Category: Saturday

  • Still on judicial corruption

    Still on judicial corruption

    In the eighth and final part of his book, ‘What Next In The Law’, in which he focuses on the possible misuses of power by key components of the political, social and legal process, the great English jurist, Lord Denning, examines, among others, the role of judges in the dispensation of justice. According to the luminous legal mind “There remains the most touchy question of all. May not the judges themselves sometimes abuse or misuse their power? It is their duty to administer and apply the law of the land. If they should divert it or depart from it – and do so knowingly – they themselves would be guilty of a misuse of power. So we come up against Juvenal’s question, ‘Sed quis custodiet ipsos custodies?’ (But who is to guard the guards themselves?)…Suppose a future Prime Minister should seek to pack the Bench with judges of his own extreme political colour. Would they be tools in his hands? To that I answer ‘No’. Every judge on his appointment discards all politics and all prejudices. You need have no fear. The judges of England have always in the past – and always will – be vigilant in guarding our freedoms. Someone must be trusted. Let it be the judges”.

    Lord Denning’s utter confidence in the moral integrity of the British legal system is without doubt a function of the larger society’s fidelity to the highest standards of ethical rectitude. Judges may, of course, give decisions coloured by their ideological or philosophical orientations to life. This is why in the United States, for instance, the two major political parties strive to ensure that judges with value preferences favourable to their worldview are appointed to the highest courts of the land. But the possibility of judgements being auctioned for sale to the highest bidder irrespective of the facts of the case is a rarity in these advanced countries. Not so countries with severely underdeveloped political (democratic) cultures like post colonial – type Nigerian societies. Here, justice is often a matter of cash and carry. The judiciary is often the last bastion, not of the common man, but the ready refuge of the well heeled felon.

    But then, this is not a peculiar feature of the judiciary. The civil servant routinely utilizes his privileged position in the policy process to escape the poverty trap through obscene accumulation of illegal wealth. Only a microscopic minority of those opportune to hold political office – civilian and military – like the iconic President Muhammadu Buhari has refrained from amassing stupefying wealth in spite of his vantage positions at various times at the apex of commanding heights of the national economy. Rare is the journalist who does not mortgage his conscience, skew his reportage or align his opinion to the seductive tunes of moneyed Luciferian pied pipers. Not even the custodians of the sacred spiritual realm are spared. All too often now, heavy loads of foreign currency are necessary conditions for eligibility into the Kingdom of heaven. Ask the alleged clerical beneficiaries of the ‘Dasukigate’ largesse. And for the officers and men of the armed and security agencies, their weapons and coercive authority are passports to the paradise of heavenly affluence.

    Of course, it is not that the post-colonial societies particularly of Africa are necessarily and inherently morally inferior to the developed polities. Rather, as Professor Peter Ekeh noted decades ago, the citizens of the former occupy an ethical and institutional wasteland in which ‘migrated’ state structures are seen by elite and mass alike as alien entities to be ravaged, looted and vandalized at will without the slightest pangs of conscience. In other words, the relation of the individual to assorted state structures is amoral rather than moral. Thus, in spite of Buhari’s best anti-corruption exertions, most of those identified and publicly exposed as beneficiaries of the incredible cash disbursements from the office of the erstwhile National Security Adviser in the last dispensation most likely still remain very well beloved sons and daughters of their people. The Buhari administration’s anti-graft offensive certainly needs much more rigorous, creative and scientific thinking than has been exhibited so far. And contrary to some top officers of the administration, adherence to the rule of law is the least obstacle it confronts in its bid to bring corruption to heel. Corruption in all its diverse manifestations is itself a gross desecration of the rule of law. Aiming to fight corruption by dispensing with the rule of law as thoughtlessly espoused in some quarters is tantamount to fighting filth with filth. It is ultimately self sabotaging.

    Yes, corruption in the judiciary can have the most dangerous, pernicious and insidious repercussions for society. For, if the salt of the preservers of justice has lost its saltiness, what is left but to spit it out and cast it off? It is in this respect that no one can fault the determination of the Buhari administration to thoroughly cleanse the judiciary as a key platform of its anti-corruption campaign. Yet, the unwarranted Gestapo-like manner the Department of State Service (DSS) went about arresting seven judges across the country in the wee hours of October 8, was certainly long on brawn, brashness, needless bravado and high drama but short on the tact, subtlety and stealth that ought to be the hallmarks of high intelligence.

    As has been noted by many analysts, at least 22 magistrates and judges were severed from the judicial service of Ghana last year. This was after painstaking and clandestine investigation of their activities over a two-year period that yielded incontrovertible audio and visual evidence of corrupt activity. There was no high drama, no overzealous power show on the part of the security agencies. The operation was surgical and professional. In Nigeria, the operational methods of the DSS in this instance may not have violated the letters of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA). But it raped its spirit.  Yes, many corrupt bad eggs are undoubtedly giving the Nigerian judiciary a severe organizational headache. The culpable ones must be clinically and intelligently detected, given a fair trial and booted out of the judiciary. It makes little sense to try to decapitate the institution’s collective dignity, integrity and self-esteem through the undue rashness of some intelligence chieftains obviously inebriated by the exuberance of their own organizational self-importance.

    Unconfirmed but widely reported and yet to be denied reports indicate that the presidency has directed that the prosecution of the affected judges be taken over from the DSS by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC). This is reportedly to ensure that the investigations of the judges suspected of corruption are more professionally handled. A report in The Punch of Sunday, October 30, cited an operative of the EFCC who said, on condition of anonymity, that the traditional pattern of the agency is to secretly investigate corruption long before going after suspects. He lamented that with the distraction caused by the arrest of the judges, the investigation can no longer be conducted in the necessary atmosphere of secrecy that characterizes the operations of the commission.

    Beyond the sensational but essentially superficial, even if necessary, hounding of individual tainted judges, there are other factors pertaining to judicial corruption that must be addressed in more effectively prosecuting the anti-graft war. First is the mechanism of recruiting judicial officers to the bench right from the magistracy. Right now, the judiciary does not enjoy the requisite autonomy in this regard. Primordial considerations including ethnicity, religion and crass nepotism tend to trump strict meritocracy. The recruitment process must be strengthened to ensure that the critical factors of knowledge and character are adhered to as much as possible. If the process is tainted right from the entry point, it becomes simply a question of garbage personnel in, garbage judicial decisions out. Secondly, once judicial officers are recruited to the bench, the process of continuous upward mobility through promotions must be strengthened and sanitized so that only the very best intellectually and morally emerge as the elite core at the higher echelons of the bench.

    Thirdly, it is impossible to meaning fully fight judicial corruption without taking into account ‘the political ecology of the judicial system’. I refer here to the constraining political environment within which the judiciary functions. It is noteworthy, for instance, that the bulk of the corruption that hobbles the judiciary is associated with election petition cases. This is a function of the tendency of politicians and parties to seek to win elections at all costs and by all means largely because of the perception and utilization of public office as a means of wealth accumulation. Consequently, political parties invariably not only vote huge amounts to influence the electoral umpire, humongous funds are also earmarked to sway electoral tribunals in their favour or to ensure factional control of their party machineries. Hence, virtually all elections result in electoral disputes and the courts are forced to play the unaccustomed role of electoral umpires making them vulnerable to pecuniary inducement.

    In his influential study of the politics of the Second Republic, ‘Democracy and Prebendal Politics in Nigeria’, Professor Richard Joseph makes the point succinctly as regards the consequences of converting courts into electoral umpires. In his words, “The courts could not operate in any salutary way when drawn into this process of vote adjusting, of having to decide which of conflicting, and questionable, sets of results were most “improbable”, which impromptu solutions by overwhelmed election officials were most acceptable, which degree of malfeasance was excessive and which excusable. In the context of Nigeria in 1983, every decision of the judiciary could be made to appear, to some extent, to be the wrong one. Truth and fairness had become subordinate to political partisanship”. Things appear to be much worse now particularly with the Independent National Electoral Commission’s (INEC) current affliction with institutional glaucoma, organizational schizophrenia and ethical kwashiorkor since the exit of the incomparable Professor Attahiru Jega.

     

  • A word for Dalung

    A word for Dalung

    Sports Minister Solomon Dalung apparently enjoys hearing his own voice which translates to doublespeak on matters concerning the industry. He is quick in reminding us that he isn’t a football minister, yet nothing good can come out of football, if he isn’t handling it. Dalung negotiates all football deals. If he doesn’t know about it, it won’t happen. He shunned church services on Sundays to beg President Muhammadu Buhari to release cash for the Super Eagles. This kind minister sef!

    Would it, therefore, shock Dalung to hear that it cost the Table Tennis Federation less than $19,000 to prosecute the African Championships where Nigeria emerged champions in the women singles, winners of the male doubles event and runners-up in the men’s singles and mixed doubles? Nigeria was also runners-up in the male team event. Sir, Super Eagles are a distant 11th in Africa, in spite of your expert intervention and interest. Sir, $19,000 is less than what we paid four bench-warming Eagles players for beating Tanzania in a meaningless last game of the Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers in Uyo.

