Category: Saturday

  • Imf and World Bank as  patrons of poverty in Africa?

    Imf and World Bank as patrons of poverty in Africa?

    The straightforward thesis of the slim but powerful new book published last year by the Lagos State University (LASU) – based political economist, Dr Sylvester Odion Akhaine, is vividly captured by its graphic title – ‘Patrons of Poverty: IMF/World Bank and Africa’s Problems’. Published in Germany by LAMBERT Academic Publishing, the book runs into a little over a hundred pages divided into five simple and readable but tightly structured chapters. The thrust of his argument is that in our globalised world characterised by information technology revolutions and capital flows volatility, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank, through their policies and activities, “have continuously relegated African economies to the backwaters”.

    He contends that Africa’s protracted crisis of perennial underdevelopment can only be properly explicated and understood within the historical purview of the tragic incidences of slavery, colonialism and contemporary neo-colonialism as represented particularly by the policies imposed on the continent by hegemonic International Financial Institutions (IFI) like the IMF and the World Bank.

    Many would contend that this is a tired and tortured argument that treads the worn path earlier charted by such radical scholars as Walter Rodney, Bade Onimode, Samir Amin, Claude Ake, Adebayo Olukoshi and scores of other radically inclined African intellectuals. Those who hold this view say that it only constitutes an attempt by Africans to evade responsibility for the plight of their blighted continent over five decades after the termination of formal colonial rule. Yet, the veracity of this position cannot be credibly refuted. It is impossible to comprehend Africa’s dire, desperate and dismal present without reference to her traumatic, disturbed and turbulent past.

    In a press statement issued at the Action Group Federal Headquarters, Lagos, on 28th June, 1961, the foremost Nigerian statesman and politician, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, made this point with characteristic pungency. “From the beginning of recorded history” he declared, “the black man has been the most conspicuous butt of all manner of inhuman treatment. In the palaces of the Arabian Potentates – both in the Middle East and in North Africa – he was degraded and enslaved. When the so-called ‘Dark Continent of Africa’ was discovered the European marauders hunted him down like a common beast, captured him, and sold him into slavery in the Americas and the West Indies. The era of trading in, and of enforcing the services of black slaves, terminated only to be replaced by the European Powers, which initiated it with a legalized form of political and economic enslavement of the entire peoples of the Continent of Africa…For more than sixty years thereafter, black Africa suffered under the grinding heels of alien conquerors and settlers”.

    Dr Akhaine has done Africans a great service by simplifying and making more accessible to a wider audience the ideas of earlier seminal scholars on the crisis of poverty and underdevelopment in Africa. As he puts it “The continent has no independent policies; it is continuously guided by transferred policies of leading global powers that are desirous of maintaining vertical relations of dominance between them and the dominant countries”.  In chapter two of his book, the author undertakes an overview of the current pathetic and dehumanising position of Africa in the global political economy. He traces the roots of underdevelopment in Africa to the brutal eras of slavery and colonialism as well as the continuation by conniving African leadership elite that pursue pro-imperialist policies, which only lead to further submergence of the continent in the miry clay of underdevelopment.

    In this regard, Akhaine disagrees vehemently with the school of thought, which states that the slave trade was actually of benefit to Africa. According to this school of thought, slavery resulted in increased prosperity of such pre-colonial states as Dahomey, Benin and Oyo and that slavery served as a form of population control to avoid famine. In addition to these, the pro-slave trade school of thought believes that apart from helping to introduce into Africa new crops such as maize and cassava, slavery rescued the slave victims from poverty in Africa to more affluent lives in European and American destinations.  Countering these racially jaundiced perspectives, Akhaine points out that the slave trade, which lasted approximately three centuries, actually had a negative and catastrophic effect on population growth in Africa, deprived the continent of the more productive and vigorous sections of their populations while also causing a severe dislocation of Africa’s local economies as a result of intra-African slavery wars.

    In the same vein, Akhaine contends, colonialism had a deleterious and retardation effect on African economies. The colonial administration forced Africans to produce so called cash crops as well as mine mineral resources for the benefit of the colonial economy. This led to a distortion and disarticulation of African economies, a distortion they are yet to recover from till date. Again, colonialism discouraged capital goods production such as equipment and machinery in the colonies thus inhibiting the capacity of these colonies for meaningful domestic capital formation.

    In this chapter, Akhaine asks why and at what stage Africa became synonymous with chronic dependency and pervasive underdevelopment. He points out that Africa was in reality economically self-sufficient before the continent’s encounter with the forces of slavery and colonialism. In his words “the present crop of African leaders need to know that the continent’s conditions were not always as it is; its people once dominated and tamed their environment; they never had unemployment; they produced what they consumed and had food surpluses and that in the context of the prevailing global constraints these feats are still possible”.

    Not only was Africa self-sufficient in food production in contrast to today’s dependency, the continent had taken impressive strides in industries such as cloth-making, iron smelting and soap making among others. These products, he says, had as far back as the 17th century, penetrated European markets especially the Iberian Peninsula.  It was thus the brutal encounter with slavery and colonial imperialism that effectively arrested the self-reliant economic and technological development of Africa.

    Of course, Dr Akhaine does not shy away from confronting the roles which corrupt and tyrannical post-colonial African leadership elite – Idi Amin, Mobutu Sese Soko, Marcia Nguema, Sani Abacha, Robert Mugabe etc – played in looting, exploiting and perpetrating the worst human rights atrocities in their countries. He, however, makes the point that the emergence and perpetuation in power of this perverse post-colonial leadership could not be divorced from the machinations of the colonial imperialists. This point is buttressed by the implication of the advanced imperial countries in the undermining and elimination of patriotic and progressive African leaders such as Kwame Nkrumah, Patrice Lumumba, Samora Machel, Thomas Sankara or Murtala Muhammed who were genuinely committed to the liberation of the continent and the actualisation of her potentials.

  • Why Eagles – always?

    Why Eagles – always?

    Soccer unites Nigerians. It is the opium of the people. Families are divided among clubs, not so with the Nigerian teams.  Surprisingly, the followership of the female national teams is more. The distinguishing aspect of the women game is that is less troublesome – irrespective of the results. Indeed, other teams lose without qualms. It is considered normal- the usual soccer slang “you win some, lose some.” Case closed.

    For the Super Eagles, everything stops in the country when the team plays. Eagles’ players are icons. They play for some of the best teams in the world. Their popularity is awesome. It is more when they are outside the country. You marvel watching other nationals show so much excitement towards any Nigerian on match day with many calling them Nwankwo Kanu, Austin Okocha, Peter Rufai etc. Even our departed stars’ such as the late Rashidi Yekini’s exploits are celebrated. You see more of the excitement on the faces of our hosts in foreign lands. Talking to Nigerians on the streets, at hotels, malls and at airport lounges brings a lot of fulfillment to these foreigners that you imagine how they would conduct themselves when they eventually see our stars such as Kanu. Such a spectacle is better imagined than expressed in words.  Such is the popularity of the beautiful game, which knows no bound, creed and tribe. And so when the Eagles lose games, informed analyses are made, largely targeted at the administration in the Glasshouse chieftains, leaving the players and coaches free of any blame.

