Category: Wednesday

  • What will APC do about Kogi’s dodgy impeachment?

    Festus Eriye

     

    THE ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) has been handed an unnecessary political and moral dilemma due to the unforced error of Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Bello and the House of Assembly, crudely forcing out erstwhile Deputy Governor, Simon Achuba.

    Against the backdrop that in a little under four weeks it goes into a tough gubernatorial contest, it defies logic that they would manufacture a needless controversy over an issue that has been simmering harmlessly forever.

    Achuba who had been neutralized politically by Bello, would have disappeared into the sunset as the first term ebbed away. So what was the mad rush to oust him? In what way was his humiliation going to be a plus at the November 16 polls?

    Now Bello has handed the opposition a negative talking point that they can bang on about until voting day.

    APC’s national leadership must be squirming in embarrassment over the morality and legality of what has been done in Lokoja. This is a party that sold itself as the platform of ‘change.’ It was going to do things differently from the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) which it has consistently defined as the authors and finishers of impunity.

    But even in the annals of dodgy impeachments, what the Kogi State House of Assembly has pulled off stands out.

    We all howled when in October 2006, former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s administration superintended the impeachment of then Governor Joshua Dariye by just eight members of the 24-man Plateau State House of Assembly.

    Earlier in January that same year, the PDP regime executed a similar stunt in Oyo State, when then Governor Rasheed Ladoja found himself out on his ears after a minority of the state’s legislature ‘impeached’ him. The brazen illegality was quickly enforced by the police under orders from Abuja.

    Ladoja troubles began after he boldly advised Obasanjo to perish the thought of seeking a third term in office.

    The courts would later upturn the so-called impeachments, to the shame of the former president and his PDP government. But the example they set has been copied a couple of times since by politicians who want to achieve a certain end.

    In Edo State, APC National Chairman, Adams Oshiomhole, finds himself locked in a political arm-wrestling match with Governor Godwin Obaseki. The most recent expression of the conflict was when nine members of the 24-man state legislature gathered together at night to elect a new Speaker.

    The bone of contention remains the legality of the governor’s undated proclamation letter which also didn’t specify a time. The pro-Oshiomhole group argue that it was clearly designed to outsmart them and allow Obaseki’s choice for Speaker to emerge.

    The APC chairman has not stopped complaining about the ‘illegality’ of the process – even talking about being ashamed of what was playing out in the party in his home state.

    With the party facing a dicey contest in Kogi would Oshiomhole and other APC leaders find the voice to denounce Achuba’s unusual ouster in the same vociferous manner they have condemned events in the Edo legislature?

    Even more surprising is the fact the Chief Judge agreed to provide legitimacy to a questionable process by swearing-in erstwhile Chief of Staff, Edward Onoja, as the new Deputy Governor.

    He may argue that he hasn’t been asked to adjudicate on the legality of the impeachment, but simply to execute the duty placed on him and other judicial officers to administer the oath of allegiance and the oath of office by Section 185 (2) of the 1999 Constitution.

    But surely as a judicial officer he understands that everything proceeding from a non-existent foundation would collapse under legal scrutiny.

    Section 188 (8) and (9) of the constitution clearly states that the impeachment process dies in its tracks if the panel raised by the Chief Judge doesn’t find against the accused.

    So on what basis did the assembly proceed beyond a desperate need to please the governor who wanted his deputy removed by all means?

    I am sure the Kogi legislators understand the import of Section 188 and its likely implication for their action. But they still went ahead and broke the law. In this case the desire to please one man became more compelling than fidelity to the constitution they swore to protect and uphold.

    It has often been said that impeachment is largely a political process, although the procedure for bringing it to pass is clearly spelt out and must be followed scrupulously if it is to stand.

    The legislators who lent themselves to do the governor’s bidding would have cynically reckoned that even if the courts void their action, Achuba would have been long since gone. At best he would get his outstanding entitlements to salve his wounds.

    In the past, nothing ever happened to those whom the courts found have violated the constitution. This is because there is no specific legal provision for punishing this very grave offence.

    Obasanjo did it in the case of Dariye and Ladoja and got away with it. He is still walking free, pontificating about democratic best practices!

    Bello may be re-elected and he, too, would be parading himself as a “progressive governor.” All the members of the state assembly complicit in this embarrassing episode would also continue making ‘laws’ for others to obey.

    The Kogi case is one of the clearest illustrations of how some governors transform into tin pot despots who cobble together state assemblies they can put under their thumb.

    If the Achuba impeachment is left to stand, another power-drunk individual would be tempted to try an even greater outrage soon. The initiative, however, lies with the one who has been injured to seek legal remedy. Thereafter, the federal legislative must step in.

    If our democracy is to grow, the National Assembly should amend the relevant sections of the constitution with suitable deterrents to check governors and presidents who think they are bigger than the constitution.

    As for the APC, it must speak against what has happened if it is retain the moral right to call PDP names. It must also find a meaningful way to censure all who participated in the funny ‘impeachment’ as a signal that it doesn’t approve of this constitutional rape.

     

  • Wanted: Prorogue NASS Bills

    You heard ‘prorogue’ first just three weeks ago. Nigeria also needs Bills to Prorogue [suspend/cancel] senate or House of Representatives to force a partial NASS suicide for economic savings of N100b+ and quick political parliamentary action -a ‘change’ situation.

    The NLC has forced the federal government into a pay agreement. All federal employees including politicians up to president require to be on the ‘Single National Pay Spreadsheet’.

    The NLC ignored an opportunity to fight for 1] Political office holders to be on levels up to Level 23-25 for President. 2] Political ‘Salaries and Perks’ be reduced, and 3] Introduce ‘Pay Reduction Reforms’ in the criminally outrageous ‘Political Pay and Pension Structure’.

    The NLC seems to have joined a political class least committed to the ‘Nigeria Dream and Project’ even though politicians are among the highest paid political officials worldwide.

    Strategically, the NLC, like NASS rejects its vital contribution to the Nigerian Dream, except on pay structure matters. Worldwide, the workers have checkmated unbridled politicians. Remember Lech Walesa and the Solidarity strikes in Gdansk in Poland? It is Nigeria’s turn for fast change.