    It will interest Dalung to know that Nigeria star Aruna Quadri is number 25 in the world. Yet the minister’s cherished Eagles are 60th. Shouldn’t these facts challenge the minister to pay more attention to the game like he does to soccer? Or should I enumerate Segun Toriola’s table tennis exploits? Shortly before the Olympics, Oshonaike cried blue murder over the ministry’s neglect of the team. She was stampeded to do a retraction; she would have been dropped from participating at the Rio Olympic Games, if she didn’t. Nothing changed. Oshonaike repeated everything she said before the Olympics when she got to Morocco.

    Stories of how other sporting federations don’t attend key competitions, including qualifiers for the Olympics, are legendary. But the minister couldn’t be bothered for as long as it isn’t football. Need I waste space to enumerate instances where Nigeria was absent from competitions because of lack of entry visas?

    Is it not one of the duties of the ministry to sponsor teams which qualify for international competitions? At these world events, Nigeria’s flag is hoisted, her national anthem sung and the medals’ table has the country’s name, not that of the players. So sir, why can’t the ministry fund their trips? What did the minister do for the table tennis squad when the news came that only Funke Oshonaike was in Morocco to represent Nigeria in the female events? If we had our female players there, they would have finished runners-up in the singles and doubles events at the worst – that is if they don’t win some of the events, like Oshonaike did in the singles?

    Why didn’t the minister forgo going to church on Sunday to appeal to President Muhammadu Buhari to release the cash the ping pongers needed to participate in the competition, like he did before Nigeria’s last game against Zambia in Ndola? We saw how the minister headed for Atlanta to pay the footballers their dues. We also saw how the minister personally supervised the payment of our contingent in Rio and only recently in Zambia. This wouldn’t be the first time that the table tennis contingent would attend competitions as orphans. They virtually paid their way to the Rio 2016 Olympic Games. The pair of Oshonaike and Segun Toriola wanted to address a press conference in Rio to announce their retirement from the game because of this and other reasons. But their federation president Enitan Oshodi prevailed on them not to retire but to help him nurture the younger ones he was introducing to the game. What a genius Oshodi has turned out to be, considering what Oshonaike achieved in Morocco last week by becoming the best female table tennis player in Africa at 42.

    What is clear to us now is that Nigeria doesn’t have a sports calendar, where the minister can plan how funds should be disbursed to contingents heading for international competitions beyond what Dalung and his men read in the media on football. Indeed, it is the duty of the federation to organise tournaments to discover, nurture and expose those discovered to bigger competitions. If there is one federation that has made its mark in terms of organising competitions funded by the corporate world, it is the table tennis federation.

    Dalung wouldn’t say that the table tennis federation’s chieftains have not done their beat like he does with football. He must therefore apologise to the players, their officials and the coaches for the humiliation that he has subjected them to since he became minister, like he did to the footballers in Rio.

    Had Nigeria organised an Olympic Games’ fundraising event before the multisport event in Rio, there would still have been cash left for the table tennis contingent. Let me inform the minister that our players earned points which would help them to qualify for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games from the tournament in Morocco. This is the hallmark of sports- forward looking and highly dynamic. It has such terminologies like wild card meant for borderline players and achievers in the games. What it also means is that there would be a lot of competitions leading to bigger ones like the Olympics.

    Now that the table tennis, basketball and boxing federations’ chieftains have shown that they can prosecute their programmes with corporate sponsorship, it behooves on the minister to make these three sports pivotal in our quest to excel at the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo. It should start today. After all, the three sports were at the Rio Olympics.

    It isn’t enough for the minister to doff his hat for Oshodi. Rather, the minister should sit with him to see how past sponsors of the game can return, with assurances that their cash won’t be misappropriated, now that they have credible members.

    We can use table tennis, basketball and boxing (the Lagos Boxing Hall of Fame project) for the pilot schemes to lure the corporate world to support sports. Subventions from the government to these three bodies could be increased. It could also include not sending cash to non-functional federations, which should kick their bumps to start their programmes.

    The Algerians are talking

    The media are awash with quotes from the Algerians promising the Super Eagles a tough time in Uyo next Saturday. Such mind games help the fans to storm the stadium to watch the match. They have acknowledged the depth-in-strength of our stars just as they think we are beatable inside the Nest of Champions Stadium.

    We aren’t expecting the Algerians to clap for us in Uyo. It is for this reason that we plead with our players to report to the team’s Abuja camp, so that the coaches would have more days to prepare them for the tie.

    This idea of our players sneaking into Nigeria, only to report to camp two days to the game is unacceptable. They were granted permission to head straight to the camp, not their homes. Thank God the coaches have asked them to report in Abuja. Surprised? The players lied about connecting flights from Lagos to Uyo, which forced them to report late. I wonder what they would tell the coaches now. They could either fly straight to Abuja from Europe or to Lagos. The flights that take off to the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) from Lagos are uncountable.

    Again, we need to plead with our players not to fill the hotel rooms with their guests who distract them. They don’t accommodate guests in the hotels where their European clubs camp. Why do they exhibit such attitude here? Our players should be told that Nigeria’s flag must be hoisted in Russia in 2018. We have the players to help achieve that objective. Anyone who isn’t ready to play by the camp rules can excuse us.

    Going for World Cup tournaments should be our birthright in Africa. It should be a stroll in the park, given our players’ exploits in Europe and the Diaspora.

    Ambode’s bull’s eye

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode’s decision to open the gates at the Teslim Balogun Stadium was a bull’s eye shot. It showed that the governor understood the essence of such a cup final.

    Large turnout of spectators at the stands helps the corporate world to identify their products and services with such human activities. The bill boards and the inner perimeters of the playing pitch should have advertorials that would further convince the big companies to advertise, knowing that for 90 minutes they would enjoy international attention in the media.

    Corporate firms always ask what is in it for them if they splash their cash. I’m excited that one of the teams (IfeanyiUbah FC) would be wearing West Ham FC of England’s colours as enshrined in the deal struck by the two parties. I wish Nasarawa FC players could also be clad in a Nigerian firm’s shirt. It could have also formed a talking point for the neutrals at the stands in deciding which of the two teams to support.

    May the better side win the trophy and represent us well at the continental level next year. Take a bow, Akinwunmi Ambode for the wisdom in throwing open the gates at the stadium. Globally, the country’s FA Cup games are the biggest and the oldest. The people cherish watching them because of their tendency for upsets. It is in the FA Cup that minnows shock the giants. And Nigeria’s FA Cup game between Nasarawa FC and IfeanyiUbah FC epitomises this.

    Ambode’s decision should propel the NFF to pick good referees for the game and ensure that the television coverage is world class, such that viewers at home are shown the fans celebrating at the stands, not just focusing on the personalities at the State Box.

    The NFF security committee members must ensure that the gates are locked once the stadium is full. Latecomers can be encouraged to head for the National Stadium, Surulere complex, which is opposite the Teslim Balogun Stadium to watch big screens inside the premises. Effort must be made to ensure that the gates are flung open with 20 minutes to the end of the game to avoid any stampede.

    Thank God the two teams are not the traditional ones with immense followership. So, their fans won’t be fanatical. They also won’t cause any confusion when either of them loses the trophy at dusk today. It is a breath of fresh air having new teams in the finals. I hope that they give the fans the value for their money.

  • Merchants of Niger Delta

    Couldn’t the Niger Delta elders have found a more dignified way to expose their vanity, and culpability in the region’s crisis? On Tuesday a sizeable number of them, including traditional rulers, chiefs and state governors, tabled before President Muhammadu Buhari in Abuja 16 conditions for peace in the Niger Delta.

    Conditions for peace? Yes. The region has been unsettled almost as soon as the colonial government struck crude oil there in the late 50s. There were agitations but none could compare to the large-scale militancy that engulfed the area and threatened the rest of the country as was witnessed during the brief reign of former President Umaru Yar’Adua. And nothing of the sort reared its head again until President Buhari took office. Oil facilities have been blown up, reducing the country production to about a third of its capacity and further hurting the economy in the face of the global oil prices slump. For a country whose mainstay is crude oil, President Buhari has had his back against the wall. He needs peace in the Niger Delta. The region’s militants know the president’s predicament, and so do the elders who turned up at Aso Villa on November 1 with their demands.

    What are those demands? For space constraints, only a few will be mentioned here. They insist that the amnesty granted ex-militants during the Yar’Adua era be reviewed to include a “robust exit strategy”, one that will have the former fighters firmly settled into newly acquired skilled jobs before cutting off the amnesty stipends tap. They equally want the region demilitarised and the Ogoni cleanup speeded up, while other communities are also rid of pollutants.

    The Niger Delta elders also want the East-West Road completed and contracts for security surveillance and protection of oil and gas infrastructure awarded to communities rather than individuals. They equally want international oil firms’ administrative and operational headquarters back in the region. They demand power supply and oil wells as well.

    Some of the demands are in fact reasonable; no one, for instance, can quarrel with the push to suck crude toxins off the Niger Delta environment. Hundreds of millions of crude oil barrels spilled in the region have hurt its bio-diverse ecosystem, significantly affecting flora and fauna, its rich variety of crops and agricultural trees as well as its freshwater fish. The delta’s endowed mangrove swamps, its fresh waters and lowland rainforests are under incremental assault, and constantly degraded, needing urgent and comprehensive remedial action.

