Category: Opinion

  • NYSC primary assignment: An overview

    Acquiring experience while serving the nation is an awesome adventure in the telltale history of youth service in Nigeria. This service entails an unwavering support or aid given to people of a particular community at a given time in your discipline. However, serving the people is not even as beneficial as the experience one garners from it. This, perhaps, explains why National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) incorporated the primary assignment phase in its four cardinal programmes of the year. The primary assignment, being the second, is the phase that involves the utilisation of corps members in their respective fields for manpower development.

    The primary assignment phase is unarguably the most relevant of all the phases. This is not to discountenance the relevance of other phases – orientation exercise, community development service and passing-out, but looking through them, one can say the primary assignment phase is the most elaborate in the service year. Your performance at your Place of Primary Assignment (PPA) is the lens through which your overall performance in the service year will be viewed. For instance, a corps member is entitled to a monthly allowance given by the Federal Government on the submission of a duly signed clearance form from his employer. An employer will never issue this clearance form to the corps member if he has not worked diligently and satisfactorily for that month. The final clearance also takes this process. 

    To show that the NYSC scheme is not a waste of time and energy, and to also prove that the monthly stipend given by the federal government is not a free-for-all emolument to aid corps members’ laziness, the scheme ensures its headcount and inspection strategies in checking the excesses of corps members and their employers are followed to the letter. These strategies often catch corps members who neglect their duty posts unawares.  Knowing full well that some employers abet corps members into leaving their primary assignment for a private enterprise or pursuit, NYSC has continued to send its staff to check up on all employers with the scheme to curtail this act.

    Convincingly, primary assignment plays a significant role in relieving the youth on the aspect of experience in their job search.  Many a graduate nowadays does not have the requisite experience to get a desired job. However, NYSC has reduced this problem through its placement of graduates to their relevant disciplines for appropriate job experience. A graduate who studied Law is attached to a chamber or the judiciary for his primary assignment. This will indeed serve as learning and practice ground for such a budding lawyer. Also, a graduate who studied Mass Communication may not have the ample time to garner experience for the need of the labour market. Here, he will experience a thorough drill on his work through diligence and hard work. In essence, the primary assignment phase is a panacea to the problem of inadequate work experience for Nigerian graduates.

    Furthermore, the character of corps members will either help or mar their relationships with their employers. A bad character is like a smoke – it will sprout, no matter the cover up. If corps members do not have good character or are not diligent with their work, their relationship with their boss will be hampered. Corps members are expected to be respectful and comport themselves to the standards of their business environments. Failure to do these will be tantamount to contempt for their responsibilities as corps members and employees. It is therefore advisable for corps members to maintain cordial relationship with their employers to enjoy gracious benefits such as, additional allowance, free-ride to and fro his PPA, good accommodation, retention with a good pay after service year and many others.  Are these not worthwhile?

    From the foregoing, the NYSC year, despite its many benefits, is not without its woes or challenges as some may put it.  The road to a resounding service year is very rough! However, your perception of roughness determines your doggedness towards making it enjoyable. The first challenge a corps member may face is that of posting. A corps member may not be posted to his area of professional relevance. What should one say of a Civil Engineering graduate who was posted to teach Mathematics or Technical Drawing in a school or a lawyer who was posted to a distant and extant community to teach English Language? Where are those graduates whose core disciplines are in education? Why should a civil engineer or a lawyer be in the classroom?  Is this not a misplaced utilisation? How will this teaching experience be of benefit to them in their fields? Although, national needs, they say, override these shortcomings. Corps members are thus implored to leave the comfort zone of their passions or disciplines to answer the clarion call of their fatherland.

    In the same vein, NYSC in its posting letter has stated clearly that a corps member’s welfare is in the hands of his employer. Corps employers are expected to augment the monthly allowance paid by the federal government to every corps member. However, there have been complaints about the inhuman conditions that some corps members are subjected to in the hands of their employers. Some corps employers who neither provide accommodation nor pay a reasonable amount of money in lieu of the accommodation do want maximum efficiency from the corps members. But for the corps employers’ selfish or ulterior motives, this reason is enough, in the first place, to reject such a corps member in order to be posted to a place where he/she will be properly treated. Corps members who are victims of this situation are often termed as being unlucky. Imagine the stigma!

    Moreover, one cannot overlook the increasing harassment and molestation that female corps members experience in their various places of primary assignment. Inasmuch as the wantonness of these corps employers cannot be satiated, female corps members will continue to experience this. It is, therefore, advisable to tread softly and subtly as a corps member if you are faced with this kind of challenge.

    The primary assignment is indeed an avenue to exhibit character traits such as honesty, loyalty, politeness, selflessness, self-reliance and transparency, even in the face of difficulties. These thus attune you to the motto of NYSC – service and humility. Therefore, in whatever situation you find yourself in the course of your service year; always strive to live up the ideals of the scheme. By so doing, you are evidently building a greater Nigeria that will be accommodating to all and sundry.

    EKUNDAYO Sunday Ademuyiwa served in Bayelsa State and was the Deputy Editor/ Head of News of Bayelsa State NYSC Editorial Board CDS Group. He writes from Lagos.

  • Lagos must be clean

    Lagos must be clean

    One striking feature of a capital city in any developed country is cleanliness.

    Most of the capital cities are very clean and this announces to visitors that they are in a capital city. No heap of refuse, no abandoned broken down vehicles, no abandoned bloated dead bodies on the road and no suicide beggars competing with moving vehicles and almost threatening to harm a motorist who fails to give out alms.

    Unfortunately, this could not be said of Lagos which used to be the nation’s capital and which remains the capital of Lagos state that international visitors must see on arrival in Nigeria after landing at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport.

    Other International capital cities such as London, Washington, Oslo, Dublin, Paris  etc are a beauty to behold because of their sparkling clean environment. The question then remains, how did these capital cities attain their cleanliness? The answer is simply that governments in those countries pay attention to personal hygiene and have a very effective waste disposal system right from individual households.