    United, the big unions can force foot-dragging politicians to 1] Restructure salaries and 2] Restructure the country. How dare NASS repeatedly take N125-150b for 469 [109+360] NASS members? ASUU and the NMA are strong unions which must harness their intellectual power towards national issues including protesting almost criminally negligent poor FG budget for 1]Education and 2] Health totally just N94b which dangerously threatens the physical and mental capacity for knowledge acquisition of ‘A Healthy Mind In A Healthy Body’ of all youth nationwide. Beyond conference communiques ‘falling of deaf political ears’, did ASUU or the NMA cry out at this imminent failure of good governance?

    ASUU voice is strangely silent. Perhaps because of the can of worms of ASUU lecherous lecturers and prostituting professors, performing and receiving academic sexual favours matching Harvey Weinstein’s horror Hollywood stories. This sex for marks, demanded by treacherous teachers or offered by entrapping students, is ancient and modern. Make use of ASUU ‘Think Tanks’ capacity and the NLC to ‘Restructure Themselves’ and strategize to cut the cost of government.

    Ask why no politician since 1999 from any party has rejected the Salaries and Perks ‘seized’ from the budget. One day, NLC’s conditions for accepting a new pay deal will include a cut in NASS ‘Salaries and Perks’, numbers and houses. Government will never downsize itself -political suicide or Hara-kiri.

    Politicians do not mind if you kill or die during elections but are not, so far, nationalistic enough to self-sacrifice and commit political suicide for the greater good.

    The Buhari government has cut trips by ministers and seated them in business class. Hurray! It will save a few million naira, but loopholes must be blocked. The Buhari government has submitted to NASS a law increasing VAT to 7.5%, up from 5% punishing the poor further. Buhari conveniently ‘forgot’ to add a ‘VAT Formula Modification’ clause to the Bill to correct the corrupt VAT Distribution Formula. No to more ‘VAT Robbery’ of high VAT states to criminally enrich VAT-less states. The IMF was silent on this discriminatory aspect of VAT. The IMF should always sniff around and research the secret agendas of Nigerian ‘wonder’ policies.

    The President has ordered a forensic audit of NDDC. Good. Please add the Amnesty Programme and the IDP funding. Four years late as he would have saved NDDC billions and seen more projects completed by now. Where the President’s party’s Restructuring Policy Bill ensuring devolving functions and funds to the State and LGA level? Where is the government’s ‘NASS Downsizing Bill’?

    Buhari’s ‘change’ manta leadership is wearing thin. Police are still taking bribes at checkpoints – stopped easily by suspending/sacking the supervising DPO or CP in affected states or the IGP. The infamous Aso Rock ‘kitchen cabinet’ should ‘breakfast with Buhari’ on bills needing immediate delivery by the federal government or its party members to the NASS. The citizens are tired of dying for policies and politics and politicians, it is time for the politicians to work or die, politically-speaking, for the good of the citizens and Nigeria. A season of political suicide is better than Nigeria’s murder.  Let the following bills be presented and re-presented until they are passed….

    1] Bill to downsize NASS and convert the bicameral house to one house -Senate or HOR

    2] Bill to Prorogue Senate without Compensation [WC].’ or

    3] Bill to prorogue House of Representatives WC.’

    4] Bill to elect only one senator per state in a new 37-member Senate’.

    5] Bill to reduce HOR membership to one member per state.

    6] Bill to have NASS members’ fully funded including house and allowances and any pension’ by their states of origin.

    7] Bill to allow for ‘Sitting Allowances Only’ for NASS members, paid by the state of origin.

    8] Bill to Restructure Nigeria by restructuring exclusive and concurrent list.

    Let’s start the ‘Bill Ball’ rolling. NASS Bills take years. It will sound like a joke until suddenly it is serious, and we succeed. Only when politicians stop laughing will the citizens begin to laugh.

    The only permanent thing is change. Worldwide arrogant corrupt presidents and ministers are jailed, and parliaments are reduced as political and economic necessities. President Buhari, self-styled ‘Mr Change’: Worldwide harmful traditions and customs like Female Genital Mutilation are being eliminated before their cancer destroys the country. Our cancerous 1999 constitution and NASS need ‘change’.

  • On the failure to investigate sex scandals in our universities

    IN a conversation with a retired professional colleague like me, who also writes occasionally on the Nigerian situation, we wondered aloud why the Nigerian press waited for the BBC undercover investigation of sex-for-grade in a Nigerian university before going to town with “wise” commentaries and “know-it-all” editorials on a crime that has bedeviled our universities for decades.

    Instead of reflecting on the lack of attention to proper investigation of the problem, some newspaper editors got their team together to catalog old cases of ousted lecturers in sex-for-grade scandals in various institutions. As usual, they were all stories recycled in various newspapers, some well after the assaults had taken place. Beyond chastising randy lecturers and their institutions, there isn’t much to their contributions. Worse still, there is a chance nothing else will be heard of this problem once the ongoing hue and cry dies down. Yet, the problem will persist in our universities unless drastic measures are taken.

    My colleague and I were not alone in recognising the dearth of investigative journalism in the Nigerian press. Days after our conversation, Martins Oloja rebuked the Nigerian press for allowing such a gap in our journalism that allowed the BBC to lead the way in the sting operation on sex-for-grade scandals in our universities. He concluded that “the sting operation is, indeed another wake-up call for the Nigerian media . I would like to appeal to media owners and operators especially in Nigeria that the development has exposed a log in our eyes. And so, we need to remove such a reproach that can further diminish our stature as an African giant and tower of strength for the black race” (The Guardian, October 13, 2019).

    Nevertheless, I do not share Oloja’s snide remark that the BBC’s sting operation is part of what he calls “the Western media’s strategy to de-market our universities so that their universities will continue to admit students from West Africa”. The remark detracts from his main argument about the dearth of investigative journalism in Nigeria. It also fails to acknowledge the contributions of the government, university unions, and randy lecturers to the de-marketing of Nigerian universities.

    If, in fact, the BBC had such a sinister agenda, what do we make of CNN’s agenda in being the first media outfit to send reporters to Chibok in 2014 in the wake of the kidnapping of schoolgirls there by Boko Haram? Who can forget the courage of two female CNN reporters, Isha Sesay and Nima Elbagir, who risked their lives to go to Chibok to uncover details of the abduction and its aftermath?

