Category: Wednesday

  • Our girls; murder; naira

    Our girls; murder; naira

    Our Girls are still missing since April 15, 2014. Pray for their return.

    Mixed messages of incompetence and indifference from government.

    The figure ‘70+’ is a ‘murdered Benue farmer citizens’ number with 73+ millstones around the government’s neck as it fails miserably to deal with the plot that unleashed the reign of terror imposed by Fulani herdsmen’s unlimited, nationwide unprovoked and premeditated attacks amounting to the Fulani herdsmen’s war- my subject over 30 years. Are they singing to an international agenda as the effect is cross-continent reaching even East Africa. The deaths of soldiers and policeman added to more than a total of 100,000 ‘bloodied civilians’ amounts to a war as I have said for many years, and confirmed by Prof Wole Soyinka. The Vietnam War claimed 54,000 US soldiers. Our ECOMOG War claimed between 3,000 (government figures) and 12,000 (non-government) estimates. Some journalist or researcher should go back and total the almost daily reports of five, 10, 20, 300 deaths in the news reports of the Fulani herdsmen War for 10, 20yrs. What will be the final death count and what is our total cost for unity? Are the perpetrators ghosts and the killing fake or phantom to always automatically escape arrest? Whither Nigeria. Only when a defence to the senseless murders is planned, it is torn down as being terrorist. Our words are the wrong way around. The attacker is the terrorist; the defence strategist is the counter-terrorist. In Nigeria we specialise in turning victims into accused and terrorists into tribal heroes. Stop the killing!!

    Congratulations, Nigeria made the targeted $40b by beginning 2018 during economic hardship. The first aid care, under the ‘save the naira’ policy of Buhari and CBN support for the naira. Phase one has paid off. Phase two will be easier with the hike in oil price to nearly $70/barrel which will boost our reserves to a targeted $80-100b by April 2019 if not Dec 2018. Phase three must go hand in hand and that is to get the naira to ‘crash back’ to N150:$1 or lower to destabilize the forex hoarders. We should recommend a CBN-led forced fall of N1 naira per day to return to the golden age of N1:$1.5 by Dec 31, 2018. Ibrahim Babangida crippled Nigeria when he halved the naira value overnight and skyrocketed interest rates –a presidential knife in Nigeria’s back. Can we reverse that blow also overnight? Or perhaps improve at N1 per 1-2days to achieve N130: $1 by Dec 31? No other government has dedicated such efforts to reversing losses inflicted on the naira.

    The unpredicted fall and now spectacular rise in oil price towards $70+ confounds ‘doom and nay-sayers’. However that $70barrel cost should not make our oil imports more expensive if our own oil is exported to be refined. The real problem is our tragic incompetence as a nation, to in four years, get its refineries up to 150% production locally to combat manmade paralytic Christmas and New Year shortages.

    The president’s dismissal of the entire efforts to restructure is an insult, painful, but predictable given the benefits he and his groupings, ethnic and otherwise, gain from the power accrued under the status quo since 1956. It is deeply saddening to millions of victims of political and military fiat which lopsidedly created states and hundreds of LGAs to favour certain parts of Nigeria, arrogated huge swaths of the budget to itself and giving power to few. It speaks volumes of the paralyzing and blinding nature of the office of the president to any modern and citizen targeted progressive agenda. Is it the seat or the occupant at fault?? Probably the combination. It is legitimate in a democracy, even one as fragile as ours, to ask ‘Do you trust your president to make merit and objective decisions and appointments?’ The answer is chillingly negative. The president can change this perception in 2018, but has misjudged the mood by appointing Ahmed Rufai Abubakar as Director General, National Intelligence Agency, NIA, demonstrating his presidential and personal rigidity to his agenda? Trust demands more than ‘Our Unity is Non-negotiable’.

    But what is the current true presidential vision and mission for Nigeria? Yes, he wants to restore value and pride to the naira, if possible to N150 and lower which will automatically by definition lift millions out of poverty and ‘re-dignify’ Nigeria while making deserving fools of naira speculators and dollar hoarders -a sound and praiseworthy achievement. However this ‘grand naira recovery scheme’ will be no virtue if the Fulani herdsmen-murdered farmers’ body count skyrockets due to presidential insensitivity, collusion or indifference to the victims of the Fulani herdsmen’s rampage. He has also the self-inflicted burden of an additional hurricane of sectional mainly Fulani ‘Oga at de top’ appointments, difficult to defend in a cosmopolitan country populated with some of the best brains in the world and some of the worst.

    Away from the presidential responsibilities and government failures it behoves us to know that the work of our hands, brain, family, community will make the nation great or small in 2018. It is well-known that just one evil-minded corrupt president and evil cohorts [which Nigeria has had an abundance unfortunately], a single corrupt political or business policy or decision in your official capacity, in and out of uniform, can raise or ruin your neighbour, your community or your country. Be vigilant!

    NB: Uncover ‘I LOVE NIGERIA’ KNOWLEDGEABLE CANDIDATES for 2019 -SDG 16.

  • Our Girls; 2018: Honesty year?

    Our Girls; 2018: Honesty year?

    Our Girls are still missing since April 15, 2014. Pray for their return.

    The murderous herdsmen and other violence call attention to the precarious violent nature of life. Will the $1billion improve security or be diverted for 2018 elections? Study Iran closely.

    This poem was read to a Trenchard Hall, University of Ibadan Christmas audience.  Help save one child.  Stop The Dirty Slap Today: When a dirty slap makes you blind / You will find / It is hard to get around/ And if you cannot hear sound/ Because he slapped your ear / You will live in fear/ So don’t dirty slap your son, / Your wife, classmate, neighbour, or anyone/ Your arm / Is not for Grievous Bodily Harm – GBH/ Overcome the bully in you.

    Nigeria suffers from the devastation sown by a predatory, parasitic, heartless hyper-consumptive greed-ridden self-preserving anti-restructuring politics in which politicians dismiss or pervert professional reasoning thus crippling development with some professional collusion.

    For Nigeria’s growth in 2018, government and politicians must break the cycle of greed and also listen to professional groups. Nigerians are not sure if government knows how to put skilled political appointees, preferably alive and not dead, into boards. Nigeria urgently requires highly skilled hands and not just contract exploiting politicians stealing funds for 2019 election. Can any board change the perception of the NPC- National Population Commission as corruptly responsible for census figures, a tragi-comedy of fake figures making an ethnically corrupt nonsense of development data? Currently the fake figure of 180m is disputed down to 120-140m based on sectional criminal 30% inflation.

    Historically politicians have misinterpreted their role, seized powers and funds and carved a swath of destruction following board appointments. The political class arrogates to itself ‘Politics as first profession among all professions’ but has failed to deliver a professional job in any sphere of need, except greed.

    In 2018 we drown in the poor naira value, fuel shortage, the absent second Niger Bridge, the truncated Lagos-Ibadan Expressway and other major roads, abysmal budgets for health and education and the malignant epidemic of profligacy within the unaudited political process.

    The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are a United Nation (UN) agreed international yardstick measuring and fast-tracking human activity. UN-SDGs monitor politicians and governments which use or should facilitate provision of sustainable clean air, water and sanitation, food, shelter, transport, education, employment, security and environmental protection.

    Already, many societies which take governance as a sacred duty of service to the citizens consider the SDGs as the human right to a decent life. We can and must use the SDGs to boost or criticize the development of Nigeria at street, state and national level.