    Most of the elders’ demands are neither here nor there, a number of them sufficiently childish and may be nothing more than a smokescreen for their mercantilist fancies. Take the amnesty matter. Why was it not an issue during the five years of President Goodluck Jonathan who succeeded President Yar’Adua who, in fact, pardoned the fighters? What do the elders mean by “a robust exit strategy”? Have they conveniently forgotten that the Jonathan administration said the amnesty programme would be wound down before its tenure ended? Why bother President Buhari about it?

    On Ogoni mop-up, President Buhari should be praised, not bullied, and only encouraged, not cajoled, to extend the cleanup to other Niger Delta communities. The East-West Road has been toyed with for years. Why should it become one of President Buhari’s cardinal sins? The elders say they want Niger Delta communities, rather than individuals, to be awarded contracts for surveillance and protection of oil and gas infrastructure. Just how do they determine who gets how much of the contract cash? And who actually does the job? Or how far they will go in the creeks, the swamps, the high seas or the forbidden forests to secure the pipes and other facilities? Will the money not end up in the deep pockets of the so-called leaders, as it always does? It is laughable to demand the relocation of oil firms’ headquarters back to the region when everyone knows why they moved them out in the first place.

    The elders demand oil wells. Perhaps, that’s what they crave most, not the development of the region. How hard did they fight for the region’s growth when Dr Jonathan, an Ijaw, was in power? After the meeting with President Buhari, one-time federal commissioner Edwin Clark gloated       about speaking for the militants, being their fathers, as he put it, but he seemed to have glossed over the fact that he and his co-travellers could be accused of taking sides and exonerating the militants, while heaping all the blame on the Buhari administration, if not squarely on President Buhari himself. As elders and fathers, why could they not prevail on their militant sons to shelve the violence option? Don’t the elders know that sabotage accounts for 20 per cent of oil spills in the delta?

    Chief Clark said the “dialogue was key”, giving the impression that the elders had the militants under control, but a day after, an oil facility near Warri was blown up.

    One day the elders will be required to prove their leadership bona fides. Have they ever held their governors to account? Have they made the case for exploiting other equally rich endowments outside oil? Have they agitated for anything other oil money? No. Mercantilism wouldn’t let them.

  • Corruption, terrorism and stability

    There  is no  doubt  that the DSS raid  of  judges  residences  and the reaction of the National Judicial Commission  that the buck stops on its table in terms of  the disciplining  of  judges have  thrown  some  spanners  in the works of the war on corruption by the Buhari  Administration. It  is my  considered  view  that both  the government  and  the NJC have the  best  interest  of  Nigerians  at  heart  on   this   matter. Except  that  in  this case Nigerians  think that the  government is moving in the right direction  in  fighting corruption  tooth  and nail  while the NJC  paints the sorry  picture of an  institution closing  the stable  doors after  the horses  have bolted.

    Let  me  state clearly  that  I think  that Nigeria’s  war  on corruption  and terrorism  will  not end  very  soon  and indeed  may  be expensive  and almost  unbearable in terms of  distractions  and the resistance  of  the corrupt brigade which is rich  and mighty, but  both  wars  have reached  a point  of  no return and  can  not  now,  or   ever   be  abandoned. I say  this in spite  of  the rebuttal of the former President  Goodluck Jonathan in  far away Oxford  that  it  is unreasonable  to say  and probe his  former DSA for stealing 2.1bn  dollars  when  they  purchased military hardware  during  his tenure and  he asked  for  all  Nigerians to  wait  for the court  cases of  those  who took the arms  money  to  know the truth  of  the  matter. In this  instance  however,  and although  on  a different matter,   the views of  the ex President  seem  to  tally with the  logic  and rationale of  the NJC  with  regard  to the  raid  and  arrest  of  judges  and the tackling of  corruption  amongst  members  of the Nigerian  judiciary.

    All the same  on  the global  scene there are wars on  terrorism  and  corruption    and   reactions   going on  with  such  fury  and  passion that make them  a threat to  global  peace  and  stability.  Definitely  I see the withdrawal of S. Africa  and Gambia   from  the  International  Criminal  Court  – _ ICC  –  as  part  of the  challenges  facing the war  on  corruption. The excuse  of  both  nations was  that  the ICC  has  focused on  African  nations but  that  is a lie as Serb  leaders  who  killed Bosnia Hercegovina  Muslims during  the war  that   followed  the break up of  Yugoslavia  were tried  successfully  for  their  crimes  and jailed as a  deterrence  to  world  leaders  who  use their power illegally  and with  impunity  while in  office.  For  now  President  Jacob  Zuma  is facing corruption  charges over the use of  public  funds to renovate  his country  house  and he may  have railroaded  S Africa’s withdrawal  to  save his neck  from prosecution by  the court when  he leaves office  eventually. The  President of Gambia  has ruled his nation with an iron hand  for  decades and is a well  known dictator  who has  used the withdrawal  to  preempt  his  bei ng brought  to  book  for  his well  known  illicit  methods of silencing  the opposition  while in  office. To  me  the issue of   withdrawal of S Africa  and Gambia  stemmed  from  the guilty conscience  of  nation’s  leaders and  the   de facto power they  wield  as  the  government  of  the day.

    It  is in that  light  again  that  I look  at  the US  Presidetial  elections and  the tag  of ‘Crooked Hillary’ and ‘nasty woman’ that  Donald  Trump  the Republican  Presidential  candidate has inflicted on Hillary  Clinton, the Democratic  Party’s  candidate. To  Trump’s  supporters Trump is running  against  a very  corrupt Washington establishment that panders  to  Wall  Street  and dances  to the whims and caprices of bankers and  hedge  funds  managers  and does not  have the interest  of the  common  people at heart. Even  though  the polls  in  the main  media show Hillary  in the lead even  such  media agree that large crowds  have  been  turning  out at  Trump’s  rallies  in  spite of his sexual  harassment  charges and  rough  utterances  in the past  on  women.

    Aside  from  this   large  turnout  which  has prompted  even  Hillary  to call on her   supporters  to  come out  and vote on  November 8, the  issue  of Hillary’s use  of  her phone for  both  official  and private duties when  she was Secretary  of  State  has  generated serious  concern  and has become a major  campaign outcry against  her  by  Donald  Trump. The  fact  that the FBI  which  investigated  her on  the matter described  her  action  ‘as extremely  careless  ‘while  not  asking that she be prosecuted  has  also made the situation  a major  selling point of the Trump campaign  that she has a flawed  sense  of  judgement. As   well   as a signal  that   she is a liar as  she  denied  not knowing the mark for classified  documents  but  still  went on to delete  30000  of  the e-mails. My  contention here  is that if  Hillary  had  not  been  the candidate of the ruling party in the US backed by  the incumbent  president  who  has boasted that  Trump is unfit and will  not  be president, Hillary  will  be facing prosecution for deep  security  breaches over her e -mails instead  of  campaigning  as she is doing now to  be the next  US  president.  That  however has  simply  showed  the power of  incumbency  as the Democratic  Party  is the de facto party in  government. Whether  it is using that authority correctly or  lawfully  is a matter  of debate  to  be settled in a  court of law on  another  day. For  now,  both the Democratic  Party and the lame duck president of  the US have  had  their way  and  Hillary  is contesting  to be the next President of  the US.

    Similarly,  as  a  Russian armada rustles  through  EU  waters  headed  for  the Mediterranean  purportedly to  give naval  support  to  Russian  forces  propping  up  the  Assad  regime in  Syria,  one  can    easily  see  the bloody  emblem of  terrorism   and the guile  and  deceit  of  corruption  on  display.  The  Russian  fleet  going to  Syria gives  a potent  sign of  the failure  of  diplomacy as well  as the collapse  of  the Obama foreign  policy  on which  Hillary  Clinton is campaigning.  Quite  defiantly  the  Russians have said Assad  who the US  wanted out  of the  way  before  any  peace  talks  will only  go  over their  dead bodies and this fleet  has given   military  muscle to  that. The timing is crucial  especially  as the US  is  holding  its presidential elections  in which  the Obama Administration literally wants  to succeed itself through Hillary on November 8 . Surely  if the Russians precipitate  a foreign  crisis or war in the  Middle  East then  the third  world  war  may come before Hillary  takes  office  and not  after,  like Donald  Trump  had  alarmingly said this  week. Anyway  the timing of the war against  ISIS by  the Russians and the movement  of  ships to the Mediterranea_n  should  not be viewed  like an  isolated event  by  the US  government  and people if they  love their democracy  as I think  they  do.

    On  the Nigerian  home front   the lesson to  learn   from  all  these  is simple. Government  matters  in  dealing with  corruption  and terrorism. It  is the government  of  the  day  that  deals decisively  with  the issues at stake and the rule  of law  flows  from  that direction.  After  all,  as the basic definition of politics says – Politics is   who  gets what, when  and how. That  should  be the answer of  this Administration  to both the NJC  and the former  President. Just  like  Hillary  is  contesting and S Africa is telling the  ICC to  go to  hell, the  Nigerian  government  holds  the  ace  and    should  call    the shots, in the way  the rule of law  can proceed from  the prosecution of  judges  as well as the trial  of anybody in any arms of  government. That  really  is  the  essence of the oversight function  of  the  government  of  the day, de  facto  and of course  de jure. Once  again  long live the Federal  Republic  of Nigeria.