    While the efforts of the past and present administrations in Lagos state to keep Lagos clean in accordance with internal best practices in waste disposal should not be lost, much still needed to be done to attain the level of cleanliness as obtained in other developed capital cities across the world.

    There is no gain saying the fact that the Ambode administration in Lagos state has made giant strides in achieving the Lagos of our dream, in terms of a cleaner megacity that is not only environmentally clean, but a commercial hub that offers prosperity to everyone. It is in this sense that the Cleaner Lagos Initiative (CLI) was established as an extensive and sustainable waste management system for Lagos.

    This new waste management regime, (CLI) will create about 45,000 new jobs. The new waste management policy apart from creating the enabling environment for the private sector to harness international best practices, will also address the existing challenges in solid waste management in the state. The CLI will engage about 25,000 community sanitation workers who will work as street sweepers and they will reside in their wards so that they won’t have to spend so much money on transport to and from work.

    Besides, they will be well trained with an attractive welfare package. The sanitation workers will be well kitted with decent uniforms, gloves, boots, pickers, brushes, carts as well as mobile phones with which to communicate with the control centre and they will be well remunerated. This is no doubt a mass employment scheme that would take many unemployed youths off the street and with the propensity to generate additional indirect 500,000 jobs from its value chain. This will also be a boost on the economy of Lagos state.

    CLI is well tailored towards maximizing the state’s potential in solid waste management that would provide permanent solution to waste recycling, recovery and waste reduction challenges that have dimmed the shine of the state for decades, and offer innovative approach to liquid waste management, drainage management and waste water treatment in the State.

    It is therefore obvious that this new sanitation policy if properly executed, will most likely achieve in one year, what the cancelled monthly environmental sanitation could not achieve in the last 30 years. The new sanitation workers will take cleaning as a serious business such that residents would only take care of their abodes and surroundings as a complementary service. It is going to be a departure from the cancelled monthly environmental sanitation which many Lagosians saw as forced labour.

    The Cleaner Lagos Initiative scheme was informed by the need to correct the flaws in existing waste management system and to introduce modern technology into the management of solid waste. A new law to back the current waste management regime is in the offing and this will allow big time players in the waste management sector to do business with the government.

    Residents will still pay what they are paying presently to Private Sector Partnership (PSP) on waste management with the new name of (Public Utility Levy) part of which goes into an Environment Trust Fund.  The difference is that they will get more value for their money in terms of effective waste management system that would ensure government’s objective of a cleaner Lagos. The scope of the  Lagos Waste Management Authority (LAWMA) shall be expanded to enable it enforce, regulate and generate revenue from the waste management process while the new policy will protect the environment, human health and social living standards of Lagos residents.

    Also, the need for the new initiative is a confirmation that the current waste management system has failed due to many obstacles which goes to show that it is high time the government re-strategised to ensure a cleaner Lagos which make the new environmental sanitation policy a welcome idea.

    The new sanitation policy will address the current problem of irregular waste collection which leads to irregular and poor payments, bin placement, transfer loading stations, and other supporting infrastructure have been ignored and undue attention placed on waste collection only. In addition, LAWMA in its role as regulator/operator is overwhelmed by the responsibilities of having to coordinate the activities of 350 individual companies and still carry out its own collection services. The billing system is unduly complicated due to the differences and inconsistencies in charges and collection routes, therefore leaving the billing system open to manipulation and fraud while many individual operators have failed to fulfil their obligations on the trucks.

    One cheering news is that the current poor waste management situation shall be addressed holistically using modern technology. For example, apart from the transformation of the existing Transfer Loading Station (TLS) and the introduction of no less than 25 Material Revolving Facility (MRF) where wastes will be sorted, 600 new compactor vehicles will be acquired, and waste dumpsites will be closed and replaced with engineered sanitary landfill sites.

    The planned shutdown of dumpsites such as the Ojota and Solus dumpsites which has become an eyesore and a threat to health of residents of those areas is a big relief. Dumpsites are dangerous to health and the environment. The leachate and gas to be recovered from the proposed sanitary landfills will be put to good use.

    In the plan, Olusosun dumpsite will be regenerated and turned  into a park, where intercity buses will end their journey and would no longer be allowed to enter into the city. Passengers will from there take taxis and intra-city buses to their destinations in town. Emphasis will henceforth be on zero-dumping, recycling and generation of power from wastes. To achieve this, government will carry out a re-certification of all the 350 PSP operators, re-license them and audit the state of their compactors and there will be a control room where the tracked compactors shall be monitored.

    It also pertinent at this juncture to allay the fears of the present PSP operators that government has no intention of sending them away, but will only re-certify their vehicles and make them comply with the new rules and regulation towards ensuring cleaner Lagos befitting the status of a mega city. This should be supported by all without prejudice.

    The restructuring will benefit PSPs because the new environmental policies and laws will not only protect the citizens and the environment, but all waste management operators who painstakingly invest their resources into helping with the clean-up of Lagos.

    The investment in the waste management will ensure that all commercial entities have a valid contract with a registered operator; these contracts will prove to be a valuable component for any serious-minded operator with sustainable plans for growth.

    The restructuring will make new provisions that protect the interests of existing investments by requiring all commercial entities to have a valid and enforceable contract with a registered operator.

    It is also heart-warming to know that five new power stations, one in each division in the state, will be built to generate power from wastes, and the numerous dumpsites dotting parts of the state will soon be a thing of the past.

    Going by what the Ambode administration has done so far since its assumption of office over a year ago, Lagosians have confidence in the ability of the government to deliver on promises like it did in a couple of other areas like infrastructure and security. If Lagos must truly attain it’s status of a mega city, it must be as clean as any of the capital cities earlier mentioned and that is why the Clean Lagos Initiative is the appropriate Special Purpose Vehicle towards achieving this. Let all stakeholders support this bold move. Lagos must be clean!