    The planet Earth is a living breathing organ infected by a parasite commonly called ‘human rash’ sorry ‘human race’ with 7.6 billion brains going in different mostly destructive directions, hungry mouths and loose bowels and bladders and 30.4 billion destructive combined legs and waste-making arms combined.

    The greatest revolution that Nigerians require to guarantee the survival and prosperity is to ask ‘How difficult is it to be honest?’ and stop personal corruption by an oath of ‘One Year of Honesty’. Do we have five, or 80million honest Nigerians willing to take the Oath of Honesty? Such a move is not far-fetched as the Bank Verification Number (BVN), tax cards, the National ID card, driving licence, voter’s card, passport issuance all have databases which if cross-linked will create a knowledge base forcing citizens to become more honest. Corruption in the workplace is worldwide but should never stunt development or family growth.

    Governments have convinced the citizens that they, by giving bribes in response to demands, are responsible for ‘Uniform Corruption’ among the government Police etcetera. No. The responsibility to keep uniforms non-corrupt lies with the uniforms who breach their employment contracts and the government, not the violated victim. Nigeria practices poor deterrents, punishment, disgrace, exposure and return of stolen assets. Massive recruiting of independent supervisors and military police and internal affairs is also necessary.

    Only an incumbent government, not the citizenry, can clean up the uniforms in Nigeria without bloodshed. Following the disgrace of the ‘revered’ judiciary, all the ‘checks and balances’ also need monitoring including EFCC, ICPC, tax authorities and Department of Petroleum Resources, (DPR) – those who monitor petrol stations which must be like Caesar’s wife- above board. The gains will be an honest Nigeria. As with the Ebola epidemic, one day we will stop the epidemic of corruption or Nigeria will die as a nation!

    Nigeria must stop legally-illegal and immoral discrimination against the citizen by the politician in pensions and salaries. The anti-corruption revolution also involves parents lying about the number and age of children to pensioners juggling age declaration, civil servants corrupting contracts, from uniforms and professionals with corrupt demands.

    Teach these Educare Trust SDG Goals:

    [1] Clean up your mouth/ language- Replace ‘OMG’ – ‘O My God’ with ‘O My Goodness’, ‘O SH-T’ with ‘O Sugar’. Replace ‘O F—K’ with ‘O Foolish’.

    [2] To Monthly Breast Exam, MBE add Total Monthly Body Exam, TMBE for everyone, SDG 3.

    [3] Start / join a campaign to stop the ‘Dirty Slap’ causing blindness and deafness in children! SDG 3, 4

    [4] ABC- Avoid Bullying Children-and adults SDG 3, 4, and

    [5] Say ‘No To Corruption of Mind and Money’ -All SDGs  1-17

    NB: Uncover ‘I LOVE NIGERIA’ KNOWLEDGEABLE CANDIDATES for 2019 -SDG 16.

  • Our Girls; Your ‘Selfie’ SDGs 2018 Plan – ABC?  

    Our Girls; Your ‘Selfie’ SDGs 2018 Plan – ABC?  

    Our girls are still missing since April 15, 2014. Pray. Happy New Year 2018 but their parents and families are still in turmoil from the absence of their children.

    Nigeria faces four serious wars: Corruption fighting back; Boko Haram, herdsmen and the looming election war. The election war will be with two consequences: (1) Traditionally accepted Budget Vandalisation by politicians for election purposes and; (2) Traditionally accepted violence. Citizens have been maimed and murdered at every Nigerian election. Can we stop the victimization of citizens during the Election 2018 – ‘A ZERO VIOLENCE, ZERO VICTIM ELECTION 2018’?

    And can Nigeria’s EFCC, ICPC, Police CID and whistleblowers plan a pre-emptive preventive monitoring programme to prevent 2018 budget theft and dirty money entering politics? This will save billions for the execution of projects and have a ‘Zero stolen funds from this 2018 Budget’? If SERAP, NGOs and others scream and shout, monitor and evaluate, we may save our as yet shamefully unpassed 2018 budget from being diverted at all levels for election war chests of billions- all misspent millions for election face posters and media hype including mega-billboards and bribes and stomach infrastructure.

    We must find a way of keeping governments working throughout this election year. Shamefully in the past, traditionally all government shut down during the election year with all contract funds diverted and stolen! Nigeria cannot afford such a negligent and wasteful party political policy and budget rape! Citizens must force governments to deliver year-round services.

    The Nigerian media has powers and responsibilities to guide society that it does not fully exercise in the national and citizens’ interest. Nigeria media revenues will increase from the billions to be spent on wasteful party election media campaigning. Nigeria requires a cross party/public declaration of war against plastic waste choking our gutters, streams and rivers and strangling our animals, fish and farmland. Abroad this particular war against plastic waste war is led by the international media programmes like Sky, CNN, BBC on Ocean Plastic Pollution and other issues like the migrant crisis and slavery as their CSR- devoting 1+% of their earnings towards funding give back projects forcing UK, USA and politicians and citizens to act. The Nigerian media also needs to allocate income and needs to come together for an Annual Media Strategy Plan to prosecute a ‘War on Ignorance’ aimed at educating both politician and the public through exposés, interviews and documentaries and by highlighting the solutions to problems faced by Nigeria due to for example, environmental pollution including plastic control, human rights abuses, corruption, migration murderous myths and other important areas of public interest to widen the 2018 political/public debate.

    There are other wars to fight and these are brilliantly encompassed as United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals (UN-SDGs) 1-17. Every government at LGA, state and federal level and Ministry, Department, Agency (MDA) level and every community, institution, religious body, corporation, company, business, household, family and individual should make a 2018 SDG commitment, a resolution to embrace and practice the UN-SDGs in all their discussion, plans and activities.

    With this SDG pillar of support in 2018, Nigeria will, or could, take a great step forward towards SDGs by 2030. Let us not look back in Jan 2019 and say ‘I wish we had done this SDG thing last year’ – like we ask why have the refineries not been finished in the three years of this regime? Please as staff yourself, or as boss, ask your staff to web-search UN-SDGs and come up with ‘Your Selfie SDG Project’ at house, office, street, community and organisation’s SDG Project Plan for ABC: Action, Broadcast and Change choosing any or all relevant SDGs. SDGs belong to every single human being and especially Nigeria which has been stunted in its growth in human development indices for decades. Please enlighten yourself with deep knowledge of SDGs so you can question at every opportunity every single political candidate and party about how they intend to achieve the SDGs if they are elected in 2018. Politicians hiring assistants should only hire those who have empowered themselves with SDG knowledge. No politician, worldwide or in Nigeria in particular, seeking to participate in governance in 2019 should be allowed to be even presented for election without a working and indeed deep understanding and knowledge of SDG. Every institution from primary, secondary, tertiary of all description – medical, finance, professional, security, service organization requires empowerment to internalise the SDG yardstick at every board and department meeting to construct its 2018 strategic plan. The commonest question in every meeting of one or two or more should be “Which SDG are/can we meet with this action or project? ’. ‘Ignorance of SDGs’ will be no excuse for failure to monitor or for political failure.