    Other national teams across the gender give us joy despite the pittance paid to the players and coaches. Today, we are at the U-17 World Cup for women. We beat Brazil in a warm-up game ahead of the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. We are U-17 World Cup champions (back-to-back) for the boys, just as we are the African Champions in the U-20 category for boys. Nigeria’s senior female team are 37th in the world, despite their recent decline because we have refused to replace the ageing one among them. Didn’t the NFF supervise these feats?

    Many would argue that Sunday Oliseh cannibalised the Eagles, leading to the exit of goalkeeper Vincent Enyeama and star striker Emmanuel Emenike. Oliseh’s era, no doubt, derailed the Eagles so much so that it took Ahmed Musa’s good thinking of relinquishing the captain’s arm band for Mikel to bring peace, love and team spirit back to the Eagles. And it explains why Mikel was marvelous in the last two matches.

    Oliseh ran away from this defeat. We may blame NFF for picking him. But Oliseh came highly recommended by FIFA and CAF technical experts at a time many Nigerians denounced the thought of bringing in a foreign manager. Need I say we have had enough from our USA’94 stars as it concerns coaching the Super Eagles? I digress! Even if we had won this game – from an objective analysis of it – you cannot be inspired, you cannot be inspired by it.”

    One isn’t saying that NFF and its workings are perfect. NFF chiefs made conscious attempts at getting the Eagles a conducive environment to perform. Even the players acknowledge the new dawn in their affairs. Why they have refused to excel when it matters remains a puzzle. The Eagles raised objections when they were paid their draw allowances in naira. Can you beat that? Of course, NFF rallied to get their bonuses in dollar bills. I hope they haven’t infringed on one of the rules of this administration.

    Eagles enjoy limitless benefits, which other national teams watch with envy. Yet the Eagles are the ones who cause us much heartaches and disappointments.

    The loss on Tuesday sank into the players after the game. Many of them sat perplexed on the pitch. The journey back to Nigeria from the stadium was quiet. Mikel couldn’t travel with the team and you won’t blame him. He gave his best. Perhaps, if our players had shown the type of zeal, zest and enthusiasm we saw during the dying minutes of the game in Alexandria, the story would have been different.

    Our players must change their attitude towards the national teams. The age-grade players do very well, largely because they are not stars. Some of them who progress to the senior teams copy the destructive old habits of the regular stars, such that it is difficult to pinpoint where the problems of the team lie. When we win matches, we don’t blame NFF, but when we fumble, the barbs are out.

    If we must excel in big tournaments at the senior level, our coaches must learn how to cultivate the habit of sharing the compartments of their teams to tested technocrats or coaches for proper post-match analysis.

    Egypt’s coach Hector Cuper has an 11-man technical backroom staff who sit after games to discuss matches and plan for the next game. Cuper is running his big mouth now, but television footages during the game inside the stadium showed a man in awe, wondering what the Nigerians would come up with next. They never really did, hence this boasting session by the coach. Will you blame him?

    “I am very happy that we are on the verge of qualification to the African Cup of Nations. I am especially proud of managing this group of players who fought on the pitch for 90 minutes to secure the win for Egypt,” Cuper told the press after the match.

    “I am happy with my players’ fighting spirit. They did their best since they love their national team a lot.”

    “We played very well in the first half. The second half was not as good as the first, but that normally happens when you come against a tough opponent like Nigeria,” he continued.

    “We threatened the Nigerian goal with many counter-attacks, but were unlucky to finish them. We also could have easily conceded a goal during the match. We should all be happy now that we are on the verge of qualification, although we know that we made a lot of mistakes that we will work on fixing in the upcoming period,” Cuper said.

    So, Siasia et al, what were the Egyptians’ flaws? How well did our counter strategies work? This is the new trend in coaching, which our coaches must imbibe.

    When the South African referee issued the first yellow card to Oghenekaro Etebo, I told those close to me in the stadium that Siasia shouldn’t allow him return for the second half; otherwise, he would be shown the second card or be brutalised because the Egyptians had no answer to Etebo’s flawless displays in the midfield. When the referee flashed the second yellow card at Aminu Umar, I concluded that nobody needed to tell Siasia that those two battlers in our midfield should be replaced. A talented Eagles side like the one we paraded in Alexandria could afford that luxury, given the fact that their replacements would have been Kelechi Iheanacho and Alex Iwobi. They both play for Manchester City and Arsenal in the Barclays English Premier League. Need I talk about their abilities?

    I’m sure that Siasia won’t have any difficulty picking his squad for the Rio 2016 Olympics, not with the remarkable way Mikel, Moses and Ighalo played. The trio should be selected as our overaged players. Mikel’s, Moses’ and Ighalo’s inclusion would give the Dream Team VI the depth to achieve another Olympic Games’ gold medal feat in soccer like, it happened in Atlanta in 1996.

    … And this

    This isn’t funny at all. It isn’t also an alibi for the defeat Nigeria suffered in the hands of the Pharaohs in Alexandria. It is an attempt to look at the other side of defeat.

    If we had got the results that we desired for the qualification ticket of the 2017 Africa Cup of Nations holding in Gabon, it would have been a different ball game. No excuses for our loss to Egypt because the Egyptian security operatives were battle-ready for the urchins. The Egyptian Falcons, the name at the back of the plain clothed operatives and their counterparts who were dressed in bullet proof vests, gave Nigerians at the stands hope in the event of the fans becoming unruly.

    When the Egyptians scored, the contents of plastic bottles were poured on us but the operatives stood up to the irresponsible act. Where I sat down, I counted 48 combatant men, who though young knew their onions. It was evident that the urchins knew their pedigree in the business of crowd violence. They kept their cool.

    One must commend the Egyptian government for the level of security provided within and outside the stadium, although the way in which the crowd dispersed from the premises was tardy and raised doubts if the operatives could have responded, had Nigeria beaten Egypt.

    But my hunches tell me that the operatives knew their job. They could have ushered us onto the pitch and ensured that the entire place was cleared before our departure.

  • Change, global terrorism and security

    Literature on the concept  of change   show  that change management is  an oxymoron   like   ‘ holy war ‘ as  change cannot be managed. The  experts thus  concluded that the best  way to confront change is  to be prepared for any eventualities  by  continually improving one’s  self  or  organization. Change  they  concluded can be faced by learning, growth  and  development. They  illustrate  this historically with the example of American President  Abraham  Lincoln who  fought the American  Civil War to free slaves  and became one of the most successful  and  impactful  US  president after a life dogged  by  failures and personal  difficulties  and mishaps. Lincoln famously  took change and difficulties  he faced with the  famous  statement – I will  prepare  myself and my time must  come.

    It  is from the perspective of this Lincolnian  statement  that I look  at  the topic  of today in terms  of the events that happened this week  which  we  will  focus on. The  first  is the killing of over 35  people in the Airport and Metro in Brussels the capital of Belgium  and that of the  European  Union and  the statement issued  by Turkey  that  it warned Belgium  when it deported  one of the suicide bombers involved when  he was deported  in July  last year.  Yet the man found his way to  Belgium to kill  innocent people  this week.

