had become too low. I would later realise that his anger was stirred by selfish considerations rather than any whiff of patriotism. He had become a cassava farmer in the village, consistently raking in hundreds of thousands of naira, only for the price of cassava to crash, and the years of honeymoon came to an end.

    With the foregoing in mind, it did not come as news to me when Comrade Oshiomhole said some Nigerians were already complaining that food had become too cheap. But the uncouth army of haters on social media saw in his declaration an opportunity to drag the former governor and Tinubu’s political ally. The majority of them even veered off the real issue and resorted to attacking Oshiomhole’s physical appearance and family life.

    But that is not to say there are no exemptions to the online madness. Indeed, some other commentators agreed wholeheartedly with the Edo senator. One commentator said, “That (Oshiomhole’s claim) is the truth. Last week, I bought N1,000 worth of tomatoes and N500 worth of pepper, and I nearly had to hire a trailer to take them home. I could not use all the tomatoes and peppers because they were too many. I had to call my sister to come take half of it because I live alone and could not finish the entire tomatoes.”

    In other climes, cheaper food prices would impel people to roll out the drums in celebration. That, however, is far from being the case in our country, where cynics, pessimists and masochists who have sworn never to see anything good in the administration of President Tinubu have become the opinion drivers on social media. They fear that giving his administration credit where it is due would translate to narrowing the chances of their preferred presidential aspirants in the 2027 elections.

  • AFCON 2025: Sadio Mane’s lesson in leadership

    AFCON 2025: Sadio Mane’s lesson in leadership

    The 2025 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) has come and gone as Senegal’s Teranga Lions beat the host team, Atlas Lions of Morocco to lift Africa’s most coveted football trophy. This year’s tournament more than ever exposed a lot about African football, the capacity of the Confederation of African Football (CAF), the beauty of nations imbuing players with a sense of self and patriotism, the values and limits of infrastructural development especially for sports and in this case, global football and every other thing in between.

    The Kingdom of Morocco has in the last two decades taken the initiative to invest massively in the game of football through infrastructural and youth development. They have shown what focus can do especially for a game that is living out ‘the beautiful game’ tag. Global football has become some trillion dollar economic pie. It’s more than a game, it is now an economic and socio-political tool with diverse powers.

    For the African continent, it is paradoxical that she gives the game so much in human capital yet, reaps so little economically due to leadership failures. The various leagues in the world have the brilliant imprints of African players; the English Premier League, Spanish La Liga, Italian Serie A, the German Bundesliga, the Ligue 1 of France and other continental leagues in Africa, Asia, South America which for obvious reasons are not in the same league as those in Europe.

    Morocco’s investment in football has given the nation a seat at the table of football politics and economic benefits. In the last fifteen years FIFA has given them hosting rights for; 2013, 2014 and 2022 FIFA Club World Cups, 2025 Under-17 Women’s World Cup and 2025 CAF Women’s Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON). They would be co-hosting the 2030 FIFA World Cup with Portugal and Spain. They would be the second African country to host World Cup after the 2010 South African experience. They have also given a boost to female football in the continent with their Atlas lionesses winning silver at the 2025 African Women’s Cup of Nations.

    However, because the impact of football has gone beyond the pitch of play, Morocco’s hosting of 2025 AFCON came with so many lessons for Africa as a continent. The post-independence Pan-Africanism spirit seems to have lost steam. The Moroccans through some actions during the games have shown that geography can be of economic value but without the sociological bonding that ought to exist between the citizens within the geographic region.

    The several racist chants at black players and the bullying of Nigeria’s Stanley Nwabali whose towels were stolen and banana thrown at him and the bullying of the Senegalese reserve goal keeper by both officials, players like Hakimi and ball boys showed some citizens  do not share in the African brotherhood neither do they care about sportsmanship in the game. The post-match taunting of the Senegalese coach, Pape Thiaw by some Moroccan journalists was as unprofessional as it was unethically anti-sportsmanship.

    The leadership of national football associations and even CAF as a continental body must reform to align with set standards for the game not just for the on-the-pitch play but beyond that. Administration of football must not end at attending meetings and competitions. A country like Nigeria that has become notorious for stressing out players and coaches by not paying them allowances promptly must begin to get sanctioned by CAF. There should be no escapism under the cloak of, ‘not interfering with countries’ internal affairs’.

    The welfare of coaches and players is fundamental to the emotional stability of those affected. The idea that Nigeria is a perennial culprit must be addressed holistically. The psychological impact of such administrative inefficiencies cannot be over-emphasised. CAF should wield the big stick if need be.

    The huge security lapses during the games that saw ball boys withhold opponents’ throw-in balls or grab Keepers’ towels must urgently be seen to be sanctioned as a deterrent to others and in preparation for 2030 World Cup the country would be co-hosting. The attack on other country’s fans in some Moroccan stadia was not a good sight. The alleged Mysterious death of two journalists from Mali and Cameroun must be thoroughly investigated and justice seen to be done.

    Read Also: Sadio Mane: God of football was not with Senegal 

    The reported artificial ticket scarcity to the fans of other teams speaks volumes of the sense of hospitality of the Moroccans. If fans and tourists travelled thousands of kilometres to Morocco and ended up watching the matches of their country’s teams from hotel rooms due to some ticket sale shenanigans, Morocco should be investigated and sanctioned if found culpable. That would be a pre-emptive move towards efficiency in the future.

    Despite the very disappointing actions of both teams, the Senagalese coach during the final game was finally concluded with a Senagalese victory. There has been outrage by football lovers due to the leadership crises that led to the chaos during the final game. The referee, Jean-Jacques Ndala from DRC failed as a lead referee of the match for failing to earn the trust of the players by being, alert, fair and firm. The Senagalese disallowed goal ought to have been verified through the VAR before the decision to disallow the goal. To have dashed to VAR to verify and award a penalty to the Moroccan team was the real beginning of the chaos.

    Referees in Africa must understand that while everyone can concede that they are humans, they are still expected like Ceasar’s wife to be above reproach. They must show leadership and objectivity to earn respect and be truly part of the global game. They must be well trained and their training must manifest in the field of play. CAF must understand the value of refereeing to football as a sport. A lot of emotions come with football and refereeing expertly ought to be the calm amidst the storm.

    There are reports that the Senagalese coach has been suspended by CAF for ordering his players to leave the pitch during the penalty argument. He did not show leadership. The spirit of the game is sportsmanship and it is achieved through obedience to the laws governing the game. He did not show good leadership at the most trying moment of African football on a global stage. He let his emotion get the better of his judgment. Leadership demands more than he gave at that instance.

    On the contrary, Sadio Mane, the Senagalese football legend; two-time AFCON winner, Premier League Champion, Champions League champion, FA Cup winner, Carabao Cup winner, Bundesliga champion and a beacon for the game showed what leadership means. He was neither the coach, team captain or even assistant captain but just his integrity earned him the respect of his teammates that he ran to the locker room to tell persuade them to return.

    Mane at that moment showed the world that leadership is not about titles, tags or positions. He displayed perseverance, humility, altruism, patriotism and a huge lover of African football. According to him, he refused to leave with his teammates because he had the reputation of the African football on his mind. It was not about emotions, it was not about ego, simply about showing leadership. It is significant that the suspended Senagalese captain, Kalidou Koulibali handed him the cup to lift after he received it from the CAF President. It was very significant, the world applauded the respect. Without the Captain’s band, a Mane has led his country to two AFCON victories and qualifications for two World Cups in a row.