    No one on earth should be ignorant of the SDGs and the social and mass public TV media organs have the right and responsibility and the means to place SDGs, the most unkempt secret ‘WMD’, Weapon of Mass Development’, in the hands of both politicians and the people to encourage and force an SDG development agenda and methods of Monitoring and Evaluation, M&E, which will benefit all. This month is the time to plan week by week, month by month, quarter by quarter for the year 2018 with timelines for delivery of the SDGs.

    NB: Uncover ‘I LOVE NIGERIA’ KNOWLEDGEABLE CANDIDATES for 2019 -SDG 16.  Happy New Year

  • 2019: Governors of consequence

    2019: Governors of consequence

    At the last count, no fewer than four national dailies have named them “Governor of the Year” for both 2016 and 2017, either jointly or individually.

    The casual observer will likely put this down to the infrastructural spectacle they evoked in their respective states at a time the rest of the nation stewed in the worst recession in recent memory; which should not surprise considering their comparative fiscal edge.

    Such perspective can hardly be faulted. But a more nuanced reading will not just be an acknowledgment of the significant factor Governors Akin Ambode of Lagos and Nyesom Wike of Rivers embody in Nigeria’s political economy in the immediate past, but the intimation of the decisive roles they are historically fated to play in the emerging 2019 permutations.

    Already, Buhari’s restored buoyancy after a grave ailment and PDP’s recovery from a self-inflicted coma appear to set the stage for a titanic rematch after the 2015 electoral upset.

    Nothing hints of this mounting adrenaline on both sides than the new seeming balance of barbs and insults. For the first time in recent years, spokesmen of both ruling party and the main opposition are trained journalists and former colleagues at THISDAY who could not be said to be strangers to open brinkmanship as former top-flight political appointees, with perhaps equal knowledge of the use of both traditional and new media. No one can lay claim to the monopoly of abuse and heckling language anymore.

    With Buhari candidature in 2019 almost certain, strategists of a rejuvenated PDP are undoubtedly left with few maximalist options and cold calculations. The first step is to affirm a northerner as their flag-bearer in the coming slugfest.

    Next, emphasis will be where the most votes are. With estimated 19m registered voters, the North-West surely holds the ace and therefore becomes the ultimate battleground. With the North-East boasting less than 10m, there is another cogent reason to deny Atiku Abubakar the ticket and anoint someone from Buhari’s North-West.

    Those already being touted in this direction include Ahmed Markafi (Kaduna) and Aminu Tambuwal, the incumbent Sokoto governor wildly speculated as now merely marking time in APC, but already back in PDP in heart and soul.

    APC ideologues may consider it unflattering, but the argument remains that the 2015 electoral outcome might have been different had PDP fielded a Muslim northerner instead of Christian Goodluck Jonathan in response to north’s then un-satiated sense of entitlement over Umar Yar’Adua’s truncated presidency in 2010. This, it is contended, provided enough incentives to northern PDP governors to therefore sell out in their respective jurisdictions to the enemy purely out of base ethno-religious considerations.

    To this school of thought, fielding a much younger Turk in whose presence the conservative North will feel more at ease and, more crucially, be spared the sneaky fear of suspect health of a Buhari with all the ominous implications, might just be the perfect recipe needed to finally break the general’s fabled captive crowd in Arewaland, particularly the North-West.

    To further rally the North, part of what PDP strategists might also sell is assurance of an extra term bonus. In a recent interview, the immediate past chair, Ahmed Markafi, hinted that the North is entitled to two terms under PDP; suggesting that the North under PDP will relinquish power in 2027 whereas APC is 2023.

    With the North likely to be divided between Buhari and whoever PDP presents, attention will naturally shift to Lagos and Rivers as the centres of gravity in the South.

    With colossal 6m registered voters, Lagos alone boasts almost half of the South-west vote and more than half of the electoral strength of the entire North-east. Being the bastion of Bola Tinubu’s awesome political machine and accounting for more than half the size of the nation’s economy, there is no contesting the countervailing weight the former federal capital provided the opposition against PDP throughout its 16-year reign, triggering the momentum that eventuated in the vanquishing of a ruling party in 2015 for the first time in the nation’s history.

    In the months ahead, APC will certainly depend on Ambode’s stellar testimonial from the reengineering efforts of the last three years to woo voters not only in Lagos, but the entire South-West. The cosmopolitan character of Lagos also means that its electorate is perhaps the most enlightened and sophisticated in the country, liberated as it were from the narrow ethno-religious considerations that often inform political choices elsewhere. But then, those  who despise Igbo in South-East or think they can contemn the Ijaw in South-South will soon also find they have to contend  with their kith and kin who constitute significant voting blocs in Lagos.

    Lately, at the national level, there is no doubt that Buhari worship has become the new obsession among APC partisans looking to profit bountifully from the coming electoral season.

    Among the growing choristers would be found failed first-term governors opportunistically seeking Buhari’s anointing to survive the approaching electoral judgment day and some second-term governors who, after a mediocre occupation of their respective provinces, now simply covet the opportunity to name their successors in a last-ditch orgy of self-aggrandizement.

    However, Lagos is different due in part to its undiminished capacity to continually generate fresh ideas to solve socio-economic challenges even when Abuja seems incapable of clarity of thought and direction.

    For instance, we saw that in its foresight to partner with Kebbi State early in the day to deliver rice on fairly large scale. The success story of Lake rice within two planting seasons has since inspired many other states to join the bandwagon of big-time rice-farming, with resultant increase in the nation’s self-sufficiency in the production of the popular food staple.

    By and large, with innovative solutions, Ambode is sustaining the tradition of excellence for which Lagos is reputed, offering accommodation and opportunities for all, irrespective of ethnicity and religion. What makes it even more striking is the quiet manner Ambode does it.

    The scale of the ongoing physical transformation is perhaps best measured in the hitherto forsaken rural Lagos where massive investment in social infrastructure has significantly altered the landscape.

    At the other end of the political spectrum, the dynamics shaping Rivers’ own exceptionalism are however dissimilar. With a record 1,487,075 votes out of accredited 1,643,409 of a total of 2,324,300 registered, the oil-rich state delivered the highest number to PDP nationwide in 2015, to emerge the new bastion of opposition to the ruling party in Abuja.

    In a classic role reversal, Rivers is now to PDP what Lagos was to APC on the road to 2015.

    Conscripted by circumstances into leading the opposition, gutsy Wike has undoubtedly risen to the challenge by deftly working the optics and amplifying the sonics. First the optics: against perceived inability of APC to list a single project completed in Rivers, Wike’s own bragging rights today are fueled by an array of significant infrastructural footprints across the state.

    So impressed during an official visit, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo could not resist the temptation to join the public chorus in Port Harcourt by addressing Wike as “Mr. Project”.

    The sonics: whereas most of his contemporaries across the two zones have conveniently resorted to political silence out of sheer survivalist instincts, Wike is the new voice of Niger Delta agitating for fairer deal for the proverbial goose laying the golden eggs feeding the nation.

    In the wider national politics, the feelings of marginalization are real in South-South and the South-East. In Igboland, the river of bitterness arising from feeling of political estrangement surely still runs deep, even if the APC’s spin doctors still choose to live in denial.

    After two harrowing years of cold shoulders during which a concatenation of terrible misspeaks and mishandling of the IPOB issue drew him farther from the Igbo, Buhari suddenly began to reach out to the South-East lately. A rare two-day presidential visit to the zone was rounded off with Buhari’s appearance at APC’s grand rally in Awka ahead of Anambra’s November 2017 governorship elections.