    Akintunde, a policy analyst wrote from Karimu, Surulere,  Lagos

  • ‘Why the Press Release will never Die’

    ‘Why the Press Release will never Die’

    By Erhumu Bayagbon

    A lot of PR professionals are of the opinion that the idea of writing and issuing the press release is obsolete, outdated and dead.

    I disagree.

    Primarily because of two reasons.

    In articulating my view, I am constrained to reflect on the key objectives of a press release.

    What is a press release?

    Or, what purpose does a press release serve?

    Or, should I ask, what are two major, striking features of a press release?

    I will stay with the third question; at least, for now.

    One major feature is that a press release is deliberately written to suit a typical, or if you like, generally acceptable newspaper writing style. This submission can be debated, depending on your academic/practice persuasion.

    Second, a press release is written in an inverted pyramid style.

    Meaning, you have to pack all relevant and the most important information in the first paragraph.

    Experts will say you should answer the 5 Ws and H in the first paragraph. That is, What, Where, When, Who, Why and How.

    Better still, the headline should be cast in a way that tells the entire story at one glance.

    Pondering on above points, I am compelled to believe that the concept or idea behind press release or even press release, as understood in ‘traditional’ parlance, will never die.

    And, here is why:

    Organisations and individuals will always have a need to communicate publicly – public communication.

    When they do this, they usually have a message and a particular audience target.

    In communicating, they will have to adapt to the language, style and nuances of the channel or platform.

    For example, reaching audience via snapchat means you have to communicate using the style of snapchat for effectiveness. Ditto traditional media, home of press releases. That is, you have to deliberately ‘write’ for snapchat to reach and engage audience in snapchat.

    So, the press release principle applies.

    Secondly, the concept of the 5 Ws and H is still valid, regardless of the channel and audience. You always want to get your message passed across in a laconic and readily understandable manner.

    This is also another principle that belongs to press release.

    Yes, the concept and principles behind the press release will never die! It has only realigned to adapt to the fast-changing channels/platforms and audiences.

    So, whether it is text, video, audio or whatever form, the principles that birthed the press release will stay with us much longer than we think.

    Die-hard.

    Long live press release.

    Bayagbon is a communications professional based in Lagos.

  • Many problems of Kogi

    Many problems of Kogi

    Our dear Kogi State is in need of urgent rebirth. The people rejoiced and looked forward to a beautiful future when Kogi State was created in 1991. Two decades and a half after, all the hopes have disappeared with no sign of a better tomorrow.

    The youths roam the streets aimlessly with unemployment reaching unprecedented heights. Unfortunately, most of the youths have found succour in crimes- kidnappings and violent robberies have become a pastime among them, therefore making the once peaceful state one of the most violent in the country.

    Commercial activities are hindered as a result of the poor states of roads across the state. And it is commonly agreed that these roads need urgent government attention right now. They include –  Omuo, Ijumu, Omuwo Kabba Express Way and several intra-city roads.

    These roads have for a long time been unattended to, thereby putting the life of commuters who pass through them at risk.

    Likewise, other major roads such as Obajana are in very bad condition. However, the Kogi State government has to wake up to its responsibilities and do the needful to stop endangering the life of the people it governs.

    UNPAID SALARIES: The living condition of workers in Kogi is getting worse by the day as the government has not lived up to its responsibilities as regards workers salaries. Kogi civil servants are suffering right now. As of today, the Kogi government is owing workers 12 months’ salary. The pensioners are not left out of this suffering, for over a year now, the pensioners in the teaching vocations have not received their stipends.

    NO HOSPITAL: Up till now, many local governments do not have hospitals, imagine in this day and age people have to travel far to get treated.

    I’m using this opportunity to call on the Kogi State Government to expedite actions on these key issues which has a direct impact on the mercies.

    Ayomide Otitoloju,

    President, Okun Youth Foundation, Kogi State

  • Operation Delta Safe: NAF’s battle against oil theft

    Operation Delta Safe: NAF’s battle against oil theft

    By Christel Odili
    The incessant activities of cottage refineries and oil theft in the Niger Delta region remains a source of concern to the nation with its attendant consequences on the economy, environmental pollution and the dire implication of promoting general insecurity.

    Successive governments have made attempts to address the situation through the establishment of different military Joint Task Force, and granting of amnesty to the restive youths. Notwithstanding the various interventions, the upsurge in level of illegal refineries and oil theft in recent times clearly portrayed that much success has not be
    achieved in stamping out the menace.

    Aside the militants blowing up of the pipelines and other oil facilities, the illicit trade of illegal refineries and oil theft is becoming alarming with the nation losing an average of 400,000 barrels of crude daily to pirates in the Gulf of Guinea and other domestic saboteurs.

    In a bid to rid the region of these criminal activities, the Nigerian Air Force (NAF) has embarked on series of air raids on illegal refineries and oil barges uncovered in parts of the Niger Delta creeks.

    Though operating under the umbrella of the Joint Task Force codenamed “Operation Delta Safe”, the NAF has conducted air combat operations to destroy equipment used for these criminal activities through constant and precise military engagement of illegal refineries, oil barges and canoes laden with stolen products or being used for such purpose.

    The illegal oil barges, in particular, are identified to be critical logistics equipment used by the criminals for the purpose of transporting the stolen products and as such the NAF adopts tactical measures of locating and destroying them after careful surveillance and intelligence missions. The rationale of the air raid is hinged on the need to checkmating these nefarious activities by the destruction of their logistics holdings while also deterring potential criminals from investing in the unlawful business.

    In obedience to the rules of engagement and outright display of professionalism, the NAF air attack focuses mainly on the assets used for these transactions as the legitimate targets. It was gathered that the perpetrators on sighting NAF aircrafts usually takes to their heel while leaving behind their refineries, barges and canoes as the
    targets that suffer the colossal damage.