    Fortunately, they did not labour in vain. They jointly won the Peabody Award for meritorious media coverage of the abduction of the Chibok girls, their ordeals, and the struggles for their release. Here’s part of the Peabody citation for their award: “Sesay’s tough, live-TV interviewing, along with high-risk field reporting of Nima Elbagir … and other CNN journalists made the network’s coverage comprehensive and indispensable.” It was common knowledge at that time that many reports in our print and electronic media were no more than spin-offs of the reports by these bold American journalists.

    Isha Sessay did not stop there. She continued with investigations, whose findings are now available in her recently published book, titled Beneath the Tamarind Tree: A Story of Courage, Family, and the Lost Schoolgirls of Boko Haram (Hardcover, 382 pages). Like Sesay and Elbagir did in their investigative coverage, Sesay’s book exposes the complicity as well as negligence of the government and its agencies in the Chibok episode. It is a book a Nigerian journalist should have written.

    It is not the case, of course, that investigative journalism is completely dead in Nigeria. There have been occasional brilliant cases since Dele Giwa and Newswatch. However, they are few and far between. Why is this so?

    The major problem is the fear of reprisal by those who are exposed, especially politicians, businessmen, the government and the security agencies. The reporters fear for their lives, while newspaper publishers are always apprehensive of possible rupture to their bottom-line.

    Corruption and, especially, sex scandals happen to be topics affecting not just the individual perpetrators but also the institutions they represent. More importantly, the endemic nature of these problems often promotes indifference or slap-in-the-wrist punishment of offenders, if they are censured at all.

    This, however, should not discourage investigative journalism. On the contrary, the way to sidetrack indifference to these problems is to continue to expose them through investigative journalism. Imagine how responsive to normative behaviour and best practices our politicians and businessmen would be if they knew that some undercover reporter might be on their trail.

    Another problem with our reporters is poor training and lack of investigative skills and appropriate equipment. You do not launch into the BBC-type investigation without adequate training, equipment, and background ethnographic work. For example, the BBC undercover reporters interviewed many girls and identified prolific sexual predators, before setting them up.

    It must be admitted that one of the reasons corruption and sex scandals proliferate in Nigeria is lack of press pressure. Rather than wait to report what has happened, the press should warn on what may happen through investigative journalism. That is the big lesson from the BBC undercover investigation.

    That’s why I suggest today that reporters should set up cover in ministries, universities, and businesses of their choice and get to work, gathering data that would enable them to expose corruption, sexual advances, and other untoward behaviours.

    At the same time, however, focused attention on the presidency is needed in order to sensitive the political leadership to the dangers of corruption and sex-for-grade on the future of the country. It is not enough for the President to condemn sex-for-grade. He needs to do more. He should be reminded of how Ethiopian Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed, revised the fortunes of his country and even neighbouring countries within two years to the point of winning the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize.

    A panel must be set up to collate the findings so far and carry out further investigations on sex-for-grade. The goal will be to provide adequate measures for minimising, if not eradicating, the practice. Unless some drastic measures are taken on the rampant sex-for-grade scandals in our universities, the future of girl-child education, in particular, and manpower development, in general, in this country will be permanently doomed.

     

  • Buhari and the broken federal roads

    GIVEN his man of the people image, it is hard to paint President Muhammadu Buhari as disconnected from the masses he governs.

    Time and again, he has proven at the polls that he has an unusual connection with common folk – especially in the northern parts of the country.

    At political rallies or public functions, the mere mention of his name throws people into delirious fits.

    It is certainly not because he doles out money to them. If anything, he never ceases to remind his followers that he has nothing material to give them. Perhaps his strange charisma lies in his reputation for plain-speaking.

    A straight-shooter certainly is a breath of fresh air in an environment where politicians are better known for bending the truth and speaking from both sides of the mouth.

    But sometimes, the line that separates bluntness from insensitivity is wafer-thin. Some comments of the president make him appear insensitive and uncaring concerning the day-to-day plight of the average Nigerian. They create the impression of distance from his people’s reality.

    The presidency is an artificial environment that separates its occupants from truth. Those who are closest to power often find it extremely difficult to speak truth to power, thinking instead that a fawning servility is the best way to affirm loyalty to their principal.

    Even the most well-meaning of leaders have been negatively affected by prolonged stay in such an environment. Could the president be coming down with a dose of ‘Aso Rocktivitis?’

    One recent comment of Buhari that makes you wonder if he’s drifting out of touch concerns what to do about the thousands of failed federal roads across the country.

    They are to be found in major cities and are the arteries that connect the states. While some like the Lagos-Ibadan and Lagos-Abeokuta expressways have started receiving attention, lots more are abandoned in their sorry state with little hope of rehabilitation in the horizon.

    Works and Housing Minister, Babatunde Fashola, at a recent interaction with a House of Representatives Ad-Hoc Committee on Abandoned Federal Government Projects, predictably faced questions about the condition of roads.

    He gave an answer that was partly revealing but ultimately depressing. The summary was that weighed down by a mountain of debts and claims by state governors, Buhari had virtually drawn a line in the sand.

    “Tell them not to fix my roads again if they’re going to claim compensation. If you want to fix it and not ask for compensation, send me what you want to do. But if you want compensation, go and mind your business while I mind my business. This is because I have inherited enough debts,” he quoted the president as saying.

    He reiterated this position at another National Assembly encounter related to defence of the allocation to his ministry in the 2020 budget.

    To his credit, Buhari did pay off the claims for refunds that he met when he assumed office. Fashola confirmed that out of a demand for N1 trillion, the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP) certified only N454 billion – the bulk of which has been paid to the claimants.

    However, the way forward is now more complex with the president insisting he wouldn’t take on additional debt even when the states are doing him a favour.

    These last few weeks in Lagos, millions of commuters have had a torrid time trapped for hours in monster traffic jams largely caused by cavernous potholes. The hapless passenger who has to suffer this for days going and coming from work doesn’t know whether the road he’s grounded on is federal or state-owned.

    They can’t relate to the game-playing that separates political assets and responsibilities but doesn’t address their pain. Abuja is thousands of kilometers away, but there is a governor in the theatre of their suffering – a handy target for venting their frustrations.

    In better times, one or two governors who presided over states with healthy finances, took the position that they would fix the roads – even if the federal government refuses to pay back. Their argument was that they had to act because their people were the ones using the roads.

    Unfortunately, the times are hard and many states are in dire straits. Not too many can afford to be that generous anymore – not even the so-called buoyant ones – given the pressure on their finances by competing needs.