    But concerted as the charm offensive was and massive as the deployment of the fabled “Federal might” was, APGA still managed to reassert its supremacy within that territory with an emphatic margin. And if the outcome of that polls is any guide, then a lot surely still needed to be done to market APC to Igbo voters generally.

    Of course, for APC obviously desirous of wangling even a toehold – if not foothold – in Igboland, there are multiple lessons to be learnt from that misadventure. Chief among them is the peril of building your battle plan around political charlatans or yesterday’s men brandishing expired talisman. They failed woefully on the appointed day.

    Real men are known in the hour of crisis. At PDP’s own moment of tribulation, Wike showed faith. To foreclose the chance of escape from the battlefield and make defeat or surrender the only option left, the general elected to destroy the ready source of temptation – he bombed the bridge after his troops crossed. Raymond Dopkesi and other folks of little faith chose to float a new party as “Plan B”. A few others waited for nightfall to sneak into Judas Modu-Sheriff’s lair to cut a deal of convenience.

    But resolute Wike openly declared he would rather swim or sink with PDP. So, when the legal lifeline came from the Supreme Court, he easily claimed the moral victory as well.

    The emergence of his nominee, Uche Secondus, as the new chair at the party’s recent national convention would seem to have further confirmed Wike’s preeminence as key player in a revamped PDP and a major influencer of things to emerge.

    If nothing at all, Secondus’ rise certainly barricades Rivers as a PDP fortress. Surely, the times ahead will be interesting indeed.

  • Our Girls; No budget? Christmas poem

    Our girls are still missing since April 15, 2014. Pray. Happy New Year to you, and to their families with a homecoming!

    Unfortunately, National Assembly (NASS) failed to deliver our budget passage by deadline December 31 – failure of politicians in NASS to deliver the morally greater good.

    Poem Christmas@ University of Ibadan 2017 –Tony Marinho.

    And the Magi appeared / Perhaps looking rather weird / Towering above us, each on a Eastern camel / Just like we depict today in china and enamel / Bearing a trinity of gifts in hand/ The Magi each brought a Gift/  To meet Christ, God’s Gift.

    Gold as a metal precious, like your wedding band/ Frankincense as perfume or for incensing/ Myrrh as oil for anointing./ In our politically induced deadly poverty / We face the reality / Of the true Gifts of Christ as deity /And struggle between the patronage of politics / And the burden of piety. / Have your own personal Magi appeared/ Were they unknown feared or endeared? / Has your Frankincense become corrupted nonsense, / Has your Gold become cold, borrowed, stolen or sold?

    Has your Myrrh been mired in fake news and ugly rumour / While you struggle with a life growing into a malignant tumour? / Christmas is not an X-mas/ Unless you declare the X as Christ’s cross / But rumours of crucifixion are premature on Christ’s birthday / When we know he has 33 years to stay. / But Christmas has been mispronounced/ And today it is time we announced / Christ is worth a full spelt name/ Any abbreviation / Is a shame, an abomination. / Should we ban saying Christian/ And replace her with a Christ-ian / Should we stop saying Christmas/ And replace it with Christ-mas? / This Christmas, give away more than you get / No money? Then share your smile, handshake and sweat / Give to needy strangers what you give to family and friends/ Towards the unloving make amends / At Christmas our Saviour is The Master of Disguise / Naked, thirsty, hungry – learn the signs and recognize/ Christ in every one around/ Christ in every distress sound / Your house help is in need of help/ The reverse reason for the name help/  Wait by your dustbin with a Christmas gift/ For one Mama taking little Christ on the dustbin dinner shift/ To fill another hole in a never-filled baby belly /

    While well-fed children eat Christmas jelly watching DSTV telly. / We are reminded of Mary’s labour and delivery /As we endure Nigeria’s hard labour, no delivery, only misery / In a country so blessed with you and you and naira trillions

    That s-elected thieves steal in multiple billions/ Meant for potholes, railways, health, power, scholarships/ Forcing youth to drown in the Mediterranean’s sinking ships /  After migration, surviving Sahara Sun, Libyan slavery, Egyptian organ taker /

    Sending youth to meet their maker / As they slit a migrant youthful throat for a Jacob’s coat/ You are left in the cold, / New slavery’s sold/  We close our eyes pretending to pray/  While the thieves get away with pension and pay/ And if they show up here today /We will stand up, kowtow and bow in a welcoming way / As many roam among Christmas day dustbins / While their leaders ‘Mr Misery’ commit billion naira sins / Teach each other not to worry about Christ-mas presents/ When we are gifted with God’s Son’s Presence. / Become a Queen. King, Prince or Princess of Kindness/ At last gasp what would you choose-another present or God’s Presence? /  What country leaders dare refuse power to the people? / Leaving them in darkness of despair, divorce, depression / Not to talk of business and family cost of power substitution and business  regression /  Creating you ‘The generator generation’ / While the leadership rapes budgets to pay for generators./ No solar for us as we are sun spectators / Are you here for Christ’s sake/  Or Christmas cake/ Christ is not far away, But just across the way/ Your neighbour, That stranger / The irritating youth or urchin / Your window stuck to his enquiring chin / Ensuring red traffic lights are no longer fun / But a moral money gauntlet to be run/ Testing your generosity each day/ Hands in your face for their daily pay / You fight urchins like vipers/ Trying to take over from your windscreen wipers/ Don’t pay and you look so mean/ And other urchins gather at the scene / The blind beggar led by his daughter who is sighted / Will abuse you or be delighted/ They are more than before/ So before you go out of your door / Arm yourself with naira notes -the sound of music –full range / Christ-mas is not the time to have ‘no change’ / Suppose your Christmas Dinner is in someone’s dustbin / Because political criminals commit multibillion naira sin? / Our Saviour was born to smile, laugh, suffer and die

    Today we are ordered to celebrate, not cry / We must restore Christ to this Christ-mas / And the Christ into Christ-ian /

    Find Christ in your wageless, pensionless neighbour/ Regardless of any strange behaviour / Recognise in him your newborn Saviour/ And if you cannot be a Magi/ Share Cubes called Maggi.

    NB: Uncover ‘I LOVE NIGERIA’ KNOWLEDGEABLE CANDIDATES for 2019 -SDG 16.   Happy 2018 Again!

  • Our Girls; SDG: Budget; Kill bill

    Our girls are still missing since April 15, 2014. Pray.

    With 11 days to December 31, we plagiarize the Musical Youth song ‘Pass the Dutchie on the Left hand side’, to read

    NASS OOOO!!   NASS OOOO!   Pass the budget by the 31st’, Pass the Budget by the 31st.  Or sing ‘All we are saying is “Pass the budget by the 31!st!’”Nigerians should record this and design e-cards to inundate social media, NASS and politicians to fulfil Global Goals Goalkeepers ABC- Action, Broadcast and Change for SDGs 16 & 17 –aiming at a Jan-to-Dec budget cycle.