    The ongoing aggressive air campaign came to limelight in early September 2016 when the NAF combat aircraft destroyed illegal refineries and barges filled with petroleum products around Bille Community in Rivers State.

    A similar operation was also carried out with remarkable success two days after in the same location. This followed with the destruction of illegal refineries and barges along east of Isaa town, Borikiri, Old Bakana as well as Bakana community a couple of days after.

    Other air raids saw the setting ablaze of some set of barges and canoes conveying stolen products around Okoromabie and South East of Port Harcourt refinery. In the course of the same operation, another set of illegal barges were uncovered at Onne in which individuals around it fled on sighting the NAF armed patrol aircraft.

    Though the barges and canoes did not explode when fired at, indicating that the drums were empty. While on armed patrol on 10 November 2016 around Kidney Island and Alakiri town, the combat crew discovered a set of two barges laden with stolen product and destroyed them on the spot. The ongoing air operations continue day and night unabated as it was creating inconvenience environment for these illegalities to thrive.

    The Chief of the Air Staff (CAS ), Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar during the third quarterly route march of the NAF in Abuja said that the Air Force is going to shift attention to the Niger Delta region and launch a new operation to checkmate the criminal activities. The ongoing air raid is a huge attestation to the fulfilment of the proclamation by
    the CAS.On a recent trip to Port Harcourt to assess the operational status of

    On a recent trip to Port Harcourt to assess the operational status of the Unit and Welfare of the personnel who are participating in the ongoing operation, Air Marshal Abubakar disclosed that the welfare of the personnel is paramount in order to boost their morale and enhanced the operational effectiveness and efficiency of the NAF operation.

    The CAS used the occasion to commission newly provided accommodation facilities which include a block of 18 units of 2-bedroom flats for Senior Non-Commissioned Officers, a remodelled block of 10 Units of one-bedroom apartments for Non-commissioned Officers and assembly ground newly provided for the Air Force Secondary School, Port Harcourt.

    The 115 Special Operation Group (SOG) in Port Harcourt is the arrow head of the air component of Operation Delta Safe with the statutory roles of air combat support as well as undertaking aerial surveillance mission to provide the needed intelligence for the surface forces operations.

    It would be recalled that in the wake of renewed hostilities in the Niger Delta, the NAF in June 2016 deployed additional aircraft to the South South region to strengthen the Operation Delta Safe. The additional platform comprises fighter aircraft, helicopter gunship and surveillance aircraft.

  • Council boss charges AMCON on income generation

    Council boss charges AMCON on income generation

    Globally, socially responsible organizations are most concerned with value re-investment to the society in appreciation of the contributions of the society to their growth, sustenance and survival. Given this as an important part of operations, corporate attention is increasingly being given to issues like health, education empowerment and employment opportunities, especially in developing economies such as Nigeria.
    Corporate bodies driven by the desire to achieve sustainable development and improve the quality of life, execute operations in such manners that ensure the protection of natural environment especially when there is little or no financial income being earned, is the measure of the organization’s policy and a culture of selfless giving.
    This is the rationale of the Honorable Chief Kpomah Solomon, Chairman Executive Council of Udu Local Government area of Delta State. Being the chief host of the steel manufacturing giant Premium Steel and Mines Limited he posits that since the sale of assets of the steel plan to the present team he has come to the realization that, “the potential for income generation and development of the Udu Local Government Area can only be enhanced when operations at the Premium Steel & Mines Limited plant are resumed; a reality that can only come to be when the Assets Management Company of Nigeria (AMCON) plays its part in settling the liabilities owed various stakeholders”.
    Kpomah stated that “Premium Steel & Mines Limited has not allowed this non-settlement of liabilities by AMCON, stall their commitments to the community with a constant stream of giving and solutions to us that touches at the roots of our health, educational and empowerment needs as is evident at the awards of scholarships, and provision of much needed health care facilities.”
    Realizing that the importance of girl-child education cannot be over emphasized, and realizing that education is meant for all; in fact, that it is the fundamental human right of every child whether boy or girl, able or disabled to acquire the basic education. There should therefore, be no discrimination as to who goes to school and who does not, hence education recognizes and helps to unlock the potentials in every child. Low enrolment of the girl-child in school is widening the educational and economic gap between the men and the women folks in Nigeria and Delta State. Addressing the problems and challenges of girl-child education in Udu LGA has become necessary in view of the dehumanizing practice of keeping the children, especially the girl-child out of school.
    In an era that many companies are reducing costs and spend especially PSML who are not able to swing into full operations, the importance and value that education adds to a community and the future of that community – our children – has not escaped Premium Steel. They have instituted several platforms to grant rewards that will encourage our children to perform at their utmost with the awards of cash prizes of totaling NGN1.5million annual cash rewards for the Best Performing boy and girl ANNUALLY in 11 Primary schools – chosen from primary 2-5 – with a total of 22 of our children benefiting and via the PSML CEO’s SCHOLARSHIP FOR ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE for Girls – specially set aside girls who cannot afford secondary school education in the three (3) public secondary schools in Aladja, Ovwian and Orhuwhorun.
    Hon. Chief Solomon Kpomah, Chairman Udu Local Government Council singing the praises of the steel giant at a ceremony recently where as part of its needs-based CSR, presented the LGA with a fully fitted ultra-modern ambulance and a three-bedroom bungalow to serve as a primary health center. As part of the providing quality medical service to the community, 2 doctors will also be engaged to deliver much needed service to the residents of the community.
    According to him, as part of the strategy to ensure the improvement of the economic lot of the LGA and indigenes, he had had a survey conducted into the intent of the PSML team and found that the desire to resuscitate the plant and begin productions is palpable. “However, a little-known fact is that the contract of sale to Premium Steel, was for the assets of the plant only and AMCON has the contractual duty to settle all outstanding debts accrued by previous owners as relates to power, gas, contractors and past members of staff. Therefore, AMCON needs, as a matter of urgency, to resolve these debts and pave the way for the revival of our priced Plant.”
    The PSML cardinal points of health, education and empowerment are supported by a dedicated annual budget with key objectives to enhance stakeholders’ relations through the implementation of a set plan; to support the development its host communities and be heard and seen as a driver of local socio-economic development. These objectives serve as the guideline that directs every step taken by the company and acts as the measure of success for all initiatives taken. The considerable investments committed to the articulation of these cardinal points is proof positive of the inherent determination to enhance the standards of living of its host communities and be “… a blessing to its hosts.”
    For a company that has been in existence for over five decades in the country, and which has consistently committed to the cause of corporate social responsibility, the impact on lives, communities and the society in general can only be huge. In 2016 alone, Premium Steel & Mines Limited has undertaken Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) initiatives and made donations amounting to over ten million naira.
    It is evident that the “Needs-Based Approach” to CSR adopted by Premium Steel has proven to be a yardstick for other companies of its ilk to set up initiatives that are central to their business strategy and market positioning. These ambitions however, are not compromised in favour of the company’s financial performance and not withheld because operations have not yet commenced.
    A perusal of annals of history will reveal that the PSML needs-based approach delivers on undeniable pattern of consistency and sustainability to CSR which will in the long term yield a harvest of stakeholder equity for the company and gives them the community license to operate (and to grow) in the ever-changing social contract between business, government, and society.
    In the words of Kpomah, “What we have been missing in Udu LGA has been the opportunity of discussion of relations with an organization with a “human” face. The generosity PSML has extended to us so far proves their commitment to continuous growth of our community. When this plant is fully operational we foresee a wide spectrum value chain of opportunities and engagement with our restive youth and budding entrepreneurs; who will in the long term contribute to the local and Delta State government via an increase internally generated revenue.”
    Our call is for the Assets Management Company of Nigeria (AMCON) to pay heed to its contractual duty and settle all outstanding debts accrued by previous owners of the plant as relates to power, gas, contractors and past members of staff as a matter of urgency. A prompt resolution of these debts will pave the way for the revival of our priced Plant.”
    Why is a company like PSML working together with government and non-governmental organizations to address issues from health to literacy? The simple answer is that it is about long-term value creation and also about sustainability — of people and the planet. One business manager we talked to on this subject put it pragmatically, “you can’t have a sustainable business in an unsustainable society.” Others worried about the world they are leaving to their grandchildren. The truth is that there is a difference between yesterday’s CSR, which was largely based on gratuity, versus today’s model based on impact. It doesn’t matter what you are selling, people are looking hard at how you do business and the companies that do it best win the CSR race, ahead of those for whom “corporate giving” is the only index of corporate responsibility.
    For PSML, it’s about something more — compassion and altruism, lifted into a shared covenant that they have deemed worthy. This is the standard that all corporations must be held to.