  • Good night Odegwa Imadebelo

    Forgive me dear reader, for beginning this piece with a special tribute to a departed sister. She deserves this because she was a gem. She was part of the Ojeikeres. We all loved her as eptimomised by the comments from everyone in my family, when I broke the late news of her demise.

    Whenever Odegwa was around, you knew from the gate. Her voice was unmistakable. She had too much energy (boisterous). She wanted to do things with the speed of light. For Odegwa, nothing was impossible.

    I hate (yes hate) reading the last two inside pages in most newspapers, ironically so. These pages should contain sports stories, which is my beat as a journalist. They usually don’t – no thanks to advertorials. A few times, my hand plays a trick on me. I end up flipping through my newspapers, most mornings, until one odd advertorial stings me like a bee.

    I end up jumping out of the bed to pick up my pair of glasses to see if what I have read is true. I read through such bad news repeatedly, praying that the name is just a coincidence not somebody I know. Nine out of 10 of such wild goose chases end up being a lost soul I had seen decades ago.

    So it was on Monday, when I was reading thorough The Guardian. I shouted. I recognised the face of Odegwa Imadebelo Imoisili. She hadn’t changed. The difference from the picture was her sliver eye glasses. I wept. Words like “impossible” rushed out of my mouth as I pondered why Odegwa. But that appears to be the hallmark of death – taking away the best.

    Writing about Odegwa hurts. She was my mother’s favourite. She was respectful, taking over any job she found my departed mother doing. Odegwa was my younger sister’s (Ronke’s) friend. But she blended well with everyone. A bookworm, she read all the time. And my late mother loved her for that. She was a brilliant girl.

    I thought I was putting a stale story in our family’s whatsapp platform when I wrote “Ronke, Odegwa is dead. What happened to her? Was she ill?” It took a while for any of my siblings to reply. I was shocked; very much unlike them. But I drove out of Lekki on Monday morning heading for Silverbird Television for a sports show, only to see my sister’s jeep heading towards me. I wasn’t shocked but surprised because it was quite unlike her.

    My younger sister, Aimalohi flagged me down, her eyes wide open in shock as she asked: “What happened to Odegwa?” Words failed me. I tried to reply but my voice also failed. I took the copy of The Guardian and showed her Odegwa’s picture. I couldn’t look at Aimalohi, I quietly drove off. All I heard her say was “I will go and buy my copy to find out if it is true.”

    Our 85-year-old dad wrote about Odegwa: “Terrible. I knew her. May her soul rest in peace, Amen. Even Odegwa’s favourite, Ejemai, said about her death: “So sad. May her soul rest in peace, Amen.” Ronke was distraught. She kept asking “What happened to Odegwa?” Such tributes and prayers are all that we owe her. We fervently pray for the repose of her soul. And pray that the good Lord grants Odegwa’s soul eternal rest.

    Good night Odegwa. You were a gem. You took charge wherever you were. You are gone but your good work speaks for you. It is well with your soul.

    Odegwa died on September 30 in Abuja and her remains were buried yesterday in Igueben, Edo State. Rock in your casket, Odegwa Imadebelo Imiosili.

     

    Thank you, Rohr

    I’m an advocate of foreign coaches (the good ones) simply because they show enough initiative to tell doubters that they know their job. They put their cards on the table from the time of negotiations, such that issues like the selection of players are transparent, making the role of the technical committee otiose. They are team players, knowing where to draw the line between what their employers can contribute to their job and why the former must accept their technical inputs to discussions concerning the Thank you, Rohr

    I’m an advocate of foreign coaches (the good ones) simply because they show enough initiative to tell doubters that they know their job.

    They put their cards on the table from the time of negotiations, such that issues like the selection of players are transparent, making the role of the technical committee otiose. They are team players, knowing where to draw the line between what their employers can contribute to their job and why the former must accept their technical inputs to discussions concerning the team. These rules are embedded in the contract. I challenge any Nigerian coach who has handled the national team, aside from Sunday Oliseh, to show us his contractual papers with the NFF?

    The Nigerian coach “eats” alone. He can’t spare a dime for any third party, not even a lawyer. But he cries loudest when things go awry. The foreign coach heads for the arbitration court at FIFA to seek redress. I hope our coaches learn a bit from this.

    Foreign coaches come in prepared for their jobs. They have the dossier of the players that they need. Their methods are akin to what our players are exposed to in their European clubs. This makes them earn our players’ respect. I look forward to the day a Nigerian coach will do things on conviction, not because agents have spoken to him.

    Nigerian coaches are naïve. They don’t know how to take responsibility. They blame everyone but themselves when the team loses, but shout to the roof top about their tactical savvy when the team wins matches. They complain about the team’s inadequacies after the result of matches.

    Nigerian coaches are all-knowing, with many of them unprepared to manage their big players’ egos, including those who were big stars in their Super Eagles’ days.

    The talk about the inactivity of the NFF technical committee in Rohr’s era is cheap and filled with mischief because our coaches lobby for their employment, without any contractual agreement before, during and after they would have been sacked. Since most of the technical committee members helped them to secure their jobs, they dare not talk. Forget about what they say in the media. It is the reason we keep recycling them, with most of them always jobless and always available for it when any lacuna exists.

    The technical committee members are bystanders now, with Rohr’s team playing well unlike when Nigerian coaches picked all manner of players without stating the parameters for selecting them. The foreign coaches tell you what they want. They are used to working with standards and time lines, hence the visit to Europe by the Eagles manager.

    I walked into the NFF’s secretary’s office on October 10 only to find Rohr, NFF president and few members of the NFF technical department coming out of a meeting. I was introduced to Rohr. He told me all his plans for the Algerian game, 33 days before it. Rohr also told of how he hoped to achieve his plans, one of which the media are awash with – visits to our players in their European clubs. The Nigerian coach would be evasive. He would have said such things like: “Old boy, time still dey now. Make we enjoy the moments of beating Zambia at home first na. Abi make we change winning team?”  Another would have said: “You will hear from the NFF. We only discussed a few things. Old boy wetin make we do? Na today we just dey enter office after we beat Zambia.”

    Penultimate week in this column I wrote about Rohr’s trip to Europe and his plans. I wrote that Rohr wanted to meet with Chelsea’s manager Antonio Conte, Leicester’s boss Claudio Rainieri and Arsenal’s tactician Alex Iwobi. Rohr was particularly disturbed by his captain John Mikel Obi’s bench role at Chelsea. He told this writer in Abuja on October 10 that he would hold a soul-searching session with Conte where he would tell the Italian that he should use Mikel for his team’s youth team’s matches to make him fit. Rohr also told me that his visit to Leicester would be hinged on the need for Ranieri to use Ahmed Musa frequently for him to be fit for Nigeria’s crucial 2018 World Cup qualifiers, with the November 12 cracker against Algeria inside the nest of Champions Stadium in Uyo. For Rohr, Mikel, Musa, Iwobi and Victor Moses must be playing regularly, if Nigeria must qualify for her sixth World Cup appearance in Russia.

    The flipside to Rohr’s current visit to Europe is that many Nigerian coaches have undergone this kind of visit, with tales of how messages left on our players’ telephone answering machines were ignored as if we sent them to make those calls. Their messages back here painted the scenario of our players not committed to national team matches.

    I laughed off such tales, knowing that our coaches could have done better with personal visits to the training sessions of our players’ clubs. Otherwise, they could also watch their matches and seek to meet with their European managers, using the procedure for such an exercise in those clubs. I was tagged a hater of Nigerian coaches. Now we have pictures of Rohr watching Arsenal beat Reading 2-0 at the Emirates Stadium on Tuesday night. Rohr discussed with Arsene Wenger the best position in which Iwobi could function. Wenger discovered Iwobi, making it imperative for the Nigerian manager to rub minds with the Frenchman to help his job with the Eagles. Rohr left the meeting better informed on the positions he could use Iwobi when the need arises. Two thinking heads, they say, are better than one.

    Rohr didn’t restrict his visit to benchwarmers. He visited everyone to show a sense of belonging. He would have used the visit to secure the support of their managers. His discussions with their managers would create the platform for them to see if Rohr has what it takes to handle their boys in between key matches. This visit, if you ask me, has resolved the club versus country imbroglio. Had Rohr undergone this visit before the Zambian game, it would have been difficult for Victor Moses and Isaac Success to dodge the Chipolopolo tie with feigned injuries.

    And this…

    A worker must be paid as at when due. But such a worker must exercise caution in handling issues that arise from delays. Samson Siasia vowed to occupy the Glasshouse if he doesn’t get his five months’ salaries. The media splashed his threat, which was good. But today, Siasia has been paid. He has kept mute, leaving the media in the lurch.

    Perhaps, Siasia would say that disclosing such sensitive information would make him vulnerable to attacks. True. How about the battered image of his employers? Siasia, please show some maturity in this kind of matter.