    Witness the National Assembly (NASS) public hearing on the apparently corruption-fights-back, ill-conceived and malignantly motivated NASS-driven HB585 NGO Regulatory Bill known by NGOs as ‘The Anti-NGO Bill’. Is the bill really to paralyse politically-focused NGOs and religious bodies, unconverted and undefeated by herdsmen and Boko Haram, and to secure Election-2019 with ‘stomach infrastructure’ using a camouflage-cloaked Draconian Decree 4-style Bill? NGO SDG-related activities fight a war of many battles against corruption and endemic voter ignorance and for major restructuring and political reform. Now this war must be fought to keep Nigeria’s 70m + youth contented or entombed at home and away from further inflating the Saharan- Mediterranean slave trade and ‘visa-less migrant crisis’ crossing to fortress Europe and beyond. NGO-championed SDG 16 +reforms include 1] One NASS House –Representatives, 2] Part-time sittings, 3] Modest sitting allowances, 4] Payment of NASS members by home states, not the federal government and 5] ‘Politicians: Get A Day Job’ and 6] Budget and good governance monitoring.

    NASS is a parasitic creation of a mosquito or leech-like parasitic milito-political system. It cannot self-destruct or preside over its restructuring. Nigeria lacks Gorbachevs or Yelsins. NASS seeks to kill these Good Governance SDGoals by strangling the ‘Kill Bill’ advocates-NGOs. Paradoxically, the NASS public hearing returned an honest, uniformly negative analysis. Among the chief spokespersons was the erudite Bishop Mathew Kukah who led an ‘NGO Bill Wake Keep’. We expect ‘We announce the Obituary of HB585’ from NASS. NGOs should fix ‘A National Day for NGO Bill Cremation’. Our NGO, Educare Trust, was represented by our treasurer and former NASS Member, Wale Okediran who also led health sector NGOs. He viewed his successor ‘Tenants Of The House’ from the populo side. His Tenants Of The House is being filmed by Kunle Afolayan.

    Pathetically NASS dismisses citizenry’s concerns instead of correcting its ‘disapproval rating’. NASS wallows in media-hype and self-adoration ‘signifying nothing’, ignoring public anger at the NASS institution and NASS members’ apparent megalomaniacal mannerisms, high-handedness and self-aggrandisement in budgetary allocation to itself and the hauled before it and rubbishing of officials watched by wives and children on TV.

    Sadly NASS appears to portray itself not as Nigeria’s protective eagle, but as a vulture perched on the ‘High Table of Public Hearings’, bullying and pecking at the cowering carrion of public and private sector officials fearful of losing jobs and/or reputations on national TV with no punishment for NASS members who are not necessarily all renowned as ‘Caesar’s wife’ or distinguished and honourable as the dictionary definition projects and who are not ‘shining examples’ of honesty, humility and service – maybe self-service.

    Can NASS ever occupy the moral high ground? Former SEC DG Arumah Oteh overcame a convicted unpunished NASS criminal but SEC was punished by NASS with a zero budget. A NASS member speaking against NASS financing met the Mafia’s silence Oath ‘Omerta’, and was apparently maliciously suspended for one year! Only NGOs spoke out!

    Undeserved perks and pensions have deceived NASS into self-deification. NASS members were uncomfortable when confronted at the public hearing by respected citizens, independent of government and NASS patronage, who could not be intimidated or dismissed, many with the humanitarian distinction of replacing a little of what millions of Nigerians have lost to a greedy avaricious politics. These citizens were forced by conscience to create NGOs, embarrassing themselves, expending their resources, begging family, friends, businesses and even NASS members, for funds. The titles ‘distinguished’ and ‘honourable’ have no ‘fear factor’ to them. Behind the sea of ‘hostile and aggressive’ NGO faces, NASS members should see the tsunami of millions of grateful NGO beneficiaries – all ‘hostile and aggressive’ at a failed overly-expensive criminal governance system most exemplified by NASS excesses and easily corrected by a 90% cut in NASS budget.

    NGOs serve the under-served and repair gaping holes in the tattered social and moral fabric of society abandoned by criminal governments. Our society survived because of the ‘zero percent loan bank’ the extended family, now destroyed by ‘no salaries and pensions’. Are NGOs wasting their time? All NGOs cannot raise N1b locally annually while NASS manipulates or self-budgets N125-N150b! QED. Quad Erratum Demonstrandum!

    Nigeria has always had enough funds –and too many corrupt fund managers! ‘Cutting Corruption’ is the greatest cross-cutting change needed! NASS can do a chameleon change or citizens’ will change it. The ‘Nays’ better have it!!!!

    Give Knowledge as free Christmas Presents. Teach these Educare Trust SDG Goals: [1] To Monthly Breast Exam, MBE add Total Monthly Body Exam, TMBE for everyone, SDG 3. [2] Replace ‘O My God’ with ‘O My Goodness’. [3] Stop the ‘Dirty Slap’ causing blindness and deafness especially in children! SDG 3, 4 and [4] ABC- Avoid Bullying Children-and adults SDG 3, 4.

    NB: Uncover ‘I LOVE NIGERIA’ KNOWLEDGEABLE CANDIDATES for 2019 -SDG 16.

    Merry Christmas- Christ-like, smile at/ help/feed one ‘Christmas’ stranger!

  • Treaty-master and a nation at the nadir 

    Treaty-master and a nation at the nadir 

    There are a few telltale signs that a nation has lost her own dignity and prestige on the world stage. Perhaps, the most easily recognizable is the weight her passport carries at a foreign border post and how her citizens are treated on a foreign soil, particularly when at fault.

    True, Nigeria’s stock on the global stage has been in decline over the years. But even at that, nothing could have prepared anyone for the sheer evisceration, the diminution of the Nigerian humanity as depicted by the plethora of horror videos emanating lately from Libya’s open slave market and the adjoining transit camps of desperate immigrants from sub-Saharan Africa longing for Europe.

    For the young women, graduating from Libya’s torture chambers and rape bouts is however not a guarantee that they would survive the perilous sail on the Mediterranean Sea. Two out of 26 bodies of such ladies recently discovered refrigerated in a dark vessel off Italian coast were identified as Nigerians. They were found to be pregnant.

    Worse, in what only suggested absolute contempt for the Nigerian state, their remains were hurriedly interred by the Italian authorities without according the bereaved families even the least entitlement in the difficult circumstance – the opportunity to pay the customary last respects.

    We see the vanishing Nigerian pride also in the waves of unprovoked and later unchallenged xenophobic attacks against her citizens in South Africa.

    Nigeria’s steep fall from the height of respectability of the 70s in both regional and international arenas could only have resulted from the cumulative failure of diplomacy in the intervening decades.

    This must indeed be a troubling moment for Akin Oyebode, professor of International Law and Jurisprudence and one of Nigeria’s truly progressive scholars who turned 70 last Saturday. The celebration of this icon has animated the progressive boulevard of the nation’s academic community in the past few days.

    Were he asked to contextualize the referenced indignities suffered by Nigerian migrants today, the Ekiti-born scholar would likely put it all down in his accustomed wit to Nigeria’s loss of her “nuisance value” in the global arena. If the 1970s are still remembered today as the golden age of Nigeria’s diplomacy, it is only because of the character and coherence demonstrated by the political leadership of the era.

    Over the weekend, President Muhammadu Buhari led the stream of stirring tributes for the erudite professor attaining the platinum age. Indeed, not many could be said to be as consistent as the Ekiti-born scholar in the past half century in exploring the far reaches of International Law through research, writing and propagation to fashioning the African perspective to world diplomacy.

    Central to this Pan-Africanist standpoint is the fierce reminder that Nigeria and indeed all self-respecting post-colonial states must define their own truths and realities from their own interests, not the dictations from the western powers. It is, therefore, impossible to read and digest his “International Law and Politics: An African Perspective” and not feel the awesome presence of a truly authentic African thinker.