    The  second  was the visit  of the US  President  Barak  Obama to Cuba,  a very  historic  one for  that matter and  the import of his speech to  an audience in  Cuba  during which  he tried  to sell American market  economy, human  rights  and gay  rights to  the people  of  Cuba. The  third  is the reported  kidnapping of over 100  women  and  some girls by  Boko  Haram  in  Adamawa state  and the reported suspicion of people in the area  that some security  officials could be aiding  and abetting the terrorists  presumably  for a fee . The  fourth  is the reported Memorandum  of Understanding signed by the Lagos  state  government with Kebbi  state to buy rice and other agricultural  produce from that state  and sell in  Lagos  state  which  has  the largest  market  for such produce not only  in  Nigeria but in the entire ECOWAS  region. The  fifth  is the statement credited to the GMD   of  NNPC   Dr  Ibe  Kachikwu  that  the fuel  queues  giving Nigerians  nightmares nowadays  will  not  go away  till  May 2016, a statement that has fuelled a mad  rush  for fuel, hoarding,  and escalated  the black  market price of the scarce commodity. Let  us now  examine  how  the statement credited to Lincoln  could  be  applicable  in all  the situations  and events identified  this week.

    First  let  us look  at the intelligence gaffe that made the Belgians  to ignore the Turkish  warning. Was  it ought of incompetence, ignorance or arrogance or all of these?. Obviously  the Belgians could have downgraded the Turkish  warning because  Turkey  is not yet a full EU  member which has proved to be a costly  and  murderous mistake. Turkey  has  always  been  at the heart of Europe even though it is Muslim. But  it is not an inferior nation  to any EU  member including Belgium. Turkey founded by Kemal  Ataturk   in  1923  was an offspring of the Ottoman Empire that ruled  Europe  for centuries  and its security and intelligence institutions  are efficient especially  in fishing out the sort of people that the Belgians ignored  to their own peril  last week.  So  for  the Belgians they did not prepared  themselves to face change like Lincoln  did  and the result  was the bomb  disaster  that claimed innocent lives this week. The  same  can  be said  of the kidnapping of the  women in  Adamawa  state by  Boko  Haram  and the fears expressed  on intelligence  lapses or sabotage  by those expected  to protect fellow  Nigerians. The  government must  investigate  and bring such intelligence or field  officials  to  book.  They  are treacherous  to say the least  as they  are running  with  the hunted  and  shooting  with the hunters  and benefitting from the awful  carnage   This should  not be allowed  as it is the duty of the Nigerian  government to  protect  all Nigerians no  matter where  they live from any insurgency  especially that of the imfamous  and blood thirsty  Boko  Haram.  It  is not enough to say  terrorism  is a global   problem   not peculiar   to  Nigeria  and sit back. Our  intelligence  community  must  be on their toes to foil Boko  Haram notoriety  and mayhem and not only be reacting to them when  the harm  was done or  closing the stable doors when  the horses  have bolted  from the.

    Next,  let  us look  at the Obama  visit  to the US and its import  for world  peace and  security  especially  at this  point  in time. Obviously  President  Obama would  have prepared  himself  immensely for the Cuban visit like Abraham  Lincoln  thought and  Lincoln is  indeed Obama’s  favorite  US  president,  but  has  Obama’s time  come on this visit ? I  honestly  think  the answer is no which is unfortunate but I will  show why.  First except  for  making history as the first US president to visit Havana  in decades the visit is simply ceremonial  and does not create any economic opportunities  for the US  or  even  Cuban  citizens who view  it with  suspicion . I watched  the US president  trying to compare  the  American way of life – free speech, human  and  gay rights  to a socialist  nation where the gap between  the rich and poor is shorter  and where  the basics of life  -education, shelter and employment  are available and affordable  without the luxuries associated with American  life and  I really  felt  the US president lost his way to  Havana  and should  quickly  return  to the White  House in  Washington. He  dared  to incite Cuban  youths  and bravely too by referring to President Ronald  Reagan’s  speech  in Berlin  –  Tear  this  wall  down- at the Berlin Wall  which was believed to have been part  of the reasons  for the collapse of the Cold  War  but he asked Cuban youths  to build  new things rather  than  tear anything down.  I am  sure the wily old  man of Cuba and unrepentant socialist Fidel  Castro will  be wondering if American  presidents ever learnt anything new  in their dealings with Cuba except  to think of it as part  of the US backyard,  a notion that the US president’s  speech  has cemented  even more than  anything else.

     Anyway,   Cuban  youths  are  well educated and know what Obama said  in his Cairo  speech  that led to Tahrir Square  revolution  in   Cairo    Egypt  in 2011 and know how  the  same US president   abandoned  Egyptian youths  and their new  found  democracy  to their plight when  the  Army came to wipe them out and take over.

    In  addition  President  Obama is a lame duck  president under whose  watch someone like Donald  Trump  has  become  a front runner  for the presidential  candidacy  of the Republican  Party in the US. Trump  has  already thrown the typical Trump verbal  bomb by laughing at Obama that the Cuban president  was not on hand to receive him in Cuba which is true.  More  importantly Trump  has said  Obama is  a security  risk in the way  he has handled ISIS and  the  fact  that the Brussels  bombing happened when  Obama was  on a visit to Cuba  has not helped  matters as it portrayed US  president as fiddling in Cuba  like the ancient  Roman  Emperor  Nero  while Rome and  this time Europe  and Brussels were  burning which is not a good analogy at all.

    Lastly  we look at  the  efforts  of the  Lagos state  government to create food  security  and the NNPC attempt  at transparency that  backfired.  Actually  both  are good preparations except  that one achieved its objective and the other backfired which  means its time has  not really come. In  the case of Lagos state the state can be said to be following the moral  of the Chinese statement which said – Dig  a well before you  are  thirsty. This is because  food insecurity  puts  Lagos state in a perilous security situation as the recent  Mile 12 riots showed  that even security  forces can  be partisan when  it  comes to  food  matters. So  one  can salute the effort of the Lagos state  government  which  would create jobs for Lagos   youths  and unleash  a new breed  of Ibile rice  distributors  to  ginger the busy  economy  of the state.

    In  the case  of the NNPC MD’s  forecast  of the truth  of regularization of the availability of  fuel; the former  Mobil executive probably thought he was  in the  US. He  was  even reported to have said he was not a magician to produce fuel  from  the blues which has led to the Unions calling for his head or resignation . Obviously  he  should  know  better now  or  go for a refresher course with a former Mobil executive now the ultimate Nigerian  politician and former governor of Lagos state, Asiwaju Dr Bola Ahmed Tinubu on  how  to play  politics in Nigeria. Unavailability  of fuel  can lead to social  upheaval and political  instability  and insecurity  and the GMD of NNPC   must  look  before  he leaps and also  know that  a stitch  in time saves nine especially  when tempers  are  frayed at the fuel  stations  where  Nigerians spend the better  part  of their days looking for fuel  to  take them  to work  to eke out   a precarious  experience even  as they expect a change for the better. Again  long live the Federal  Republic  of Nigeria.

  • One day for our own butchers

    On Thursday one of the world’s most notorious bloodthirsty figures was sent to jail for 40 years. Twenty-one years after the Bosnian war in which he played no small part, Radovan Karadzic evaded arrest for 13 years, and even after his capture in 2008 and arraignment, it took nothing less than eight years to find him guilty. The wheels of justice ground slowly, even too slowly, at least from the perspectives of his victims, but, at last, the man who was dubbed the Butcher of Bosnia will now pay for his crimes.

