Category: Commentaries

  • Of PFN’s 40-day prayer to address hardship, hunger

    Of PFN’s 40-day prayer to address hardship, hunger

    • By John Oluwadero

    Sir: I write in response to the announcement by the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria (PFN) of a 40-day period of prayer and fasting to address the severe hardship and hunger that continue to plague our nation.

    As Nigerians invest a significant amount of their resources—time, finances, and energy—into the Church, it is only morally and spiritually right that the Church responds to these acts of devotion with measures that address the practical, day-to-day needs of its members and the larger community.

    The PFN’s upcoming conference, with its promise of guidance from prominent Nigerians and thought leaders, is a step toward sparking a conversation about Nigeria’s socioeconomic conditions. Yet, I would like to encourage the PFN to take this opportunity to initiate direct, actionable strategies alongside prayers.

    While prayer is an expression of faith, it often needs to be accompanied by intentional action. For instance, someone who prays to become a medical doctor but enrols in a civil engineering program cannot realistically expect to achieve their goal. Their faith would need to be supported by applying to an MBBS program, demonstrating both faith and a commitment to doing the necessary work.

    As our country faces an unprecedented economic crisis, hunger, and severe socioeconomic hardship, I humbly ask the PFN to consider adding a structured policy advisory to institutional members of PFN and action plan to complement the prayer rally. These measures could focus on promoting programs for food distribution, skills training, and economic support within churches and communities.

    We have a profound example in the early church. All the believers were together and had everything in common. They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need. This was more than charity; it was a manifestation of their love and unity, as well as their commitment to living out Jesus’ teachings.

    While today’s congregations are not called—and do not need—to sell their possessions en masse, there is a clear message about communal responsibility and meeting the practical needs of fellow believers.

    I draw insight from my father’s 33 years of ministry as a pastor in the Christ Apostolic Church. In our mission house, we had a storeroom for tithes and offerings, and I remember that there was a special day every month dedicated to praying over the stocks and distributing them to those in need: mostly the pastorate, the elderly, single-parent families, the sick, pregnant women, and some were kept in reserve for emergency needs.

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    While many of these practices may not apply to the modern realities of our postmodern Pentecostal churches, insights from these orthodox practices could conceptually inform policy direction. Such policies may guide institutional members of the PFN to adopt a structured approach to meeting the needs of their members. I strongly believe that insights from these practices could greatly contribute to finding sustainable solutions for addressing hunger by harnessing our shared social capital

    While this open letter may not provide sufficient space to explore possible structured approaches and plausible scenarios, some of the insights that can be looked into include the idea of church-owned community farms where the produce serves the members; training members in homestead gardening; coordinated and structured food bank programs; and, most importantly, accountable use and stewardship of available resources.

    The Church is one of the most financially supported institutions in Nigeria, receiving contributions from Nigerians of all backgrounds. With this support, it is vital for church leaders to ensure that these resources are directed not only towards worship and religious activities, which are very fundamental, but also towards initiatives that tangibly alleviate suffering and empower congregants.

    So, as we prepare for this period of prayer, let us also prepare for meaningful, deliberate action. The PFN’s leadership could encourage churches to develop community programs to support those who are most affected by the economic downturn. By organizing homestead gardening training sessions, establishing food banks, health insurance for seniors, or creating job opportunities for youths, we can better fulfil our calling to be the hands and feet of Christ. These efforts could provide a framework for members to live out their faith with the same fervour that they bring to prayer.

    Let us take this conference and the period of prayer and fasting as an opportunity to deepen our impact by combining our faith with collective action. Together, we can build a foundation of hope and strength for Nigeria that rests on both prayer and practical, compassionate solutions.

    •John Oluwadero,

    United States

  • Their lordships, the unionists

    Their lordships, the unionists

    Magistrates in Cross River State threatened a warning strike from last week Wednesday. Thankfully, it appears they’ve not followed through with the threat –  at least as of now. The two-week warning strike was projected to forerun an indefinite strike if the state government fails to accede to their demands.

    Their lordships, under the aegis of the Magistrates Association of Nigeria, Cross River chapter, issued a seven-day ultimatum to the state government penultimate Wednesday over poor working conditions. They alleged career stagnation, undue exposure to hazards and paltry allowances as some of the issues they were beefing with the government. In a communiqué at the end of their congress in Calabar, the state capital, the magistrates threatened to desert the temples of justice from 13th November on a two-week warning strike, and subsequently make the strike indefinite if their complaints aren’t addressed.

    The communiqué signed by the association’s president, Godwin Onah, and secretary, Solomon Abuo, alleged that the state government stagnated magistrates since 2015 unlike other civil servants, who were promoted by incumbent Governor Bassey Otu between January and April, this year. The association described the N15,000 monthly imprest given to magistrates in Cross River as meagre compared with their colleagues in other states who “receive between N200,000 and N250,000 monthly.” It demanded rehabilitation of magistrates’ courts across the state and provision of official vehicles to magistrates. It also deplored the state government’s failure to pay yearly robing allowance to magistrates as obtainable nationwide.

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    The association said in the communiqué inter alia: “To protect the welfare of members, uphold minimum standards and sanctity of the magistrates in the state, we need immediate action on our demands. Magistrates are seen daily on public or commercial vehicles, most times alongside litigants and criminal suspects standing trial before them. This is a security risk to their lives.” Among others, the magistrates demanded immediate implementation of promotion and regularisation of their members across all cadres with attendant financial benefits, and payment of all accrued arrears. They also wanted official accommodation for magistrates, and that government should bear burial expenses of any deceased magistrate.

    The congress resolved that failure by the state government to grant its demands within seven days would leave its members no option than go on a warning strike for two weeks “in line with the extant labour laws…and subsequently embarking on an indefinite strike action until our demands are fully attended to.”

    There is something awkward about their lordships’ recourse to the nuclear option, given the dignified insularity that typically attends their profession. But since they’re there already, the state government should act with speed to avert the threatened strike. Only that their lordships too must realise there are limitations to government financial capacity, and they should work with a more realistic time frame.