    I also hope that Siasia doesn’t raise his hands for any Nigerian job in the future because we can’t change. It is an African FA problem. He would still be owed salaries.

  • Hope beyond Chibok

    The girls’ return is as memorable as their abduction was unparalleled. For never in the history of Nigeria or, for that matter, any other country, had over 270 pupils been seized and taken away from their dormitory in one night. And never had any government betrayed such lethargy and lack of character as that of Goodluck Jonathan when the unthinkable did indeed happen on April 14, 2014, a bizarre failing which, as some have pointed out, foreclosed prompt rescue of the girls.

    Nor, it must be said, have Nigerians ever come up against a sect as ambitious and bloodthirsty as Boko Haram, which claimed responsibility for the Chibok abduction. Not that there was nothing as horrifying as the terror gang. In the 1980s, the Maitasine riots shook up the North in a way nothing else did, claiming thousands of lives from Sokoto to Maiduguri, and from Kano to Yola and Bauchi. It may well have been the precursor of Boko Haram, but the Maitasine sect, founded by a Cameroonian Mohammed Marwa nicknamed Maitasine, did not claim territory, hoist a caliphate flag or abduct schoolchildren.

    Penultimate Thursday, two and a half years since the abduction, 21 of the girls returned. They came looking frail and gaunt, their gaze vacant, suggesting that nearly three years at the hands of the militants took not just a physical toll, but probably also left them emotionally and mentally drained.

    Still, it was pure joy having them back. In a matter of days, the girls themselves had started shaking off the gloom, relishing the soothing hands of the vice president’s wife Dolapo Osinbajo, and finding their voices and dance-steps.

    Yet, it was joy amid grief. On Wednesday, the eve of their release, a blast killed eight and injured 15 in Maiduguri, a city which the terror group coveted so much that it hit it so relentlessly.

    That same Wednesday some eight members of the Islamic Movement of Nigeria, also known as the Shia sect, were killed in skirmishes across Kaduna, Katsina and Sokoto during a procession. The Shiites were reportedly attacked by mobs, which seemed to denounce them almost everywhere they turned up. Clearly, more work must be done to curb sectarian violence and reassure everyone that indeed they are free to identify with any religion and are protected to practice it within the confines of the law.

    The girls’ release, brokered by the Swiss government, with some involvement of the Red Cross, triggered some academic concerns. One, did the government swap the girls for some Boko Haram commanders? Two, was money paid to the Islamist group before the girls were freed?

    Both questions are irrelevant, whatever the answer. In hostage situations, both options are routinely applied provided the abducted are freed. Information minister Lai Mohammed said there was no such swap, and that the return of the girls was the product of painstaking work and trust on the side of government and of Boko Haram.

    It sent a huge sigh of relief through the Chibok community. TV footage showed a parent lifting his daughter off the ground in indescribable excitement.

    Finding the girls and bringing them back was a task Dr Jonathan and his government clearly failed to accomplish. They doubted that the girls were taken away in the first place, and when they could no longer doubt, they just did not have the heart for any rescue. Even when they tried to negotiate with Boko Haram, they came up against swindlers and remained clueless till the end.

    The Muhammadu Buhari administration also had some false starts, but it deserves credit for this one. The girls’ rescue happened at a time Boko Haram was factionalised, with a certain Abubakar Shekau being killed several times over. So securing the release of this number of the girls when no one was sure who was in command of the group must be the result of some credible effort.

    The return of the 21 Chibok girls is arguably the biggest thing that has happened to the country, and to the Buhari administration. It must have forced some to revise their positions and conclusions, one of which was that President Buhari promised more than he could deliver. Some also concluded that the girls would have been scattered, possibly across borders, married off or killed, all pointing to hopelessness. But with their return, though assaulted in imaginable and unimaginable ways (in fact, one of the girls returned with a baby), Nigerians can hope for the return of the others.

    The best news of penultimate Thursday also silenced those who said the whole thing was a hoax, a point that was driven home by a relieved Chibok community leader who, alongside his people, was not only troubled by the abduction but also haunted by the fact that some said it did not happen at all.

    Chibok, a little humble town, exploded in joy as the 21 came home. But it was joy that spread beyond its borders, to neighbouring communities all the way to the nation’s capital and across national boundaries. The abduction got the attention of world leaders, each adding their voice to the #BringBackOurGirls campaign. With the release of the 21, those leaders have started voicing their relief, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair being one of the first to speak. Mr Blair said he was happy the 21 have come out, urging that the rest be found and returned too. United States First Lady Michelle Obama would be just as happy as Mr Blair, having emblematised the push for the girls’ return. So should others who, though in vain, nudged Dr Jonathan to secure the Chibok girls’ release.

    Now there is hope that the other girls still in captivity, nearly 200 of them, could return. But, away from abductions, there is also hope that perhaps the unflattering national economy, perhaps President Buhari’s nemesis, could also get a lift and take the wind off the sail of critics who say he is not up to the job.

  • Neither NJC nor DSS

    Neither NJC nor DSS

    Officers and men of the Department of State Services (DSS) involved in the planning and execution of the recent commando-like raid on the residences of seven judges, an operation misleadingly labeled a ‘sting operation’, and which culminated in the arrest of the jurists before  their eventual release on bail, must be thoroughly satisfied with themselves. Their objectives are certainly being achieved beyond expectations. The entire judicial system had long been morally and psychology prostrate, reeling under a debilitating cloud of suspicion, distrust and total erosion of public confidence. That unsavory situation has been gravelly aggravated by the DSS’ chosen mode of operation. Yes, the DSS did not create the problem. The government’s secret police only had to act decisively to combat the ethical putrescence that mortally taints the judiciary. There is no doubt that the discovery of humongous amounts of raw cash in diverse currencies in the residences of the affected judges, an allegation not yet plausibly debunked by any of them, has worsened popular perception of the judiciary and fuelled public antipathy against the institution.

    An incensed public, many of whom are victims of the avarice and venality of the largely unjustifiable affluence of a microscopic minority, will certainly not give a damn if judges accused of sordid corrupt acts are tied to the stakes and summarily shot or guillotined. Due process and adherence to the rule of law in combating graft are vociferously derided as dispensable, time wasting luxuries and ruling class mechanisms cleverly designed to protect, sustain and strengthen corruption. Some of our most cerebral legal minds of undisputed character and integrity openly identify with this intemperate disposition to the rule of law. One of them has emphatically and rightly declared that judicial corruption is tantamount to a crime against humanity. But then, must allegations of judicial corruption not be proven beyond reasonable doubt in courts of competent jurisdiction before a verdict of ‘guilty’ is entered?

    Yes, I identify with the rage of these respected, progressive legal minds against corruption in the supposedly sacrosanct house of justice or anywhere else. As President Buhari has repeatedly said, Nigeria must kill corruption before the ethical cancer consumes the country. But then, Buhari we know. His near saintly asceticism we can testify to.  His moral integrity we can vouch for. Can we say the same thing of some of those shadowy elements who today wield tremendous power at the apex of our coercive agencies of state? What do we know of their antecedents or possible hidden motives or agendas to offer them a blanket cheque of discretionary action given the proven tendency of absolute power to corrupt people who may even have the best of good intentions?

    Let us take the unorthodox action of the DSS in breaking into the residences of allegedly corrupt judges to apprehend and take them into custody albeit briefly as an example. The DSS claims it had to resort to such extreme measures because the National Judicial Council (NJC) failed to act on petitions it sent to the latter on allegations of corruption against the judges. Yet, the NJC has challenged the DSS to publish any petitions against judicial officers forwarded to it by the agency which was not acted on. The NJC has specifically and emphatically stated that it received no complaints or petitions, for instance, against Justices Sylvester Ngwuta and Inyang Okoro of the Supreme Court or Justice Adeniyi Ademola of the Federal High Court all of whom were subjected to degrading and humiliating treatment by the DSS.

    Mr Olanrewaju Suraju of the Civil Society Network against Corruption (CSNAC) has, however, cited several petitions before the NJC, which have been ignored purportedly in a bid to shield corrupt judicial officers. But it would appear that the NJC’s disciplinary powers over judicial officers is not absolute and can only be exercised within stipulated constitutional and regulatory restraints. Thus, the judicial body explains that 45% of the 808 petitions against judicial officers, which it received between April 2000 and October 2016 were disregarded because only the Appeal Court was competent to determine the issues raised in the allegations. But then, what steps did the NJC take to channel these petitions to the Appeal Court to ensure justice was done? The Council was certainly indefensibly derelict in this respect. Even then, in the period under consideration, the judicial body sanctioned 82 judicial officers by reprimand (suspension, caution or warning), recommended 32 to the President or Governors for compulsory retirement another 12 for outright dismissal. It has not been indifferent to judicial misconduct.