    It is certainly not fair to ask a governor who used state resources to deal with a federal problem in his territory not to ask for a refund.

    The president reportedly said if you are thinking of asking for your money back, just leave ‘my roads’ alone. That position suggests that the federal government has the capacity to carry the burden. We know it doesn’t.

    Nigeria doesn’t have enough right now to fund its institutions and fix critical infrastructure. Allocation for the Works and Housing ministry in the 2020 budget is a trifling N262 billion. This, as Fashola has pointed out, cannot even clear the debts on ground, not to talk of initiating new projects.

    Lack of funds is partly why federal roads across the country are the way they are. Out of desperation states are forced to step in because people cannot move and businesses are suffering. For as long as this persists, the economy will suffer – and that is elementary.

    If states are offering to help, it is wrongheaded to discourage or frustrate them.

    If the new policy is truly just about the debt burden then there’s a way around it. It is something that can be addressed gradually as the country’s finances improve. After all, a lot of the refunds made by Buhari were racked up under the Goodluck Jonathan administration.

    Like most things Nigerian, there is the fear the some put up bogus claims in a bid to rip off the government. But this can be easily addressed by making the process so rigorous that it deflates any padding.

    Even with the creative solutions that this government has come up with like the Sukuk bonds, it still doesn’t have enough to keep the roads in the shape that allows people and goods to move around seamlessly.

    The president needs all the help he can get; he needs all the bright ideas people can think up to address the road decay. What he doesn’t need is wrongheaded posturing that only makes life worse for the people whose cause he claims to champion.

     

  • Your Project Equiano@275?

    Olaudah Equiano, born 0ctober 16, 1745 died March 31, 1797 is 274 years ‘old today. Happy posthumous Birthday!!. He was kidnapped from Eastern Nigeria before Nigeria became Nigeria, kidnapped from Southeast Nigeria and sold as a slave at 11 years old along with his sister; made the Middle Passage by sea to suffer slavery in The West Indies and Virginia and Georgia in America. He was first sold to a Royal Navy Captain and re-sold several times. He learnt to read and write and arithmetic. He bought his freedom and was cheated of his freedom before regaining it again in 1766. He became a member of the abolitionist Sons of Africa. He rose from being a kidnap victim and slave to becoming a clerk, sailor, hairdresser, horn player, businessman, assistant to sea captains, navigator, carpenter, shipwreck survivor and rescuer, and an anti-slavery leader beside Grenville Sharp and Wilberforce. He married and had two children one of whom married a reverend gentleman.

    He visited many countries including the Americas, England and Ireland, several Mediterranean countries and Turkey. He saw Mount Vesuvius erupt and was the first Nigerian to visit the artic in company of midshipman – later Admiral- Horatio Nelson. He came back to Africa, to Sierra Leone.  His portrait hangs in a UK Gallery.

    He is the ‘first successful Nigerian author and poet’. His book, an autobiography, is entitled ‘The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa, The African’ was published in 1789 and  sold over 10,000 copies and went through nine reprints in his lifetime and many more since because it was abridged as ‘Equiano’s Travels’ by Paul Edwards with an introduction by Professor  S E Ogude and published by Heinemann Publishers in 1996. Worldwide many activities, films, plays, poems, sculptures have been dedicated to the story of Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa as he was during his lifetime. No doubt, next year 2020, the world, especially in many parts of America and the UK will celebrate the literary work, the cultural worth and the antislavery relevance OlaudahEquiano@275/2020 and compare now and then. But as usual Nigeria will largely be left out.

    But you, your school, your social group, your children, your friends and I can change that narrative and hashtag MakeOlaudahEquianoGreatAgain to create 1,500,000 ‘Olaudah Equiano Projects’ by 16-10-2020. Such projects would be one project in every classroom of every school, public and private, and one in every department of every polytechnic and university, and even the private and public sector. Knowledge of Olaudah Equiano is in Google and Wikipedia. There you will see that a wide range of efforts and events have been done to honour and learn from Olaudah Equiano’s suffering and survival.

    Building on that huge legacy, we in Nigeria can help fellow Nigerians especially the young ones still in school and tertiary institutions to constructively explore the arts to bring Olaudah Equiano to the attention of classmates and the community – drawing, cartoons, painting, posters, sculpture of his head and complete body in different types of material like paper, cardboard, wood, metal and using waste material in and around the school and university environment. They can explore drama about parts of his life, engage in ‘Essay, Debate and Discussions’.

    Such ‘Olaudah Equiano Projects’ can include competitions for poetry, songs and ‘tales by moonlight’ and other storytelling, role-playing, enacting parts of his life. Such efforts should include discussions and highlighting the projects by schools and other groups. A key theme for the year starting today and culminating in the 275th birthday on 16-10-2020 should be ‘Equiano Now and Then’ and ‘Equiano – Relevance of His Legacy Today’.

    The private sector and the public sector, both media and corporate interests, should sponsor ‘Equiano Events’, create media hype, programming and documentaries around the MakeOlaudahEquianoGreatAgain and build statues and name building and roads after him and announce 2020 Olaudah Equiano Scholarships and Prizes.

    The current LNG Literature Prize can be specially named as the 2020 Olaudah Equiano LNG Literature Prize or at least awarded in his honour and memory. All Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA) branches and national ANA could name their 2020 conventions in honour of Olaudah Equiano and the national ANA could similarly name the annual ANA prize in honour of Olaudah Equiano@275.

    This is another not-to-be-missed ‘Nollywood Moment’ to project historical relevance and make cartoons, films and documentaries about Olaudah Equiano. Fashion can get on board with Olaudah Equiano T-shirt and caps graphics, Nigerian ankara and even catwalk styles, wristbands, schoolbag stickers etc.

    To be a catalyst for spreading ‘Lessons from the Life and Times of Olaudah Equiano’ all these projects should start now and be catalogued and blogged about towards a huge ‘Nigerian Olaudah Equiano Catalogue’ showcase on and before Olaudah Equiano’s 275th birthday on Friday October 16, 2020. No school should be without an ‘Olaudah Equiano Poetry/ Reading Club’ like we have had at Educare Trust since 1999.

    Contributing to this task will require the Corporate Social Responsibility contributions for shows and talent displays inspired by Olaudah Equiano@275’, donation of space for ‘Olaudah Equiano@275 Exhibits’ by exhibition centres and museums, provision of OlaudahEquiano@275 airtime/page space slots on ‘Olaudah Equiano Activities’ in the media. The task is ‘Equianormous’ and will fail if nothing is done. It could be ‘Equianormously’ rewarding if every student, teacher, school, tertiary institution and corporate body. Check back on Friday 16-10-2020 for Equiano exam result!