  • Bridging the legal, moral and social interpretation of law (III)

    Bridging the legal, moral and social interpretation of law (III)

    In Nigeria, the causa bellum is currently the scourge of corruption. In tackling same, I would strongly opine that where a Judge is faced with clear cut evidence of corrupt practice or serious crimes that offend public morality or engender public discontent or opprobrium, then one is bound to be a custodian, bearing those considerations to mind in sentencing the convicted person. This is because a Judge cannot divorce his own destiny from those of the average citizen.

    This is why the law affords us some principal canons of interpretation, which guide the reading of the law as it stands, irrespective of the surrounding circumstances and social pressures. Like the House of Lords, now United Kingdom Supreme Court, stated in the case of DPP v SHAW, we are in a unique position which makes us bound to interpret the law in accordance with the dictates of the law and good conscience.

    VIII. CONCLUSION

    I wish to use this medium as well to address the question-is a Judge a public servant? I make bold to state that though judges are servants of the public, they are not public servants. The tenure which we enjoy, the lengthy procedures required to remove a Judge, and our institutional separateness from the executive arm of government, are all aimed at securing our independent position. The essential obligation of a public servant is, consistently with the law, to give effect to the policy of Government . On the other hand, contrary to what you might read in the press of have conceived, the duty of a Judge is different.

    The duty of a Judge is to administer justice according to law, without fear or favour, affection or Local Government. Judges, by their decisions, may give effect to the will of the legislature as expressed in Statutes, but their duty is to be impartial in conflicts between a citizen and the State. In doing this, there may be a divergence between the will of Government and the laws and rights of citizens. Here, the Judge acts as the umpire to decide which side has prevalence over the other.

    I know that most of you and the wider community may regard Judges as public servants. Judges, however, should know better. There may , on occasion, be inordinate pressure from some quarters for Judges to be treated  as though they were public servants. Sometimes, politicians and public commentators express irritation or resentment a the refusal of Judges to conform to the wishes and policy of the Government. It merely reflects the institutional repugnance with independence of any organ of state. This is not surprising as independence of any kind is likely to be regarded as a threat to a government’s capacity to govern effectively. This is reflected where the government begins to regard the Judiciary as a “headache” or “the trouble with Government”.

    Doubtless, Government may, in some cases, be more efficient and life for those in power would be easier, if judges were obliged to show due deference to government policy. However, such efficiency is not the primary aspiration of a democratic society. Those considerations are however overridden by the demands of justice, and our community’s idea of a just society is one in which the judiciary determines its cases, independently of the Government.

    The image of the just judge as one who favours neither the rich nor the poor but gives a true verdict according to the evidence without partiality. It is essential for a judge to maintain, in court, a deportment which gives to the parties an assurance that their case will be heard and determined on its merits, and not according to some personal predisposition on the part of the Judge. Unfortunately, some Judges may fall short of this and modern lawyers, litigants, and witnesses, and the public generally, are much more ready to criticize judges whose behavior departs from appropriate standards of civility and judicial detachment. This is a good thing. If Judges behave  inappropriately, they  should be criticised. Of course, on occasions, some judges are exposed to wrongheaded, extravagant, or unfair criticism. That is the price that has to be paid to remind all judges of the necessity to conduct themselves with dignity and decorum.