  • Free Hamdiyya Sidi: Let Northern women breathe – a rejoinder

    Free Hamdiyya Sidi: Let Northern women breathe – a rejoinder

    By Danjuma Musa

    Always listen to both sides of the story before you come to a conclusion” – Mohith Agadi

    Chimamanda Adichie, the Nigerian novelist and activist popularized what she aptly described as “the Danger of a Single Story”. Long before her, several notable authors, concerned about the dangers of one-sided narrative, had admonished that we listen to both sides of the story before jumping to far reaching conclusions. Hasty conclusions based on skewed information and twisted facts, could cause irreparable damage to the hard earned reputation of the victim and would take serious efforts  to fix.

    If only this group of concerned  Northern women, operating under the name of Voices for Inclusion and Equity (VIEW), had adhered to the admonitions of Chimamanda Adichie, they wouldn’t have fallen for the antics of Hamdiyya Sidi, a political operative with close ties to the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), to brutally savage  the hard earned reputation of Ahmad Aliyu Sokoto, the amiable governor of Sokoto State, who they  not only subjected to a media trial, but have also summarily convicted as charged, without fair hearing.

    The irony is that while Hamdiyya Sidi, the supposed ‘victim” at the center of the controversy, was given a chance to tell her story by the Nigerian Police Force, the VIEW group have used their media/NGO power to intimidate  Ahmad Aliyu Sokoto of a crime he knows absolutely nothing about. As they say, indeed, uneasy lies the head that wears the crown. So, the governor can in that sense be vicariously guilty of the crime and indeed of every crime committed within the boundaries of Sokoto State, going by the logic of VIEW.

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    Another issue that the VIEW group conveniently refused to address is the reckless use of the social media by Hamdiyya Sidi, to incite violence against the government in an area that is grappling with terrorists attacks. What she posted about the governor and his family would never be published by any mainstream media because of  its toxicity. Never!!!. It is unbelievable that the highly educated members of the VIEW group would rationalize a crime of incitement to violence in the name of freedom of speech.

    Having made this preamble, let us attempt a point by point rebuttal of the public statement by the VIEW group, which displayed crass lack of information on the subject and of the new Sokoto State under Governor Ahmad Aliyu Sokoto.

    We wholeheartedly agree with the VIEW group that Hamdiyya Sidi, even though she is a known political operative working for the opposition PDP, she has a constitutional right to Freedom of Speech and the Right to hold and express opinions, but it is important to stress that these rights are not absolute. There is a universal agreement that rights are not absolute. Why do we have libel laws? Can her right to freedom of movement make her insist on strolling into the Presidential Villa without an appointment? Won’t that be a trespass? And while she has an inalienable right to life, she must succeed if she decides to terminate it by suicide, otherwise  the state would charge her for attempted suicide. Same with the incitement for which she has been rightly charged to court by the Nigerian Police.

    It needs be restated that rights are not absolute and that  there is no evidence whatsoever that law abiding citizens of Sokoto State are being denied their rights. The case being used by the VIEW group to reach its warped conclusion is not in anyway true of the situation in Sokoto State, nor can the police who in the legitimate performance of their law enforcement duties, rightly arrested Hamdiyya Sidi, a national of Niger Republic, and charged her to court, be blamed for doing their duty. Thankfully, Hamdiyya Sidi would have her day in court.

    The VIEW group was very uncharitable to Governor Ahmad Aliyu Sokoto who has given the security situation in Sokoto State his every attention, despite being a glorified Chief Security Officer, in its assertion that the governor is indifferent to the security situation of the state. Though the accusation is wicked, it thankfully would not dampen the governor’s commitment to eradicating the terrorists who are wreaking havoc in the eastern border of Sokoto state with Zamfara State.

    For the benefit of the VIEW group and Nigerians in general, though the responsibility to secure the sovereignty of the Federal Government of Nigeria rests squarely on the central government, several sub-national units like Sokoto State have been forced to perform the role that is exclusively that of Tinubu, because it is their people that are being kidnapped, raped, killed and subjected to other forms of inhuman treatment.

    For the record, the Ahmad Aliyu Sokoto administration has not only rightly placed combating the security challenges on top of its agenda, but has continued to discharge its responsibilities to its citizens. It has established a Community Corps  to primarily gather intelligence and has invested  heavily in constructing military bases and has provided other logistics support for the security agencies, like the provision of buffalo vehicles, because the victims are its citizens. But being only a sub-national government, it lacks the coercive power to really go after the terrorists. The Sokoto State Community Corps can at best carry dane guns.

    The question is, are there other initiatives that Governor Ahmad Aliyu should take that he has not taken, in his bid to take the war to the terrorists operating in his state, within his constitutional authority? While it is not the constitutional responsibility of governors to construct military bases, Dr Ahmad Aliyu has, in enlightened self interest of his people, constructed one at Ilela for the armored corps,and built access roads to help the security agencies respond promptly to security breaches.

    So, why should Hamdiyya Sidi falsely accuse Governor Ahmad Aliyu, who has been up and doing? Is it because she was reportedly paid by the opposition to “cause trouble”, or the possibility of acting in a film based on her “ordeal”?

    The VIEW group, being an interested party in a stable and prosperous north, should urgently impress it on President Bola Tinubu to fulfill his campaign promise by immediately ordering massive recruitment of men and women into the security forces. The less than 300,000 strong armed forces is, without doubt, overwhelmed and over stretched by the various crises confronting the country.

    There is no doubt that only a massive recruitment will give the security agencies the much needed capability. Apart from increasing the booths on the ground, large scale recruitment into the security agencies would drastically reduce unemployment amongst the youthful population.