  • Nigeria’s Population: The bomb that exploded unnoticed

    Festus Eriye

     

    There was a time when Nigeria’s booming population could have been referred to as a ticking time bomb. The bomb has since exploded but we didn’t understand what happened because it crept up on us. Now, we must confront the diverse consequences of our carefree procreation.

    A huge population can be an asset if a country has sound economic foundations that make for continuing prosperity. In this case the large numbers become a powerhouse market.

    But an exploding and impoverished population is a nightmare that would soon lead to an implosion because it cannot sustain its hordes.

    On Monday, at the 25th Nigerian Economic Summit (NES) held in Abuja, the Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II, described our population as a liability to the country. He is absolutely correct.

    As shameful as it is, we don’t have credible figures because censuses over the years became tools for jockeying for ethnic and political advantage.

    So we must rely on projections. UN estimates put our population as of 2019 at 200.96 million – making us the 7th most populous nation on earth.

    At independence in 1960 we were a country of just 45.2 million people. The National Bureau of Statistics put our population as high as 166.2 million as of 2012. So in the fifty-two years in between our numbers ballooned by 268%.

    The scary part going by these projections is that by 2050, this nation could have 390 million residents! Bear in mind that while we are multiplying, the entire landmass remains static at approximately 923,768 square kilometres. A significant chunk of this space is uninhabitable – given climate change and the relentless encroachment of the Sahara Desert.

    We are already noticing the impact as dislocated people seeking succour down south, compete for land and limited resources with the locals.

    Sanusi, in his intervention at the NES event, attributed the spate of kidnapping, armed robbery, insurgency, farmer-herder conflict to the rate of population growth.

    He said: “Nigeria’s population is currently a liability because the root cause of problems such as kidnapping, armed robbery, Boko Haram, drug addiction are all tied to the population that we have and the question is how do you turn that into a productive one.”

    My first suggestion is we need a national consensus that our population growth rate has become an emergency that has to be addressed without delay. You don’t get that sense of urgency listening to our leaders – whether in the National Assembly or Presidency – lay out their policy priorities.

    It’s nice to know that one or two grand bridges or kilometres of roads are being built. But it doesn’t matter how many jobs are created or how many hospitals and houses are constructed, they would never be enough if we don’t rein in our present growth rate.

    As pressure on available infrastructure and limited opportunities mount, desperation also increases. Those who are left behind sooner or later venture into crime. The more daring are fleeing to the four corners of the globe to build a life for themselves.

    Unfortunately, most nations are struggling to sustain their own population and the surging numbers of foreigners heading their way from countries like Nigeria, is putting their systems under considerable strain. The recent anti-immigrant sentiment that we’ve seen in countries like the US, Italy, South Africa and elsewhere is down to this.

    We are partly where we are today because in the boom years of the 70s, our leaders were not visionary enough to foresee the problem that lay ahead. They were satisfied with basking in accolades about being the ‘Giant of Africa.’ Roads and other facilities were built without a sense that a decade or two down the line they wouldn’t be enough to cater for a larger population.

    It wouldn’t be totally correct to say that the governments of the 80s and 90s didn’t recognise that there was trouble ahead. The question is what did they do about it? Were they sufficiently disturbed to take action?

    The military regime of former President Ibrahim Babangida did take a half-hearted stab at the problem with a campaign that sought to limit Nigerians to families of four. Designed to get people to enlist to the idea by persuasion, it came to nothing.

    The same challenges that existed back then are alive and well today. Any attempt to seriously control growth would immediately face the formidable obstacles of cultural practices and religious beliefs.

    But we are beginning to see families limit the number of children they have in the face of the astronomical cost of raising them. Economics is fast becoming a factor in the matter – but not enough.

    We still have too many among our elite who think that because they have the means, they must sire enough children to populate a village. There are also individuals blessed with beautiful girls, but keep procreating in search of a supposedly ‘superior’ male child.

    On the flip side is the beggar who has three or four wives, when the only means of sustenance is the goodwill of strangers who may drop a dime in his plate. The upshot is we are daily building a pool of people who ultimately become a menace to society.

    That Nigeria has to develop an aggressive new population control policy has become imperative.

    The jury is still out as to whether China’s one-child policy was a good idea. Its implementation may have been harsh and extreme, but it prevented 400 million births and threw open employment opportunities for millions across the country.

    The policy has since been relaxed and couples may now have up to two children. We don’t have to copy their example wholesale, but we can adopt the good things they did.

    We may choose to offer new families the choice of limiting their size to two or three children and incentivise the policy. Families can get scholarships, free healthcare and tax relief for buying into the programme.

    It may take a while to seep through to the grassroots, but a committed government that sees the danger that is already upon us, would try anything.

    But first we must organise a credible national census that doesn’t make provision for questions about ethnicity and faith, instead it focuses on settling the critical issue of how many we truly are.

  • Corruption and sex: Nigerian university education at a moral crossroads

    Niyi Akinnaso

     

    Barely a week ago, a 19-year old female student I mentor in a state university called me up early in the morning. She told me of a lecturer, who had singled her out as they walked out of class and asked her to see him in his office. “I haven’t noticed you in this class until today”, he told her. “You should come and see me in my office later”, he concluded. My mentee said she had been reluctant to go and asked me what she should do.

    I advised her to go but with her phone recorder turned on and a friend loitering outside in the hallway. Should anything untoward happen, a shout would alert her friend to bang on the door.

    She was the first person I called after my wife drew my attention to the jaw-dropping BBC video of a senior university lecturer cum pastor at the University of Lagos, making brute sexual advances to a female journalist posing as a teenage girl seeking admission and of another lecturer making similar advances to another female journalist, posing as an adult student wanting to change her course to the lecturer’s department.

    Both cases reminded me of a 2003 a pop song, titled Mr. Lecturer, by Eedris Abdulkareem. Here is an excerpt:

    My lecturer wants to have sex with me …

    Hey! You girl … what’s your name?

    My name is Bimbo, Bimbo Owoyemi

    That’s very good, very smooth and very nice

    Come and see me immediately in my office.