    Ronald Dworkin, the foremost legal theorist, maintained that the Law consists of Rules (enacted law such as Legislation, Rules of Court, etc), which apply in an “all or nothing fashion.” If the rule applies to the circumstances, it determines a particular legal outcome. If it does not apply, it is simply irrelevant to the outcome. Conversely, principles do not determine an outcome even if they clearly apply to the pertinent circumstances. Principles provide judges with a legal reason to decide the case one way or the other, and hence they only have a dimension of weight. I would posit that moral, social considerations may run through both types of law but the moral is most likely to be reflected in the principle and more social considerations in the law.

    Ladies and Gentlemen, we must remember that a Judge is still a citizen of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, who shares the same fears, concerns, optimism or otherwise about the Country in general and the actions of criminally minded persons in particular. They are liable to be kidnapped, robbed and indeed murdered as several global and local examples have shown. As such, though they interpret the law as it is and not as certain sections of the society may like it, they are also swayed by the same concerns as other Nigerian are. In passing Judgment, they may wish to sentence as a deterrent, or choose to acquit in order to protect the fundamental rights of a wrongly accused person. They may choose to sentence to long terms of imprisonment for public policy reasons, or because of the impact of such crimes on the wider society. However, these considerations are bridged uner the umbrella of Ubi Jus Ibi Remedium- where there is a right, there is a remedy. The Law is the supreme consideration and all other considerations flow therefrom.

    With these final words, permit me to once again express my sincere gratitude to the Vice Chancellor, Management and Staff of this great institution. I also wish to thank the members of the Press, invited guests and you, our distinguished ladies and gentlemen, for you rapt attention.

    • Excerpts from speech delivered by former Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Mahmud Moham-med, at the 2nd Justice Anthony Aniogolu Memorial Lecture on October 27, 2016.
    • Concluded
  • Why my bully won

    Why my bully won

    I was bullied back in primary school by a male classmate! Every day at break time, he with his friend would drag and keep me captive under the stairs of the school until the bell goes for recommencement of classes. It was always dark and cold under the stairs and I would weep silently, very scared to even challenge them let alone tell someone. I couldn’t run away too as they always stood guard throughout. Never found out why they did that, not that I asked!

    Bullying remains a global social challenge that has been largely condoned by family and state actors. Cases abound of suicide by minors who couldn’t take it anymore yet not much is been done to arrest this injustice. It is pertinent to call to mind that during the recent US presidential election campaigns, a young girl who had been a victim of intense bullying had asked the Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton to state what she would do to stop bullying if elected. That young lady is only one out of billions who are constantly harassed by contemporaries or superiors, many of whom may never tell because of dreadful consequences.

    In my case, I never told. I kept mum because my bully severally threatened to hurt me if I ever did. I feared him because somehow the menacing look on his black face stuck in my head. I was worried and scared and feigned sick many times just to skip school. Luckily, that constant nightmare under the stairs wasn’t enough to drown me; I was a fighter, not a very strong one though. It would have been almost unbelievable if I had confided in anyone.

    My parents or teachers couldn’t have suspected since I remained consistent academically, topping the class most times! I was talkative too, so how come I never mentioned what I was going through? Who would have guessed when I remained cheerful and quite assertive! More so, my bully would shove and hit me yet leave absolutely no traces, so I had no marks to show for it.

    So, if I had told, it would have been merely my word against his. However, I was severely affected psychologically and it is still strange that no one saw through that façade of happiness I struggled to sustain. The dread that no one could help was stark. Even now, I still imagine the trauma and pain of going to school knowing I would end up captive.

    Clearly, I was also one of billions other children who go through torment from bullies at home and in school. For some, it is even more grievous and many never fully recover. Research shows that children who turn bullies are themselves first traumatised in some ways at home or elsewhere; they are children desperately needing to be powerful somehow, who then try to overpower and prey on smaller peers who they consider feeble. It is easy to tell when someone is under bully attack, no matter how subtle, when they become strangely withdrawn, easily get panicky or lose academic concentration leading to poor grades. For persons like me, unless I told only a keen guardian could have seen beneath the surface.

    Sadly but obviously, bullies are everywhere. At different stages of life you come across people that want to put you down, control and malign, who won’t stop unless you stand up to them. In the adult stage of life, I like to consider such bullies as “coded bullies” because you “the bullied” may not even think for a moment that you are under bully attack. While it might prove a tough one putting them in their right place, that might be your best bet.

    Never give anyone the foot hold to bully you right from their first attempt. If you let them do it once, it becomes normal and they won’t ever stop. That first instant they get at you to make you cower under their influence, resist and stand your ground. If you find that you are staggering, find a firm place to lean, that is, talk to someone and if they can’t help, talk to another and yet another, don’t stop until help comes.

    Bullies are actually scared deep within. They scare you for strength and your silence sustains their act. Trust me, if they can’t gag you, they can’t bully you. In my case, I wore my gag painfully yet cowardly until the very end and that’s why my bully won! Don’t let yours!

     

    Ify Aronu is a journalist and advocate for right values in Nigeria

    @iamifyaronu

  • Bridging the legal, moral and social interpretation of law (III)

    Bridging the legal, moral and social interpretation of law (III)

    Similarly, Joseph Raz’s theory of authority posits that the law is an authoritative social institution, the de facto authority. However, he also opines that it is essential to law that it be held to claim legitimate authority. According to Raz, the essential role of authorities in our practical reasoning is to mediate between the accepted subjects of the authority and the right reasons which apply to them in the relevant circumstances. Legal authority is  therefore legitimate if  and only if it helps citizens to comply better with the right reasons relevant to their actions that is, if they are more likely to act in compliance with these reasons by following the authoritative resolution than they would be if they tried to figure out and act on the reasons directly (without the mediating resolution). For example, there may be many reasons that bear on the question of how fast to drive on a particular road- the amount of pedestrian traffic, impending turns in the road, etc. –but drivers may comply better with the balance of those reasons by following the legal speed limit than if they tried to figure out all the trade offs in the moment.