    The VIEW group made several fallacious statements. It is amazing how, for instance, the group can describe the verbal tirades against the governor by Hamdiyya Sidi as “bravely demanding  accountability”!

    she further went for the governor’s jugular and pointedly asked: “If he and his family faced the horrific violence that has befallen countless women across the North, women who have been violated in unspeakable ways, sometimes in front of their families, would he remain so indifferent?”. It’s astonishing that the VIEW group described the tirade as someone merely “asking a simple question”.

    Agreed that law abiding citizens have a right to speak freely according to their conscience, but Hamdiyya Sidi was certainly over the board in wishing evil to a man who is doing everything to end terrorist attacks in  his domain, not minding the fact that security services is the exclusive franchise of the Federal Government.

    About the attack on Hamdiyya Sidi, there is no evidence whatsoever that the Sokoto State Government instigated the attack on her nor does it support her attack. But wait a minute, did the VIEW group look at the possibility that the stakeholders that she had emotionally swindled took out their frustrations on her? Hamdiyya Sidi came promising the poor people palliatives which heightened their hopes, only to start raining insults on the governor and instigating them to forcefully occupy the government estate under construction at Wamakko. Dear VIEW group, this is a possibility and it is plausible. We have seen mob actions at accident scenes, but we do not hold the governor responsible simply because he is the governor.

    Once again, the VIEW group are wrong in their assertion that Hamdiyya Sidi spoke for women. She didn’t speak for  women and if she did, she definitely didn’t speak for northern women. The average woman in the core North, being well cultured, mannered and deeply religious, would not wish the governor and his family ill. She would accept her fate with equanimity. But because she was on a mission, she pushed her luck too far and deservedly got arrested. She is now famous and would hopefully land the roles she craves for in the Kannywood movie industry.

    And the Nigerian Police are very emphatic that she incited the people against the government. And that it was the Village Head who reported her in the lawful exercise of his responsibility. As Ahmad Rufai (ASP), the State Police Public Relations Officer said, “One of our constitutional responsibilies is to investigate crimes, both simple and capital in nature, to this end, the case of Hamdiyya is no exception”.

    There is no where in the entire matter where the governor featured. But it has become fashionable for fame seekers and political opponents to drag the governor’s name into any crisis to generate public sympathy.

    The VIEW group painted a picture of a dystopian Sokoto State where people cannot express their opinion for fear of being arrested. Certainly, this is not the Sokoto State that we know. Their charge is grossly unfair and is not supported by the reality.

    Governor Ahmad Aliyu Sokoto is unassuming, certainly not power drunk, a thoroughbred democrat who cannot hurt a fly; and he is not a violent man. He is also not opposed to free speech expressed within the boundaries of the law.

    As deputy governor to Aminu Tambuwal, he resigned based on principles. And after the disastrous eight (8) years of  Aminu Tambuwal, Ahmad Aliyu Sokoto has restored the trust of the people in the capacity of government to deliver services.

    Sokoto State is not a terrifying place to be. It is nothing near  what the VIEW group had claimed. Rather, it is the likes of Hamdiyya Sidi that are hell bent on disturbing the peace of Sokoto State. Considering the security challenges Sokoto state is facing, especially in the eastern axis of the state, Marafa Yakubu, the Village Head of Sabon Birnin Daji village in Wurno local government area, was right as a government appointee to have alerted the police, an action which averted the breakdown of law and order. Hamdiyya Sidi certainly has the Village Head to thank for his quick response which saved her life.

    Going by the administrative structure, the Chairman of the local government would definitely have been informed, and he in turn would have brought the situation to the attention of the Commissioner of Local Government Affairs, and from there it probably would have been escalated to the State Security Council, depending on the assessment and there is no evidence that it has been brought to the governor’s attention.

    Governor Ahmad Aliyu Sokoto is alive to his responsibility and he doesn’t need a rude and uncouth Hamdiyya Sidi to remind him of his responsibilities which he has been discharging diligently.

    The VIEW group asking the governor to denounce the legitimate actions of the police ought to know that it would certainly affect the psychology of the police who  only performed their legitimate duty of maintaining law and order. They didn’t subject her to inhuman treatment. So, why should the Governor Ahmad Sokoto call the police out?  Sometimes, being too close to a picture would blur appreciation of the work of art.

    Every Nigerian citizen, including foreigners and not just Hamdiyya Sidi, has the constitutionally  guaranteed right to free speech, but within the ambit of the law. The access to social media does not mean freedom to incite the people against the government. It is a freedom that must be exercised with responsibility.

    Governor Ahmad Aliyu Sokoto’s record speaks for itself, both in the number of female commissioners and other appointees and in specific programmes designed to uplift  women, because he understands the relationship between an empowered woman and development.

    Governor Sokoto equally understands what love by the people means. But for them, especially the women, he wouldn’t have been elected governor. He is ever mindful of that fact and he remains eternally grateful to them and, in return, has given them his all.

    The VIEW group must not  allow itself to be unwittingly used in an orchestrated campaign of demonization being funded by  discredited opposition elements, by dragging the Sokoto State Governor into the matter that falls squarely in  the domain of the police. If the promoters of VIEW should investigate Hamdiyya Sidi further, they would certainly tender an unreserved apology to Dr Ahmad Aliyu Sokoto when they find out they have been hoodwinked.

  • Putin no longer has the Trump card

    Putin no longer has the Trump card

    By Timothy Ash

    It is quite extraordinarily how the fortunes of President elect Trump and President Putin of Russia have changed since they last met back in 2019.

    Back then at the G20 summit in Canada, Trump was still poleaxed by domestic legal proceedings, the Mueller report and accusations of him being the Moscow Candidate, an image not helped by the  disastrous prior year summit meeting with Putin in Helsinki.

    The concern then was that Putin had something on Trump – pee pee tapes, et al – which somehow explained Trump’s fawning overtures to Putin. Trump seemed genuinely enamored with Putin, perhaps with his aura of power, and menace. Something perhaps that Trump aspires to himself, secretly, or even not too secretly.