    The impression that the NJC must necessarily find in favor of petitions against judicial officers is mistaken and unfounded. Such an assumption makes nonsense of the necessity of due process and the rights of accused persons to fair hearing. For instance, on 26th February, 2016, the NJC received a letter from the DSS requesting administrative and judicial measures including prosecution against Justice Muazu Pindiga for stipulated acts of alleged corruption. The NJC, on 19th April, 2016, wrote the DSS requesting a verifying affidavit in support of the allegations against the judge in compliance with the council’s regulations. When the DSS complied with the request in a letter to the NJC dated 6th May, 2016, the latter set up a Fact Finding Committee made up of Members of the NJC to investigate the allegations against Justice Pindiga. The representatives of the DSS and Justice Mu’a zu Pindiga, as well as their witnesses and counsel appeared and testified before the Committee. Since the allegations against the judge could not be substantiated by oral or documentary evidence, the NJC on 15th July, 2016, exonerated Pindiga. Surely, the constitution does not envisage the NJC to be an unthinking rubber stamp of the DSS or any other organ of the executive. But the question is: in cases where the NJC dismisses allegations against a judicial officer, what other avenues of redress are available to an aggrieved and still unsatisfied petitioner?

    Nothing I have said thus far excuses the insensitive and complacent reaction of the NJC particularly to huge sums of cash discovered in the residences of the affected judges. Indeed, the CJN, Justice Mahmud Mohammed, should have urgently queried the judges to explain the source of the cash haul discovered in their residences. He should not have waited for the rather puerile, pedestrian and self-implicating letters to him by some of the judges under reasonable suspicion. Again, no matter how flawed it perceives the methods of the DSS, the NJC should have immediately suspended the embattled judges until they had cleared their names in a competent court. Of course, the fears of the NJC are understandable. Could this be a precedent for future harassment and intimidation of possibly innocent judicial officers? It is not unthinkable.

    Apparently buoyed by public approbation of the hardly wise even if legally valid action of the DSS, the Federal Government reportedly plans to prosecute the judges through the National Prosecution Council whether or not the NJC suspends them. This can only further strain the relationship between the executive and judicial arms of the government while doing more harm to the already battered image of the latter. At the end of the day, the polity will be the worse for it. There must certainly be a more mature and restrained path to follow. But then, the good thing is that the judiciary has no power to prevent the security agencies from carrying out their constitutional duties even where high judicial officers are involved. But until a coup is successfully executed against the constitution, the security or any other executive agencies cannot also bypass or sidestep the judiciary, which still has the final say in interpreting the law and pronouncing on the guilt or innocence of those accused of infringing it. Entrenched institutional checks and balances should engender mutual respect and cooperation on the part of agencies and arms of government as they perform their functions presumably in pursuit of the common good.

    Re – Justice: The Path Not Taken

    “Please, the ‘crackdown’ as you wrote, has not at all ‘sanitized’ the judiciary. No judge as at this moment has been ‘dislodged’ from the Bench, and none can be dislodged by the DSS. All of the affected Judges up to yesterday were still presiding in their jurisdictions. But for certain, the action of the DSS cannot be faulted legally or otherwise. If the police or any other Security Agency gets a tip of suspected meeting of criminals at  a Maraba Hotel, plotting robbery operation, they are at total liberty to invade that venue at any hour of the day. They cannot wait for a Court permit to do that. Likewise, Judges or any other person suspected of foul play, including President Muhammadu Buhari or Aisha. The right to intervene, to investigate, can never be denied the security agencies. But the outcome of their investigations does also not amount to established fact for dissemination on the pages of newspapers. That can only be the outcome of prosecution and validation by the Courts. We must avoid the infantile Nuhu Ribadu format of screaming “corruption”, and ending up not prosecuting any cases to conclusion. The DSS owes Nigerians and the civilized world a full prosecution to conclusion (not a petition to NJC), with all the charges exhaustively named, of those affected. Otherwise, their action would be reckoned as a charade of the worst kind. There would arise questions like – how come that in Judgements delivered close to a year ago, all of the judges in different Nigerian cities, and involved in unrelated cases, had the same lifestyle of storing bribe cash in their homes long thereafter, etc…”, Sir Chris Ike, Abuja

  • Leaders, politics and personality clashes

    When   in   2001, after   the 9/11 bombing of  the Twin Towers  of  New  York,  former  American President, George Bush, Jr  launched  his war on terrorism and  pursued  Al  Qada  and its  leaders   to  Afghanistan,  some  critics  called  the war,  A Clash  of  Civilisations. 15  years  after,  one can  still  see    that the war  on  terrorism is still  on,    even  though  Bin Laden the Al  Qada  leader  had  been  captured in  Pakistan   and  buried at  sea  somewhere  in the  oceans surrounding Pakistan  by  the  Americans  led  by  President  Barak  Obama, who  regards this and the issue  of  gay rights,  as the outstanding  achievements  of  his administration.

    Surprisingly,  however, a new  and unexpected  war   and    clash has  surfaced  over  the 2016 US  presidential  election  to elect  the  successor  to  President  Barak  Obama   who  is now a lame duck  president but  has clearly handpicked Hillary Clinton his  Secretary  of  State at  the time of  the capture  of  Bin  Laden  as  his preferred   candidate  to  support him. That  choice  perhaps  and the personality  of the candidate  of  the  other  party billionaire  Donald  Trump  of  the  Republican  Party  has  created the most  explosive  and  acrimonious  presidential  campaigns    ever   in  US  politics  and  elections   to  date. The   disagreements  and   divergent  world views  of the two  presidential  candidates  have reached a  depth  of  mutual  contempt  such that  they cannot  stick  each  other’s guts and  that  is the  vintage  clash  of personalities  never  seen  before in modern US  politics  and  campaign.

    There  have been  three  presidential  debates  so  far  characterized  by  personal  abuses  and insults  on  both  sides.  Hillary  said  Trump  is  unfit  to  be president  and  Trump  promised  or swore  literally to jail  Hillary if he becomes  president. Worse  still   Russia’s  alleged  interference in the elections,  a claim  by  the US security  apparatus and supported  by  Hillary  and the US  president,  became  a hotly  contested issue in  the  debate  with  Donald  Trump claiming  he  had  never  met the Russian  president  Vladmir  Putin  before.   He  however  insisted  that both  Hillary  and  her  boss   the  US  President  have  earned  the  disrespect  of  the  Russian  president  by their  poor  leadership  on  global  diplomacy  and his  presidency  will  restore  such  respect  if  he wins  the US  presidential  election on  November  8.

    Clearly  the  US presidential  debates  of 2016  have  shown  a remarkable   and  unprecedented  clash  of  personalities of  the  two  contestants and  their   language   and  bitter  utterances  have  done  little  to cover  up  that  fact. That  sordid  development  and its  import  on  global  politics  and  diplomacy  form  the kernel  of  our  discussion  today.  It  is  a discussion  that  will  take us  back  and  forth  in  terms  of its evolution  and  discovery  and how such   personality  clashes can  make or  mar  social  and political  institutions   in  terms   of  their  integrity  and   the just  pursuit  of    set  societal   developmental  goals  and  objectives. In  this regard  one  can  say  that  such  personality clashes  amongst  world  leaders  is not  a monopoly  of  the American  political   system.

    Let  me state  clearly    then  that  I   even   see  a personality  clash in  the way  that  Nigeria’s  political  system  has evolved so  far  in  the  Buhari   Administration  given   the way our   constitutional  separation  of  powers   is   being  practiced nowadays.  To  me  this development  started  in  the Senate , skyrocketed into the House  of  Reps   and  has landed  like  the  Eagle  in  the  judiciary with  the arrest  of  judges including those  of  the Supreme   Court  by  the  DSS recently. It  is a  development that  has crystalised   into  a dog  does  not  eat  dog  mentality  in  which legislators  have closed  ranks against  the government  and the rest  of  us.  Similarly, the  judiciary,  cheered on  by  lawyers , SANs   and the NJC,  has  developed, with  alacrity, a new  found  espirit    de corps against  the government  of  the day in  the  name  of  the rule  of  law   which  seem  to  have  a different  meaning when  judges  are arrested   allegedly    with  loads of currencies  in  their  residences.

    Under  such litigious  political  conditions it is difficult  for  the dividends  of  democracy   to  thrive as the three  centres  of  power  go their  separate ways  in  protecting  self  interests   that polarize  society, threaten  social  cohesion  and overheat  the political  system  unnecessarily. Surprisingly  though  there  was   a silver  lining  albeit  in the domestic  front of  Nigeria’s  first  family. The first  lady  showed  her  mettle  on  the  home front  and raised alarm  that  some  people  had  hijacked  political  control from  her husband, the  president  of  the republic. It  was  a revealing information and timely   too. It was  no  false  alarm  and even  though the president  doused  the domestic personality  clash  in the executive arm  of power  as  no  more  than  a kitchen or bedroom  issue, the First Lady has shown  her  personality and  pedigree.   She    has   shown  that  given  the opportunity,   she   can   play   effortlessly,  in  Nigerian  politics,  the role  of  a Margret Thatcher  or even  that  of  her  husband’s  hostess in Germany this week, German  Chancellor  Angela Merkel. I  really  mean  that  and salute  the first  lady  for  her timely  candour and unexpected  outburst. It  is good  for  our sick  political  system  and  lukewarm democracy.

