Category: Commentaries

  • Re: Family denies report on Oshodi ‘ownership’

    SIR: I wish to comment on the report in The Nation of December 24, 2013 page 37 on the dispute between Oshodi-Tapa and Agedegudu Onigbesa families.

    I am of Salihu Oba-Tapa family descendant. Salihu is my great-grand father. He lived and died in Tanmeda-Aguda which naturally turned to be my ancestral home. Suffice to state here that my grand-father was born in Tanmeda-Aguda but grew up in a compound in Iganmu. There he lived and gave birth to my father in 1919. My grand-father later died and was buried in Iganmu. I was also born and grew-up in the same compound in Iganmu like my father and the compound was like my home but in early 90s, I developed the quest to trace my ancestral home which led to a lot of discoveries.

    The findings made me to understand that Salihu Oba-Tapa (as well known in Tanmeda-Aguda) in not from Nupe (Tapa) in present Niger and Kwara states but are of Egun stock. He only migrated to Tanmeda and settled. History reveals that Salihu is a very strong traditionalist. He is a close friend to Oshodi-Tapa and Debari in Shomolu-Bariga. Around 1855, the trio, in a quest to improve in their prowess embarked on a mission which took them to a town called Kusoko in the present either Niger or Kwara State. (There are three Kusoko villages in Nupe tribe).

    Salihu, Oshodi and Debari travelled to Kusoko, lived there and embraced their religion – the worship of Igunuko. They all returned to Lagos together and settled at their former abode, established and introduced their new found religion in their various areas. While Salihu covered Tanmeda-Aguda, Iganmu, Ijesha and by extention, Ota in Ogun State, Debari covered Shomolu-Bariga while Oshodi covered the present Oshodi-Ile in Lagos Island, Mafoluku and Oshodi-Oko in present popular Oshodi.

    The introduction of the worship of Igunuko common with the Nupe (Tapa) made people to indentify them with the Tapas hence Oshodi-Tapa, Salihu Oba-Tapa and Debari too. But without mincing words, Salihu originated from Iweme and is likely that the rest two also originates from same area.

    I agree with the opinion that the Agedegudu Onigbesa is a landlord to Oshodi who is likely of Dahomey origin like his friends. It is pertinent to also state that they are now of Lagos origin because we are talking of a well over 150 years history.

    In conclusion, we all need to bury our pride on either one is master or servant. No one germinated from the ground. We all came, settled and claim where we long stayed. Agedegudu Onigbesa families should not continue seeing Oshodi-Tapa families as strangers. More so, Onigbesa is of Awori tribe that also originated from the present Ado-odo-Ota Local Governemnt Area of Ogun State.

     

    • Alhaji Babatunde Salihu

    Tanmeda – Aguda, Lagos

  • OYSG: Stop after-school lessons

    SIR: Since the inception of the Abiola Ajimobi administration in Oyo State, parastatals of the government have witnessed dramatic changes in terms of zero tolerance for corrupt practices but the secondary schools in the state appears not to have experienced this change.

    Some principals/teachers who believe they are untouchable, especially in the South-east and South-west local government in Ibadan are always looking for ways to exploit parents through compulsory lessons after school hours despite the fact that the administration had warned public secondary schools to stop all forms of extra classes after school hours. They pretend to be after the performances of the children but it is because of ridiculous N30 or N50 they collect daily.

    Some collect N30 or N50 from each student per day while a particular school charge N2000 student per term. The fact of the matter is that they actually do the normal classwork in their so called ‘extra’ and make every student pay by force. The topics taught in the extra lessons are never repeated in the normal classes and those taught in the normal classes are not repeated in the extra lessons. Should we call that extra lesson? Who is deceiving who?

    Should extra class affect the normal classes for which the principals/teachers are paid? This deceitful act was common in many private schools but we now experience it in public secondary schools in Oyo state. They make many parents that do not have time for their children believe they are helping them when they are not. These deceptive and fake extra classes do not give those of us that are ready to be responsible for the performances of our children time to take care of them.

    Public schools were not known for extra lessons; they closed by 2pm and the performances were much better. Now that we have so many extra classes, and the children leave school late, where are the records of good performances in WAEC, NECO AND UTME? The only record of performance we have seen is the record of malpractices. If not, how can a student do well in Oyo state qualifying exam and still fail or have incomplete result in public exams?

    We parents believe in the zero tolerance of this administration for indiscipline and evil acts, and we shall be grateful if this administration can put an end to any class beyond 2pm in public secondary schools in Oyo State so that teachers will concentrate on their primary assignment without the option of doing their normal class work after school hours.

    • Concerned parents,

    Ibadan

  • Let’s have a peoples’ constitution

    SIR: God, in His wisdom made President Goodluck Jonathan agree to have a national confab by whatever name. He might have his own agenda as being alleged by some observers. My own take is that we as Nigerians should latch on to it and make it work for us!