    Bimbo goes to see the lecturer, who then tells her she failed his test and exam, and then added: “You know what to do”, a quid pro quo code for sex for grade.

    Sexual advances to female students by male lecturers or staff were not unknown even when I was an undergraduate in the 1960s. However, by the time I joined the teaching staff in the early 1970s, the practice had taken root. Sexual escapades between lecturers and students were going on in the offices and in the few hotels around.

    The practice escalated with the inroads of Army officers into the university campuses in the 1970s, more than 30 years before Eedris’s Mr. Lecturer lyric. At that time, it was not unusual for an Army guy to snatch even a lecturer’s student-lover and send her off to London or Paris for a weekend.

    What makes lecturer-student sexual encounters different today is fivefold. One, there are widespread across universities, public or private. Two, they are frequent. Three, they are often non-consensual. Four, they are often cases of sex for grade. Five, the offense goes largely unpunished. As a result, the practice is not only rampant today, it seems to have been normalised. Yet, it is a serious breach of professional conduct.

    It was only in 2015 that a case of rape of a teenage girl by a part-time lecturer inside a study hall at the University of Lagos came to the limelight. The fellow was arrested by the police, alright, but not much was heard about the case thereafter and no lesson seems to have been learned from it by other lecturers, especially at UNILAG.

    Then came the case of Professor Richard Akindele, who was involved in a recorded sex for grade scandal. He was promptly suspended by the university management and eventually dismissed by the Dr. Yemi Ogunbiyi-led Governing Council after investigation. True, the UNILAG management promptly suspended the lecturers involved in the scandal reported in the BBC video, the public awaits the decision of the Dr. Wale Babalakin-led Governing Council of the university.

    These cases have serious implications not only for the reputation of the universities involved in the scandals, and of Nigerian universities in general, but also for the public attitude to the quality of Nigerian education and especially of female academic flyers.

    Only recently, I was shocked when someone talked down a young lady who had a Second Class Upper degree from a premier university and was looking for a job commensurate with her qualification and degree classification: “A female student? She might have attained the degree classification through sex for grade”. This is a serious indictment of hard-working women, who genuinely deserve their grades and degree classification. Such a comment could only complicate the psychological pain that predatory victims go through.

    Sex for grade is only one of the serious ethical problems confronting Nigerian universities today. I have written repeatedly about corruption in university management, from the offices of Principal Officers to the executives of the unions, including the Student Union. Like the sex for grade cases, corruption cases in the universities have festered without due attention or deterrent measures.

    Corruption cases involving investigations by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission have never gone beyond sensational arrests and court appearances. The kid gloves with which such cases are handled have fueled the militancy of university unions in recent years. This is especially true of the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities, whose members often know about the deployment of resources and the movement of files within the university system.

    In 2017, in reaction to cases of corruption involving the management of some Federal Universities, I drew attention to lessons to be learned from Romania, where the negative practices now going on in Nigerian universities have been rampant for quite some time, leading that country to stagnate for years without skilled labour.

    The Romanian Academic Society, an education think tank, rose to the challenge by forming the Coalition for Clean Universities, drawing participants from university unions, students, journalists and other stakeholders. A university integrity ranking system was developed whose outcome is used to name and shame institutions that are failing in their duties, as well as to celebrate and spread good practices.

    An evaluation team, consisting of both faculty and students, periodically performs a governance audit of public universities, basing its evaluation on four major criteria, namely, transparency and responsiveness; academic integrity; governance quality; and financial management. To this list, we might add gender sensitivity. Appropriate documents are obtained from university management in these areas, followed by a field assessment during which management, academics, administrative staff and students are interviewed. Based on the data obtained, universities are assessed and ranked and the results are made public.

    Since the first evaluation in 2009, Romanian universities have improved significantly in the four categories assessed. It is high time a similar system of evaluation was developed in Nigeria. The current practice requiring universities to assess themselves and be corruptly assessed by the NUC, has proved unsuccessful. A broad coalition of stakeholders and independent assessors is sorely needed.

  • Chibok@2000; 8th NASS apologise! 9th NASS Jan-Dec, No Maradi Rail

    ABCDEFGGHI=Avoid Bribery & Corruption Daily Everywhere For Good Governance Here Immediately for a Nigeria@60.

    It is now Chibok@2000days in captivity for students kidnapped at Chibok + Leah Sharibu. Appreciation to #Bringbackourgirls for keeping the matter on the front pages of Nigerian minds.

    Senator, I did not say Saint, Okorocha’s suggestion that Nigeria urgently requires a surgical reduction to NASS with one senator and three representatives per state is a good beginning, no matter what you think of Okorocha as governor. Judging from past NASS actions, its members who think refreshingly differently and talk about salaries etc., get hauled before some NASS Internal Disciplinary Committee. A strong punishment for free speech and pro-Nigerian but ‘breach of the NASS Code’ of silence, against dissenting voices also called anti-NASS activities. Dissenters among NASS members are quickly silenced and even internally prosecuted with suspensions for 180 working days, effectively one calendar year suspension and abandonment of responsibility to represent the voters who supposedly ‘elected’ the individual. Catastrophe!

    Unfortunately, NASS presents itself to Nigeria as an almighty and independent political party uniting its members against externally recommended change. Are their actions and earnings against Nigeria, to extract as much as ‘legally manipulation will allow? They are both judge and jury in their affairs. If a serving NASS acts against natural justice, is that not anti-Nigerian activity?

    Ask yourself: What is anti-NASS activity? Is it protecting Nigerian society from the manifest excesses of politicians?

    That Nigeria’s NASS has mutated at every political opportunity into the oppressor similar to the military era into a financially ‘spoilt child’ and a bloated blight on Nigeria’s political landscape and consumed by the disease ‘Political Consumption’ consuming a disproportionate percentage of the budget is not in dispute. Just compare it to any other country worldwide. Which slimming diet to apply is the problem as the patient, NASS, must sign its own prescription, death warrant, to shed financial and numerical weight for Nigeria to even be respected as a serious nation and even to survive. For years almost 80% of people I speak to want a reduction to ‘One NASS House’, preferably the House of Representatives with at best one or at worst two representatives per state, 37-74 in all, with ‘Part Time Sitting Allowances’ refundable verifiable travel expenses all to minimize abuse of Salaries and Perks, SAP. My personal recommendation is that members are fully funded by the electing state of origin.