    In interpreting our laws, therefore, a Judge must balance the law as it is with the prevailing social circumstances. In this sense, a Judge may give effect to stated Government policy  as reflected in their laws where it impacts upon the wider society as a whole. As such, a court will enforce speeding penalties because of its wider social impact upon other citizens. This is easier than can be imagined, given the need to ensure “the greatest good for the greatest number of people”, while doing justice. In order to best give effect to this interpretation, a Judge will need to arm himself with essential cannons of legal interpretation.

    1. LEGAL INTERPRETATION OF THE LAW

    I will begin with Abraham Lincoln’s thoughts on ‘bad law’. Lincoln was America’s sixteenth president and its first to be assassinated. He was also a lawyer. In his Lyceum address, which was in defence of political institutions, Lincoln has firmly held on to a literal approach to interpreting law. According to him “although bad laws, if they exist, should be repealed as soon as possible,  still while they continue in force … they should be religiously observed”.

    It is a truism that a Court must examine the text of the law, what it addresses and also what the intendment of the law was when the Legislature enacts same. Therefore our Judges will, in the right circumstances, apply certain tenets or cannons of interpretation.

    The traditional Canon of interpretation is the literal interpretation . Certainly, our Nigerian jurisprudence provides a history of strict “constructionism”, If I may coin that phrase. This attitude is based on the idea of non interference with the will of the Legislature. Indeed, the American statesman Alexander Hamilton noted “liberty can have nothing to fear from the judiciary alone as the legislature, not the judiciary has the power to make laws”.

    In the Nigerian case of Attorney General of Abia State V. Attorney General of the Federation (2006) 16 NWLR (PT.1005) 265, for example, my learned Brothers of the Supreme Court warned against courts going out on ‘an unguarded voyage of discovery’ thus seemingly giving the nod to al literal interpretation of the Constitution. Suffice it to say, I agree with their crudite determination. Certainly,  it accords to common sense that laws be followed as they were enacted . Judicial activism must mot be used as a cloak for retroactive or erroneous application of laws. The text of the law must be adhered to as this engenders certainty. It is this certainty that allows for fairness and fairness is an essential component of a good judgment.

    However, even literal enthusiasts realize that strict literal interpretation can lead to illogical absurdities . For example, a law that punishes a person who draws ‘blood in the streets’ cannot  extend to a surgeon who opened the vein of a person who fello down in the street, to cite the US Case of K MART COPR. V. CARTHER INC. 486 YS 281 (1988). While this may be an extreme example, it does not remove the fact that strict construction can often lead to absurd consequences. Language is, after all, in Denning’s words, ‘not an instrument of mathematical precision. As such, a Judge will apply a purposive interpretation using what lawyers term the “Golden Interpretation” Rule.

    Like the literal rule, the golden rule gives the words of a statue their plain, ordinary meaning . However, when this may lead to an irrational result that is unlikely to be the Legislature’s intention, the golden rule dictates that a judge can depart from this meaning, examining what will be the interpretation that best gives effect to the intendment of the framers of the said law. This is where consideration is given to the spirit of the law.

    Nigerian jurisprudence is also rich on interpretation of statutes. We have been cautioned again and again to first begin  with a literal interpretation except where the provisions are unclear. Here, the Mischief Rule is applied so that we may be able to peel back the layers of obscurity and reveal the problems that such law was enacted to address. Niki Tobi JSC’s metaphor in GLOBAL EXCELLENCE COMMUNICATION LIMTED AND 3 ORS V. DONALD DUKE SC. 313/2006 is helpful: “where the provisions are unclear… (t)he court is expected to apply a compass in a ship to navigate the waters to arrive at the intention of the makers of the Constitution”. Other judgments echo this and so it would not be necessary to expound on them.

    The Nigerian Constitution, as many other constitutions, does not state the rules for interpretation. It is because a Constitution is an organic document, intended to endure for ages’ to be adapted to various crisis of human affairs. It is not meant to be interpreted with stultifying narrowness’ or with a meaning that  will effectuate rather than defeat its purpose. Indeed, the true meaning of a legal text almost always depends on a background of concepts, principles, practices, facts, rights and duties which the authors of the text took for granted or understood , without conscious advertence, by reason of their common language or culture. Interpretation must therefore depend on what the Court in Ag Federation V. Abubakar (2007) 10 NWLR (PT. 1041) I put as the circumstances of our people’, seemingly a nod to the social interpretative theory of law.

    VII. Bridging diverse yet convergent views

    With these considerations in mind, it is important  to consider, like Wittgenstein, the following poser:

    A rule stands there like a sign-post-does the sign post leave no doubt open about the way I have to go” Does it show which direction I am to take when I have passed it; whether along the road or footpath or cross-country? But where is it said which way I am to follow it;  whether in the direction of its finger or (e.g) in the opposite one?- And if there were, not a single sign-post, but a chain of adjacent ones or of chalk marks on the  ground –is there only one way of interpreting them? –So I can say, the sign post does after all leave no room for doubt?

    There are many sign posts as to how a Judge should interpret the law as it applies to the case before him. Indeed, there are cases where the Judiciary has acted as the custodian of the morals of society as well as being a regulator of social conduct, while applying a legal interpretation to law. A case that is usually seen as representing this  idea is the case of Regina V Shaw, which is widely regarded as having revived the common law offence of conspiracy to corrupt public morals. Frederick Shaw had begun production of a Ladies Directory in the autumn of 1959 and contained around forty ads for female prostitutes in Soho, Mayfair, Bayswater and Notting Hill, in London, while featuring some black and white photographs of the women concerned in various stages of undress. Shaw was tried on three counts,. First for publishing an obscene article, second for conspiring to corrupt public morals, and third for living on the earnings of prostitutes via the ads in the Directory. He was convicted on all three counts and sentenced to nine months in prison.