    As every football lover including Nigerian politicians applaud a Sadio Mane for his integrity, humility and altruism, this period must be one for introspection. Mane does not need a tag to impact the game and lives. He has invested heavily in schools, hospitals, Mosques and football back in his country, impacting lives in ways that is almost making him the symbol of football and philantophy in his nation. Despite his background and all he has achieved, he remains calm, unobtrusive and kind. 

    In a continent with several failed leaders and corrupt political class, Mane emerges as an icon of what leadership ought to be, productive, selfless, compassionate, patriotic and humane. Mane is so humble despite his exploits, he gives so silently and impactfully that only his works speak for him. He is the perfect silent and cheerful giver. Placed side by side most Nigerian politicians, even with his physical size, he towers above many of them who even after using the people’s money to build infrastructure pretend own them and publicize them for accolades and political expediencies.

    Mane through his actions on and off the pitch is a great model to the youths not just in Africa but globally. His contributions to the game at both club and national levels can be seen through his many medals from several continents. Leadership is seen through actions not through rhetoric and ego trips seen in most politicians across the world. He has shown that leadership does not imbue anyone with certain qualities. People bring their innate qualities to leadership. Despite his achievements, he remains humble and thinks more about humans and the game.

    The celebration of Senegal’s AFCON 2025 win across continents is not so much for the mere victory of the team, it is the human family looking beyond football. Their victory is seen as a befitting tribute to Mane and his teammates’ fighting spirit. The cohesion they showed helped them achieve success. He sees himself as an ambassador of a tripartite style; football, Africa and nation/club. Today he speaks to millions without talking. Mane has spoken to global politicians. Here’s hoping his ‘voice’ resonates with generations to come. Congratulations to Senegal.

    • The dialogue continues…
  • Tunji Olaopa, critical reforms and the Trump challenge (1)

    Tunji Olaopa, critical reforms and the Trump challenge (1)

    Ever since President Donald Trump sounded his alarm on the possibility of sending United States troops into Nigeria ‘guns-ablazing’ in response to alleged ‘Christian genocide’ in the country, this column has focused severally on what I have described as the mercurial American leader’s wake up call or challenge to Nigeria and Africa.

    In his seemingly unhidden disdain for weak, mostly poorly governed, inexcusably poverty-stricken and abysmally wretched African countries, Trump may not be the unbridled racist many perceive him to be after all. His may just be a normal reaction of the strong, mighty and wealthy of the world to an otherwise abundantly endowed continent that has no business with the kind of dehumanising poverty with which she is identified.

    It is another testament to the tragedy that is Africa that Uganda’s ruling strongman for over four decades, Yoweri Museveni, despite his advanced age, has just won another landslide electoral victory to lead his country for another seven years. In the emergent post-Trump global order, strength is might. Established rule-based behaviour based on decency, honour and civility has lost resonance. In the new world being born before our very eyes, democratic deficits in Africa and kleptocratic heists of governance leading to massive citizen impoverishment and disenchantment become existential threats to national sovereignty.

    The restoration of democratic credibility, ethical governance and economic progress that impacts millions positively among the Wretched of the earth, thus becomes the immediate imperative response in Africa to an essentially amoral ‘Trumpian’ philosophical outlook on global governance.

    Such a revolutionary transformation in the management ethos of the public sphere in Africa is indeed a necessary condition for black countries with the requisite wherewithal to acquire the deterrent lethal armoury that will make great powers with a Machiavellian eye on the continent’s rich trove of rare minerals and other resources to think twice before leaping on her like lethal carnivores even as they mouth pious declarations of ‘civilizing’ intent.

    Indeed, renowned political scientist and international relations scholar, Professor Bolaji Akinyemi, alongside another scholarly African legend, Professor Ali Mazrui, had made persuasive cases, long before Trump, for what has been widely called the ‘black bomb’ to better facilitate the emergence of a global deterrent racial balance of terror. This may not necessarily be as outlandish as some perceive it. Neither will it require superhuman feats of cerebral heroism. Indeed, the human resource base already exists for such a feat in Nigeria, South Africa, Egypt and many African countries.

    What is urgently needed is for a sufficient number of African societies to summon the organisational efficiency, leadership discipline, elite cohesion, and solidifying democratic culture and political stability needed to shoulder such a grave responsibility. Interestingly, while we tend to focus excessively on our flaws and negative traits, there is much, unfortunately imperceptible, good occurring in different spheres of our society in Nigeria, such as an appreciation and cultivation of merit that is a necessary condition for the nurturing of the technocratic culture that must be the basis for a nuclear-powered society.

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    For instance, in his 2016 Convocation Lecture at the University of Ibadan, in which he made a vigorous case for ‘Nigerian Exceptionalism’ in the country’s desired ‘Quest for World Leadership’, Professor Akinyemi referred to a commentary by the CNN on the launching by the National Space Research Research and Development Agency (NASRDA) of five satellites into space since 2003. The professor quotes CNN as reporting that “The NASRDA has launched five satellites since 2003, with three still in orbit delivering vital services. The most recent NigeriaSat-X was the first to be designed and constructed by NASRDA engineers, and more advanced models are in development”.

    And in the words of Professor Akinyemi, “NASRDA has close to 500 skilled and trained staff, some up to PhD level. The programme has ambitious goals. By 2018, it hopes to build Indigenous satellites, by 2025-2028, it hopes to build a national spaceport and develop an indigenous space launcher, and by 2030, it intends to put a Nigerian astronaut into space. These are lofty goals that have received international acclaim”.

    No less critical than charismatic and visionary political leadership at the commanding heights of societal governance are merit-recruited and driven technocrats at the driving seats of bureaucratic structures that propel scientific, technological, artistic, industrial, educational and other attainments to the level of genius that move polities forward at a geometric rate. In choosing Professor Tunji Olaopa as his pick to serve as Chairman of the Federal Civil Service Commission (FCSC), President Bola Tinubu demonstrated a commitment to merit as the underlying imperative for the fundamental reforms that are the defining essence of his administration.

    This meritocratic disposition of his leadership style is evident in the outstanding productivity of various agencies from General Buba Marwa’s NDLEA to Mr Tunji BELLO’s FCCPC to Professor Eghosa Osagie’s NIIA to Hafsat Bakarat’s NFIU to Yemi Cardoso’s CBN, Professor Oloyede’s JAMB or Dr Kayode Opeifa’s NRC, to name a few.

    An accomplished political scientist, Professor Olaopa obtained his MSc and PhD degrees in public administration and has gone on to establish his reputation as the leading scholar on public sector reforms in Nigeria and Africa. Rising to the apex position of Federal Permanent Secretary in the Federal Public Service, he has no less than two-score highly regarded scholarly books on different aspects of public service reforms in Africa.

    In a write-up to commemorate two years of Professor Olaopa in this demanding seat, another noted scholar who works with and observes him at close quarters, Dr Paul Onomuakpokpo, noted that “Under Olaopa, there is the overarching quest to bring the best and brightest to the civil service, without undermining the federal character principle. His credibility has invested his leadership with an imprimatur of believability. Through credible promotion examinations, the career progression of the most qualified civil servants is guaranteed. Civil servants are no longer apprehensive that they need to look for millions to bribe their way to rise to the top. Olaopa has demonstrated the courage to stop the promotion of those who do not merit it, no matter the pressure from different quarters. The avenues for questionable promotion examinations, such as leakage and sub-standard examination questions, have been blocked. This has saved the commission from wasting time, money and other resources on court cases”.