    On a personal note, this writer had the privilege of being taught International Law by Professor Oyebode (doubling as the HOD of the Law Faculty) at the University of Lagos for his Master’s degree in International Law and Diplomacy many years ago. A true master of his art, his erudition always electrified the packed lecture hall, spiced with  a terrific sense of humor that made arcane technical concepts looked so simple and otherwise mundane events of history truly memorable.

    However, the simplicity of his airs sharply contrasts the rigidity of his principle. Once the Vice Chancellor of Ekiti State University, he did not hesitate before tendering his resignation letter once he sensed his values conflicted with those of the new political leadership of the state then.

    Overall, there can be no doubt about the surfeit of professed solutions to African problems. But the enduring question is whether the errant nation, the wayward continent, is willing to heed the wise counsel of the philosophers like Oyebode.

    In a paper he delivered back in 1986, he observed: “The fact of underdevelopment of Nigeria’s political economy circumscribes the role of the country on the world stage. The sophistry of Africa being the centerpiece of our foreign policy has worn thin. Without genuinely radical reordering of our society, the country would be unable to fulfill its mission in Africa and beyond.”

    Thirty-one years later, those words surely continue to speak to the Nigerian reality. That the allure of migration now seems too irresistible to our youths to the point of embarking on suicidal trips through Libya is only a reflection of harsh economic climate at home. It is the immutable law of nature for man to lust after greener pasture. When opportunities abounded at home and Naira was strong, the temptation for our ladies to go prostitute in Italy and young men flocking to labour camps elsewhere in Europe to slave was certainly less.

    It is perhaps a measure of the insipidity of our contemporary foreign policy that a nation that birthed the Emeka Anyaokus, Bolaji Akinyemis and Oyebodes seems no longer capable of speaking eloquently and respectably on the world stage today.

    Oyebode’s possible anguish could then only be in context of the curse of talents left to lie fallow. Nothing could truly be more traumatizing than the spectacle of a land brimming with great minds being sentenced to a darkness and squalor inflicted by mediocrity or the scion of the proverbial meat-seller left a supper of bones.

    Of course, in retrospect, the carnage that Libya approximates today is another graphic illustration of the failure of African diplomacy of which Nigeria cannot, by any stretch of imagination, shirk responsibility. It was largely in the interest of vengeful western powers that erstwhile Libyan strongman, Moammar Ghadaffi, be swept out of power in the ferment of the Arab Spring. But the aftermath only left Africa with more instability.

    At the defining moment, the African Union ceded the initiative to buccaneering outsiders and, instead, conveniently chose to marinate in idiocy. It explains why Libya is now a lawless province with no fewer than five militia armies laying claims to different chunk of the once prosperous country. It explains why, even when Nigerians are either sold as slaves or butchered openly, there is no constituted authority to hold accountable today from the perspective of International Law.

    Oyebode’s forte in International Law is treaty. From his antecedents, it is safe to also assume Prof has been suffering insomnia not so much for Morocco’s treacherous bid to gatecrash into ECOWAS from North Africa, but more for Nigeria’s apparent timidity, if not indifference, to what should ordinarily be treated as a clear and presence threat to her continued dominance and influence in the West African sub-region.

    Regardless, here is wishing Prof happy birthday.

     

     

    A Commodore’s last voyage

    Part of the paradox of human nature is that those who made a career of putting others to death by the sword always become uneasy themselves at the sight of same weapon in the hand of a stranger.

    Such would seem the case of Bode George, erstwhile supremo of Peoples Democratic Party, whose dream of becoming national chair of the party evaporated like smoke last weekend.

    How ironic that BG, a retired Commodore, who was never shy to adapt martial language in describing how political opponents would be crushed, ended up not being able to even throw a single punch this time in what could be classified the most important battle of his entire political career. Without the veto of gun and bayonet, the old naval warrior looked so ordinary in the civil contest.

    Rather, after withdrawing from the race on the convention’s eve, he lapsed into a grumpy mode. In his bitter tirade, he lamented the influence of money in the race. He took liberty to introduce himself as a long-standing apostle of righteousness. So, the “Atona (pathfinder) of Odualand” should not be expected to soil his nobility with the carnality of buying and selling delegates at the bazaar called convention.

    Ha!

    Silence would have been most dignifying after BG threw in the towel. To begin with, who does not know that delegate election is euphemism for discreet “buying and selling” of votes?

    The bitter truth is that the highest bidder often carries the trophy. Even in the so-called advanced democracies, the inducement is only fancifully packaged as “free lodging”, “free transportation” etc bankrolled by contestants. Such unwholesome tales were heard even in the United States last year during the conventions by the Democrats and the Republicans.

    Having evolved with PDP right from 1998 as he rightly claimed, BG is certainly the least morally competent today to decry money politics in Nigeria.

    If outgunned or outspent by the young Turks, the least expected of a supposedly self-respecting dinosaur like BG is concede victory, in obeisance of the unwritten oath of the political underworld that once benefited him. At 72, clearly there are few political options left for the old mariner.

    Worse, BG indulged in another vulgarity peculiar to the typical Nigerian politician upon losing their stake in the power casino – retreating into the ethnic hideout. He equated his inability to clinch the PDP crown to Yoruba humiliation. For effects, he launched into needless self-praise, reminding everyone of not only his “Atona” chieftaincy but also the Yoruba definition of “Omoluabi” (the virtuous citizen).

    But such obscenity of self-adulation would have been forgivable were it backed with proven testimonial of political virility at home. In the last 18 years of elections and democracy in Nigeria, never has BG won his polling unit at Evans Street treet near the iconic Massey Hospital on Lagos island. Not even once. Not even when his political lord and master, OBJ, twice deployed “fed eral might” against Lagos in 2003 and 2007 in furtherance of “operation totality”.

    So, to what do we attribute this obsessive bragging?

  • Our Girls; NASS: Budget by 1-1-2018 – no tolls

    Our Girls; NASS: Budget by 1-1-2018 – no tolls

    Our girls are still missing since April 15, 2014. Pray.

    Today we talk Ejo Eko foreign reserves up, budget and tolls no thank you

    Ejo eko, the Lagos snake, a python-the hundreds of lorries parked from Surulere to Apapa- strangling the life and economy of Lagos is a dangerous disgrace as highlighted by Channels TV with bridges likely to be compromised from vehicular deadweight.

    Happily the foreign reserves have risen to above $38,000,000,000 and should top $40 by January making predictions of $55-60,000,000,000 by end 2018, realistic and the naira will rise again.

    National Assembly (NASS) has less than three weeks, 18 days, to the Nigerian people’s deadline for budget passage by NASS ‘1-1-2018’. Communicate with NASS politicians to encourage, force, empower, and energise them to stick to the people and not the politicians’ agenda. I make this ‘Legitimate Demand’, indeed a ‘Citizens’ Command’, on behalf of citizens to NASS that it sleeps not, breaks not, holidays not, laughs not, indeed eats luxuriously not, and drinks nothing but water until the passage of the 2018 Budget by 1-1-2018.