    In this light, I align with the Igbo Leaders of Thought that we should fashion out a new constitution that will reflect the people’s aspirations, not the decree that we parade at the moment.

    My own suggestions for consideration include a return to Parliamentary system of government as the Presidential system is too expensive or is it the way we operate it that makes it so?

    If we must retain the Presidential system, then, we have to peg the number of aides that can be appointed.  Let us revert to regions with each of the current six zones constituting a region. The Salaries and Wages Commission should fix the pay for everybody, from the President to the messenger. We should scrap the Revenue Mobilization and Allocation Commission.

    Finally, we should have only part time legislators who will only receive sitting allowance, while we should scrap the House of Representatives.

    Incidentally, PRONACO has already fashioned a constitution for the nation, let us take a look at it for guidance. There are also some recommendations from the Obasanjo conference which will be very beneficial to the nation!!!!

    • Abiodun Sopitan

    Oregun, Ikeja

  • Lagos: Defining moments in 2013

    The year 2013 has, undoubtedly been a crucial one for the Lagos State government and indeed, Lagosians at large. It has been a year of consolidating and sustaining innovative governance, which the Fashola administration is widely renowned for. With regards to budget implementation, the state government recorded a third quarter performance of 70 percent for the 2013 Budget. The shortfall from an aggregate half year performance of 72 percent to 71 percent is attributed to revenue shortfall and delay in remittances of national statutory allocations.

    The year witnessed the execution and commissioning of several infrastructural projects by the state government. The Lekki-Ikoyi Bridge, the first cable/suspended bridge in Nigeria and the entire West Africa was recently handed over for the use of Lagosians. The 1.38km bridge connects Ikoyi-Alexander Street to Lekki-Admiralty Way. Other on-going projects of the state government include the Okokomaiko to Marina Light Rail project, Adiyan Waterworks, Lagos Badagry Expressway, Apapa CBD Road Networks, Mushin Isolo Road, Isolo-Isheri-Ijegun Link Bridge, Ayinke House Maternity Hospital and the Atlantic shoreline protection project among others. Government has equally handed over several inner roads across the state. The Market Road in Badagry which has been provided with cable ducts to avoid the need to cut any part while trying to lay cables is one of such.

    With regards to food security and youth empowerment, the state’s Agricultural  Youth Empowerment Scheme (AGRIC YES) has continued to give hope to hundreds of youths in the state. Recently, government  handed over 32-tonnes capacity per day high quality cassava flour mill and a 50, 000 capacity automated five-unit broiler houses, among other facilities, to the scheme. The progress and achievements recorded by the AGRIC-YES scheme is a pointer to the fact that investment in agriculture remains a solid platform through which unemployment could be tackled.

    The governor, Mr Babatunde Fashola (SAN), also hosted the third Lagos Corporate Assembly tagged “BRF MEETS BUSINESS” where he urged local producers  to embrace innovations that would give them competitive edge. Providing insights into various areas impacting business and standards, the governor advised local entrepreneurs to adopt new business models that could give them the much needed breakthroughs.  Similarly, the governor led a state delegation to meetings with major Public Private Partnership financial institutions and construction firms in Beijing, China. At each of the meetings, Governor Fashola emphasized the investment opportunities inherent in the highlighted areas of infrastructure and the role direct financing through such institutions could play in bringing identified projects to reality.

    The Lagos Liveable City Conference 2013, with the theme, “Preparing for the Mental and Social Health Needs of the Lagos Mega-city”, also took place in the year. At the opening of the conference, the governor explained that the project of governance in a mega city “is firstly and lastly for the people and about the people including the man on the street who must be able to live in it. He must be able to breathe in it. He must be able to dream in it – dream for himself, for his family, for his succeeding generations. He must be safe in it”.

    To sustain the pace of its infrastructural development, the government held a completion meeting for its N87.5 billion programme, rounding off its N167.5 billion issuance programme. Although the offer recorded a stellar 139 percent total subscription of N121.72 billion, the state did not accept all given the limitation of the programme size and the state’s disciplined approach to financial management. The bond, another milestone by the state given that it is the largest bond issuance ever completed by a sub-national in the history of the Nigerian capital market, was aimed at satisfying the needs of the 21 million residents of Lagos and allowing them achieve their dreams.

    Ensuring easy access to qualitative heath care remains a top priority of the state government. This is being partially done through the Free Medical Mission of which the 29th edition was held in Badagry where over 10,000 residents benefited. Similarly, the Oregun Flagship Primary Healthcare Centre, the sixth in the series, was handed over for use. The initiative has brought about significant reduction in the indices of infant and maternal mortality across the state.

    Concerning security, the operational scope of the Lagos State Security Trust Fund is being continually expanded. Government also hosted the fund’s 7th Annual Town Hall Meeting on Security with an assertion that the collective investment of the state and citizenry in crime prevention is paying dividends visible in lower crime rates when compared with last year. Progress being recorded from year to year through the initiative, has developed a security apparatus that has improved upon what was inherited. For instance, since the state traffic law was enacted; the incidences of motorcycle related robberies reduced from about 60percent in 2012 down to 16 percent in 2013.