    Continuing, he states that “Those who fail no longer bother to contest the grades they have been awarded as they rest assured that the system is now credible. Olaopa’s streak of firsts at the FCSC has received a boon with the introduction of the computer-based test ( CBT) mould for the conduct of recruitment and promotion examinations in the civil service. This novelty imposes on civil servants the salubrious necessity of computer-savviness that is reflective of technological developments in a world where those who have demurred at bracing for artificial intelligence and others are faced with the present danger of consignment to corporate and professional backwaters. It has also shrunk the space for the manipulation of examination results that impugn the credibility of the commission”.

    Remarkably, Olaopa has been able to put into practice his profuse theoretical adumbrations on the imperative of civil society reforms while maintaining harmonious relationships with the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation (HOCSF), Mrs Didi Esther Walson Jack (OON) and other leadership cadres of the Public Service, many of whom are change agents in their own right.

    A significant development under Olaopa’s leadership of the FCSC has been the resuscitation for two years running of the annual meetings of the National Council of Civil Service Commissions of the Federation; an exercise that had been in abeyance for over a decade. In the concluding part of this piece, we will look in detail at the deliberations of the last Council which held in Umuahia, in Abia State, its exhaustive communique and why its conclusions are germane to the emergence of Nigerian and African public services that can be the backbone of emergent flourishing, vibrant and virile African countries no more vulnerable to the bullying and hectoring of self-interested external self-proclaimed saviour -giants with feet of clay.

  • Pyrrhic victories

    Pyrrhic victories

    Nigerian sports administrators are experts in quick fixes rather than carving out deliberate and enduring structures that would churn out talents seamlessly. I watched the new African Cup of Nations champions, the Teranga Lions of Senegal’s matches and each time tears flowed down my cheeks. I had heavy loaded heart each time commentators reminded us during their games  of the advantages they have secured for the future, particularly their ages.

    May I humbly ask our administrators: ‘how old will these players be by 2030? Besides, there is the deafening noise from a few football lovers trying to sway others to regulate their tunnel vision of making sure that second rated Coach Eric Chelle remains on the coaching bench. If I know our administrators very well, the selection of new players into Super Eagles would be farfetched. If we retain Chelle because of his pyrrhic victories in Morocco, no disrespect to what he has done (somebody needs to tell me),then we would have tacitly embraced cabals which would support the coach’s  retention of certain players always playing our matches, except they are walking with walking sticks.

    A Pyrrhic victory is a win achieved at such a devastating cost that it feels like a loss, with the victor suffering immense casualties, resources, or damage; making the success ultimately hollow or unsustainable, like winning a battle but losing the war. The term comes from King Pyrrhus of Epirus, who famously said after defeating Romans at great expense, “One more victory over the Romans and we are completely done for!”.

    Indeed, the reason our soccer slid into the abyss was because many of us didn’t encourage new entrants into the Super Eagles after what our debutants at the USA ’94 World Cup in 1996 did withtheir what has now turned out to be pyrrhic victories. It got so bad that a sitting sports minister argued that he didn’t want that feat eclipsed by defeats from any country under the guise of playing friendly matches. The boys got so unruly that they plotted the sack of PhillipeTroussier, whose 3-5-2 formation had effectively removed the aging ones. It struck them so badly that it didn’t matter what Nigeria did at the France ’98 World Cup. Playing at the Mundial then was a birthright.

    Our administrators have unwittingly conceded their rights to guard certain tenets of NFF/Chelle contract as it affects Chelle telling the world that his contract isn’t in his hands, when he has a subsisting contract with Nigeria. What happened to the famous right of not divulging anything enshrined in the contract? Isn’t this a breach? What has happened to the infamous oath of secrecy which all the parties in the contract must uphold?

    “The coach was very emotional when he addressed the team after the quarter-final win over Algeria. He didn’t cry, but he was deeply moved. He told us that he has yet to be contacted by the NFF and so anything is possible as regards his future,” the team member told only SCORENigeria.

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    “Really he enjoys the support of the team and has made us one big, happy family. But we also know that several other countries are interested in working with him, with some of them offering him much more money than what he gets in Nigeria.”

    Isn’t this a time bomb waiting to explode in the coming years of Chelle’s tenure? Haven’t we tacitly emboldened the players to pick the coach they want to work with when the chips are down, going forward? These are players with the penchant for civil disobedience when fighting for their entitlement.

    Chelle has joined the league of journeymen that Nigeria has recruited who use our players’ innate skills during matches to enrich their Curriculum Vitae (CV) for future jobs across the globe.

    Former Super Eagles coach and captain, Sunday Olisehwas dumfounded with the ceremony after Nigeria clinched another bronze medal at the AFCON, our ninth in the competition’s history and rightly so. The flipside to Oliseh’s argument is that some of the players are debutant and would surely want to celebrate their first senior medal at AFCON.

    Oliseh submitted further that: “There was a time when the Super Eagles shed tears after finishing second, because to us, anything but the trophy was unacceptable.”

    “Celebrating third place builds a culture of mediocrity.”

    “I will give you an example of what I meant. Before the final in Rabat, a video went viral of the Super Eaglescelebrating winning third place against Egypt. At the media tribune where I sat, both African and European journalists mocked us; they couldn’t believe it,” Oliseh said.

    “We must remember that the decline of our dominance started when we became content with bronze. If we want to be Africa’s best again, wild celebrations for anything less than gold must stop immediately,” Oliseh concluded.

    Oliseh just reminded the younger generation of the Super Eagles that winning a third place isn’t worth it, not with the armada of stars we parade from across the globe. We have the players to win AFCON thrice on the trot, but a better coach who won’t look for amicable resolutions for high acts of indiscipline because it involves one of the big boys.

    What Chelle succeeded in reawakening in the Super Eagles was drill them to required playing weights.But they lacked tactics to dislodge below the line marking, as seen in the games against Morocco and Egypt, which dragged beyond the stipulated 90 minutes duration.

    Unfortunately, our football doesn’t have articulated nurseries whose curriculum comes from the football federation for the good of the game. The situation is so bad that the last expedition to Morocco by the Super Eagles was prosecuted by our Diaspora players who couldn’t sing our national anthem before the matches began. This writer cringed with envy listening to different commentators in the media reiterate the ages of the Senegalese players and how bright their future would be. Left in the lurch is the domestic game still pampers and unable to grow.

    Interestingly, civilised countries develop their sports through the neighbourhood system, where facilities are built to engage the youth and push them away from social vices. Nurseries serve as the bases for storing the data of those discovered. Such information helps to nurture and monitor the good ones to stardom. Besides, nurseries lay the foundation on which the athletes are taught the rudiments of the game. It is at such factories that playing styles and patterns unique to such countries are evolving.

    The countries that excel in sporting events have systems that guarantee enough funds for the sportsmen and sportswomen to compete with the best, such as tax rebates on sport-friendly firms, lotteries, and businesses owned by wealthy nationals who know what is in such a sponsorship and the benefits from the sitting government. Such financial taxes are spelled out to companies and wealthy citizens after agreements have been reached. These cast-in-stone policies are binding on all the parties to such an extent that breaches are adequately addressed to allow either of the parties to seek redress in court.

    ”Nigeria’s failure to qualify for the 2026 FIFA World Cup has carried a high financial cost, with the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) missing out on a guaranteed minimum of USD 10.5 million following FIFA’s approval of a record USD 655 million prize money pool for the tournament. FIFA confirmed that every one of the 48 teams that qualified for the expanded World Cup in North America will receive USD 1.5 million in preparation funds, in addition to a minimum participation payout of USD 9 million for teams finishing between 33rd and 48th place.