    Even the divorce settlement of BREXIT forced bothUK and EU politicians to burn the midnight light, never generator, haha, to achieve a breakthrough. NASS should learn to do the right thing, first with budget and then with the coming elections, from such real foreign democracies. Nigerians risk life and limb to benefit from other people’s investment in their own countries while back home their families wallow in darkness, self-pity and hopelessness. The budget approval and the coming election offer yet another opportunity to conduct the deadly game of politics quickly in the interest of the downtrodden citizenry. They cry inside for a better ‘Beloved Country’, a cry from Africa for many different political reasons, ever since Alan Paton published Cry, my Beloved Country way back in 1948. Politicians have opportunity to reconstruct to get real politics started but as long as the political godfathers and strongmen and few women are the ones who serially and chronically ruined Nigeria in the past 50 years, what hope have we for a new beginning?

    NASS is the face of Nigerian politics, in lifestyle, utterances, actions, empathy or pack of same and morality. From assessment of the various financial and other scandals which have plagued it and disappeared under the voluminous carpet, NASS is an easily assessable quality check on the Nigerian politics measured against other political institutions and the state of the nation and the citizens’ expectations or lack of accomplishment of those expectations. Let the NASS be fully aware of the huge weight of public opinion already against it for its profligacy, mega-money status and apparent insensitivity to the comparative squalor of the citizenry when compared to the extractive political salary legally-illegally extracted from the same federal government budget and purse!! Politics is indeed an extractive industry. NASS must do the needful to ensure that it passes the budget to help save its troubled reputation.

    Any NASS member should think again if he or she thinks his or her political posturing points ‘shown on NTA’ are more important than the survival reasons why hundreds of thousands of young Nigerians set out as part of the ‘migrant crisis’ to risk their lives and lived ones to cross the Sahara and Mediterranean for a ‘better life abroad’ where they expect what they do not have at home. Running water, constant electric power supply, pothole-free roads, mass transit, sound education, good health and housing are denied human rights of citizens in Nigeria. For years this column has warned of the growing ‘Migrants Crisis’ and the perils of this new 21st Century slavery generation. A number of years ago, CNN or BBC carried several investigative reporter documentaries by an excellent West African reporter whose name escapes me. He explored migration, slavery and travel. Today the matter is even more in the open than then. But is the more recent CNN exposure, again under CNN’s Freedom Project, supported by a social media explosion, helping to curb the practice that led to the migration crisis? Probably of little effect because the local media does not relay such documentaries to common people likely to flee.

    I do not like every budget item especially selling assets as some buyers may have stolen money in the past and want to launder it –a sort of double stealing. Even tolls have problems. We are not good road managers, causing suffering for citizens unnecessarily! All current tolls are inadequate, undermanned, poorly or mismanaged toll roads, totally underperforming tollgates as exemplified by the Lagos Oniru and the New Lekki Bridge often a nightmare for traffic movement. Just look at the hours added to Lekki travel by the toll bridges. Yes, they make billions for their owners and government but in an archaic manner. Will the tremendous traffic jams in Lagos with stand-still traffic become nationwide when federal government re-introduces toll bridges? Far better to increase the vehicle and driving licence fees by say N5,000 each and make electronic pre-paid tickets cheaper than tickets bought at the toll gate. Toll operators care nothing for reorganising the disorganised crazy 20 lanes into six orderly queues 50 metres to the toll points merely by stretching out their plastic barriers 50 meters out. Simple queue management!

     

    • NB: Nigerians uncover ‘I LOVE NIGERIA’ KNOWLEDGEABLE CANDIDATES for 2019 -SDG 16
  • Soyinka and Trump’s illegitimate kids

    Soyinka and Trump’s illegitimate kids

    This must be a depressing hour indeed for the man who “fashioned the drama of existence” and first black Nobel prizewinner in Literature, Professor Wole Soyinka. A comment uttered in what could only be a protest against the willful trampling on the dignity of the African immigrants and other “underdogs” has, alas, been twisted out of its moral joint and now forms the singsong of some idle parrots, the horde of little minds, barricading the social media.

    Ahead of the now historic November 8 (2016) US polls, Kongi told a gathering of students in America that in the event that that loose-cannon Donald Trump won he would not wait to be reminded before ripping his Green Card and evacuating the acclaimed God’s own country, his present station.

    Asked again by The Interview (Nigeria’s wave-making monthly magazine) amid the widespread shockwave that trailed the news of the Republican candidate’s victory, the literary giant neither quibbled nor wavered.

    But that did not seem to impress the cyber stalkers who, akin to the typical lynch mob lurking in Nigeria’s urban centre forever itching for a chance to festoon someone with a burning tyre, cannot wait to see the much esteemed octogenarian descend into the obscenity of publicly shredding what many would lie, if not die, to possess.

    Never one to shy away, particularly when epistolary rats are foolish enough to disturb his tail, the literary lion has since tackled his cyber assailants efficiently and effectively in a vigorous rejoinder entitled “Red Card, Green Card – Notes Towards the Management of Hysteria”.

    But this is beside the point. For me, I think the real tragedy is two-fold. For “the hysterical” not to see the Trump’s rise clearly as an urgent invitation to debate Nigeria’s place in a putative new world order defined by a man that can technically be certified as a mad man and, instead, be more obsessed with the banality of watching Soyinka physically tear his Green Card is very, very alarming indeed.

    Second is the possibility at all that a generation of Nigerian Pharisees now exist and are so blissfully ignorant of the history of their own very fatherland to, even for a drunken moment, ever doubt Soyinka’s words once the issue borders on the defense of human dignity.

    So, as we can now see, it is not only America whose moral capital seems on the decline on account of Trump’s thunderous disavowal of all the lofty values the rest of the world had associated with her in the last half a century; same ethical atrophy is clearly discernible in contemporary Nigeria with the rise of youths with neither a sense of history nor a social conscience, but more conversant with even the minutest details of, say, the soccer celebrities of European soccer leagues.

    If they had bothered to read and understand their nation’s history, they would not have easily forgotten that Soyinka had in the 90s cast away the coveted national honour CFR medal earlier bestowed on him in 1986 by General Ibrahim Babangida in protest of the June 12 annulment and the subsequent clampdown on dissent. He later risked death in leading a global campaign against Abacha despotism – was actually sentenced to death in absentia – until democracy was restored in Nigeria in 1999.

    So, could anyone have forgotten so quickly the legend of “the mystery gun-man” who stormed a public radio station in 1965 and forced the presenter to play a pre-recorded statement censoring the ruling party over perceived repression of the opposition? Again, when it was most dangerous, someone visited the Biafran enclave from the campus of University of Ibadan with a view to persuading the secessionists to return to the peace process.

    For this, he was clamped into solitary confinement by the Gowon regime for more than two years. The title of his prison memoirs “The Man Died” was inspired by revolutionary George Magaski who in his own “Letter To Compatriots” memorably declared, “The man dies in him who keeps silence in the face of tyranny.”

    So, to the cowards who today luxuriate in the anonymity of the cyber space, against the aforementioned heritage of uncommon sacrifice in pursuit and defense of noble values and honour, how much weight does a mere American Green Card carry?

    Today, these spoilt brats sired in philistinism, immersed in cheap intoxicants of ignorance, seem least troubled by the farrago of nasty things Trump said about vulnerable African immigrants, especially Nigerians.

    But all decent people like Soyinka, who treasure their own dignity as members of the human race, should be appalled. Racial integration thought irreversibly cemented in US on account of the Obama ascendancy eight years ago is what is invariably called to question by Trump’s tantrums.