    In its drive to make Liquefied Petroleum Gas, LPG, the number one choice for domestic cooking in the state, the state government has commissioned yet another Skid Plant in Ikorodu. One of the priorities of the administration is to revamp and reposition the energy sector in the state . Governor Fashola recently commissioned the 10.6 MW Alausa Power Project that would power the entire State Secretariat, Alausa and Obafemi Awolowo Way. The state independent power project, has helped in lighting up  several places and landmarks like the Carter Bridge which is a very critical bypass into Lagos which was abandoned for many years because it was unsafe as well as Simpson Street in Lagos and the Ramp on Marina close to the Third Mainland Bridge. Twelve streets have equally been lit up in Alimosho area and is already having enormous economic benefits.

    To accelerate the dispensation of justice, Governor Fashola recently commissioned the combined High/ Magistrate Courts in Ikorodu, which he renamed in honour of the third indigenous Chief Judge of Lagos, Ademola Candide- Johnson.

    Certainly, 2013 has been a successful one for the government. Characteristically, government has mapped out strategies to ensure that 2014 is a much better year. Two more power plants to be sited in Lekki and Ikeja GRA respectively are in the pipe line just as government continues to focus on public maintenance of law and order, provision of qualitative education, health care delivery, youth empowerment, rural development, sports development among others.

    It is, however, important that Lagosians work with the state government in its bid to make 2014 a better one. Qualified residents should partake in the state residents registration exercise while eligible ones should ensure prompt payment of their taxes and other dues. They must also not engage in acts that could jeopardise law and order in the state. It is in doing this that the plans and aspirations of the state government for the year could be achieved for the good of all.

    •Ogunbiyi is of the Features Unit, Ministry of Information and Strategy, Alausa, Ikeja.

  • Belgore and Kwara APC

    Regrettable. That is the one word a reasonable individual familiar with the political workings of Kwara State as well as a burden for the emancipation of our nation would use to describe the latest outpouring of emotions by Mr. Dele Belgore, SAN, and one time gubernatorial candidate of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria on the merger of the nPDP with the APC in Kwara.

    Let me isolate the issues that so much bother Belgore in the very emotional interview he recently granted one of the national dailies. One, that while the decision of the national leadership of the APC to accept the nPDP into the fold of the APC is a welcome development, the decision to accept the same nPDP members in Kwara State into APC is foolish. ‘I understand it from the point of view of national politics’, he said in the media chat.

    I doubt, judging from his subsequent utterances, that  he really understands. I wonder how what is agreed as a necessity for the political development of the nation will have no relevance to the local platform of the same polity. If it is good at the national level, how would it become evil at the state level? Who makes the national leadership of any party if not people representing the local organs?

    It seems to me that Belgore is only reluctant to tell the leadership of the APC what he really wants in the state: express gubernatorial ticket of the party. Perhaps that is the genesis of his crisis with the state leaders of the party before the merger? He had raised the same contention when the legacy parties, ACN, CPC and ANPP were still working on the merger that has made the opposition party a force to reckon with today in Nigeria. He made numerous outreaches to media personalities promoting the argument that having been the gubernatorial candidate of the ACN and having won the highest number of votes among candidates of the legacy parties, he deserves to be the candidate in the next election. But now applying the same rule to the merger of nPDP, our brother is unhappy. Regrettable.

    The second issue of bother to Belgore is that the nPDP members, under the leadership of Senator Bukola Saraki, will add no value to the APC. Definitely it is a summary dismissal of the combined wisdom of the leadership of the APC. It is a subtle way of castigating the elders who went round the length and breadth of this country, risking their lives, canvassing the evolution of a truly national opposition party with enough strength and spread to truly challenge the PDP in the 2015 election.  To Belgore, they have not done well because they included Kwara on the list of states they consider as truly progressive and which should join the increasing fold of like minds across Nigeria.

    His other partner, Bunmi Olusona, also recently went out in the media to say the legacy parties would win Kwara without the nPDP. He brandished some spurious data to prove  the might and power of the parties. But one simple question: How many people voted for Olusona in his hometown at the last election when he was gubernatorial candidate? What has he done there till date that makes him believe he will still win one polling unit in his ward? On the day of the last election, where was Olusona? On the prayer mountain, I was told by a bird, praying, instead of mobilising voters. What he should have done first he did last and he expected miracle. Regrettable.

    Please let somebody tell Belgore that the coming of both Saraki and governor Abdulfatah Ahmed into the fold of the APC is already adding real and positive values to the party.

    A reminder: Belgore also claimed a government agency said Kwara is unbankable. False. He should go and check his record again. Methinks that as a lawyer, facts are supposed to be sacred. So why did Belgore conveniently ignore the retraction of the same agency on the same subject? Or does he want to say that since that allegation was raised two years ago no bank has been dealing with Kwara?  So how does Kwara access its funds? How does Kwara pay contractors?