    Putin had ruled Russia with an iron rod over the prior 20 years, rebuilt Moscow’s great power image, and supposedly also its military might. Russia had succeeded in putting the West on the back foot in an array of international settings, from Syria, to Libya and Africa through the activities of the Wagner brigade. In Ukraine Putin had annexed Crimea (illegally) and militarily intervened in Donbas and was continuing to intervene therein to destabilize Ukraine. Putin’s interventions in Syria, Africa and even Belarus had the aim to drive migrants to Europe thereby destabilizing the European economic, social and political fabric, promoting far right and far left centrifugal forces in Europe.

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    He backed Brexit and far right and far left candidates in Western democracies, seemingly to great effect. Meanwhile, he had Europe on his energy hook thru its energy dependency on Russia, and was gradually tightening the noose there via North Stream et al, and shutting down various other gas supply routes.

    Putin appeared to pull all the strings, geopolitically. He also benefited seemingly from the ultimate backstop of support from President Xi in China through the Partnership without Limits consummated at the Beijing Winter Olympics just weeks before his fateful invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Putin and his authoritarian allies seemed to be on the ascendency and Western Liberal Market Democracy on the decline/backfoot.

    Fast forward just five years and President elect Trump is basking in the glory of a landslide US election victory. Likely this will prove to be a red wave, capturing the presidency, and both chambers of Congress. He controls the Supreme Court, and thereby the judiciary and hence all levers of Federal power. Legal cases pending against him are likely to be dropped, while the recent Supreme Court ruling appears to make POTUS literally above the law. His powers are unparalleled in US history. His political capital is now huge, with world leaders queuing up now to kiss the ring. Even if Putin had pee pee tapes to use against him, so what, as Trump earlier boasted he could likely walk down fifth Avenue and shoot someone with no legal consequences. Trump, can call Putin’s bluff on whatever kompromat he has on him because he has proven to have a Teflon like ability to ride through the biggest of scandals.

    Contrast all this with Putin whose invasion of Ukraine has proven to be a catastrophe of epic proportions for Russia. Almost three years in Russia, a supposed great power, has been unable to defeat Ukraine, a third or fourth rate military power at best at the onset of the invasion. A war which was meant to be over in two weeks has lasted over 1,000 days and is nowhere near a conclusion. Russia has lost perhaps half a million men, and maybe half its conventional military capability – so much so that it is now forced to field Second World War kit in battle in Ukraine.

    Ukraine, a country with no navy has managed to defeat the Russian Black Sea fleet which has been forced to flee its Sebastopol naval base in Crimea, and is unable to sail much of the Black Sea for fear of being hit by Ukrainian drones and missiles. Russia fought to secure a land corridor to Crimea but has found the peninsula itself to be unsustainable and that every same land corridor now a white elephant.

    Russian military technology had been exposed as crap with NATO second or third generation kit in use by Ukraine beating fourth of fifth generation Russian kit. Russian defense sales have collapsed and Russian geopolitical leverage with it. Who wants to buy Russian S400s now? US Patriots are in high demand, with the order books full.

    The Russian economy is weighed down with sanctions. Russia has to pay top dollar for critical imports and offer discounts for its exports. Inflation is rife and its central bank has had to jack up policy interest rates to 21%, while the ruble is back approaching record lows. It has lost access to $330 billion in central bank reserves and Russia is likely close to $400 billion plus in assets immobilized overseas.

    The overall cost of the conflict to Russia is already close to $1 trillion, half one year’s Russian GDP. Russia has lost the European energy market forever, as Europe accelerates the climate transition from Russian carbon energy, and has diversified to other suppliers – like Algeria, Central Asia and the Gulf. This was a €50 billion annual business for Russian just for gas. It is never coming back.

    Meanwhile, the partnership with no limits, has exposed Russia as not only the junior partner, but actually the runt of the litter. China has not provided no limits support to Russia but couched its support so as not to annoy the West. As a result Russia has had to scrape the barrel by going cap in hand to North Korea and Iran for weapons and now troops. Just how low has Russian been forced to go. And, let’s not forget that the war in Ukraine was going so badly that only a year back Putin faced an existential threat from the Prigozhin coup – he came close to losing power. Russia has been exposed as a declining colonial power – the whole world knows it. Only Russians have yet to come to the harsh reality.

    Putin goes into any talks with Trump in a critically weak position. Yes he can continue the war, as can Ukraine, for some time yet, but it will just kill hundreds of thousands more Russians, waste huge amounts more resources and finance and still leave a risk of a Prighozin 2.

    Trump might not realize it but he goes into potential talks with Putin from a position of overwhelming strength. Trump needs a Ukraine peace deal much less than Putin.

    If Trump fails to agree any such deal, so what? What are the consequences for the US? Not much. Ukraine has shown it is willing to fight, and even if the US pulls financing, Europe has to continue writing the cheques as the best way of defending itself against inevitable future Russian aggression.

    And if the cash is short Europe can dip into the $330 billion in immobilized Russian assets to continue to fund Ukraine. Ukraine and Europe will inevitably continue to put big orders for US defense equipment – in almost any scenario, and which US President is going to say no to defense orders for literally hundreds of billions of dollars from Europe. That represents millions of US jobs for Trump to secure. Putin literally has no leverage now over Trump, and Trump should play very hardball.

    I would argue that Trump is being presented with the mother of all opportunities for the greatest peace deal ever. Why he would not use all his leverage to extract maximum concessions from Putin.

    And what does Putin bring to the table? What concessions can Putin make to Trump?

    Let’s just imagine though the deal suggested by JD Vance – Putin keeps all the territory in Ukraine, secures neutral status for Ukraine and no NATO membership, and the only concessions to Ukraine is that it still gets to buy Western weapons to enable it to put up some sort of defense to Russia. What is Putin giving in exchange there? Nothing.

    Surely the leverage the West has here now is significant in terms of it can offer sanctions moderation for Russia to withdraw to borders as per February 2022, or better 1991. Russia is brought back into the international community and can start to rebuild trust. But Ukraine has to be given the means to defend itself – which means either NATO membership, security guarantees or the US has to give it the full range of Western military technology so it can defend itself.