    In 1995, during the war, in a district called Srebrenica, Mr Karadzic, president of Bosnia at the time, was accused of inspiring the killing of some 7,500 Bosnian Muslims and Bosnian Croats, a campaign that was said to be “aimed at killing every able-bodied male”.

    Yet, that was just one of the many crimes the butcher was accused and convicted of. Justice was indeed long in coming.

    In our own country, and in the face of dizzying daily revelations of atrocious financial conducts, one can say that indeed we do have our own butchers and that one day they too will pay for their crimes.

    On Tuesday it was reported that some of our erstwhile leaders who served as governors, ministers and in other capacities in the Dr Goodluck Jonathan administration and possibly others before, managed to stash away a cool $200b in the United Arab Emirates. Apart from the cash, there were mansions said to be owned in Dubai, not by the rich Arabs whose land it is, but by our own leaders. One ex-minister said to be a front for a former a First Lady, allegedly owns two houses there. Another reportedly lays claim to malls.

    Two of President Muhammadu Buhari’s ministers have reportedly jetted off to repatriate the cash and officially impound the properties believed to be illegally acquired. By the way, one of the President’s often lampooned foreign trips is said to have paved the way for the discovery and expected recovery. Thanks to the new order and the heat brought on by the Buhari Presidency pact with the UAE, some of those with dodgy cash and questionable properties in Dubai have starting moving out to such presumed safer places as Singapore, Casablanca and even islands belonging to the United Kingdom. We also hear that Dubai parties hosted by such Nigerians have since thinned down.

    One week before the Dubai report, our front pages chilled us with some N3.2 trillion said to have been kept away from the federal coffers by authorities in the national oil firm NNPC. That report evoked memories of a certain former governor of the Central Bank who essentially revealed that the federal oil corporation was up to some of the dirtiest financial practices Nigerians had known since we struck the liquid gold in the late 50s. The Central Bank chief, much harassed at the time for his guts, has since gone on to mount a befitting throne.

    A little over a week ago, word was out, again, that a memo from the Presidential Villa authorised the release of some N3.145 billion allegedly to be split among chieftains of the Peoples Democratic Party and the Goodluck Support Group. A Permanent Secretary generated that memo, it was learnt, but it is unclear who directed it to be generated.

    Some of those implicated in these shady deals have been charged to court. More will sooner or later have their day in court. Possibly, some will be discharged and acquitted. But it is clear that people we had in positions of authority set out from day one to fleece the country, suck it dry of its lifeblood and leave it to stagger on its bones until it can stagger no more. They had no more love for this country than Mr Karadzic had for Bosnian Muslims and their Croat compatriots. Mr Karadzic played a major role in a war that consumed over 100,000 souls and led to the breakup of the former Yugoslavia.

    The 70-year-old butcher was found guilty of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity, among others, and was put away for 40 years. What verdict will justice hand our own butchers, whose brazen and systematic approach to greed and criminality must have wiped out only the good Lord knows how many souls? How many of our troops were cut down by better-equipped Boko Haram fighters? How many doctors fled to other countries because they could no longer watch patients die for lack of drugs in the hospitals? Can we quantify the degradation of our school infrastructure as a result of diverted funds?

    Mr Karadzic had guts and fooled the security community with his cucumber-cool composure. He dressed smart, sporting some cool suits and was a master of disguise. When he was running away from the law, it was said that he still managed to travel under a fake name to Italy to watch Serie A matches. A fugitive in Belgrade, he worked at a private clinic, claiming to be an alternative medicine practitioner and treating patients for sexual problems and disorders, again, under a false name. A man who usually sported a clean-shaven face and  hair longer than John Kerry’s, Mr Karadzic was once seen in a full-blown grey beard, his full hair tied into a pony tail, a visage doctored by a pair of professor’s reading glasses.

    A man who studied psychiatry and neurotic disorders and depression, caused his people such mental problems and disorders. Mr Karadzic also seemed to mock his people and his patients claiming to be a passionate physician with answers to their private worries.

    Mr Karadzic got away with butchery for so long. But in the end, all the tricks in the book could not shield him from the day of reckoning. Our own butchers have been quite smart too, affecting in their day to be the best we could find. And we couldn’t tell the difference. But like the Butcher of Bosnia, their day will come too.

  • Mikel, forgive Mourinho

    John Mikel Obi is easily Nigeria’s biggest football ambassador in Europe. He ranks next to Nwankwo Kanu in terms of being the most decorated Nigerian footballer. Like Kanu, Mikel has won the UEFA Champions League diadem. Kanu and George Finidi danced on the UEFA Champions League winners’ dais with Ajax FC of Amsterdam in 1995. Mikel has won the Barclays English Premier League trophy, like Papilo. The Chelsea legend – yes, Mikel is, given what he has achieved for the star-studded English side – has won the English FA Cup like Kanu, the difference being that Papilo has won the trophy in two clubs (Arsenal FC and Portsmouth FC).

    Whereas Kanu can point at his Atlanta’96 Olympic Games’ soccer gold medal, which Mikel doesn’t have, the Chelsea midfield pearl can eye his gold medal earned for winning the Europa League title in 2013, as one trophy Kanu hasn’t touched. But Kanu towers over Mikel, having won the Africa Footballer of the Year diadem twice. The closest that Mikel has got was the runners-up slot two years ago, which many African football purists felt belonged to the Nigerian, not Ivory Coast’s Captain Yaya Toure. I don’t want to join the debate because my views on this award and its owners, the Confederation of Africa Football (CAF), are known to readers of this column.

    Mikel ranks as one of the most successful players at Chelsea, having survived many chops from different managers in the last 10 years. But could he have achieved these feats if Mourinho had turned his back on him in those troublesome times at Chelsea, especially after his injury spells?

    Mikel had better watch his utterances; otherwise, the next coach could ease him out, having read some of the unpleasant things ascribed to the Nigerian about Mourinho. It is easy for Mikel to say that he would join the Chinese train. Yet, he needs to break more records at Chelsea. Indeed, he is being tipped to replace John Terry as Chelsea’s captain (that will be the day), only if the new manager Conte wants to retain Mikel next season.

    I’m not trying to compare Mikel’s feats with Kanu’s. Impossible. The parallel here is that Kanu left clubs without rancour. He also didn’t rain abuses on his former managers, including those who refused to sign him after they thought he had passed his prime in the game. Today, most European managers have high regards for Kanu. They relate with him. Television stations tumble over themselves to have him face their cameras, not forgetting to recount his glorious moments in the game.

    The same cannot be said of Mikel, who despite playing for just Chelsea has refused to allow his former coach Mourinho rest. Mikel seizes every interview to drag Mourinho on the turf as if he is the only player who had a rough time with the Special One. True, Mikel has the right to express his feelings, but he must consider how the subject of his message. Is Mikel not worried that Mourinho hasn’t dignified his rants with a response? Mourinho has shown maturity. Yet it is expedient to remind Mikel of those glorious days when Mourinho preferred a rookie Nigerian to tested and trusted European internationals.

    After all, not once did Mourinho list Mikel in the transfer window beyond the media speculations, which were unfounded the moment a new season began. What does Mikel expect those who Mourinho sold to other clubs to say? They have moved on and allowed Mourinho to stew in his mess of unemployment. It is alright for Mikel to be unperturbed by his rants. But it is instructive to remind him that some of his comments may return to haunt him, especially if he chooses to earn a living doing football or sports business.