    I understand it if he claimed he cannot see any work in progress in Kwara. I understand it if he says there is no transformation going on in the state. I understand. He cannot see them because he is not the one in charge. He may not be able to see Kwara State University, but others can see. The respected Professor Ibahim Gambari is the Pro-Chancellor. Let Belgore consult him. The university has held one convocation and it was not in secret. He may not be able to see the International Aviation College, but others not blinded by personal ambition can see it.  It is located on the expressway out of Ilorin and just held its maiden graduation, produced the youngest Nigerian pilot. Belgore can send his team there.  He may not be able to see the benefits of the Kwara Bridge Employment Scheme but the thousands of Kwarans who have benefitted from it can see. They are in the ministries and parastatals, excited that government has opened to them a window of opportunity. Belgore should look out for them. He may not be able to see the thousands of small scale businesses generated by people who have been given access to loan in designated microfinance banks, but Nigerians of good conscience can see them. It is a project that has given life to micro finance banks and empowered the population of small scale entrepreneurs. He may not be able to see what government has done in the health sector until he takes a personal, unbiased tour of comprehensive renovations at the general hospitals in Omu-Aran, Offa, Ajasse-Ipo, Kaiama and Ilorin.  What about massive road construction going on across the state? Ambition. Yes, personal ambition and desperation will not allow our barrister to see those ground-breaking achievements for a state almost at the terra firma of federal allocation and constrained IGR. Regrettable.

    And lastly, he pretended he had nothing to do with the PDP. This is regrettable because those who walk the politics of Kwara understand that he is merely waiting for a little time to join his ilk in the party. Like somebody joked the other time, Belgore is now APC in the day and PDP in the night. It is, like Wole Soyinka’s play, the metamorphosis of a selfish propagandist. I cannot speak for Saraki, but I want to advise Belgore, if the Almighty has destined the man to be the leader at this point in time, why fight the decision?

    Adebayo writes from Ilorin

  • Cert. scandal: How long before Jonathan sacks Oduah?

    Cert. scandal: How long before Jonathan sacks Oduah?

    It never rains but pours. The storm is certainly not over for the embattled Minister of Aviation, Princess Stella Oduah who is now embroiled in a scandal of towering proportion – certificate forgery.

    Stunning revelations by the intrepid online whistleblower, SaharaReporters, revealed that Princess Oduah (‘Princess’ as she has insisted she be addressed), lied about her Masters degree.

    In her citation to the Senate during ministerial screening in 2011, Mrs. Oduah claimed she attended St. Paul’s College, Lawrenceville in Virginia, United States, from 1978-1982, where she bagged her first Degree in Accounting. “On completion of her first degree, she was not lured into taking up paid employment but was determined to have the best education and at the highest level, so she immediately stayed back to study for her Masters Degree which she achieved in 1983,” the citation said.

    Thorough investigations have revealed that St. Paul’s College, Lawrenceville in its 125-year history never ran a graduate (masters) programme. More so, there was no trace of evidence that she earned a Bachelor’s degree from the said university.

    Barely 24 hours after her claim to have acquire a Masters degree from St. Paul’s University in the United States was punctured, further investigation uncovered another false claim by the embattled Minister – fast gaining notoriety for earthshaking scandals – that she lied on oath to the Nigeria Senate, and indeed the Nigerian people, in her audacious claim that another American ‘university’, Pacific Christian University based in Glendale, sometime in 1998, awarded her an honorary doctorate degree in Business Administration.

    Investigation by grapevine online news platforms showed that there is no university in Glendale called Pacific Christian University. It was on the strength of this qualification she was grilled and eventually confirmed by the lawmakers as a minister. This is a scandal and the law should be allowed to take its course.

    Silence, they say, is acquiescence. Unsurprisingly, all her aides and spokesmen of departments and parastatals under her ministry have so far failed to respond to enquiries by journalists to the latest findings indicting the minister. To lend credence to the these scholarly journalistic work, it has been observed that frantic efforts have been made by the minister and her aides to revise her profiles on the internet in a desperate bid to clean up every reference to St. Paul’s College and Pacific Christian University. On Wikipedia for instance, it was observed that her page was edited 19 times between 1.56am and 5.05pm on Tuesday, January 7.

    Meanwhile, the dust is yet to settle on the reckless abuse of office by the Minister’s approval of the purchase of two bulletproof BMW cars at an unimaginable cost of $1.6m (or about N255m) by the National Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), a federal agency under her ministry’s supervision. Coscharis Motors Limited, a dealership from which the two BMW cars were purchased by NCAA, gave N112million to the aviation minister, Ms Oduah as kickbacks while Cosmas Maduka, who owns Coscharis  Motors, pocketed N60 million for each of the two BMW cars.