    If NATO is not willing to bring Ukraine in, then Ukraine has to be given the tools to defend itself – the Israel/South Korean status. Key for Ukraine is that it needs to have security, sufficient financing, and a real EU accession perspective to anchor reforms.

    Trump is a lucky politician for sure and I would argue that he has been presented with a set of circumstances giving him the opportunity to make the deal of the century on Ukraine.

    Trump needs to be prepared to walk away. And the advantage he has is that Ukraine is willing to fight on while the consequences of such an outturn to the US are minimum – but potentially they are existential to Putin. Trump can accentuate Putin’s pain by offering to supply Ukraine with the full array of US conventional military kit if he fails to sign up to a peace deal which leaves Ukraine secure, and economically and politically sustainable.

    More and better US kit will mean the longer Putin leaves it the worse it gets in the battlefield for Russia in Ukraine.

    Does Trump really have the Art of the Deal or is he just Putin’s tool and full of crap? We will now soon find out. Putin is weak, Trump has all the cards. Let’s see if he can actually play a great hand to clean up the table.

    ·               This article was originally published in www.kyivpost.com

  • Olanipekun: Greatness won with honest toil

    Olanipekun: Greatness won with honest toil

    By Sunday Saanu

    The title of this piece is extracted from verse two of the University of Ibadan (UI) anthem. It is one of the most striking lines of the anthem, underscoring the importance of achieving greatness or success through hard work and transparency. However, since this story is all about a man who achieves greatness through honest toil, it is apposite to interrogate the concept of greatness. So, what is greatness?     Greatness is a cocktail of qualities that include honesty, integrity, passion, resilience, fortitude, self-belief and strong values. All of these come together to create a uniquely strong character that consistently achieves success after success.

    Greatness is a state of being important, notable or distinguished. Its synonyms are dignity, heroism, nobility, prominence among others. However, two powerful keys to greatness are humility and service. An English architect, Charles Fowler observes that the best teachers of humanity are the lives of great men. Against this background, therefore, one may not be wide off the point to examine the life of one of the greatest men in Nigeria at the moment with a view to gleaning some vital lessons

    Without doubt, Chief Oluwole Oladapo Olanipekun, Commander of the Order of the Federal Republic (CFR) and  Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) remains one of the greatest men in Nigeria today. The legal colossus who turns 73 on 18 November, 2024, having been born on 18 November, 1951 at Ikere Ekiti in Ekiti state is a national figure who has demonstrated exemplary leadership, characterized by profound patriotism and unparalleled dedication to the progress of this country.

     For those who may not have known, Chief Olanipekun holds the distinction of being a single lawyer who has handled cases for four Nigerian sitting Presidents back-to-back. He was a counsel to the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua. He handled President Goodluck Jonathan’s case, President Muhammadu Buhari’s legal matter as well as the incumbent, Bola Tinubu. The list of governorship cases he has successfully defended is almost endless. What else defines the greatness of a man? In fact, having handled cases for four sitting presidents and numerous state governors is in itself a testament to his ground-breaking accomplishments.

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    Let me attempt to deconstruct the enigma. Chief Olanipekun, without doubt, is one of the best and brightest brains in the legal firmament in Nigeria. Indeed, he is one of the diamonds that continue to shine luminously in the Nigerian landscape. Across the world, this legal titan has won several seats among the stars as he remains an influential doyen. To those who are familiar with him, he is a mighty man of means who lives a spartan lifestyle. When it comes to jurisprudence, this former President  of Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) knows which tortoise is male, as he has been the in-and-out of almost everything experience can offer.

    He approaches his life career with deliberate intentionality, authenticity and unrelenting consistency. Consequently, he becomes a super achiever and a peak performing person. But beyond his attitude and attributes, here is a man who has demonstrated the purpose of wealth and the place of the privileged in a poor country like ours. Chief Olanipekun has used his wealth to reconstruct many awkward destinies. He has spent substantial part of his wealth to lift several thousands of people out of poverty. Perhaps this is one of the reasons there will never be a celebratory staleness of this iconic personality of all seasons. For instance, in this month, hundreds of intelligent but indigent students across the country are going to benefit from his scholarship scheme known as Wole Olanipekun Scholarship Scheme (WOSS). He gives scholarship every year. This writer was once a beneficiary. And, the WOSS has been up and running for over 20 years.

    There are many other initiatives he has embarked upon simply to alleviate poverty in the country and to empower the youth, widows and the aged. Yet, he has no political ambition. The point is that he is a generous giver and a phenomenal philanthropist who is always using his voice for kindness, his ears for compassion and his hands for generosity.

    Chief Olanipekun who is the immediate past Chairman of Nigerian Body of Benchers has exhibited exemplary leadership in this country which is characterized by wisdom, integrity and unparalleled dedication to the progress and prosperity of the people. Indeed, this tailored man of excellent manner remains a study in selfless service. His legacies and achievements in every position he ever occupies are legendary.

    When he was the Pro Chancellor and Chairman of Council at the University of Ibadan between 2009 and 2013, he personally built a gigantic lecture theatre and donated it to signpost his tenure. He did the same thing at Ajayi Crowther University (ACU) Oyo when he personally built the Vice Chancellor’s lodge. Let me take the liberty of privilege to reveal that as I was putting this piece together in the middle of the night, I received his invitation to the commissioning of a newly built Wole Olanipekun Senate Building at Bamidele Olumilua University of Education, Science and Technology (BOUESTI) Ikere Ekiti.

     Interestingly, an American lawyer and orator, Robert Ingersoll could not have been more correct when he says a great man does not seek applause, rather he seeks the road to happiness. Chief Olanipekun, being a great man, is ever committed to seeking the road to happiness for the people. His gentle mien, compassion and reticence are the ethos that define a real leader in him. The giant strides and impact he has made, have remained a reference point in many quarters.