    This ensures that each participating Member Association earns at least USD 10.5 million simply for qualifying.

    Nigeria’s absence from the tournament means the NFF will receive none of these funds, a significant blow at a time when many African federations rely heavily on FIFA competitions to support national team programmes, grassroots development and administrative costs.’’

  • MssN: The almond tree

    MssN: The almond tree

    “Do you not see how Allah sets forth a parable? Pleasant word is like a splendid tree which roots are firmly entrenched in the earth while its branches sprout protectively into the sky yielding fruits every season by the grace of Allah. Allah talks to men in parables that they may be mindfully alert”. Q.14:24

    Almond tree, for those who know it, is splendid to behold. It is magnificent in appearance. It is grandiose environmentally. But much more than all these, it is highly curative in substance and in essence. No soil whether in the forest or in the savanna or even in the desert is objectionable to this great tree for a dwelling. Wherever it is found, Almond tree creates a serene environment and serves as a protective umbrella for other living organisms around. It is one unique tree that wears the crown of a king and bears the scepter of a generalissimo. What other tree can compare favourably with this wonder tree?

    Believed to be an original native of Morocco in North Africa, Almond is not just about roots, stem and leaves. It is also a medicinal tree with invaluable medicinal properties. Its medicinal virtues are evident in its pharmaco-dynamic action of copper, iron, phosphorus and vitamins B1, B2, B3, B4 and B6 which exert synergic action in man and boost the formation of new blood cells and haemoglobin even as they maintain smooth physiological function of the brain, the nerves, the bones, the heart and the liver.

    The summarized analytical description here is not much about Almond tree per se as it is about the parable which its existence seeks to interpret. The similitude of the MUSLIM STUDENT SOCIETY OF NIGERIA (MSSN) is like that of the Almond tree. It was planted like a Mustard seed. It germinated into an enlivening plant with no irrelevant part.

    Most Nigerian Muslims of the current generation, including this columnist, do not know or cannot remember how MSS came into existence. They can now afford to take it for granted either because they were not part of the struggle that brought their spiritual harmony to bear or because the struggle has taken a different form which they are yet to be conscious of.    

    MSS is a revolution which quietly crept into the Nigerian society at the very right time that a revolution was required. If Islam enjoys a hitherto denied official recognition in Nigeria today, it is mostly due to that miraculous revolution.

    How and when did this gargantuan SOCIETY come into existence? Who were the irrigators that watered its seed into a tree? What suckers have since sprung from this tree and where are the farmers planting and nursing those suckers? Should MSS be called an Institution? Who actually are its alumni today and where are they? What further height is this tree aspiring to attain? These and many other questions had spurred ‘THE MESSAGE’ to fetch water from its very source for the sake of originality and genuineness.

    In a one on one interview with a man who joined hands with others to plant its seed, who was its chief irrigator from the very beginning, who grew and towered with the tree and who is more authoritative than others in telling its story, these questions were answered. Dr. Abdul-Lateef Adegbite, the first and longest serving National President of MSS (and former Secretary General of the Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs by the grace of God) went the memory lane and relayed it all for posterity sake. It must be recalled that Dr. Adegbite as pioneer President served five terms of one year each from 1954 to 1959. That length of service turned out to be a saving grace for the infant SOCIETY.

    ‘THE MESSAGE’ decided to put the interview in a prose form for lucidity and proper perspective rather than a question and answer rhetoric. Here we go:

                   “It all started like a dream in April 1954. A student of Methodist Boys High School (BBHS) Lagos, Tajudeen Aromasodu, clairvoyantly muted a unique idea. He proposed an association of all Muslim students in Nigeria starting with Lagos secondary schools. The intention was to create a forum of unity and identification with Islam. Such a forum was also to enable them pursue and defend their common interest.

    Aromasodu’s idea had emanated from the constitution of the Muslim Students Society of Burma which he accidentally came across. He read the constitution and became fascinated by it. That was at a time when Muslim children could hardly pass through secondary schools in Southern Nigeria without getting converted. Muslim children seeking Western education in those days were seen as trespassers or intruders except they were ready to cross to the other side of the   bridge against their faith and the wish of their parents.

    Aromasodu’s focus at that time was probably not beyond Lagos which was the federal capital of Nigeria and the seat of the colonial rulers. He quickly contacted a few other Muslim students of like minds and, together, they decided to invite two delegates from each of seven most prominent schools in Lagos at that time. Thus, fourteen of such students (boys and girls) formed the pioneer nucleus of what was destined to become a formidable SOCIETY. The schools were Kings College, Lagos; Queens College; Yaba, Methodist Boys High School, Lagos; CMS Grammar School, Bariga; Ahmadiyya College (now Anwarul Islam Model College), Agege; Methodist Girls High School, Yaba and Baptist Academy, Obanikoro.

    The nucleus body held its inaugural meeting at Ansar-ud-Deen Primary School, Alakoro, Lagos, on May 30, 1954. It was at that meeting that a proposal which had earlier been sent out to the mentioned schools was formally adopted. And, a resolution was taken to draft the constitution of the SOCIETY which was ratified thereafter.

    With the constitution in place, some members of the first executive body were elected into office. Dr. Adegbite was unanimously elected President while Shuaib Oloritu of Kings College and Saidat Anibaba (now Professor (Mrs.) Mabadaje) of Queens College became first and second Vice Presidents respectively. Dr. Adegbite’s election was quite timely and coincidental because he was not just the Chairman of the Library and Debating Society of Lagos secondary schools, at that time, which made him a first among, he too was planning a common forum for Muslim students.

    Other officers were elected and given responsibilities. Duties were delegated with trust and virtually everybody lived up to the trust.

    What would have been a major hindrance to the realization of that dream was money with which to run the new SOCIETY. But nothing fails at the dream level which has the hands of Allah in it. With strong determination and commitment, the young boys and girls levied themselves one shilling each monthly. Besides, each of them bore the cost of transportation when assigned to a duty outside the immediate environment.

    If the first national conference of the SOCIETY, held in Lagos in 1954, drew the attention of many people to it and attracted many new members, that of 1956 held in Ijebu-Ode was a watershed. It was at that conference that the SOCIETY can be said to have become a real national body. Some members especially of northern origin who later became prominent in that body joined in 1956. These included Shehu Musa, Adamu Ciroma, Yerima Abdullah and a host of others.  It was about the same year that some other Lagos students like Lateefat Oyekan (now Alhaja Lateefat Okunnu) joined the SOCITY and boosted its growth with indefatigable activities. At this time, Islam was not yet known to have significantly reached what is now called South East or South South of Nigeria.

    The third conference was held in Ilesha in 1957. It was hosted by M.A Smith. The fourth and fifth conferences were held in Ibadan and Abeokuta in 1958 and 1959 respectively.

    The conference had to be held consistently in the South-West because most of the initial members were students in that region. There were only two Higher Institutions in the country at that time. The two (Yaba College of Technology and University College, Ibadan) were situated in Lagos and Ibadan respectively. And all northern students seeking higher education in Nigeria had to attend these two Institutions.

    The MSS annual conference had by now become a meeting point for almost all Muslim students in Nigeria because of the awareness it created in those students and the spiritual succour it engendered in their parents.

    Despite their young age and little experience, the founders of the SOCIETY were foresighted enough to know that they would need the guidance and support of some elderly prominent men and women in the society to survive. They therefore appointed some of such people as patrons and matrons.