    But how long will President Jonathan continue to shield her from anti-corruption agencies despite massive criticism trailing her corrupt acts is the big question on everyone’s lips. Many reason that with the latest revelations, she does not deserve to stay one more second as a minister of the federal republic. The longer she remains in Jonathan’s government, the more embarrassment she becomes to the country, making a huge joke of the much touted anti-graft crusade of the present administration.

    President Jonathan should not use any probe panel to cover-up or create a leeway to delay investigations, lull public outrage and ultimately distract the anti-corruption agencies from prosecuting the aviation minister. At this point, Ms Oduah is (seemingly) unshaken; the subterfuge of a panel has been a fortress.

    Those who revel in ignominy have resorted to such crude ways as clannishness to support her reckless abuse of office. Such Nigerians have been blinded by ethnic jingoism that no deed is too heinous as long as the offender is of their ethnic bracket. For such staunch backers, she is being ‘persecuted because she is igbo.”

    It is inconceivable that such tribalists try so hard to validate impunity with ethnicity. It is even more worrisome when so called enlightened Nigerians join in this stupefying vulgarity.  Nigeria will turn the corner when we stop invoking the ‘ethnic card’ to perpetuate criminality and defend corruption.

    The Senate must now do more than ‘take a bow and go’ during subsequent screening exercises. Independent verification of documents must be done by the upper chamber of the National Assembly and not left to security agencies alone that it now seems take orders from powers above.

    The most probable option left for Stella Oduah is to throw in the towel, if for nothing at all, so she can save us all the embarrassment she unduly attracts to the country.

    Our sit tight leaders have already gained a reputation that no amount of disgrace constrains them to lose their tight grip on power. What better way can President Jonathan prove to Nigerians that he is dedicated to taking the fight against corruption in 2014 up a notch, as he promised in his new year message, by asking her to step aside.

    The damage she has done to his administration is incalculable. The fight against corruption requires leaders at all levels with high voltage public morality. People who occupy public offices must be made to feel they have moral obligations to our sensibilities to save us from being the laughing stock of the bemused international community.

    It is time we began to address the issue of academic dishonesty in public service in Nigeria. We need to raise ethical standards and morality that’s the more reason why the Stella Oduah certificate scandal should not be swept under the carpet. If other scandals can be ‘ignored’ by this government, certainly not this.

    If Oduah is left to continue as a minister, then it sends the wrong signal to young Nigerians that you can cheat your way to attain such lofty heights in government. Every effort of the government at curbing exam malpractice and certificate forgery will effectively be brought to its knees if this shameful act as widely expected, is ignored by Mr. President.

    If Jonathan had given her the boot in response to the outrage that greeted her BMW scandal, he would have maybe, saved his administration this embarrassment.

    In this part of the world where politics of mudslinging hold sway, issues of certificate forgery are lethal weapons in the hands of the opposition. It is weighty enough to nail her political coffin. Nigerian political history is replete with examples. But it takes bovine guts to hang on to your job in the face of public opprobrium when you’reprivy to mystifying facts about your certificates. Her bravery has become her undoing.

    One is only left to wonder how many political office holders have forged certificates. It is a shame that in the 21st century with advancement in science and technology, authenticity of documents of public office holders cannot be easily verified by authorities saddled with such responsibilities. It is left to the imagination how many ministries such scandals exist, worse still, we may never know the extent of the rottenness in such places.The integrity of some ministers in Jonathan’s government have long been questioned. This justifies that. Merit and competence have long been thrown in the dust bin.

    Searchlights should now be beamed on more certificates of political office holders.

     

    Theophilus Ilevbare is a public affairs commentator. Engage him on twitter, @tilevbare. He blogs at http://ilevbare.com.

     

  • Riddle of seven flying wonders

    A voice from outside has apparently reinforced Nigeria’s international image as a land of the ridiculous. In spite of the denial credited to the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, the negative publicity connected with the statement by a Kenyan lady that President Goodluck Jonathan recently visited her country with seven private aircraft will not just fade into insignificance. Indeed, rather than clarify the issue in favour of the administration, Abati’s counter-statement ironically deepened the opacity.

    Well before this particular incident, Nigerians were well aware of the fact that the country’s political elite had found a new and intoxicating status symbol, private jets, which they flaunted with incredible enthusiasm. So, the news was unsurprising. However, it was embarrassing that outsiders had not only noticed the craze but also observed the depth of depravity.

    A video which has gone viral on the social media has the Kenyan saying, “Your (Nigerian) President visited our country with seven private jets. That has never happened before, we were all excited, ‘this is Nigeria; it is the country with the highest number of private jets.’ Seven private jets. I know there could be more but for us, that is still wow! They all came in their private jets.” The video was reportedly twitted by Nigerians, including a former Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, which presumably compelled Abati’s reaction.

    Funny enough, the official response went thus: “That President Jonathan travelled to Kenya with seven jets is not true. I challenge the Kenyan lady to prove her allegation. Stop spreading lies. President Jonathan was in Kenya with only one aircraft. Provide concrete evidence to the contrary or shut up. That Kenyan lady is lying. It amounts to sheer laziness to take on crazy tale and broadcast it without verification. It is shameful. It is an absolute lie. A presidential jet is not difficult to identify. It bears a clear mark.”