    In the last fifteen years that I have been writing for him, we have maintained a kind of kinship that has enabled me to know him more closely,  I am proud to be numbered among his disciples. With my close relationship with him, I can authoritatively assert that Chief Olanipekun is a positive change ambassador. I have benefited immensely from the nobility of his vision. I recall with gratitude his numerous financial interventions in many cases that I have had to call him to beam his torch in the darkness. He had not failed to serve as an oasis in the desert.

    With his famed golden voice, clear and crisp diction, royal swagger, he exudes illuminative panache and gentlemanliness, as he epitomizes excellence and embodies the values and virtues of dedication, compassion and innovation. This living legend is forthright and firm, he is rich and righteous, living a life of service and sacrifice to humanity. Without exaggeration, this man of stellar character is not just a man, but a man of fame and fortune, a man of influence and affluence who exemplifies courage, conduct and class. His huge intellectual savvy and uncompromising sense of justice position him as a specimen worthy to be studied.

    Amazingly, his is probably a house of heroes and heroines. All his children who are lawyers are in the same superlative cerebral class. Two of them are already Senior Advocates of Nigeria. One is actively involved in Chief Olanipekun’s chamber. However, getting his children involved in his legal practice simply demonstrates a strong narrative about parenting and legacy sustainability.

    As I celebrate the life of this elegant icon and national treasure, I remain proud of his immense contributions to national development and salute his life of indelible service to God and humanity. The story of this special breed is a story of achievements, humanism and greatness. According to a Roman politician, Mark Anthony, “a man’s true greatness lies in the consciousness of an honest purpose of life, founded on a just estimate of himself and everything else, on frequent self-examinations and a steady obedience to the rule which he knows to be right, without troubling himself about what others may think or say”. Anthony is perfectly right. Chief Olanipekun does not trouble himself about the opinion of others. He only does what he feels is right.

     In summary, this birthday is not just the passage of another year, but a testament to greatness won with honest toil. It is also a celebration of selfless sacrifice and service to humanity. I reflect on Chief Olanipekun’s remarkable achievements and the profound impact he has made with it, I humbly doff my hat for him. We need many more of him in this country. His enviable example has provided us with an invaluable framework with which to conduct our lives.

     I round off this tribute by asserting that what we do for ourselves die with us, but what we do for other lives forever. By living forever in the memory of our beneficiaries, we achieve historical immortality. The major lesson from this narrative could be found in the words of Etienne de Grellet who says “I shall pass this life but once; any good that I can do or any kindness I can show to any human being; let me do it now. Let me not differ  nor neglect it, for I shall not pass this life again”. This is the definition of Chief Wole Olanipekun’s lifestyle. He has been so gracious to all manner of people. May God continue to replenish him.

    A happy birthday, sir, a great man, who carries greatness lightly.

    • Saanu (08034073427) is with the University of Ibadan.

  • More inmates at large

    More inmates at large

    It is troubling that the number of escapees from Nigerian prisons who have not been recaptured has increased.  About 278 inmates who escaped from the Medium Security Custodial Centre, Maiduguri, Borno State in September are still at large. The Nigerian Correctional Service (NCoS) had said “281 inmates were observed to be missing” following a flood that “brought down the walls” of the facility. 

    According to the police, “Not less than four suspects have been re-arrested so far and handed over to the correctional service.”  This means that more than 270 escapees have not been recaptured. The police said “efforts are still ongoing to arrest the other fleeing suspects.” 

    However, this is unreassuring.  Prison escapees in the last two years still at large were reported to be about 4,000 in February. This is a conservative estimate.  NCoS spokesperson Abubakar Umar was reported saying, “For the purpose of being very sure and exact about the figure, we cannot for now ascertain the number of fleeing inmates, but we are making efforts to do that.”  This shows poor record keeping. It is inexcusable that the agency does not know how many prisoners are on the loose. 

    Escapees on the loose pose a serious danger to society as many of them are said to be dangerous criminals.  This is a bad situation. With so many inmates on the loose, there is an atmosphere of danger, which compounds insecurity in the country. It also defeats the essence of justice. The situation calls into question the capability of the country’s security agencies. Their failure to recapture the inmates on the run reflects ineffectiveness.

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    It is curious that so many prison escapees seem to have vanished into thin air. This raises questions about public vigilance and the role of the people in ensuring security by providing information to the security agencies on possible threats to security. For instance, it is unlikely that such escapees have had no interactions with members of the public, who could expose their status. But the lack of official information on the identities of the escapees certainly limits what the public can do to assist the security agencies to recapture them. 

    The available figures show that unacceptably large numbers of prison escapees have not been recaptured. Disturbingly, the figures keep rising.    This is inexcusable. The authorities must ensure that they are recaptured without further delay. Convicted prisoners must not be encouraged to believe that they won’t be recaptured if they escape. 

  • Political resurrection of Trump

    Political resurrection of Trump

    By: Oluwole Osagie-Jacobs

    The victory of Donald Trump in the presidential election in the United States of America is indeed a sermon on existentialism. It is a mid-20th Century philosophy which emphasizes the uniqueness of humans in freely making their choices. The second coming of Donald Trump is probably, the greatest political comeback in American history. The result of the election confounded many people in view of Trump’s perceived misdeeds and transgression of sacred democratic norms. He has been endlessly branded a fascist, racist, and a split personality given to loony ideas. He has been convicted of 34 felony counts, inflation of assets and sexual abuse. To add to his woes the mainstream media projected him badly by emphasizing his negative tendencies.

    It hurts a civilized conscience that Americans would elect as president someone who instigated an insurrection at the Capitol after losing a presidential election. The lesson from this behaviour is that Americans vote for interest and not character. It underscores the fact that there are things more fundamental than his shortcomings.