    Mourinho is a European brand. His mates like him, even though they detest his guts and antics. Perhaps, Mikel should in his quiet times ask what he would say to Mourinho if they find themselves inside the elevator in a shopping mall. Would he expect Mourinho to respond, if he greets him? That’s if he has the courage to do so. Mikel may have resolved to do other things outside sports. But, a cordial relationship with everyone he meets in the course of playing the game is the best testimonial for the Mikel brand, going forward.

    Mikel can write his memoirs later and dedicate as many chapters to Mourinho. But he must be wary of libelous statements which can be held against him. True, there is the culture of players/managers’ spat and manager vs manager crossing of swords among the Europeans. But it is alien to Africans, except Mikel wants to be the exception to the culture of respect for elders.

    It will be cruel for Mikel to remember only the bad side of his stay at Chelsea in the Mourinho years. I need to remind Mikel of his early days at Chelsea when the Portuguese took particular

    interest in the Nigerian by getting someone to talk him out of his juvenile acts. I wonder what Mikel would have written about Mourinho had he been sacked by the Portuguese in those periods when he lost form. Mikel owes a greater percentage of his achievements to Mourinho. And he needs to be told so.

     

    Nigerian coaches must improve

    The beautiful thing about coaching for the soccer tactician is the result he secures from matches. Hence the dictum that the coach is as good as his/her last result. One is therefore excited to ask Nigerians coaches what they have done with the domestic clubs in the Confederation of Africa Football (CAF’s) inter clubs’ competitions.

    It is true that most Nigerian teams recruit too many players and even coaches whenever they secure the qualification tickets. But would you blame them when such outfits win mostly league games played at home – please don’t ask me how they do it? But the management members know the details and opt for new handlers and players who will deliver the results without heartaches. What these management members lose sight of is that teams need to blend through quality matches. This is a major flaw more so in a country where the domestic league’s calendar is not in sync with what operates overseas.

    Maybe the Nigerian coaches’ body can stop its members from taking others’ jobs simply because they want to prosecute continental matches? On the hindsight, this kind of decision could be laughable because the clubs have the right to hire and fire people that are surplus to requirement or those who don’t have the prerequisite knowledge to meet their dreams. It happens elsewhere.

    I laugh when people make cases for Nigerian coaches to handle the Super Eagles. The only significant qualification that some of these coaches have is that they played the game at the highest level. Their Curriculum Vitae as coaches are for kindergartens and I wonder how such teachers (sorry coaches) can impact anything new to established professionals, such as John Mikel Obi, Alex Iwobi, Ahmed Musa, Victor Moses, Odion Ighalo et al.

    Our players are better exposed than our coaches. In fact, most Nigerian coaches won’t dare sit on the bench if FIFA and CAF decide to enforce the rule where only certificated coaches sit on the reserve bench like we have in Europe.  But they won’t because all fingers are not equal, especially with developing countries, such as ours. Put simply, there is no way a Standard Three teacher can teach a PHD student. It is a misnomer. And that is how Nigerian coaches are to our better exposed players.

    In the past, we had coaches, such as Adegboye Onigbinde, Alabi Aissen, Patrick Ekeji, Shuiabu Amodu, James Peters, the late Willy Bazuaye et al, head to Germany and other European countries for coaching courses. Little wonder these coaches, especially Onigbinde and Amodu, did well with our national teams.

    Have you ever listened to our coaches’ post-match comments? You will weep. It is even worse at half-time. Let me not bore you on some of the things they say before matches – like asking us to pray for God’s guidance as if the opponents don’t know God too.

    Indeed, 20 coaches were taken to England to improve on their knowledge. Only four of them could function on the computer, much to the consternation of the English men who were told that they were some of the best in the domestic game. Rather than being taught the rudiments of the game, they were first taught how to function on the computer.

    The NFF must insist on having only knowledgeable coaches for our domestic teams. On no account should a coach without a badge be allowed to train any club. This idea of former players becoming coaches without attending coaching courses must stop. It won’t cost the NFF much to invite renowned coaches to come here during the off season to re-train our coaches, possibly grade and motivate the good ones among them by taking them to Europe for further refresher courses. That way the dropped coaches will strive to improve to join the big ones heading for Europe.

    The National Institute for Sports (NIS) seems to be producing coaches. But there is serious doubt about the quality of training these coaches receive, if their products totter seasonally to make an impact at the continental level.

    Our coaches cannot compete with the best now. They must strive to improve themselves by returning to school during off seasons. They must learn the new tricks of the game, even online, until such a time they can source for the cash to physically attend courses. Many people were educated through remedial courses and are big players in their endeavours. That is the truth.

  • Keep pushing the equality bill

    Senator Abiodun Olujimi (PDP, Ekiti South) should cheer up. And so should everyone who supports the Gender and Equal Opportunities Bill she initiated and presented before her colleagues on Tuesday. Her efforts produced some chilling results, though, for the male-dominated Senate of over 100 men against seven women shot the bill down as soon as she could read out the title. In other words, Olujimi’s bill did not go beyond First Reading. It speaks volumes of the senators’ intolerance of the idea of gender equality, of their aversion to the very words, and of their impatience with a woman’s audacity to contemplate the unheard-of. It hints of a bunch of male chauvinists feeling almost dismantled by the thought that someone was bent on having women stand shoulder to shoulder with some special people who pay their bride price. For all the senators cared, Olujimi could as well ask that women immediately start picking up the bills covering rent, house upkeep, school and sundry fees, as men have been doing long before she was conceived.

    Considering the bill’s imperatives, if not urgency, Olujimi might feel a bit deflated and discouraged. It is natural but she need not be. Here’s why. She has chosen a modern path -the law- to tackle an ancient dinosaur that has simply refused to be extinct. We have heard of women who poisoned the domestic chauvinists, also known as their husbands. We have heard of those who physically attacked their domineering male spouses, or denied them conjugal rights, or quietly pulled out of their marriage simply because their men insisted on being known, addressed and treated as gods rather than human partners.

    Such methods of righting a wrong are unhelpful. But Olujimi’s parliamentary effort is great because whenever it sees the light of day every woman and the entire society will benefit. This should lift the spirits of the Ekiti senator. She should also be encouraged by the fact that not all men in the Senate are chauvinists. Some, however few, indeed supported the bill.

    What was the senator fighting for with the bill? She was seeking an end to “all forms of discrimination against women”, aiming to protect women against violence, including the physical and sexual kind. It made a case against anything amounting to “inhuman, humiliating or degrading” treatment of women. It craved for women being free to vote and be voted for, and that they “shall have the right to an equitable share in the inheritance of the property of their husbands.”

    I not only see nothing wrong with the provisions or particulars of the bill but also make bold to say that they are supposed to be, in the first place, the inalienable rights of women. Yet, on Tuesday, some alpha-male chauvinists in the Senate smashed the bill citing portions of the Quran and the Bible to support their positions.

    I know the Bible refers to the man as head of the home, and that the wife should submit to him but I know of no scripture which bars women from freely choosing a candidate to vote in an election, for instance. I have read enough of the leadership qualities of such biblical women as Miriam and Deborah to know that men sometimes want to put women in subjection more out of ignorance, sheer chauvinism or outright mischief. When men tend to keep women quiet it is to massage their misplaced ego or to play the good custodian of culture and tradition.