    Interestingly, there is some confusion here, arising from some clever manipulation. The Kenyan was sufficiently definite in her qualification of the aircraft, using the unambiguous word “private”, which suggests that she was conscious of the difference between a clearly marked presidential jet and others.

    Furthermore, on the accusation of lying, the question of motive must come up. Why would she concoct tales about Nigeria’s leaders? Analysis of her comment rather betrays her as an excited witness to a spectacle. Contrary to the official position, the onus of proof in this matter lies with the Presidency, which ought to show evidence beyond mere words that the lady was fantasising.

    The love of showy opulence in government circles is corroborated by two recent instances: the yet-to-be-resolved scandal concerning Minister of Aviation Stella Oduah who stands accused of involvement in the morally repugnant purchase of two armoured cars for N255 million; and the government’s scandalous interest in a deposit of N1.5 billion for a new jet which will become the Presidential Air Fleet’s (PAF) 11th aircraft. As the observant Kenyan noted, perhaps only in Nigeria are such wonders possible.

  • Healing the continent

    Nigeria’s 100-year existence hardly calls for celebration considering the plight of Black people in Africa and beyond. Centuries after the abolition of slavery, the race is no nearer political emancipation and ideological conceptualisation.

    Yet, Africa’s most populous country and the world’s largest collection of Blacks could not have had a more auspicious beginning. Cobbled from the Northern and Southern Protectorates by Great Britain in January 1914, it took its name from the resource-filled River Niger (or Niger River) courtesy of incumbent Governor-General Sir Frederick Lugard’s future wife, Flora Shaw.

    However, progress since independence on October 1, 1960 barely justifies the country’s enormous potential. While President Goodluck Jonathan and a tame executive do their best to excuse the jamboree launched with a presidential dinner on February 4, 2013 in Abuja, the country’s failure to fetch international reckoning disturbs.

    Before his December 5, 2013 demise, anti-apartheid hero and South Africa’s first Black president, Nelson Mandela, rued Nigeria’s prodigal leadership. Black people would be truly free once Nigeria stood up for the continent and Black folks elsewhere, the old man asserted. I couldn’t agree more.

    Often called the ‘Giant of Africa’, Nigeria is also Africa’s top producer of crude oil and the world’s fifth-placed supplier. With huge deposits of valuable minerals as well, the expectations are not misplaced. Much of the wealth remains untapped, however, and the petroleum is mainly exported unrefined – an economic situation fuelled by the country’s failure to refine minds through comprehensive education.

    After the colonial masters relinquished power, the political class squandered the country’s resources and instituted poverty. Europe may have underdeveloped Africa, as Walter Rodney argued in his famous book, but politicians assisted by a succession of military tyrants have for years sustained the notion of Nigeria as an overseas territory subject to foreign beliefs, culture and commerce.

    Students of history who wonder at the relative ease of Portuguese infiltration and British conquest need look no further than qualities common to leaders, past and present: sentimental, discriminatory and domineering. These traits and more greased the chains of slavery and helped the old British Empire avoid its predicted sunset.

    The unfavourable channel of trade remains open today, with the commodities simply changing form. In place of pepper, salt, tobacco and other basic products of the bygone era, doctors, lawyers, engineers and managers constantly depart Nigeria’s shores to plug economic gaps in more developed societies.

    But race relations run deeper than market forces. Spurred by the Civil Rights movement headed by the late Martin Luther King Jnr in 1960s United States of America, Black ascendancy appeared imminent in the 1990s when Mandela emerged from a 27-year prison term to surmount racial segregation and ensure majority rule. The feat helped Barack Obama break down the colour barrier in the U.S.

    Obama inspired Black people worldwide, but America’s 44th president is a finely balanced specimen of Black-and-White. In support of race theories that suggest condescension by Whites and reverence by Blacks, the former surrendered the son of a black Kenyan father and white American mother while the latter claimed him.

    In the event, Mr Obama embraced the American will. Flying his homeland’s cause in the course of duty, he managed more than once to spurn Nigeria’s advances, if not its cry for help, until the recent designation of the Boko Haram sect as a terrorist group.

    With Mandela’s exit and Obama’s second and conclusive term in the White House winding down, however, Blacks worldwide must determine how best to tread the trail blazed by the pioneering duo. We may begin by examining and addressing tendencies. Why do Black people grandstand and crave domination? Indeed, why do some shun enlightenment for ephemeral pursuits?

    These posers appear magnified in the upper echelon of private and public organisations. Government officials trained abroad choose to propound policies certified by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF). The Agriculture and Finance ministers, Akinwunmi Adesina and Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, seem adept at laughable schemes involving farmers and the Sovereign Wealth Fund, in particular.