    Going  back  to  the  US  ongoing  presidential  campaigns, it  is necessary  to  look at  the consequences  of this bitter  personality  clash between  the two  presidential  candidates on  the US political  system  now  and in  the future. The  fact  that   Donald  Trump  has alleged  that  the election  is rigged  has  already  raised  issues on  the  integrity of the electoral  system  in the US  which  is  the leading promoter  and practitioner  of  democracy  in the world.  Secondly  the fact  that Trump  has  not agreed  to acknowledge  and  accept  the results  of  the elections has  put  the  political  stability  and pedigree  of  US democracy and  politics in  jeopardy. Thirdly  and  a  far  greater  danger  was  the statement  on  the internet  that  said –  thanks to the electronic voting system  in  the US thousands  of  Russian  hackers  can  now have  opportunities  to influence  or  sabotage the democratic  electoral  system  of  the US. That  is definitely  alarming  and  the US  security  apparatus  should  be on  their  toes. This  is because  there  is  no smoke  without  fire.

     Indeed,  the origin  of  the Hillary- Trump  personality  clash  was the personality  clash  between  Obama and  Putin  and this goes  back  to the days when  the US put  sanctions in place against  Russian  officials  close  to Putin,   over  the invasion  of  Crimea  in Ukraine  sometime ago. The  bank  accounts  of such  officials  overseas  were  frozen  and Putin  accused  the US government  of  trying  to  topple  his government  then. This US presidential  election  can  be viewed  as Putin’s   notion  of  pay back  time  for  the Americans. Which,  anyway,   is  not  a funny  proposition  for  the stability  or  peace  of  mind  of  the US  or  its well  nurtured  political  and   democratic  system  of  government.

    The  white  tie  dinner in  New  York  this week   at  which  the two  candidates spoke  and were  expected  to  poke  fun  at  each  other  even  saw  the two  at  their belligerent  best even  in  terms of  humor.  The only edifying thing was the loud   laughter  they  had at each other’s  expense.  At  least  they  showed they  could  laugh at each  other’s  foibles and  eccentricities in  public. Hillary  showed she has such  a beautiful  smile  even   when  the   joke   was  on  her and  Trump  showed  he  could  look  like  a mischievous school  boy  when  joking. Which  is so  different  from the image of  the grouchy  all  American bear  and  bully  that     he  has    unwittingly  created  for  himself in this 2016 presidential  elections. Anyway  the ball is in the court of the US  electorate  although  the dinner  showed  the human side of  the two candidates  more than  the three debates and  that   too matters  in how  Americans  will  cast  their  votes  on November 8. Once  again  long  live the Federal  Republic  of  Nigeria.

  • Fixing our football

    Constriction twines me like a snake every time I listen to Sports Minister Solomon Dalung’s panacea to take the NFF out of its financial crises. He gives the impression that he doesn’t know the problem with the federation. Yet, when untoward things about the body happen in his presence, he glosses over them as if it isn’t his duty to give resolve such problems.

    We are tired of this sickening setting where a few people are insisting on gate-crashing into our football administration, after losing elections. It is about time these troublemakers faced the wrath of the law. If they have a matter in court, it is important that they let it run its course. All the sides to the matter have the right to state their cases no matter how long it takes.

    Dalung’s simplistic approach to the Jos court drama, NFF and NPFL chieftains’ dilemma leaves much to be desired. Dalung did well to ensure that NPFL Chairman Shehu Dikko wasn’t arrested, shortly after arriving in the country from Zambia at midnight of October 9 outside the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport’s lounge in Abuja. But I have been waiting to read his reaction to what happened that night. I thought Dalung should have raised the matter at the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting, considering the grave danger which our foreign legion faced that night, especially when one of the operatives released a shot into the air. It was scary to say the least.

    A team couldn’t have left this country, secured a victory on away soil, only for some people to lay ambush to arrest one of the NPFL chiefs. What was the hurry about the arrest? It behoves of Dalung to let us know the government’s position on the matter. This idea of the NPFL sending stories to the media as fallouts of the saga isn’t the best.

    Minister sir, Nigeria is one of the few countries whose soccer is measured by the contributions of players who ply their trade outside here. Elsewhere, countries measure how well the domestic league players perform on the international platforms through their dominance in the national teams. It is so bad in Nigeria that we don’t see anything wrong with inviting Nigeria-born lads in Europe to play in our age-grade teams. This isn’t fair. We need to develop the game at the grassroots. It can only happen when there is stability in the administration of the domestic league.

    The domestic league champions hardly compete with their counterparts in Africa. Now that we have some semblance of growth in the domestic league, the minister should ensure that interlopers stay away from the local scene.

    The minister needs to put his foot down on those who should run our football across all the levels as demanded by FIFA statutes. About 210 countries have applied themselves to the tenets of the FIFA statutes. It is shameful that Nigeria, easily the most talented soccer nation in the world (no hyperbole) has refused to appreciate the importance of the game in shaping people’s perception of the country. If we fix our soccer, other sports will thrive. But soccer can’t get its desired results when everyone wants to administer it without complying with the laid down rules and regulations.

    The FIFA president was here. He related with those who won elections supervised by FIFA. So, knowing those who run soccer shouldn’t be a difficult task for the minister.

    The minister would write his name in gold if he could persuade the National Assembly to hasten the process of making NFF independent of government funding. In other climes rich in soccer talents like Nigeria, the administration of the game is not tied to government funding.

    I’m sure that if President Muhammadu Buhari removes NFF from the Sports Ministry’s apron and tag it with the office of the vice president, for instance, there won’t be all this noise of heading to courts by people who administered the game in the past without good results. We repeat the mistakes of the past yet we expect to change our rankings in the world. Not possible.

    I was excited reading the tweets from Senate Sports Committee Chairman Obinna Ogba that moves had begun to ensure that NFF funds itself. That will be the day. What this means is that those clueless administrators will be forced to quit the scene.

    Senator Ogba’s Wednesday tweets on states: “Yesterday, several Tweets on the Senate’s Official handle quoted the Chairman, Senate Sports Committee Senator Obinna Ogba propose an amendment to A Bill for an Act to Establish the National Football Association Act CAP N110 LFN 2004 and enact the Nigeria Football Federation and for other matters connected therewith, 2016 (SB.154). The Bill is to reduce the government’s spending and perhaps propose a law that will incorporate the FA and encourage greater participation of Corporate Nigeria.”

    Closing the debate, Senate President Bukola Saraki said: “In line with best practice, those of us who follow football progress will see the evidence of funding problems. It is important that we improve the funding problems as seen in Olympics and reduce government interference.”

    The Bill surely comes with some exciting buzz to it but without the finer details, like all else that has transpired in the last couple of years in Nigeria football, to be skeptical is safe.

    Going to Ndola in Zambia offered me the best opportunity to study Dalung closely to find out if he easily gets excited when faced with microphones or that he loves hearing his voice. The latter impression is the case as he enjoys talking when he ought to be observing. The mood inside the aircraft after beating Zambia at home opened up the flanks of most quiet people. It was good watching the minister in a relaxed mood, showing that he is after all human. It is on this score that I want to plead with the minister to copy some of the things we saw in Ndola, particularly the relationship between the Zambia FA chieftains and their sports minister.

    The Zambians and Nigerians resident in that country welcomed us into the country as kings. Movement was swift. No hiccups. We settled down easily. The Zambians were warm. The only unfriendly aspect of the trip was the weather. Even the Zambians complained. Otherwise, they shocked us with their hospitality.

    Reading through the papers in the hotel, the talk was uniform – beat Nigeria. No conflict talks between the minister and ZIFA chiefs. Few hours before the game between Nigeria and Zambia, the Zambia FA boss and the minister drove into the Eagles hotel to fast track our passage to the stadium.

    It was seamless. I was shocked that their president could drive into the stadium without blocking where he would drive through. The president arrived early for the game. He took the kick-off and watched the game till the end. He left the stadium, satisfied that the Chipololopolo fought a good fight against a very young and talented Nigerian side. From the blast of the whistle signaling the opening of the game, I noticed that Zambians thought they could beat us. They rallied their boys. Even with two goals down late in the first half, their fans, who were clad in their country’s colours raised, their voices to propel their players.

    The deafening noise that accompanied the Zambian goal was unparallel. It almost brought down the stadium. The young and old danced to their native tunes. It was a sight to behold. But it showed too that the people see Chipololopo as the symbol of their existence. But they were not violent in appreciating their players. Chipolopolo lost, but the fans still swarmed around their favourites. I wished our fans could replicate this kind of love to our players, irrespective of results. Sport is for friendship, not war. I hope our fans will learn from the Zambians by supporting the Super Eagles during their matches, not matter the scoreline. Even if it doesn’t favour the team, embrace them and salute them for their gallantry. But is it sport to win all games? I don’t think so.

    Thursday’s news that Nigeria moved four places upwards to 60th is commendable. It should be sustained by beating Algeria in Uyo on November 12. However, Nigeria’s 11th placing in Africa is preposterous, given our abundance of talents.

    The minister should support the NFF to get a World Cup budget for the federation, now that our players are insisting on being paid in dollars. I won’t blame them because they earn their wages in foreign currencies, with many of them not interested in running local accounts when they hardly live here.