    Such attitudes and tendencies are anachronistic and therefore untenable in the modern era.

    When my Dad passed 10 years ago, there was pressure to have my Mum lie beside his corpse just before he was buried, according to tradition. I resisted it even though I was warned that my Mum could come to some harm if she said no. She is now in her late 70s and in appreciable health.

    My Mum was lucky. Some of her counterparts in other parts of the country must shave off their hair, keep themselves untidy and in some cases drink their deceased husbands’ corpse-bathwater. Some are stripped of everything they and their late spouses acquired together and then thrown out of their homes.

    What should Senator Olujimi do in the face of rejection? The first thing is to know that she is on the right side of history. Secondly, she must not give up. She must keep pushing the bill as long as she in the Senate or even as long as she has breath. Keeping women quiet, which is what the rejection of the bill amounts to, is not peculiar to Nigeria, though. Some other nations have done, some still do it, to their shame. One good thing is that some other nations, still, know the difference between the age of the dinosaurs and a forward-looking, tech-driven era. At some point, it was unthinkable for a black man to vote in America; now one is serving out an eight-year tenure as president and commander-in-chief. In that same country, women could not cast their ballot; now a black president could hand over to a woman in the Fall.

    I realise that we have so many rivers to cross. Our politics is still dirty and blood-soaked, for instance. Our standards fall far short. Our houses continue to collapse, killing our people. Our schools and are not worth much. If life itself means little to us, how can we expect our men to easily accept that women are equal?

    But as long as we continue to live in the ugly past, so long should the Olujimis in our midst keep pushing for equality. History beckons.

    CORRECTION

    I erred last week in this space when I referred to Olumba Olumba Obu as the head of the Brotherhood of the Cross and Crescent. Everyone knows that O.O.O. leads the Brotherhood of the Cross and Star. I must thank a reader who pointed out the error, warning me not “start another problem”.

  • Strategies on using the law to floor corruption

    A  lecture  at the prestigious  Island  Club and the amazing unfolding political   events in Brazil, where  a  former President  has been brought  back  to  the cabinet  by the incumbent president to circumvent a corruption trial,  form  the theme of our discussion  today. The  lecturer  at  the Island  Club  was legal  luminary Professor Itsay  Sagay SAN   and   his given topic was  ‘ How  to fight  and Win  the  War against  Corruption; Challenges  and prospects ‘  which  he changed to  the juicy  and highly  educative  topic – Confronting the  Scourge  of  Corruption.  This  is the  topic  on which  I will  dilate  extensively today given  the very bright light  and hope it generated  in me,   that at least,  there is one man standing,  ready  and willing to use his enormous erudition  and learning  to  sing the death knell of corruption in the current war on corruption embarked  by the Buhari  Administration.

     Professor  Sagay  spoke  in his capacity as  the  Chairman. Presidential  Advisory Committee Against Corruption  and his lecture threw  immense  light  on the  strategies  on  hand by this administration to fight corruption  according to the rule of law, taking great  cognizance  of the challenges and obstacles inherent  in the Nigerian  environment  and context, both  historical  and potential,  and ways  to  see the strategies through to achieve their objectives.  In effect  Professor  Sagay  analysed the issues involved pragmatically, empirically and  practically in such a way  that one can only tremble at  the fate and dire  prospects facing treasury looters caught in the act by this administration  in the priority  it has  set  in using the ant I  corruption war  to sanitise  our economy  and  society by  identifying and punishing those who  have used  public office to loot our common  patrimony  to  feather their own private  pockets while  Nigerians live in squalor  when indeed the country  is  a very  wealthy  national  entity.

    Amazingly, while  Professor   Sagay   was postulating on giving corruption a punchy  legal  upper  cut, sequel  to  a  boxing  knock out   in the Island  Club,  a different situation  that  he  already  foresaw and was warning  against  in his lecture was  unfolding in far  away  Brazil. That  soccer  loving nations’s  president, Dilmar  Roussef  was  appointing her former  boss  and  former   president Lula  da  Silva    to  the same position  of  Chief of  Staff  in which   she served  him so  that   the former   president   would not face charges  for fraud  and money  laundry   that  had  been  brought  against  Lula  and were   widely publicized  in Brazil.

      I  had written  earlier  on this unfolding drama  and  had  commended  incumbent  Brazilian president   Dilmar  for her guts in allowing the charges of collecting bribes from oil  contractors of  Petrobas  against  Lula  to see  the light of day and  wished our own  government had  the same  guts to charge our former  president to court if found   culpable on the  diversion  of money  meant for arms revelations which we have aptly called  Dasukigate. Obviously  not only myself but   Brazilians   and indeed   the whole world  had  been taken  for a ride   by  this  Brazilian lady  President.  She has sworn in Lula  as  her  Chief  of Staff thus giving him  immunity  from  prosecution from Brazilian  federal  courts and prosecution  only by the Supreme  Court. A  court in Brazil  has ruled the position  illegal  but   the Brazilian  president has appealed against  the ruling . What  happened  in  Brazil which  is also  fighting its war  on corruption   is   precisely   what  Professor  Sagay  highlighted  as   a major  challenge to the war  on corruption posed  by very senior defence  lawyers who  use all  their  experience and  knowledge  to frustrate  the prosecution  of their clients  by unethical  methods. One  of such underhand  methods  he highlighted was – political rehabilitation   of accused  by  high profile political appointment and electoral  victory into public  office and –compromise  of the court of the prosecution  or both. This  is what the incumbent Brazilian president has  done in bright  day  light  and Brazilians  have taken to the streets in protest.  But  it is something quite  common in Nigeria given  the ongoing trial  of the Senate president by  the CCT  and  the huge numbers of former two term  governors now  distinguished  senators in our National  Assembly.

     It  is  pertinent  at  this stage to   highlight  the major parts  of the Sagay  Island  Club  Public  lecture on Confronting the Scourge  of  Corruption.  The  lecture  had sections on – The  Negative  Impact of  Corruption; The  Emergence of  President Muhammadu  Buhari  as someone who  has zero tolerance for corruption  and how that has  set the tone of the war  on corruption;  The  means for  combatting corruption namely the ICPC  started  by the  Obasanjo  Administration in  1999 and  provided  a legal  framework called the Corrupt  Practices  and Other  Related Offences  Act  in  June  2000;  the  EFCC established in  2000; the  Code  of Conduct Bureau  and  Tribunal in 1989; the  Code  of Conduct  Tribunal and the Presidential  Advisory  Committee  Against  Corruption – PACAC in August 2015.

    The   Duties  of the PACAC  headed by Professor  Sagay include  the following – promotion of the anti  corruption struggle by  developing comprehensive interventions  in Nigeria’s  Administration  of  Criminal  Justice  System; Engendering Inter Agency  Cooperation and  Information  sharing; promoting the  efficiency and  effectiveness of the anti corruption  agencies; Examining the workings of  the present system of the Administration  of Criminal  Justice;  Seeking to put an end to all  orders of  Perpetual  Injunctions  against the investigation, interrogation, arrest and  prosecution of anyone  for corruption with  the objective that such  persons must defend  themselves in court and  such  cases must go through  the full trial  process;  the  lifting of all  existing injunctions protecting anyone from  investigation, interrogation, arrest and prosecution for corruption;  and revisiting  outstanding cases  of egregious corruption and  impunity which  have  been  stalled or  suspended.