    But inexplicably, and in my personal non-legal opinion, an abuse of their constitutional powers, NASS usually takes over the budget and approves huge amendments. The immediate past 8th NASS disgracefully withdrew a government approved N150b for the completion of the Lagos-  Ibadan expressway in 2018 and diverted it to constitutional projects for the 8the NASS membership to feed off. NASS should not have such powers the abuse of which has added untold 6-10 hours of extra hardship to millions of expressway commuters for an extra year. The 8th NASS members should beg Nigerians for forgiveness and apologise to current expressway travellers! The 9th NASS should not change the budget, just tweak it. Nigerians demand a January to December fiscal year.

    Hurray, the budget is being submitted so that the NASS can deliberate and come up with a consensus or compromise budget. It must as a matter of NASS efficiency and honour recalibrate the budget year to Jan-Dec cancelling the corruption of time by stubborn past NASS for reasons well known.

    One budget burning issue is the ‘Maradi Railway Affair’. Nigeria once gave electricity to neighbouring countries while Nigeria denied its citizens electric power. Is the story to repeat itself? No to ‘others first’! How can Nigeria use borrowed funds to build a 55km railway line into a foreign country – to Maradi in Niger Republic? According to the ECOWAS map, Maradi is not in Nigeria!! Daura is not in Niger Republic!!! Not yet at any rate. Nigerian cartographers, mapmakers, please confirm. Is Nigeria annexing Niger Republic or is Daura to be annexed by Niger Republic? What are we exporting or is it to import foreigners from Niger Republic? No!!! There are 100 places in Nigeria requiring 55km of railways. Railway charity is never done cross-border. Railway charity must begin at home for now. NASS and public opinion should stop this till Nigeria has railways to everywhere. Railways were suppressed by the same military policy in favour of a trailer industry.

    Our leaders have always explained why Nigeria is ‘Not Yet Great Again’. We know it was due to the past and present CINS -Corruption, Incompetence, Negligence and Selfishness of politicians, contractors and civil servants as well as unitary and lopsided governance destroying true federalism. Instead, governments served themselves the funds diverted from citizens’ infrastructure and social services. Governments disseminated misinformation, fake news and hanged. They re-branded ‘basic human rights’ as ‘Social Amenities’ and even worse ‘Dividends of Democracy’ suggesting to the citizen that books and electricity, are unimaginably wonderful gifts above the normal functions of governments. When ‘delivered’ they are criminally paraded as great media events, favours and huge achievements of governments. Worse still, government agents personalise distribution of such people’s property ‘governor’s or senator’s benevolence’ or ‘a governor’s wife’s personal gifts’. This must stop.

    Governors, tell the truth – ‘On behalf of the state, I make this available…….’.

    What will change in 2020 when we will be Nigeria@60? Electricity 60,000Mw???

  • President Buhari: Stop this internal bleeding

    I REVERT to this medical metaphor for two reasons. First, blood is easily recognisable. Second, we know that internal bleeding can lead to death. Therefore, both literally and metaphorically, internal bleeding could be very dangerous.

    Unfortunately, today, President Muhammadu Buhari is dealing with two serious cases of internal bleeding, and he does not appear to be paying due attention. One, the presidency is bleeding. Two, his political party, the All Progressives Congress, is also bleeding.

    There are several symptoms of internal bleeding within the presidency. However, the present diagnosis is concerned with only one of them, namely, the mischievous allegation of misappropriation against the Vice President, reportedly by a former Deputy Secretary of the APC and other accomplices.

    The details of the allegation are somewhat sketchy. It first appeared on social media and it soon spread like an epidemic. Essentially, it alleges that the VP mismanaged some 90 billion Naira allegedly provided by the Federal Internal Revenue Service to fund the 2019 general elections, including the presidential campaign.

    The allegation looks like a parody of the 2015 allegations against some officials of former President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration on the mismanagement of funds said to be allocated for national security but diverted to fund Jonathan’s failed presidential campaign.

    Furthermore, by implication, the present allegation is not only against the VP; it is also against the President, who allegedly authorised the use of FIRS funds for the general elections. Indeed, according to the allegation, the purported frosty relationship between the President and the VP was precipitated on the alleged mismanagement of the funds.

    In clear language, there are three parties involved in the allegation, namely, the VP, the FIRS, and the President.

    So far, the VP has come out bluntly with three steps. First, he staunchly denied the allegation. Second, he instructed his lawyers to sue the perpetrators of the allegation. Third, he pledged to waive his immunity for the proper prosecution of the culprits.

    This last step has, however, attracted some controversy, because immunity is constitutionally required of the holder of the office of VP. The question is: If he cannot be sued, can’t he sue for sedition?  We must give it to the VP that, as a Professor of Law and a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, he would know the proper steps to take.

    Similarly, the FIRS has come out to deny the allegation on two grounds. First, it does not have that kind of money as its annual allocation by the Federal Accounts Allocation Committee has never grossed N100 billion. The fund is barely enough to cater for its over 150 offices and 8,000-member staff and trainees. Second, its accounts and operations are public and, therefore, could be verified.

    The expectation is that the President would be the next to deny the allegation by making it clear that he never authorised the FIRS to release that kind of money. However, only few are disappointed that the President has not spoken on the issue.

    True, the President’s taciturnity is legendary; but why would he say anything, if, indeed, the allegation is baseless? There is the argument that once the President begins to respond to baseless allegations, there will be no end to the nonsense.

    Nevertheless, it is standard practice in civilized democracies for Presidents or Premiers to defend their Deputies against allegations. The confidence expressed in them is considered necessary to sustain the image of the presidency. This is what many expect President Buhari to do at this time.

    Instead, it would appear that the President has taken some steps which are believed to have some direct effects on the office of the VP and its operations. I will not go into those details here. The question is whether such steps were taken to signal the erosion of confidence in the VP or to maximise the efficiency of operations in the presidency.

    Last Sunday night, the presidential spokesperson, Femi Adesina, indicated on Channel TV’s Sunday Politics, hosted by Seun Okinbaloye, that the latter was the case and that the former was no more than an insinuation.

    Be that as it may, there is another disease in need of urgent attention by the President: The APC is said to be suffering from internal bleeding as well. The party bled through the 2019 elections but was lucky to remain victorious. It is believed to be bleeding again in readiness for the 2023 general elections. There are indications that each of the three major parties which formed the APC alliance in 2014–ACN, CPC, and ANPP—is strategising for the 2023 presidential ticket.