    Worse, expatriate CEOs now sprout in conglomerates and reputable companies badly managed by indigenes under the Indigenisation policy of the 1970s. Expatriates from Europe to Asia enjoy better treatment from security agencies and the establishment on account of lighter skin.

    What is it with the Black man? He is colourful, to be sure. His languages and traditions attest. And he evinces a wealth of ideas in art and culture. He clings to the past while Europeans managed to overcome the strife and serfdom that attended the early periods through the postulations of experts and practice of leaders.

    To ride economic challenges, for example, Britain’s Adam Smith kindled the industrial revolution with his theory of division of labour while Thomas Malthus’ warnings helped prevent population explosion as wealth increased. Americans Peter F. Drucker and Abraham Maslow helped ground management theories.

    The continent’s leaders do not help matters. They would stay on for a second term, a third term and yet another while their countries’ economies take repeated battering from poor policy making and implementation. With poor economies and inadequate education, impoverished minds barely trace the thick line between decency and moral compromise.

    For instance, the continent would be better off without the African Union building handed out by the Chinese, the rather opportunist backers of political relics Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe and Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir. The continent could as well do without the memory of Idi Amin, the marshal of Ugandan killing fields, and Jean-Bédel Bokassa, the imperial terror of the Central African Republic (CAR).

    Considering bloody strife in CAR, the Democratic Republic of Congo and South Sudan, the need for more perceptive leadership cannot be overstated. Add the terror of Islamic fundamentalist sects in North Africa, Mali and Nigeria, and an overwhelmed Africa needs the West to end economic disaster and accommodate refugees in the interim.

    Under Obama, the U.S. has stepped up intervention. The United Nations, besides mediating in the perennial North Korea-South Korea, Japan-China and Israel-Palestine conflicts, engages similar muscle.

    But only Africa can heal itself. To galvanise folks in the Diaspora, the continent must compete better in international circles. The U.S. raised the bar with the first man on the moon in 1969 and the old Soviet Union leapt after. Mars, at the current rate of technological development and space exploration, looms. Nigeria dawdles; so does Africa.

    The bell tolls, and there’s no question for whom. If global warming, ozone layer depletion, an apocalyptic dinosaur-era meteor strike or a combination of natural phenomena causes mankind to mass on a single continent tomorrow, the outcome is predictable: only the fittest would survive. And a second period of slavery is better imagined.

     

    Fagbemi is a staff of The Nation

  • Aregbesola: The ultimate honour

    And so one after the other in the year of our Lord 2013, the awards saluting the remarkable achievements of State of Osun Governor Rauf Adesoji Aregbesola rolled in.

    Hundreds of kilometers away in Ghana, the respected Integrity International magazine had noticed what the governor was doing to redefine governance in a continent that had for ages suffered at the hand of its leaders. It gave Aregbesola its Integrity Award declaring that the man had offered what it called “outstanding quality and integrity” in political administration. The journal lamented that much of the post-independence era had given Africa leadership without integrity; it concluded that things had however been different with the advent of the Ogbeni in Osun.

    Another accolade later came in. Aregbesola bagged the Odua Person of the Year 2013 award on account of the serious effort he has injected into the project of restoring the Yoruba nation its pace-setter role it clinched under the illustrious age of Papa Obafemi Awolowo. There has been a sudden renaissance in interest in the culture, arts, history, politics etc of the Yoruba, thanks to a focus on the Omoluabi spirit championed by Aregbesola.

    Business Day newspaper also awarded the Osun governor two honors: Best Governor in Urban and Rural Infrastructural Development and Youth and Sports Development. According to the paper, Aregbesola had made what, by extrapolation, would turn out to be a permanent impact on the polity in the state of Osun. You can’t fault that decision because any meaningful push you exert on society through the solid blocks of infrastructural development, the youth and sports, would invariably touch the soul of society in the future. In other words you can’t develop and progress without addressing challenges in those critical areas.

    Then as the year 2014 broke, Daily Independent newspaper unveiled its Man of the Year in keeping with its tradition of more than a decade. Its board of editors picked Rauf Aregbesola from a tough crowd of achievers that included accomplished private sector players, performing governors, ministers, politicians and legislators from the ranks of the opposition and ruling party.

    In an engaging and dispassionate discourse, Daily Independent argued that Aregbesola deserves the honor because no other public officer has applied as much distinctive initiative to re-engineer society as Aregbesola has done. He has changed the concept of governance, the paper’s editors argued.

    I need to quote them at length for us to grab the depth of their appreciation of what the governor has bestowed on Osun and Nigeria

    This is what the editors said: “Aregbesola’s belief in the sanctity of the rule of law is exemplary. Engr. Rauf Aregbesola, on the platform of the then Action Congress (AC) contested for the Governorship of Osun State in the April 2007 elections, and won. To be so declared, however, took close to four years of what must go down as one of the most titanic mandate recovery legal battles of all time, and a moment for the manifestation of the omnipotence of the Almighty God and his steadfastness in support of those who rely on Him.