    PACAC   has  a four  point strategy to  achieve its objective and ensure that the  Administration  of justice  achieves its anti  corruption war objectives. These  strategies  are efficient investigation, effective  prosecution, speedy  adjudication  and  effective  sanctions. The  lecture  also  identified a  National  Anti  Corruption  Plan, Assets  Recovery,The  Recovery  of Public  Property ( Special Provisions Act  2004 ), and  The Administration  of the Criminal  Justice  Act  of 2015.

    With regard  to  effective prosecution, the Professor  called for the prosecution  of any  person who  has compromised  the prosecution process either as a judge, a prosecutor  or investigator and  that  such  people  should  be jailed if found guilty. He  highlighted in particular  a set  of consultants called  specialists  who  are retired  judges at all  levels -high court, Court  of Appeal or  Supreme  Court who  make  themselves  available  to corrupt  judges. He  asked that such  people  should be jailed  if found culpable.  All  of  them, he  averred, SANs, Consultants  and  judges who  compromise trial  proceedings need  to be charged,  prosecuted and imprisoned if found guilty.  According to  Sagay – a  few  cases of imprisonment of this category of unpatriotic  Nigerians is necessary for  honour and integrity  to return  to the judicial  process. I  cannot  agree more.

    However, it was  in the question and answer  section  of the lecture  that Professor  Sagay  proved  his mettle  and  commitment  as  an  unrepentant  anti  corruption  warrior,  both within and without Nigeria’s  temple  of justice. To  the plea from a questioner  that the government should  concentrate more on improving  the plight of Nigerians   rather   than the war  on  corruption, the professor admitted  he was fed up with such  suggestions which betrayed  that that  those  holding such views  could be corrupt too. On  a view that  judges were poorly  paid he countered  that that was not  sufficient excuse  to be corrupt  as judges know their salaries  and  should  live within  their  means.  On  the view  that  the EFCC  was  slow he explained  that the volume  of revelations  from on going statements by suspects  has  created   a huge number  of inter related frauds and new  cases  that the EFCC has  had  to take  on. On  going  back to past  governments   on  the anti  corruption war he  said  that was not  feasible  as there  was  enough on the plate  already with the sordid  level  of  revelations of   corruption  of the last  administration.

    In  spite  of  his strong  convictions I found  it unbelievable  that Professor  Sagay  was against capital punishment for  corruption  as widely canvassed  by  commentators  at  the lecture. He  simply  dismissed it by saying once a  man  was  dead that was it.  All  the  same  I  found it commendable  that he recommended  for use in the fight  against corruption  the adoption  of Decree No 3  –                    Recovery  of  Public  Property    of 1984  promulgated  by  the present Head  of State  when  he was  a military head of  state.  This  is because the  decree   which  is still  valid  stipulates prison  sentence   up   to  21  years  for corruption as against  our present laws  which  stress seizure of assets which  he  said   is not deterrent  enough .

    The  Island  Club Public  Interest Symposium is  an  initiative  of the Club’s  Chairman the  ebullient Dipo  Okpeseyi  who  revealed at the lecture that he was a student of  the lecturer . The  Chairman at the lecture was  the legal  sage and former  Supreme  Court judge Justice Sola Oguntade who  showed  a bias  for picking lawyers at  question time as if anti  corruption war  was  an all lawyers  affair which  is a fallacy that could provoke another war this time not on corruption but  against  discrimination in favor of lawyers von  such  matters .  Any way  I was aggrieved as I was not  called to ask  any question  at  the event  even though  I had my hand up  like  a flag  all  the time . Again  I   doff my  hat to the brilliance  and commitment of   a Nigerian Professor of law  to  the all  important war  on corruption and  the hope  it holds for all  similarly committed and patriotic Nigerians.  Once  again  long live the Federal  Republic  of  Nigeria

  • The trials of brother king

    ‘The trials of brother Jero’ and ‘Jero’s metamorphosis’ are two of Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka’s most hilarious and delightful plays. Written over three decades ago, the plays depict the dexterity with which a devious man of God preys on the insecurities and vulnerabilities of members of his flock for his own pleasure and material benefit. The current trials of Reverend King, also known as Chukwuemeka Ezeugo, Overseer of the Christian Praying Assembly, who has been sentenced to death by hanging by the apex court of the land for murder, violence and sexual predation, reminded me of the Jero plays. But then, what type of socio-economic context allows the unscrupulous likes of Rev. King flourish?

    In his notable theory of the two publics, eminent political scientist, Professor Peter Ekeh, argued that one of the reason why corruption thrives so much in Africa is that the colonially imposed state exists in an amoral milieu in which officials of state suffer no pangs of conscience as they utilise their positions to loot public resources to benefit their ethno-regional groups. Of course, this is a rough rendering of Ekeh’s thesis but I think it offers us some insights into the relationship between religious institutions such as churches and mosques and public officers in contemporary Nigeria.

    Thus, the individual loots state resources. He or she makes huge financial contributions to their church or mosque. Religious leaders accept these ‘offerings’ and ‘tithes’ without question. The looting state officials are the most prominent and exalted members of church or mosque.  The state, largely because of industrial scale corruption, is unable to provide adequate healthcare for citizens. But no matter, the religious institutions flourish as more people run to them for miracle health cures.

    The state, as a result of massive corruption, cannot provide qualitative and affordable education for children. That only provides religious institutions that receive offerings from thieving officials the opportunity to establish thriving educational institutions at all levels. When highly respected and decent members of the religious establishment – Christian and Muslim –close their eyes to the massive looting of public resources thereby becoming complicit by their silence, they help in creating the conditions that enable the likes of Reverend King to successfully exploit the ignorant multitude for cynical ends. But then, should the death sentence on Rev. King be carried out as many are demanding? I think not. That would mean our collective descent to his level of beastly meanness. There should be a higher, more ennobling way. A life sentence is as good as a death sentence.

  • Commissioner decries violence against women

    Commissioner decries violence against women

    Lagos State Commissioner for Home Affairs Dr AbdulHakeem AbdulLateef has condemned women abuse.

    AbdulLateef said it was wrong for people to abuse women, imploring women to see themselves as commissioners in their homes.

    He urged women to rededicate themselves to their primary responsibility.

    “A society starts from the home, to have a good home, women must rise up to their responsibilities,” he said.

    Attributing the increasing cases of social vices to poor parental care, he said women’s role was fundamental to proper child upbringing.

    The commissioner urged women to demonstrate good examples to promote societal value.

    “Women should develop more interest in their children. Today, many women especially nursing mother will leave their homes at dawn and will not come back until dusk”, he said.

    AbdulLateef said women should not be used as chattels, but celebrated.

    According to the commissioner, no one has celebrated women like Allah, who dedicated a chapter of the Quran, Suratul Nisai, to them.

    “Women are the children incubating factory. When you trained a girl-child, you have train the world. Women today are fighting for women liberation; this should not be their focus. Their focus should be how to take good care of the future leaders of this country. Focus on how the young ones will become professionals in different fields irrespective of the gender. Women should dress in a very modest manner and not in a seductive way that influences men negatively,” he stressed.