    Among them were Alhaji (Sir) Abubakar Tafawa Balewa; the then Prime Minister of Nigeria, Alhaji (Sir) Ahmadu Bello (the Sardauna of Sokoto and Premier of Northern Nigeria); Alhaji Adegoke Adelabu, (a Federal Minister); Alhaji Dauda Adegbenro (a Minister in the Western Region); Professor Saburi Biobaku; Alhaji Ekemode; Mr. H.A.P Adebola (a labour leader); Alhaji M.A Smith; Alhaja Humani Alaga (from Ibadan) and Alhaja A. Shodeinde (from Lagos).

    The contribution of these Patrons and Matrons to the phenomenal growth of MSSN was invaluable. And its spread across the country within a very short time was due to providence. Abdul-Lateef Adegbite, the President of the SOCIETY had completed his secondary education at Kings College in 1957. He had wanted to vacate the office of the President for someone else but others would not hear of that. They persuaded him to continue having appreciated his cool-headedness and the leadership ability in him.

    Providence set in to play a role in the life of Abdul-Lateef and that of MSSN simultaneously. He got a job as a researcher at the Historical Research Scheme in Ibadan in which he was engaged while awaiting admission to read English at UI. At this time, Abdul-Lateef experienced a repeat of providence working for him against his wish. He did not succeed in getting admission into the Premier University but that was a blessing for MSSN. If he had been admitted as he wished, he would have had less time for the SOCIETY in its infancy and he would not have become a lawyer that he happily became later. He also would have studied English at UI without any scholarship. His patience and faith paid off as he later got admission into the University of Southampton where he obtained his Bachelor’s Degree in Law before proceeding to the University of London for his Masters’ and Ph.D. on scholarship.

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    Earlier in his life, he had experienced a similar fate. While seeking admission into secondary school, his desire was to be a student of Government College, Ibadan which his brother Saburi Biobaku had attended. But as providence would have it, his Primary school   Headmaster mistakenly filled Kings College, Lagos, in his form. And that was how he became a student of Kings College.

    If he had attended Government College, Ibadan, he would have probably not been part of the formation of MSSN and his leadership quality that nursed that SOCIETY from inception would not have been of such great benefit. And if he had got admission into UI at the time he desired, perhaps the history of MSSN would have been different today.

    As a researcher always on the road, Adegbite used his time, his energy and the car attached to his office to spread the good tidings of MSSN to many other Muslim students, especially in the Western Region, who later became members.

    By the time he eventually travelled to United Kingdom for his University education in 1959, a solid foundation had been on ground for the SOCIETY. He therefore had no fear on what would become of it in his absence especially when he had confidence in those who succeeded his tenure.

    One major fear that had been averted before he travelled was that of the interaction of male and female students. That was the fear of the parents who didn’t want immorality to debase the good intention with which the SOCIETY was established. This sensitive aspect was carefully handled through the enforcement of discipline. Marriage among members was not forbidden but modalities were laid down for such based on the guidelines of the Qur’an and Sunnah.

    Realizing the implications of talking any of the sisters into marriage, the President himself avoided any act that could set a bad precedent for others. When it was time for him to choose a marital partner, he made sure that his wife to be (Miss Taibat Yetunde Carew, of blessed memory) was not a member of the SOIETY. Although he met her at an MSS forum, the latter just escorted her friend to that forum.

    When he returned into the country in 1965 with Ph. D degree, he was surprised at the growth rate of MSS across the country. All the secondary schools have fully become members and most of the foundation members had either graduated from Higher Institutions or about to graduate.

    He therefore thought of a higher pedestal for the SOCIETY’s alumni to operate Islamically. Fortunately, he was appointed Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice in the Western State.  

    Today, most of those members are great men and women in various public and private sectors. The current Sultan, some Emirs,   Ministers, Governors, Vice Chancellors, Professors and, even President Umar Musa Yar’Adua were members of that great SOCIETY.

    It is however disturbing that despite the greatness of this SOCIETY and its alumni, there was no permanent office that could be called its national headquarters even by the time its 50th anniversary was celebrated in 2004. An attempt was once made to site such office in Ilorin being the midway between the north and the south. But that attempt was unsuccessful. It was only when the elders decided to pay   attention to the issue of headquarters, recently, that work began on a befitting office in Abuja which may soon be completed.

    Dr. Abdul-Lateef Adegbite’s appointment as Commissioner also helped tremendously in bridging the religious gap between the north and the south especially in respect of the Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs in which he was to play a major role to bring to life.

    His actions that led to the formation of ‘WEST JOMO’; how he contributed to the formation of the Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs; How he became the Secretary General of that Islamic apex body and other Islamic activities he has engaged in will become a subject in this column in a foreseeable future. In sha’a Llah.

  • Critical success factors for Nigeria’s economy this year

    Critical success factors for Nigeria’s economy this year

    The World Bank, and International Monetary Find (IMF), have reeled out positive outlook for Nigeria in 2026:2027, projecting a 4.4% growth with positive headline inflation, and food inflation trajectories as well as other macroeconomic indices indicating positive economic recovery. However, it is essential that we also take notes of some alerts by the World Bank, and IMF, so as to ensure that the macro economic trajectory is sustained and upscaled, and to also avoid what I call socio-economic “reflux”, especially considering the fact that we are in an election year. However, it is also important that we upscale Nigeria’s growth rate as soon as possible, so that we can achieve the actual economic growth rate that is desired to really turn around the economy of Nigeria in the mid to long term.

    Furthermore, while the macroeconomics indicators are very important, the microeconomic indicators and the impacts on the common man in Nigeria, are most critical. For instance, the World Bank report also projected that there will be further increase of poverty in northeastern Nigeria. And we should also not forget that the over 140 million multidimensionally poor Nigerians have not really significantly been reduced, even according to the Nigerian National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). So these are crucial points we need to take note of while we are celebrating the positive macroeconomic trends and outlook.

    We must also interrogate the overall performance of the economy, i.e, macro and micro, so as to ensure that, the average Nigerian is really feeling the impacts of those economic indicators, and to hedge against insecurity and the escalation of poverty, in the northeast as mentioned by World Bank, etc. ,

    In my view, here are some critical success factors:

    Fiscal Discipline:

    I have been consistently advocating that there is the urgent need to properly align Nigeria’s fiscal policy with the monetary policy. And we can only achievement of the fiscal policy with the monetary policy, if the federal government entrenches fiscal discipline. Indeed the  lack of fiscal discipline had been the bane successive administrations in Nigeria including the incumbent. That is why we have not been able to achieve that level of growth and consistency required to fully recover and grow  Nigeria’s economy.

    Fiscal discipline include; how we  rein in the national income, how we spend the money, what our priorities are, issues of budget padding, how we prioritize and manage our capital expenditure. Certainly, the lack of fiscal discipline is why Nigeria is currently, simultaneously operating three different budgets, which further complicate the economic situation.

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    For example, for the first time in a long time in Nigeria, local contractors have gone on strike and have carrying placards, demanding for the payment of the backlog of payments of contacts awarded and executed as far back as 2024. Interestingly, we the Honorable Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Chief Wale Edun, has stated about a week ago that about N1.8trillion have been earmarked  to pay contractors (foreign and local). These are indications of lack fiscal discipline, which is negatively impacting and is misaligned with the current Monetary policy of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    Therefore, there should be policy cohesion, policy coherence, and  policy coordination amongst and across MDAs. The federal government should also ensure that while we are making the progress, the gains are penetrating into the economy and making the desired impacts. Because no matter how well we want to talk about how the economy is doing, the fact that we are operating three budgets in the same year should not be the practice and should not be acceptable. Unless and until we are able to address those fundamental issues, we will not be able to have traction.