    “Having gone through the tribunal of first instance, an appeal and a retrial tribunal, the second appeal court, delivering judgment on October 26, 2010, declared Aregbesola governor and ordered he be sworn in the next day.

    “Ogbeni Rauf Adesoji Aregbesola, since assuming office as Governor of the State of Osun on October 27, 2010, has redefined the meaning of governance in the public sector, not just with symbolic posturing, but real and sustainable interventions that will presently enhance the quality of life of everyone that lives or works in the State of Osun. Rebranding of the state as the Ipinle Omoluabi (State of the Virtuous) started from himself, adopting the title Ogbeni, simply Mister, in deference to the singular Excellency of the Almighty God. In just over a year, the chronicle of his achievements is astounding, and may be summarised as a chain of “O-Models”, the most astonishing being the engagement of 20,000 youth in the Osun Youth Empowerment Scheme within his first 100 days in office; an accomplishment without precedence that has become the model for others to follow.

    “Rauf is a born strategist. Throughout his life, whether as a pupil, student or career man; political appointee or governor, Ogbeni Rauf Adesoji Aregbesola has applied the art and science of strategy to ensure success in all endeavours in which he is engaged. He strategised and was outstanding as a student. He strategised and was efficient and effective as a career man. He strategised and was accomplished as a grassroots politician. He strategised and was excellent as a commissioner in Lagos State. He strategised to reclaim his mandate when he was rigged out in the race to offer selfless service to the good people of Osun. He strategised to lay a sound foundation for a regenerated Osun State knowing that sustainable development does not happen with ‘quick fix’ methods, tools, and techniques. He is strategising to position Osun and the good people of the state appropriately in the geo-economic milieu of Nigeria. He is a fervent believer in the dictum that strategists do not fail and so will not fail the people of Osun.

    “Committed to a better, egalitarian society, Aregbesola, though fully anxious to build a society with massive physical infrastructures that promote better living, believes in first pursuit of those human values that can pave the way for the emergence of that total man, who is socially responsible. Hence his dogged pursuit of programmes extra-curricular schemes, such as the Calisthenics, Omoluabi Boys and Girls Club, and other schemes aimed at re-orientating the youths to channel their energies towards a society where the promotion of the common, collective goods will dominate the crazy pursuit of the good of the self.”

    Honours that are heaped on men and women of ideas are welcome when they come from individuals and groups who have set themselves the task of guiding society through constructive criticism and encouragement. That was the point the famous French writer was making in the quote at the beginning of this essay.

    What then is the ultimate honour for a public officer upon whom so much laurel has been heaped? I believe the logical step is for the citizens to re-elect him and allow a consolidation of the achievements that have attracted uncommon universal acclaim.

     

    • Barrister Oyatomi is director of Publicity, Research & Strategy, All Progressives Congress (APC), State of Osun.

  • Banda’s ill-treatment in Nigeria

    SIR: The recent Emmanuel Onyechere Osigwe Anyiam Osigwe Foundation lecture with Dr Joyce Banda, the President of Malawi as a keynote speaker and Professor Ibrahim Agboola Gambari, former Nigeria Foreign Minister, former Permanent Representative and Under-Secretary at the UN, as chairman will continue to be a subject of discussion in enlightened circles for some time to come. At the lecture we heard of the determination of a woman who placed the fight against corruption before her political career. She fought a bitter war to regain the office of president in her country following the death of the former holder, Bingu Mutharika, who was grooming his brother for the office.

    Dr Banda, in her fight against corruption won popular support. She told her audience of how corruption suspects in her country hid money underground to avoid arrest and prosecution, the recent prosecution of two cabinet ministers on corruption-related charges, her promotion of youths within the government with youngest cabinet minister being 29. Hers was a story told with passion, determination and moving spirit. It was an exemplary tale, particularly in the African continent where many political leaders are fans of corruption and only pay lip service to its elimination.

    However beyond the stimulating talks, I must point out the shoddy manner this woman of substance was treated by our government. It is known protocol worldwide that before a sitting president comes to another country, either for official or private visits, the president and government of such country would have been notified. More importantly, it is the responsibility of the host country to provide security and cater for the visiting head of government and his/her entourage. But the reverse was what we saw during the presentation of Banda in Lagos. The federal and state governments were nowhere to be found. President Goodluck Jonathan was meant to be represented by the Secretary to Government of the Federation Senator Anyim Pius Anyim and the Lagos State Governor, Babatunde Fashola (SAN) was designated rightly as chief host. However, neither Anyim nor Fashola showed up during the event and they both regrettably did not bother to send any representatives.

    In a normal clime, a cabinet minister is supposed to be attached to the visiting president and the state governments are to do same but the reverse is what happened that day. This I believe is not fair to Banda, who threw a lavish reception for Jonathan during his visit to Malawi months ago.

    • Badejo Adedeji Nurudeen

    Surulere, Lagos State.