    AbdulLateef warned the public against thinking that it is not good to educate the girl-child, emphasising that no child should be denied education for any reason.

    “Women are not in any way inferior to men. It is unfortunate that women are used wrongly. Women are used to advertise tyres, bicycles and even men’s wears. Women should fight back to regain their lost glory and value system,” he added.

  • Political decay, development and change

    To  say  the least the  last few weeks  have  been  very hard days for Nigerians all over the nation. No  light, no water,   no  fuel, and  traffic snarls  caused by those buying fuel blocking the way  of  those   who  have and  wasting the rare fuel  in their tanks.  That   sounds  a  bit like Shakespeare’s ‘ As  You like  it ‘  on the last stage of the seven stages of the life of  a man. Without eyes,  without  teeth, without  anything. The  difference here being   however   that we  are talking of the life of a man and that is quite  distinctly  different  from the life of a nation. Yet  there is no denying that even if  a nation  is like a cat with nine lives there  must still be a limit to the suffering and  forbearance  of its  people.  Honestly  Nigerians  have survived  so far on one crucial gruel  and that is hope  and the  fact that we have just elected a new government on a platform  of change. That single fact and the  fight against  corruption together  with  the heady  spectacle  of the revelations    from  the EFCC on the massive looting of our treasury with impunity  by the high and mighty  of the last administration,  keep  Nigerians going, in the hope  that God  is not finished with Nigeria  yet.  Like Jesse  Jackson loudly  reminisced  when  he lost the presidential  nomination of the  Democratic  Party  in the  US some time ago.

     So  in a way  Nigerians seem resigned to their fate which  fortunately is not hopeless.  It  is simply a teeth  gritting admission that things have got to get worse before getting better.  In  essence some political  decay is necessary  and  admissible before we can make progress and realize  our  hope.  You  may  say that is poor consolation or even  accuse  me of exaggeration of the plight of the masses because  I  am  a journalist and  the  EFCC has  accused journalists of being against the war on corruption  like lawyers .But let me tell  you  what happened at  the  launch of  a professorial  chair funded by the a traditional  ruler with an intellectual  bent, the illustrious Awujale of  Ijebu  Ode , Sikiru  Adetona Ogbagba  11    and  you  will see  that even  the high  and  mighty know  that there is political  decay  in the land.  You  will   see  that they  know  there is need to change not only our present style of leadership  and institutions but   our political and socio  economic values  and orientation to create meaningful  development  for our people.

    Let  me also  add here that bad  leadership  creates political decay and corruption just  as weak leadership engenders threat to the political system,  its   security  and it stability. That  in essence is  what  Dasukigate  has  been  all  about  with  its sordid revelations  on looting, abuse  of power  and fraudulent  diversion  of state  funds.

    However  at   the  professorial chair  launch the  former Governor  of the Central  Bank and now Emir of Kano, the cerebral Muhammadu    Sanusi reportedly  said   that 80%  of  the enormous  resources of the nation are  being squandered   to maintain the leadership  infrastructure  of the political  class  while the remaining 20%  is what is left  to cater for the needs  and wants of over 165m    Nigerians remaining. The  guest lecturer at the  launch a well  known  and  brilliant Urban  geographer  gave an analysis of the  Nigerian problem  as that of decayed institutions that have  not moved Nigeria forward in terms of progress and development. Also  at  that  launch Obas  from  Ijebu  were said  to  have  donated 125m  naira as  first instalment  of the 250m naira  they  have pledged  to fund the chair.

    Apart  from  these events and issues at the chair  launch there was an interesting suggestion  from the Senate leader Senator  Ali  Ndume  worthy of our attention and comment here with regard  to the topic of the day. The  Senate leader reportedly said  that   the last president should be tried by the EFCC if it is found that he secretly  gave the order that the funds meant for arms should    be  used  for campaigns. This  according to the senate  leader was  because he suffered as a result  of this as his house  was burnt in the insurgency. He  wondered if arms were  ever bought at  all. Yet  his most interesting  observation  and challenge was that  the  trial  of the Senate  president was given  publicity whereas his own  trial  for being a sponsor of Boko  Haram  has  been in court  for four years and  has not  been given much  attention.

    These  then are the issues  I  want  us to  digest  today   to  see a way  forward from  our present  predicament as a nation which I have  highlighted with due acknowledgements from those  who should know. I will  also  bring in the comment by  Donald  Trump  that Islam  hates America and similarly look  at the visit of the S African  president to  Nigeria  and the importance  I attach  to his addressing the Nigerian  National  Assembly.

    First  let  me start with the events  at the professorial chair  launch at  the Oriental  Hotel in  Lagos. The choice  of venue  is  instructive  for a university chair  for a university  located  in  Ago  Iwoye in Ogun state. I commend the Awujale for his promotion  of governance  and education but this  chair  must  be one of the best funded in the world. It  surely  must  be the envy of other chairs  in the university but  really part of the fund could  have  been used  to  develop a new  university  altogether. In  addition  I know the Ijebus  are bound to ask their  Obas  how they  managed  to pledge  so  much  and  have even paid  half  of it in a land with  so much poverty  and neglect  of social  facilities  and infrastructure.

    Similarly  the  observation  of the Emir  of Kano cannot  be ignored and it is in that light that  I wonder  why the  visiting President  of  S Africa  was accompanied  to the  National  Assembly  by  our president. Who  initiated that  and  for  what  purpose?  It is a well known  fact  that the president is at  logger heads with the  senators  over the new  luxury  official  cars they want  to purchase  and the case  of the senate  president is in court over false  asset  declaration. Would  the senate  president  attend court  after receiving  a head of state led to the senate  by  the president?  I doubt given our separation of  powers and  the earlier  excuse  of political intimidation.

    On  the lighter side  however I would  say  that the S African president was in good  company as   opposition  legislators who heckle him  on  corruption and  diversion  of  public  funds, anytime  he addresses the S African  National  Assembly  are  normally  thrown  out and  many  of  our own legislators  too are  on the books of the EFCC  for  similar offences. Which  brings  in the comments  of  the senate  leader  on  publicity  competition between  the senate leaders trial  on sponsoring Boko  Haram  and the Senate president’s trial  on false  asset  declaration. My  view is that both are the same side of the same  coin. It  is only  in Nigeria that both can still  be in office in  spite of going to court for their  trials. It is a potent sign  of our political  decay as a nation and as a people but both are trials we  must  see through in the courts in spite of booby traps, mines  and obstacles in the way  of justice to  see the right thing done to clean our legislative  Augean stable.

    On  Donald  Trump’s  provocative and insolent remark  that Islam  hates  America one   can only attribute that to the mentality  of Americans  that the whole  world  is made  up of  Americans and  no  one else. Are  there not  American Muslims and do they practice a faith  that hates  them?  Certainly  that  statement  does  not  make sense.  But  Trump  has  said he does not want  to  be politically  correct  but  just  correct. This  time he got it wrong  and  is not  correct, even  if that has  not affected his  popularity rating which  is soaring as the primaries  continue. Donald  Trump  has  become the enfant  terrible of  US  politics and is getting popular  by  the day. Whether  that is a good  thing or a sign of political  decay is for the Americans to decide on their own.  What  we know and say is that the world is  bigger  than  the US  and  Trump needs  to be educated on that before  it is too late.  Again, long live the Federal  Republic  of  Nigeria.