    Meanwhile, while 4.4% rate projected is good good as it sounds; the truth is that, the growth rate will not  actually make Nigeria a $1 trillion economy as quickly as possible, which is what will actually really turn around the economy. We need at least an annual growth rate of from 7% to something about 8.5% consistently for the next to four years and beyond to nearly achieved the objective.

    So there’s a lot of work to be done. Interestingly, we have an election year. Politicking will take a chunk of the time of the administration. I hope that the federal government will remain focused on achieving sustainable micro economic impacts , to hedge against the opposition political parties, while they are doing the politicking so that people will really appreciate that they are doing something that is making sense to them, not just for the macroeconomic indicators or for analysts like us.

    Full Activation of the Local Governments Autonomy and Administration:

    Local Government administration is  also part of national fiscal framework, because fiscal discipline is also addressing the constitutional provision for allocation of resources. And the local government is a crucial part of that.

    For many years, that particular level of government, has been used as a special purpose vehicle for corruption, or for alienating the people. I am happy that, despite resistance by some state governors, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has been able to operationalize the autonomy the local government administration in line with the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. He has done that by first, making sure that the Supreme Court of the Federation has affirmed the sanctity of the relevant sections of the Constitution that gives local government administrations their structural, financial, and operational autonomies. Two weeks ago at the beginning of the year, 2026, Mr. President re-affirmed his commitment by stating that he will ensure that local governments directly funded and supported even if he will have  issue executive orders. Kudos to Mr. President. We hope that will be done as soon as possible, because we need to detach the local government from this chokehold of the governance.

    Accordingly, if we are able to detach the local government, we can be able to focus on the local government as well and give them those responsibilities and ensure they deliver because they are the closest, you know, to the common man in Nigeria.

    Local government administration is a critical success factor to the success of Nigeria’s fiscal framework.

    National Security:

    The criticality of national security to Nigeria’s existence, unity, prosperity and sustainability, growth and development cannot be over-emphasized. Without national security, the visions, social and economic strategies, and policies will amount to nothing.

    What is critical is also to ensuring we strengthen our institutions, while dealing with insecurity.Therefore, the leadership at federal and state levels must ensure the achievement of national security and safety of citizens, in with section 14(2)(b) of the Nigerian Constitution of 1999 [as amended] provides that, “the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government.

    Activation and Operation of FDI Pipelines:

    Trade and Investment are live wires of any country. President Bola Tinubu has done a lot of Investment and Trade mobilization since the beginning of his administration in May 2023. He has traveling around the world, mobilizing Foreign Direct Investments (FDIs) and trade for Nigeria. The recent engagement is Mr. President’s trip to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) last week where he attended the Sustainability Summit and also his interactions with the President of the UAE,  Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, which resulted in the signing of Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreements (CEPA) across various sectors.

    The important next steps in 2026, are the full activation and operations of those FDI and Trade mobilizations, particularly the agriculture, power, and manufacturing sectors, because those are sectors that will actually drive the economy. The performance of investment and trade in 2025 was very good. However the big investments were in Financial Services, and Portfolio investments.

    According to the CBN, Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) rose to $720 million in the third quarter (Q3) of 2025 from $90 million in the preceding quarter. Year-on-year FDI inflows we’re also higher than the $570 million posted in Q3 2024, reflecting 26.3% increase.

    Interestingly, out of the total 2025 Nigeria’s annual investment, $3.1 billion, representing 54%, was to the banking sector, but about 2.3%, which is $129 million production and manufacturing. So you can see where we should focus on, to actually get the actual growth target, in the economy.

    Overall, efficient and effective execution, performance and impacts are critical.

  • Police and the Kaduna abductions

    Police and the Kaduna abductions

    WE HAVE WALKED THIS path before as a nation. That was in 2014. Twelve years after, we are back on the same road, and the bone of contention is similar. Mass abduction! Were over 150 persons abducted in Kajuru in Kaduna State on Sunday? Christian leaders in the state  are claiming that they were. They put the figure at 172. Nine were said to have escaped, leaving 163 in captivity. The government and the police refuted the claim.

    It is 2014 all over again, yet the 2026 case is eerily odd. The story is being hotly contested by the government and the police. You will say that also happened in 2014. That year in a government girls secondary school in Chibok, Borno State, some 274 pupils were whisked away in the dead of the night. The school and the community raised the alarm. They looked up to the government for help to get the girls back. Rather than act swiftly, Abuja footdragged. How can 274 girls be roused from sleep and carted away like that when they are not sheep? Some officials were said to have asked, as they made light of the issue.

    But it was not a joke. The abduction was real and the reality only dawned on the powers that be two weeks later. By then, it was too late to get the girls back intact. They had been distributed like chattels to the different cells of the  Boko Haram Islamic Sect that abducted them. As a nation, till today, we rue the missed opportunity to rescue those girls intact at the earliest possible time. We are still haunted by the image of Leah Sharibu, one of the girls who defied the abductors and has remained with them ever since. One only hopes that the same scenario is not now playing out in Kaduna!

    It is now four days that the abductees were said to have been seized from three churches in Kurmin Wali in Kajuru Local Government Area of Kaduna State. Media reports said the incidents took place simultaneously. Some said the affected worship places were a Catholic and two Cherubim and Seraphim (C & S) Churches. Yet, some said they were an ECWA and two C & S Churches. Late on Wednesday, the Force Headquarters confirmed the affected places were a Catholic, an ECWA and a C & S Churches. From the reports, the assailants were said to have stormed the churches in large numbers, encircled the worshippers and marched them in one single file into nearby forests.

    This is a serious matter which should be handled with the utmost sense of urgency and care that it deserves. Our worship places and schools, no matter how remotely located they are, should not be allowed to become easy targets for  kidnappers to go to at will and pack as many people as they wish. Unfortunately, these places and schools have become human fishing grounds for these marauders. They operate with impunity, and in most cases, they enjoy the cooperation of the locals, who out of fear and at times, pecuniary gains, have no choice but to do their bidding.

    Unwittingly, such people have emboldened these criminals by becoming accessories to the fact. From the look of things, what happened in Kurmin Wali four days ago is gradually unfolding. Why did the police and the government initially say there were no abductions, contrary to the claims of the Christian leaders? Rather than dispute the claim, the police should have dug deeper before talking. It reacted hastily without first discharging its primary function of investigating the claim.

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    It would have cost the police nothing to say that the matter was under investigation and that the public would be briefed on developments. These are challenging times for the country and our security agencies must be seen to be up and doing and proactive.

    We are in the firing line, so to say. In the wake of Donald Trump’s claim of “Christian genocide” in Nigeria for which he came ‘gun-a-blazing’ last Christmas eve to take out the terrorists behind these killings, our security agencies, especially the police, must be careful how they react to terror attacks and other related incidents. They cannot afford to do anything that would make them to look partial or lead to their being accused of a cover up.

    Their job is to detect crime and bring the perpetrators to justice. They cannot do it alone. They need the support of the people. So, when the Kajuru incident happened, the police should have held back a little considering that the crime scene was in a remote community. In such a situation, they should not rely on one or two sources to draw their conclusions, they should have reached out to as many people as possible, including the common man on the street, who might have seen or heard something about the incidents.

    This should serve as a lesson to the police and the government. They should not be too hasty to take only what they consider as ‘good infoŕmation’ to reach conclusions on matters. They should look at the ‘bad’ and the ‘ugly’ as well and sieve them to determine the truth before talking. On what information did the Commissioner of Police Muhammad Rabiu, Kajuru Local Government Chairman Dauda Madaki, and Internal Security and Home Affairs Commissioner Sule Shaibu base their claim that there were no abductions in Kurmin Wali last Sunday?