    It is noteworthy that Donald Trump crossed boundaries in the 2024 election. There is a little shift from traditional positions. Donald Trump made historic gains with Hispanic Americans and the black voters especially in Georgia and North Carolina. He won more black votes than any other American in 48 years. In Pennsylvania, black support for the Republicans rose from 10% in year 2020 to 26% in year 2024. Many blacks claim they were better off in terms of employment when Donald Trump was president. In fact, Donald Trump achieved the lowest unemployment for blacks in history. The whole world is now curious of what an unpredictable Donald Trump would do in the next four years.

    Trump prosecuted his campaign leveraging on demagoguery. He appealed to people’s emotions, fears, prejudices and ignorance rather than using rational arguments or genuine policies. He made political capital from unrestrained influx of immigrants and gender identity issues. Trump promised to firm up the borders, a policy dear to the minds of many Americans.

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    It is rubbish talk telling the white Americans and some conservative blacks who believed they could in the future be outnumbered by immigrants that Trump is a felon. In this case, interest will take precedence over character. A fish leaping out of the water to seek refuge in fire is telling you that what pushes it out of the water is hotter than fire. No sane country would allow its citizens to be outnumbered by immigrants. It is a dangerous gamble. Also, the Evangelicals wouldn’t mind that it is a convicted felon telling them he would ban gender transitions forced on innocent children when he becomes president. Trump, who I am sure cannot tell if the book of Habakuk is in the Bible, has been evangelistic about this. It has endeared him to the Evangelicals. He puts out himself as a poster child of Christian virtues.

    It should be mentioned that the Democrats have not helped matters. They have demonstrated scant regard for the implications of uncontrolled immigration. Hillary Clinton, a Democrat, once affirmed during her campaign to occupy the oval office that she would grant asylum to 68,000 Syrian refugees in America. She was against the building of walls to curtail illegal immigration. She said rather than build walls, bridges should be built in the spirit of accommodation. She wanted countries with strictures against same sex marriage to be sanctioned. These tendencies aimed at winning votes were sustained by the Democrats up till the 2024 election.

    I am of the opinion that racism and gender bias as they affect the choice of Americans in elections have been exaggerated. If the whites were as racist as claimed, there is no way Obama, a black, would have become president in a country blacks are 14 percent of the population. The fact that Hillary Clinton had majority votes in a presidential election puts a lie to the belief that Americans are not yet ready for a female president. Many people have expressed disappointment that a morally bankrupt Donald Trump could become president in a country that prides itself as a bastion of democracy. I don’t know if they understood the phrase, “bastion of democracy”. A country cannot be a bastion of democracy if it tramples on democracy in other countries. This is what America had been doing to serve its interest. African leaders like Kwame Nkrumah and Patrice Lumumba were victims of the CIA because of their socialist tendencies. President Eisenhower of America wanted Patrice Lumumba eliminated for being a communist. America invaded Iraq and Libya without a just cause. In fact, Iraq was invaded in defiance of a UN resolution. Under President George Bush, Panama was invaded and its leader, Manuel Noriega abducted and brought to America for trial. Imagine that nonsense. Now consider the ignoble American support of Israel in denying the Palestinians a homeland in defiance of many UN resolutions.

    Nigerians expressed a lot of concern for the American election because America has become a land of opportunities to Nigerians. Many Nigerians who exited the country for America are excelling in their fields of endeavour. Anything that would disturb the peace of Nigerian citizens in America would surely be resented. Some of my friends in America are jittery because of the return of Donald Trump. They fear he could come up with policies against their interest. This is the reason we must build our country and make it a haven for all Nigerians. We are too highly endowed in human and natural resources to be living at the pleasure of any other country.

    •Osagie-Jacobs is an economist and chartered accountant

  • Uba Sani’s multi-million naira water solution

    Uba Sani’s multi-million naira water solution

    SIR: Water consumers in Kaduna State, including citizens, corporate organizations and individuals have struggled with pipe borne water supply for a long time. Most people who can afford it, have boreholes in their residences or business premises. However, the situation is about to change following a comprehensive revamp programme initiated by Governor Uba Sani.  First, he is set to clear the backlog of salary arrears of the staff of Kaduna State Water Corporation. Second, the governor has put them back to the state’s payroll. Not that alone, he plans to inject N93 billion in the next three years into KADSWAC, to repair and upgrade their facilities, treatment plants and other equipment.

    Despite heavy investments in the water sector in the late 1990s and the first decade of the 21st century, water supply has been dogged with series of problems in Kaduna State. For example, the World Bank had granted the state government over $100m facility for the repairs and upgrade of its then ageing and obsolete facilities, including broken down pipes and plants, in the 90s. However, very little was done with the colossal amount of money. That was during the old Water Board.

    The coming of KADSWAC, meant to run the corporation like a commercial entity, didn’t help matters because of structural problems.

    First, the population of Kaduna town has exploded beyond the capacity of the corporation’s equipment. Second, the pipelines and other mains have become too old to convey water to every household. Again, most of the textile companies that were the biggest customers of the old Water Board have folded up due to high operating costs, dumping and the general harsh economic conditions in the country. So, the corporation couldn’t even pay its staff, let alone meet customers’ demand for water.

    In a recent press briefing, the Commissioner of Public Works, Arch Ibrahim Hamza, disclosed that ‘’previous administrations invested $500 million into the urban water supply scheme in the last 10 years with no result. Rather, capacity utilisation dropped down from 43% in 2017 to 8% in 2023 with 5% coverage.

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    The governor inherited the problem from the last administration but rather than look the other way, decided to solve the problem once and for all. For over a year, the workers went without salaries. It was not surprising that they went on strike several times, demanding the removal of Comrade Sanusi Maikudi, the then Managing Director.

    Expectedly, Governor Uba Sani’s decision to pay the backlog of N800 million salary arrears to the staff was greeted with wild jubilation. Similarly, water consumers including citizens and corporate organizations hailed the governor’s action. Apart from paying salary arears, Governor Uba Sani will inject N93 billion in KADSWAC in four instalments, starting with N17 billion this year. The balance is to be spread in three instalments of N35 billion and N30 billion in investments in 2025 and 2026 respectively. The remaining N11 billion will be invested in 2027.