    It is further speculated that the Southwest is targeted as the theatre of intrigues and manipulations in the belief that it should be the rightful zone to produce the next Presidential candidate for the party. At the same time, however, it is also believed that there are Northern interests in the ticket within the CPC/ANPP bloc. However, the APC may lose lose out were the North to cling to power beyond 2023.

    Understandably, two battles are already brewing in the Southwest. On the one hand, the zone is the focus of intrigues by Northern interests. On the other hand, various interests within the zone are being played against each other.

    We may have been witnessing the interplay between the two battles in the form of unauthorised 2023 posters, unfounded rumours, and spurious allegations. There surely will be more to come against notable Southwestern targets suspected to be interested in 2023.

    The fear is that the party may well be on the road to perdition, if care is not taken early enough before it is torn apart by factionalism, ethnic strictures, and the cleavages of religion as these are overlaid on the political ambition of certain individuals within the party.

    The disintegration of the party will be a sad legacy for President Buhari. He may be viewed as the leader of the party, who looked away as the party faltered and splintered under his feet. He may be viewed as an ingrate for whom the party toiled for two consecutive elections but who did not care once he secured a second term.

    He must act swiftly to avoid this image, by preventing a free-for-all fight between the North and the South for the 2023 ticket. And he must protect his VP against this fight.

     

  • Talking points from Buhari’s Independence address

    ANNIVERSARIES like the Independence Day celebration usually afford Nigerian leaders the opportunity to deliver an assessment of the ‘state of the nation’ under their watch.

    Yesterday, President Muhammadu Buhari got the fifth opportunity to tell Nigerians we are better off today than we were in 2015. Whether he succeeded in that endeavour is a moot point.

    He did try his level best to showcase what his administration is doing concerning the key areas of security, economy and corruption on which he secured a mandate in the last two election cycles.

    Only the uncharitable would say his government has done ‘nothing’ in the over four years of his incumbency. The issue is whether what is being thrown at Nigeria’s problems is being delivered in enough doses to make a difference.

    Some critics would even argue that, in certain instances, because wrong treatment is being applied, we are worse off economically than we were a couple of years ago.

    We are all experts at retailing what’s wrong with the country. So determined not to be part of the October 1 bore fest of regurgitating our failings, I read the speech looking for positives.

    And you would find a few – whether in the building up of a healthier foreign reserve, investment in some big ticket infrastructure projects, in attempts to diversify the economy, or even in the administration’s imperfect war against corruption.

    That said, the speech was a bit disappointing because beyond the ritual chest-thumping expected of every government in power, its rhetoric did little to inspire people to hope for a better day. Indeed, the message could have been the updated version of the ones read in the last two years.

    In the preamble, the president reminds us of his charge four years ago, that we may have voted for ‘change’ but it isn’t going to appear like a conjurer’s trick.

    He said: “We must change our lawless habits, our attitude to public office and public trust… simply put, to bring about change, we must change ourselves by being law-abiding citizens.”

    Accepted that even a government of angels would be challenged when confronted by a people uniquely gifted in circumventing every rule made by man.

    Still it is the burden of leadership to corral the most recalcitrant of followers and point them in the direction you want them to go. It goes beyond just seeing the fault of those you lead.

    We certainly have an attitude problem in the areas the president spoke of. But it would be more helpful if rather than the name-calling and finger-pointing, the president came up with a specific national reorientation programme that helps to reshape the people’s mindset.

    This is especially urgent because the younger demographic in this country are already headed in a direction that should alarm anyone concerned about the future.

    Almost on a daily basis the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) parades scores of young men in their 20s and 30s who have been arrested for internet fraud and other forms of cybercrime.

    Many have been driven into this activity by unemployment and lack of opportunities. Others have simply made wrong moral choices. In addition to whatever families, religious organisations and local communities are doing, the government should weigh in with its own solutions. The president didn’t really speak to this.

    Interesting, the accomplishments of the youths in the area of the arts and entertainment represent one of the bright spots for Nigeria in the last 10 to 15 years. Today, our pop singers like Davido, Burna Boy, Wizkid and others are world beaters who are competing against the best in America and Europe.

    They have achieved what they have with little or no government support. Perhaps the president, being an honest man, wisely chose not to ascribe their strides to any special thing his administration has done.

    But the government can build on what has been achieved through policy intervention to further boost the entertainment industry as a means of generating jobs. The same can be done in the area of sports which is a major employer of young people globally. Buhari’s speech never glanced in this direction.

    Equally disturbing is the fact that while acknowledging we have a crisis with our exploding population, he didn’t suggest anything radical was being done about it – beyond the perfunctory comment about creating jobs.

    He did, however, bemoan the abuses of social media to further hate and division talking, again, about individual rights needing to take a back seat to national security and interest.

    His remarks are interesting against the backdrop of the ongoing trial of Sahara Reporters publisher, Omoyele Sowore, the activities of pro-Biafra secessionists and opposition activists.

    Perhaps, the trial would throw up earthshaking evidence of the capabilities of a rabblerousing activist to topple an entrenched government. Still, one cannot help but view the case as further evidence of the lack of progress made in furthering civil liberties in the last few years.

    I have had the privilege of listening to heads of some security agencies go to the extent of labelling critical comments made against the incumbent president in the heat of the last election season as acts against national security.

    I would suggest that we face a greater security threat from the activities of Boko Haram/ISWAP fighters, kidnappers, compromised security agencies at our borders – even from the ailing economy – than from publicity-seeking agitators.

    I made this point in my piece titled ‘The trouble with the Buhari Doctrine’ written after the president controversially said last year that there were instances where individual rights must come second to the national interest. It bears repeating here:

    “Although Buhari has run to a certain Supreme Court ruling for cover, the trouble with the newly-espoused doctrine is that national interest is such a nebulous concept which is open to diverse interpretations, misinterpretations and manipulation by malevolent forces.

    “What is in the national interest of a country is often down to what the individuals who run it think it is. There are hardly ever any objective parameters for defining it.

    ‘National interest’ is what regimes hide under to clamp dissidents in detention. But the moment a more liberal administration takes over, one of its first acts is often the release of detainees – in the ‘national interest’ – in order to score points locally and internationally and shore up support.”

    Just a few points of cavil. Hopefully, someone out there would take notice and make adjustments.