    Did they subject the information to any proof before running with it? It only shows that all they were interested in is that there was no such incident so that they can rush back to the governor and gush, “your excellency, all is calm. There is no cause for alarm”. There was cause for alarm and Governor Uba Sani deserves to know the truth so that all his efforts to enthrone peace in Southern Kaduna and every part of the state do not come to nought.

    Just as the respected leader of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) in the 19 northern states and Abuja, Reverend Joseph Hayab, said in the heat of the row over whether the incidents happened or not, the governor has been working tirelessly to ensure law and order, but that is not to say that something that happened should be swept under the carpet. It is not what the government and the police want to hear that matters, it is what happened that is relevant. Were people kidnapped in Kajuru? Yes, the police finally admitted. So, why was it initially hard to tell the governor the truth so that he can mobilise resources for the abductees’ swift rescue?

    Hiding such truth from those in power does not amount to helping them. It further alienates them from the governed who know no other person than the leader and call him out for all actions and inactions, even though he may not know about them. This is the danger of hiding the truth from a leader. The security agencies and the close aides of governors shouod know this and learn from the Kajuru incident that it is better to say the truth than hide it. Contrary to their thinking, this is not political correctness; it is political harakiri.

    The person who bears the brunt at the end of the day is the leader, not the police and his aides. Let security agencies and political appointees help leaders by telling them the truth about happenings in the country, no matter how bad things may be, and leave them to take the decisions they deem fit. A leader is a captain, and there can only be one captain in a ship.

  • Trump and the politics of brinkmanship

    Trump and the politics of brinkmanship

    It seems the American president, Donald John Trump, is determined to change the world if the rest of us permit him to without United Nations notice of a reason for belligerency or the interest of global peace or threat to the security of the USA. Therefore, having to embark on retaliatory action in the interest of self-defence and without declaration of formal war on Venezuela approved by the US Congress, he nevertheless sent an armada of a carrier group of ships, frigates, air armaments and the Delta Strike group and assorted coastal ships and previous deployments of the CIA (Central Intelligence Agency) and FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) and DIA (Defence Intelligence Agency) to the coast of Venezuela. It did not come as a surprise when on the morning of January 3, the USA government announced the capture of the president of the Republic of Venezuela, his wife and one of his children while asleep and brought them to New York where they were detained in a New York prison for drugs and gun running thereby putting, at risk the security of the United States. 

    Legally, the US was violating international law and the norms of international diplomacy. The situation was made more surprising when Donald Trump announced that he was going to run the country and invite big American oil companies to return to Venezuela and redevelop the oil wells which they owned before the oil business was nationalised by previous governments of Venezuela. Then while the public was wondering how he would single-handedly run a whole country three times the size of California, it was announced that the US government was leaving virtually intact, the government of President Nicholas Maduro in power without Maduro because his vice president, of Delcy Eloina Rodriguez Gomez was sworn in as president. This was rather bewildering because people expected Madame Carina Machado, the new Nobel laureate for peace would play some important role in post-Maduro government but Trump dismissed her as not popular despite the fact that the democratic coalition she organised won democratic elections last year in Venezuela which Maduro rigged against her.  

    It seems the American government had learnt a bitter lesson from its experience in Iraq where it dismissed the entire Saddam Hussein government only to face in later years, rebellion under ISIS and the Al Baghdadi Caliphate. This may be understandable but is it wise and justiciable? The case is still in court and postponed to start litigation in March.  The case remains unresolved while the whole world is watching and waiting. Trump directed his attention to other areas of the world as if he is driven to action by unseen forces. He picked on annexation of Danish Greenland and war on the Islamic Republic of Iran following street demonstration against the government of Ayatollah Khamenei. Any intelligent observer would ask on how many fronts of war can the US fight on? It was known at the time that a big fraction of the naval strength of the USA was committed and tied down in the Caribbean front in Venezuela. Trump unfortunately encouraged the Iranians to continue their demonstration against their government and promised that help was on the way from the USA. Some days later he backed down saying the Iranian government had not carried through execution of about 800 people arrested for demonstration against the Iranian regime. Then to palliate the anger and discontent of Iranian rebels, he began to say the time for looking for a new Iranian leader was ripe to which the Iranian government in a withering  attack told him if he killed their Ayatollah Khamenei, he would pay dearly for it.

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    Now apart from sending ICE paratroopers to Minneapolis and threatening war against  states run by the Democratic Party and threatening to issuing a declaration of insurrection and sending troops to put down demonstrators against forceful deportation of illegal immigrants, as I am writing this piece on the birthday of Dr Martin Luther King (January 19) who in the 1960s led protests by black people and their supporters against more than a century of denial of rights and economic opportunity and equality which culminated in the Civil Rights laws of 1965 which Donald Trump has been eroding gradually, his government has one by one undermined rights of black peoples to equal education by getting rid of rights reserved for minorities in education and employment describing them as racist attack on whites. He has been getting rid of black peoples through so-called reduction of the federal government and blocking opportunities for blacks even in sports.  While doing this, he is imposing psychological damage on blacks because he is banning African people from coming to the US because Trump is characterising them as people from “shit-hole countries” while appealing to countries in the Scandinavian region to come to the USA since they will be welcome. He is also asking whites from South Africa to leave the republic and emigrate to the US because he said they were being killed or victimised in the Union of South Africa without evidence. He invited the president of South Africa, Cyril Ramaphoza and humiliated him before the whole world.

    He is totally unaware that he is building a black bomb for future explosion of discontentment. He has started threatening Greenland which he said the USA needs to protect itself from threats from Russia and China in an increasingly strategically important sea route because of the melting ice in the Arctic. We are also aware of Trump’s secret plan to build on Greenland an anti-nuclear shield to protect the USA against possible nuclear attack either by Russia or China. We now have a situation in which European countries, formerly solid allies like Denmark, Norway and other Scandinavian countries and also France and Germany and other allies of the USA which are members of NATO are opposed to Trump’s policy on Greenland and are ready to resist Trump’s braggadocio.

    Although nobody expects American troops to start shooting Europeans but anything is possible in a situation when Trump’s cabinet ministers and even the American vice president, JD Vance openly say America represents strength and power while Europe is a symbol of weakness. If Trump goes ahead with his so-called military option against the Kingdom of Denmark in order to seize Greenland, that will signal the end of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).

    Sometimes one wonders if one should take President Trump seriously. How does one interpret the seriousness of a man who accepts the Nobel Prize from Machado and hangs it prominently in the White House even though everyone knows it is not transferable? How serious can one take him when he publicly writes an open letter to the Norwegian prime minister for not ensuring that an independent body like the Nobel Committee did not give him the Nobel Prize for peace which he claimed he has earned for stopping eight wars which everyone disagrees and disputes? It seems as if he feels this justifies his bellicose relationship with Denmark a sister Scandinavian country!

    With US piling pressure on European countries in order to force them to support the possible seizure of Greenland, Europe is beginning to ask whether America is a worthy ally or a bully using them in its struggle and competition for world power. It is becoming clear that European support for America is no longer guaranteed. Yet America would need European support if America decides to stop justified Chinese future unification with the island of Taiwan. The same America is alienating India by putting up tariff against it and China for buying oil from Russia and thus helping Russia to have money in prosecuting the war against Ukraine.