    Kongi would then seem to find it exceedingly hard continuing to inhabit a space, however alluring, where a bare-faced racist holds court. Ordinarily, given his world celebrity status, Soyinka would not have needed to beg or lie to get visa into America. His offer to rip his Green Card once the US falls under Trump’s shadow should, therefore, be properly seen as a symbolic gesture of protest on behalf of his nameless compatriots among other vulnerable categories about to be meted undeserved humiliation.

    Now, as the rest of the world braces for an uncertain future, it is most logical that we first attempt to locate the trigger to the present meltdown. Prophesy two decades ago by Samuel Huntington in his seminal book, The Clash of Civilizations, on the perils of globalisation is coming to pass with chilling accuracy.

    Obsession, as he put it, of triumphalist west upon the collapse of the old Soviet Union and the socialist/communist tradition in China and elsewhere to export and implant its cultures and values around the universe with little or no regard for local sensibilities in other civilizations meant the battlefield would inevitably shift from old geographical borders to the temples of faiths and the shrines of ethnic nationalism.

    As a corollary to Brexit which shook Europe four months ago, Trump’s triumph was undoubtedly fueled by the rising tide of ethnic nationalism. The hell-raising far-right rabble are also already out in Hungary, Poland, France and Germany, baying for blood. The aborigines of affluent western nations are simply no longer willing to accept massive immigration into their countries as part of the price for globalization. Hence, the new battle cry – “Take back our country!”

    But the great paradox is that it is all a self-inflicted pain. There is no way the immigration flood largely from Syria recorded at the borders of recognizable western nations in the past two years can be isolated from the miscalculations a decade and a half earlier by the allied powers with the frenzy of “regime change” after September 11 in 2001. For instance, rogue Saddam Hussein was hurriedly uprooted from Iraq in 2003 in pursuit of a phantom weapon of mass destruction (WMD) without a coherent contingency plan to manage the aftermath in the highly combustible Middle East.

    Eight years later, the social media, a powerful tool brought by globalization, helped stoke the fire of the Arab Spring which paved the way for eccentric Moammar Ghaddafi, but a stabilizing influence in North Africa and parts of the Arab world, to be bludgeoned to death on the street of Tripoli.

    In neighboring Syria, Bashir Assad has managed to survive the Arab Spring for six years, but at a horrific human toll.

    Now, the lethal arsenal Ghaddafi left behind have been harvested by Hussein’s demobilized fighters who formed the core of ISIS, which straddles a chunk of Iraq and swath of Syria.

    What then seems utterly insufferable to Soyinka and other men and women of conscience around the world today is the unwillingness of the resurgent nativists as privileged members of the western establishment to accept that intolerance of others’ values and faiths from the outset is at the root of the moral crisis that has engulfed the world community in the past decade, of which Donald Trump is the latest mutation.

     

  • Our Girls; NASS: Budget by 1-1-2018 our human right

    Our Girls; NASS: Budget by 1-1-2018 our human right

    Our girls are still missing since April 15, 2014. Pray.

    National Assembly ( NASS ) has less than four weeks, 25 days, to the Nigerian People’s Deadline For Budget Passage by NASS ‘1-1-2018’. NASS should not say ‘no’ for whatever reason. Everything is possible in politics- even rarely correct decision making!! Was it not NASS which passed, was it, 67 bills in one day?  It is to get results like this that we are being forced to pay NASS between N125 and 150,000,000,000 – to do our will, not its will. In the opinion of many, NASS is truly an unproductive highly extractive industry for little tangible returns. It is payback time. The budget is not a matter of life or death. It is only a matter of differing opinions on facts, fiction and figure. NASS should do our will to see the budget passed by 1-1-2018, warts, mistakes, differing estimates of oil income, differing guestimates of oil prices and all differences are speculative. The accolade ‘The first NASS to pass a budget by 1-1,’ will be a far greater crown than a litany of quibbling questions and blowing hot and cold with Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs). Judging from all the multibillion ‘corruption-gates’ in and out of NASS, NASS has no leg to stand on by delaying the budget.

    Note that every million naira stolen results in X number of deaths from inability to afford medical treatment for family and poor diet and impoverishment from absent jobs making the thieves actual murderers by their actions. Political science and social science departments and must research this as stealing billions makes the thieves mass-murderers.

    Let NASS pass the budget by 1-1-2018 for our children. We all know that a lecturer can fail even a professor in any examination if she wants to or if the price is right. So also with NASS which could delay or fail the budget forever on genuine and spiteful technicalities. It pays many to see this government fail just before the elections, as they again jump ship. Nigerians are on to their game, inflicting shame on Nigeria while our youth suffer in pain and are sold into Libyan slavery and used as bush meat for body parts. We the voting public all see through this filibustering/delaying shameful smokescreen. Such grandstanding and time-wasting politics may be okay for developed countries which deliver every comfort like power, water and sanitation, no matter which political party is in power.

    Our situation is shamefully different and cannot afford such political tactics. However it is such ill-conceived activities which fuelled the mass migrants’ movement. Why did these same MDAs have plain sailing since 1999 but are suddenly found wanting! Nigerians need their budget now for the year Jan-Dec. Should we not prepare a ‘Thank you NASS’ Card as NASS gives Nigeria this Christmas and New Year Present, although NASS would merely be doing its job.

    The Nigerian outcry from multimillionaire politicians about the ‘Migrants’ Misery Trail’ through the Sahara and across the Mediterranean Sea to drown in the sands or the sea off Lampedusa amounts to crocodile tears. The migrants and many resident Nigerians lament the needless absent infrastructure across Africa and particularly in our country where common electric power is ‘multi-billion naira corruption-ridden nuclear physics’ –killing citizens -murder. Yet China, the new big cheese worldwide, adds 30,000+Mw, to their grid annually even as more people in authority in Nigeria are discovered with more billions of our commonwealth. Of course we should have 150,000Mw by now and all heads of state should be ashamed and stop talking. They dropped Nigeria into this bucket of powerlessness.

    I have a simple yardstick for Nigeria’s development that affects every one of our citizens -power. That test is positive in every other country in war-torn Africa demonstrating Nigerian leaders’ collective colossal ineptitude. The test is the ‘One Year No Blackout Test’ – if I can turn on a switch with uninterrupted power every time for a year. Only then will I know that Nigeria is developing to the barest minimum expected by those youth forced to search for ‘the human right to 24 hour power’ by fleeing our country and risking life and limb and crazy organ donor doctors.

    Do you know what it means to be held down, perhaps put to sleep, and have a kidney or two and a cornea or two and even a heart removed just because your country’s leaders have stolen the money, murdering jobs, roads, health, and pensions, making life unliveable and a death sentence at home or abroad? And then the murderers blame youth for migrating to add insult to operation injury. Nigerian politicians have failed so many millions and should do more than apologise.

    Let nobody tell you that you have failed Nigeria if you did not steal – murder, or misguide, or cheat Nigerians and Nigeria. You are not responsible for Nigeria’s failures unless you took funds or made selfish decisions, denied others their rights to education, health and pensions and good elections by you actions and mis-actions. It is not about the electorate getting what it deserves because you see how much elections misspend with the odds stacked against honest candidates.

     

    • NB: Nigerians uncover ‘I LOVE NIGERIA’ KNOWLEDGEABLE CANDIDATES for 2019 -SDG 16