    Moses and Success

    It is difficult to placate Victor Moses and Isaac Success for missing the October 9 cracker between Zambia and Nigeria in Ndola. Nigeria secured a nail-biting 2-1 victory. But the result would have been better had the team’s manager Gernot Rohr had Moses and Success on the bench. A good team is as good as the quality of players on its bench. Having Moses and Success in Ndola would have been a bigger boost for the Eagles.

    It is true that players are susceptible to injuries. But where it appears that any player feigns an injury to dodge a game, it is only fair that such lads are punished no matter whose ox is gored.

    Success was the MVP in Watford’s 1-0 away win over Middleborough FC. Moses was a delight to watch, scoring Chelsea’s third goal in the Blues’ 3-0 whiplash of defending Barclays English Premier League champions Leicester City.

    The way Moses and Success played for their European teams put a big lie on their claim of not being able to play for Nigeria, six days earlier. It would, therefore, be unfair to those who also play in Europe if both men walk into Nigeria’s next game against Algeria inside the Nest of Champions Stadium in Uyo, no matter how important the game is to us. We mustn’t compromise discipline on the altar of sentiments. We shouldn’t have sacred cows in the Eagles. Moses and Success can return for the Cameroon game next year, not this one against Algeria, please. Besides, shouldn’t the doctrine of not changing a winning side that coaches advocate for stay?

  • Justice: The path not taken

    This column has always been of the firm view that the President Muhammadu Buhari administration should adhere strictly by the tenets of the rule of law in prosecuting its commendable war against corruption.Was last weekend’s multiple raids on the residences of seven high court judges and their arrest by functionaries of the Department of State Services (DSS) in accordance with the dictates of the law particularly given the rather odd timing of the extensive operation, which took place in the dead of night, and the somewhat crude manner it was carried out in many cases?

    It appears that the DSS had carefully done its homework and ensured no law was violated. The security operatives had valid search warrants. Relevant provisions of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) specifically allow security agencies to effect lawful arrests at any time including weekends and public holidays. The law further empowers the security agencies to gain forceful entry into any premises in the pursuit of their mission if they face resistance. High court judges at any level do notenjoy constitutional immunity from arrest.

    The case of the senior judicial officers affected has not been helped by the humongous cash found in the residences of at least three of the judges as well as  the properties such as palatial buildings and exotic cars reportedly traced to some of them and their relations. Since their release on bail in self-recognition, not one of the judges has come out to fault the claims of the DSS.

    The DSS could certainly have carried out its operation in a tidier, subtler and less dramatic way with a view to protecting the corporate image and integrity of the judiciary. Perhaps, however, the rot and decay in the country’s justice administration system at all levels has degenerated so badly that only this kind of unprecedented shock therapy can jolt the system back to the path of sanity. As the British academic, jurist and politician, Lord James Bryce (1838-1922), vividlyasserted: “Law is respected and supported when it is treated as the shield of innocence and the impartial guardian of every private civil rights…if the law be dishonestly administered, the salt has lost its flavour, if it be weakly or fitfully enforced, the guarantees of order fail…if the lamp of justice goes out in darkness, how great is the darkness”.

    There is no doubt that sheer corruption and crass partisanship on the part of officers of the law including judges, senior lawyers and occupants of the critical office of Attorney General have contributed significantly to undermining the cause of justice and promoting instability, bad governance and underdevelopment in post-colonial Nigeria. For instance, in the immediate post-independence era, the coalition government of the Northern Peoples Congress (NPC) and the National Council of Nigerian Citizens (NCNC) at the centre was uncomfortable with the vigorous opposition provided by the Action Group (AG) particularly the strident, rigorous and persistent criticism both within and outside the country of the Federal Government’s policies by the Leader of the opposition, Chief Obafemi Awolowo.

    Top NPC and NCNC politicians did not hide their desire to dislodge the Action Group in the South West at all costs and permanently incapacitate Awolowo politically. This explains the curious motion moved in the federal House of Representatives on Tuesday, June 29, 1960, by Honourable F.C. Ogbalu of the NCNC from Awka North Federal Constituency. The legislator sought “an authoritative statement as to the possibility of the Federal Government dissolving a Regional House if they proved recalcitrant or if they prove dangerous to the interests of the federation”. The legislator would also “like to know if the Federal Government has the power to set up a caretaker committee should such a Regional Government become obsolete”.

    Responding, the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation, Dr Teslim O. Elias, a member of the NCNC, adumbrated extensively on different aspects of the independence constitution, particularly Section 65, as well as the constitution of India and concluded that “Where the constitutional machinery of a Region has completely broken down and you have this two-thirds majority in Parliament, I cannot see how the Federal Government of Nigeria can stand aside and allow public disorder to take place in any part of the Federation”.In other words, Elias lent his considerable legal learning and weight to legitimise the power of the Federal Government to take over a Regional Government.

    Accusing Elias of allowing politics to colour his legal judgement, Chief Awolowo, himself a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN)said: “So under our constitution, the position, therefore, in sum, Mr Speaker, is that where there is a state of war or emergency, the Federal Government is free to enact laws on matters which are vested in the Regional Governments. To enact laws, that is what it says. It only has concurrent jurisdiction, that is all. But our constitution does not provide that the Federal Government can sack or dismiss any Regional Government nor can it dismiss any legislature and any opinion to the contrary is heretical and grossly prejudiced”.

    Of course, Awolowo and the opposition could have their say. The Federal Government and their traitorous collaborators in the West had their way with the active collaboration of the judiciary. Capitalizing on a contrived crisis, on the floor of the Western House of Assembly, the Prime Minister, Alhaji Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, declared a state of emergency, sacked the government of the region and imposed a sole administrator on the Western Region. It did not matter that law and order had not broken down in any part of the region including the capital, Ibadan.

    But then, the NPC/NCNC hawks were not finished with Awo. He was put on trial for treasonable felony. On September 11, 1963, Justice George Sowemimo found Awolowo guilty and sentenced him to ten years imprisonment after a most farcical and theatrical trial. As Olufemi Ogunsanwo writes in his engrossing biography of Awolowo “Justice Sowemimo did not add to his reputation by flying out soon afterward to meet with the Sardauna of Sokoto in Kaduna after delivering his judgement in Lagos for an undisclosed mission”.

    A Supreme Court panel headed by the rabidly partisan and pro-NPC Chief Justice of the Federation, Sir Adetokunbo  Ademola, dismissed Awolowo’s appeal against his conviction although Justice Louis Mbanefo gave a dissenting judgement quashing the allegations against the opposition leader. Mbanefo contended that the allegations against Awolowo by the prosecution’s star witness, Dr Sanya Onabamiro were not corroborated by any other witness. Thereafter, the Western region judiciary became deeply complicit in conferring dubious legitimacy on regional elections blatantly rigged to impose an unpopular government on a people who rose up in arms against blatant injustice.

     As Wole Soyinka records in his classic, ‘The Man Died’, the Military Governor of the West after the 1966 coup, Colonel Adekunle Fajuyi told the writer: “You know, he was here, sitting just where you are, in that very chair. I sent for him.  I was very anxious to meet the man who was responsible for all the chaos in the west. When people no longer believe that they can obtain justice in the courts then they must take the law in their hands. So, I take the view that the Chief Justice is personally responsible for all the death and destruction which took place here”.

    If persons in critical judicial offices had taken the path of truth, integrity and commitment to justice, it is unlikely that the first republic would have collapsed in the circumstances that it did. As Ogunsanwo argues, the uprising in the West, the coups and counter coups of 1966 and 1967, the pogrom in the North and ultimately descent to civil war could probably have been averted.

    In the 1979 transition elections to the Second Republic, Chief Justice Atanda Fatai Williams’ Supreme Court, legitimised President Shehu Shagari’s election by ruling that the constitutional requirement of two thirds of 19 states means twelve and two thirds of a thirteenth state rather than 13 states even though Justice Kayode Eso gave a luminous dissenting judgement. The apex court curiously ruled that the majority judgement should not be cited as a precedent in future cases! We can also recall the role that judicial compromise, corruption and lack of integrity played in facilitating and seeking to legitimate the unjust annulment of the June 12, 1993, presidential election with serious consequences for national stability and cohesion.

    Even though many commendable judicial decisions have been given in this dispensation since 1999, the judiciary is popularly perceived as having descended to unprecedented depths of avarice and venality with justice often on sale to the highest bidder. Yet, the truth is that the judiciary is not the sole institution to blame in this regard. Rather, all sectors of the society – the executive, legislature, Civil Society Organizations, the media, the academia, religious bodies, the civil service, the military, intelligence services etc. – are all sucked into the cess pit of suffocating corruption.

    However, if the judiciary is cleansed of this debilitating virus, it is the institution best placed to shine the torch of justice to help lead us all out of the current gross ethical darkness to a new, elevated moral order. And here lies the significance of the ongoing unprecedented crackdown on judicial corruption by the DSS. It is unlikely, for instance, that after this, we will ever witness again the kind of bizarre unanimous judicial legitimation at all levels of the indefensible electoral impunity that has imposed an apparently legal but hardly legitimate political status quo onKogi State by a shadowy but powerful cabal within the APC. We may yet have cause to be grateful toAlhajiLawal Daura, Director General of the DSS.