    I personally think it will get to a point when the Chinese that holds substantial portion of American debt in form of Treasury Bills, the Norwegians and others begin to unleash on the market their holdings of American treasury bills and treasury bonds and this will simply expose the fact that for years, America has enjoyed living on the backs of the rest of the world by using the dollar as a reserve currency without controlling the printing and issuance of the currency. The whole world since 1945 has been working to support the American economy and to allow Americans to live well to the disadvantage of the rest of the world.

    President Trump’s rambling policy may usher in the end of the American global military but most importantly financial domination. What is Africa or Nigeria’s response to what the Canadian Prime Minister Mike Carney says?  He said there is a rupture in the world order and not a transition and countries have to determine to forge economic ties with groups with similarities of ideas goals and needs instead of fixed and rigid permanent organisations dominated by global or single hegemon doing whatever pleases it at any given time without considerations of the interests of other members of the global community. Nigeria must organise, albeit clandestinely, without too much noise. I hope we are not just going to continue with our old politics without ideas, plans or goals as long as we get elected into office.

  • He simplified being human

    He simplified being human

    Faith is sorely weaponised in Nigeria. One person’s “God” is another person’s “Satan.” One temple’s saint is another temple’s sinner.  Between rival altars rots the skeletons of neighbours who once shared water, markets, and laughter.

    Faith is a boundary stone in Nigeria; and sometimes, a password or a warning. It decides who gets mourned honorably and who deserves the dishonour of a mass grave. It decides which deaths are explained away as destiny and which are weaponised as proof of divine favour. In this bruised moral landscape, religion thrives on maleficence; what should soothe becomes a tool of persecution.

    Thus it was startling, almost disorienting, to read amid the haze of Islamophobia and religious extremism perpetuated by Nigerian Christians and Muslims, the reportage of a Nigerian who rebelled.

    On June 23, 2018, Abdullahi Abubakar, Chief Imam of Akwatti Mosque in Nghar community, Plateau State, opened his masjid and his home to about 270 Christians fleeing death as well as Muslims fleeing reprisal attacks. Long-running communal violence between Berom and Fulani groups in the State had flared again, and more than 80 people were killed as suspected Fulani militias carried out midday attacks on 10 Berom villages in Barkin Ladi Local Government Area of the State.

    Abubakar, then 86, sheltered the refugees, knowing fully that to harbour them in that moment was to sign his own death warrant. Yet, he defied the militia prowling his premises, desperate to kill. He resisted the terrorists.

    Let us be precise with language. They were ethnic terrorists, not Muslim terrorists. No verse in the Qur’an or Islamic jurisprudence licenses the murder of Christians or sanctifies the killing of innocents. The same moral courtesy Christians routinely extend to themselves must be extended here. When a Christian mob lynched and burned Pastor Dio Idon of ECWA in Southern Kaduna recently over allegations of witchcraft, Christians across Nigeria insisted those murderers were “not real Christians.” Likewise, when Deborah Yakubu was lynched and burned for alleged blasphemy, Muslims reserved the same moral latitude to say “Deborah’s murderers are not real Muslims.”

    Consistency is the minimum requirement of morality, and on that count, Imam Abubakar exerted himself admirably. Senior journalist and writer Sam Omatseye, who later interviewed Abubakar, captures the simplicity of the man’s courage stressing that, “In a region where Christians and Muslims have been reported to be at daggers-drawn, where the so-called herdsmen and farmers only met in blood puddles, this Imam bucked the narrative. He dared to disdain his personal safety for others and valorised human life without prejudice to religion.”

    Because of him, hundreds of Nigerian men, women and children were saved, notes Omatseye. “We are all children of God. Both faiths want peace,” Abubakar explained his actions with a simplicity that mocked our sophisticated cruelties.

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    To understand the significance of Abubakar’s act, one must understand the ecology of hatred in which it occurred. Plateau is a landscape where grievances are inherited and weaponised across generations. The Berom, who are mainly Christian farmers, and the Fulani, who are largely Muslim pastoralists, have a history of violent conflict in the State, rooted primarily in land disputes and the contentious classification of residents as “indigenes” or “settlers.” Tensions worsened significantly after a federal political appointment in September 2001 triggered violence that killed about 1,000 people and displaced thousands. Since then, cycles of attack and reprisal have continued, often sparked by rumours.

    In such a place, neutrality is tantamount to betrayal and to save “the other” is to offend one’s own. Abubakar’s action, deservedly drew global attention. In 2019, the United States honoured him with the International Religious Freedom Award. He also received Nigeria’s national honour of Member of the Order of the Niger (MON) from former President Muhammadu Buhari.

    He died on Friday, January 16, two weeks after his 92nd birthday.

    Imam Abubakar, no doubt, belonged to a different moral generation, one raised on a culture that measured faith not by how loudly it announced itself, but by how gently it treated the vulnerable. His Deen wasn’t performative. It was Qur’anic in the deepest sense: “Whoever saves one life, it is as if he has saved all of humanity” (Quran 5:32).

    The Qur’an insists that there is no compulsion in religion. It commands believers to speak kindly to people, to stand firmly for justice even against themselves, and to recognise human dignity as God-given, not sect-granted. That lineage of thought lived through Imam Abubakar.

    So too does Christianity, at its moral core, insist that love of neighbour is inseparable from love of God. The problem has never been scripture. It has always been selection. And Imam Abubakar selected humaneness. In doing so, he exposed the poverty of our religious theatrics.

    Omatseye intones with a rare moral precision that in Abubakar: “The Christian fanatic zealot will see remorse, the Muslim fanatic will find a new path, the atheist will coddle human pathos. He was a man with true evangelical zeal. A puritan of love and peace. A partisan of harmony, not sects.”

    In death, Abubakar outlives our pretensions and embarrasses our noise. While others milk tragedy for relevance, he refused even the spotlight that found him. Little wonder he had no social media accounts. He didn’t save Christians to project himself as a saint or perform theological gymnastics. Thus, when the world applauded, he went back to being human.

    Contrast this with our age of clout-chasing righteousness. Even now, established and closet bigots are laundering their reputations with Abubakar’s name, accessorising themselves with virtues alien to their conduct. It is a cheap and soulless spiral.

    In Imam Abubakar, Nigeria lost a rare gem, ultimately because he established a truth too inconvenient for ideologues: that we were human before we became religious. Humanity is the first covenant and any faith that violates it is counterfeit. Abubakar lived this reality. And that wasn’t a small feat.

    It is easy to preach tolerance behind microphones and security details. It is another thing entirely to shelter about 300 neighbours while a blood thirsty militia stalk your door. Too many contemporary faithful parade themselves as God’s gift to a broken world while ploughing its peace with gospels of carnage. They have perfected a theology that can explain any corpse away, provided it belongs to the wrong kind of believer. It is about time we defanged religion in Nigeria, not by banishing faith, but by stripping it of its license to kill.

    Yet, we must understand that the merchants of hate want us to live in fear of one another. We must appreciate why a villager who watched his family butchered by men chanting “Allahu Akbar” may never see goodness in Islam again. And why another who lost loved ones to Christian militias chanting “self-help” and “Glory!” may define every cross as threat. Trauma rewrites theology and hate-mongering preachers exploit pain, pawing it into permanent hostility.

    Abubakar was a rebuke to every such agent of hate. He proved that the most radical act in a season of slaughter may be to open a door.

    To remember him is to submit ourselves to his unimpeachable humanity. To decide, in the moments that will test us, when rumours thicken and fear knocks, between the easier creed of hate or the harder discipline of humanity.

    •Abubakar chose, and hundreds lived. The rest is commentary.