    Although it will take about three years before the situation normalises, Governor Uba Sani’s intervention has already endeared him to a vast majority of KADSWAC customers, especially the masses who do not have the wherewithal to sink boreholes or make other private arrangements. Water sustains life and Governor Uba Sani has promised to inject life into KADSWAC.

     •Andrew Fadason,Kaduna

  • Charting a path for sustainable economic growth

    Charting a path for sustainable economic growth

    Sir: Corruption is dishonest or fraudulent conduct by those in power or position of authority. This is now becoming the ‘new normal’ in Nigeria and dangerous for our future! But it is not sustainable as it is a ‘leakage’ in the economy and has no limit to which it can be practiced. We all felt the military government before the 1979 civilian rule was financially reckless until we saw financial recklessness under Shehu Shagari administration between 1979 and 1983 in the federal level.

    For sustainable economic growth in Nigeria, government must recognise why “we the people of the Federal Republic of Nigeria” have formed government, why everybody decided to surrender their sovereignty to a group of people in government and that there are different groups that must be taken care of in the country. As there are rich people in the country, so are poor people that must be taken care of.

    The best way to ensure that there is welfare and security of lives and properties is to ensure that as many citizens as possible, especially the youths can get job.  It is through the efficiency of the economy, that is, the youths contributing to the development of the nation as early as possible and knowing that there is dignity in labour that we can have a sustainable economic growth in Nigeria.

    Section 16, economic objectives, states that: (1) The State shall, within the context of the ideals and objectives for which provisions are made in this constitution – (a) harness the resources of the nation and promote national prosperity and an efficient, a dynamic and self-reliant economy; (b) control the national economy in such manner as to secure the maximum welfare, freedom and happiness of every citizen on the basis of social justice and equality of status and opportunity; (c) without prejudice to its right to operate or participate in areas of the economy, other than the major sectors of the economy, manage and operate the major sectors of the economy; (d) without prejudice to the right of any person to participate in areas of the economy within the major sectors of the economy, protect the right of every citizen to engage in any economic activities outside the major sectors of the economy.

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    It goes further in sub-section (2) that: The state shall direct its policy towards ensuring – (a) the promotion of a planned and balanced economic development; (b) that the material resources of the nation are harnessed and distributed as best as possible to serve the common good; (c) that the economic system is not operated in such a manner as to permit the concentration of wealth or the means of production and exchange in the hands of few individuals or of a group; and (d) that suitable and adequate shelter, right to food and food security, reasonable national minimum living wage, old age care and pensions, and unemployment, sick benefits and welfare of the disabled are provided for all citizens.

    Apart from provision of living wage and salary, the constitution in Section 16, subsection 2 (d), also provides for stipends to be paid to those who are unemployed, sick, disabled and old.

    It is along this line that government must not only concentrate on revenue generation through increase tax burden and widening tax net alone, but through employment generation for the masses. It will be the best to consider the areas where we have comparative advantage for employment generation, wealth creation and economic growth.

    It is a known fact that Nigeria, being a tropical nation, has comparative advantage in agriculture. It is also a fact that there is general apathy among youths to engage in agriculture because of the poor returns. It will be beneficial to the government to create farm estates across the nation with landholding of minimum of four acres and a residential estate in a cluster close by with two bedroom flats each, water provision, tarred roads to the farms and to towns for off-takers accessibility, recreation areas like football pitch and internet facilities.

    These modern farm estates should be allocated to youths who are interested in farming on lease basis. The construction of these buildings will generate jobs for thousands of people in Nigeria and the supplies of building materials will create wealth for our people. Eventually, the exercise will ensure food security and our high dependence on imported foods and high food inflationary rates will cease.

    •ESV. Olufemi Adedamola Oyedele,Lagos

  • Lagbaja: Laurels for a fallen hero

    Lagbaja: Laurels for a fallen hero

    Sir: Lieutenant General Taoreed Abiodun Lagbaja, Nigeria’s 23rd Chief of Army Staff died in Lagos on November 5 after a brief illness. His death at the age of 56 has thrown the entire country into mourning at a time when the country most needs the presence of a man who was the quintessence of bravery and soldiery.

    Before he became Nigeria’s 23rd Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Lagbaja had withstood many tests and survived countless dangerous assignments in service of a country he loved with all his heart.

    The Nigerian Army has continued to serve as the last line of defence against terrorists who are determined to overrun the country. Without the heroic efforts of Nigerian soldiers who are ever willing to make the ultimate sacrifice in defence of their country, terrorists would have recorded far more successes than they have especially in those areas where they are far more suited to rugged terrains, which soldiers find treacherous.

    Nigeria’s decade-long battles against terrorism have recorded highs and lows with the Nigerian Army always managing to have the upper hand despite extremely difficult conditions.

    Terrorists who had established conclaves in many parts of the country, terrorizing locals and defying the country, have been routed again and again as soldiers have largely stuck to their task of securing and defending Nigeria.

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    There have been many painful losses in the course of war against terrorism. Many gallant soldiers have been forced to pay the ultimate price in defence of the country but the most devastating losses have been reserved for the enemies of the country who have suffered heavy casualties even in their so-called strongholds.

    Like every other war, the prosecution of the war against terrorism in Nigeria has not been perfect. There have been murmurs of discontent about diversion of funds meant for weapons, poor welfare of soldiers, and saboteurs among soldiers. But despite the diversionary discourses of detractors, the shortcomings of few persons cannot distract from the excellent job soldiers are doing to keep terrorists on the run.  It is reason enough to celebrate them.

    It is enough reason to commiserate with the country and their heartbroken families whenever they lose their lives.  Nigeria which has had to contend with many forces since independence owes them an unpayable debt. Remembering them, celebrating them and keeping them in the national consciousness where they deserve to be is the least the country can do.

    Comfort to the Nigerian Army and the families of all those who have laid down their lives in the service of this great country.

    •Ike Willie-Nwobu,Ikewilly9@gmail.com