    Shaw appealed against his conviction on the grounds that ‘there was no such offence at common law as  the conspiracy alleged , and he also contested his conviction for living on immoral earnings. Broadly speaking two conceptions of conspiracy to corrupt public morals were put forward at his appeal. The Crown argued that conspiracy to corrupt public morals was a single offence that grouped together particular kinds of immoral conduct over which the courts had long asserted jurisdiction.  These were, primarily, obscenity, procuring prostitution, keeping a disorderly house (for illicit sexual activities), public indecency and public mischief. Although these could be offences in themselves, they could also be construed as conspiracies against morality where an agreement to do them had taken place. It was that interpretation of the common law which permitted the prosecution of Shaw for arranging what  was considered an illegal activity. Shaw argued to the contrary that each of these forms of conduct constituted separate offences and could not be seen as aspects of  a single substantive  offence known as corrupting public morals.

    The main argument against  the appeal was that the courts had long been custos morum (guardian of morals) . This doctrine, it was maintained, was first articulated by Lord Mansfield in 1763 in Rv. Delaval and relied on a series of cases dating back to 1663 to show that the courts had long asserted their right to prosecute conduct of various kinds held to be against public morality. In the first of these, Sir Charles Sedley’s case, from 1663, he had exposed himself on a balcony at Covent Harden and urinated on the people below. They also referenced the cases of Rv. Berg, Britt,Carre and Lummies (1927), involving keeping a disorderly house for the purpose of corrupting those who went there by encouraging homosexual acts. The court of Appeal therefore decided in Shaw’s case that all of these could be held, by analogy, to constitute  conspiracies against public morals, and that therefore an offence with that name did exist. The Court concluded that it was an established principle of  common law that conduct calculated or intended to corrupt public morals (as opposed to the morals of a particular (individual ) is an indictable misdemeanour’. The law reports showed that ‘The conduct. To which that principle is applicable may vary considerably, but the principle itself doses not, and in our view the facts of the present case fall plainly within it’. At Shaw’s appeal, Sedley’s case was held to be evidence that the secular courts, rather than the ecclesiastical ones, had asserted a right to prosecute such conduct. Two other categories of conspiracy were used to support the decision in Shaw on the question of conspiracy against public morals: those that related to causing a public mischief and those concerning outrages against public decency. These cases were used to give force to the view that the courts had maintained an ability to punish immoral and mischievous offences as conspiracies against the public.

    Here, we see the courts not only being a custodian of morals, but giving a social interpretation of the acts that were complained of although widely practiced in the Country at the time. Nevertheless, the social ramifications as well aas the moral implication bound the justices together in legally interpreting the provisions of law and statute, respectively.

     

     

  • After now syndrome

    The after now syndrome is the after effect of an alternate reality that dawns suddenly like the manner in which night disappears at the first sight of a cloudy sun. The theatrics of the after effects are so sudden because it is the only reality that hits you after school, during Youth Corp Service or in your final year at school.

    The truth is- the reality hits one very soon. You may ask yourself in wonder: when did I graduate school? It is like time is a running shadow that moves faster than the speed of light. It makes you awe in wonder how four years or five years of tertiary education raced so fast where the dilemma of all the monies consumed from your parents pursue, suddenly change hands to your younger siblings, as you are finally forced to fend for yourself and mature into an adult very fast, before the society begins to label you worse than an invader of tax.

    For me, it didn’t take too long to decipher that or for my mind to ruminate on that aspect of my life. I mean, what does one spend one’s final year in school to do if not reminisce on lost years and ages, given to Nationwide strikes and the pressing issues of attendance in class, tests and exams? Many will term it a Nigerian factor that makes it impossible for a fresh graduate to get a suitable job in this current economic crash but Nigeria is still better. This recession has spread its embers to the richest- even Saudi Arabia has had their fair share of their cost gold mineral slip through their hands. The crash isn’t just Nigerian- it is global; this ruin didn’t just start, though many young school leavers will blame their selfish and corrupt leaders for a problem that has long festered.

    Recently, I met an old friend one early morning, I just returned from the famous Akinola market at Ife, smiling at the gates of Obafemi Awolowo University with foodstuffs, bought at a fair price. He gave me the long sigh and then advised me to give thanks for all the supportive hands that stretched their pockets to support me through school, as he said in his words: “Outside is very hard. You will meet people who would look to exploit you and expect you to tell them thanks because, there is no employment waiting for anyone after school.”

    These very sad words of his forced me to ask if all four of his years in school did really matter. He, of course, gave the scary response- that it didn’t.

    Most University graduates have plans- several plans with several phases, even whilst in school. It is with this reason that they struggle to keep good grades even in times when they could be threatened by lecturers in courses they could fail. Many young graduates are no different from Ryden Malby, a character played by Alexis Bedel in the 2009 20th Century Fox movie: Post Grad.

    In the first prelude of the movie, she states all her plans with optimism in her eyes as she goes on to elaborate how having straight A’s helped her secure a good internship but unfortunately failed her in getting the job of her dreams. She finally did get the job of her dreams, but it came at a latter point when her frustration led her to several failed interviews as the reality of the after now syndrome dawned on her.

     To be in fact honest, even the best graduating student faces this problem. Having a job after school is more than just mere intelligence: the opportunities are scare, some are even impossible to find because some courses are out-dated- and no longer play any insightful relevance. Though nothing good comes easy, innovation and entrepreneurship are the only tools to success now, in a world where economic prosperity is dominated by soft skills and impressive use of talents than head-knowledge and good grades.