Category: Commentaries

  • Making reproductive rights global priority

    On April 5, the world began the 1,000-day countdown to the 2015 Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) deadline. Created in 2000, the MDGs spurred action from governments, international organizations, and civil society. In recent years, we have cut the global poverty rate in half, reduced the prevalence of deadly diseases, improved sanitation, narrowed the gender gap, and more. Although we have made progress toward these goals, there is still much to be done, especially for the girls and women of the Muslim world.

    Despite the ample evidence that ensuring the well-being of girls and women spurs development, gender equality indicators in many majority-Muslim countries are some of the worst in the world. If we are to continue making progress towards the MDGs, we must prioritize the health and rights of our Muslim mothers, wives, sisters, and daughters everywhere – including those in Africa. The continent is home to hundreds of millions of Muslim women. Yet unfortunately, a large number of African countries –including majority- Muslim nations like Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Djibouti, Senegal, Guinea, and more –are expected to fall short of the 2015 MDGs deadline for their girls and women.

    It has been shown time and time again that we can accelerate progress towards the MDGs when we invest in girls’ and women’s health and rights, including their rights to reproductive health. When women have access to contraceptives, maternal and child mortality rates are greatly reduced; sexually transmitted infections (STIs) are prevented; the number of safe and unsafe abortions is lowered; and pregnancy and birth-related complications are avoided. Girls and women are more likely to stay in school and spend more time in the workforce when they are able to plan their pregnancies. All of this helps us close the gender gap, reduce poverty, spur economies, and stabilize nations.

    Yet women in many Muslim communities face barriers to contraceptive access and family planning services due to religious and cultural misconceptions. The reality is that Islam is – and always has been – supportive of women’s reproductive rights. The family is the basic unit of a Muslim society, and the mother is the keystone of this unit. Islam is a progressive religion that encourages its followers to uphold principles and practices that ensure maternal and reproductive health, and family planning is a central component of such practices.

    Islam does not forbid a woman from controlling the spacing and number of her pregnancies. A thorough review of the Holy Quran reveals no text (nuss) prohibiting the prevention or planning of pregnancy, and there are several traditions of the Prophet (PBUH) that indicate such practices are permissible. Many modern contraceptives and family planning methods, by analogy (kias), are similar to coitus interruptus (al-azl), which has been practiced since the time of the Prophet (PBUH). Modern contraceptive pills, injectables, implants, and other reversible methods were not known at the time of the Prophet (PBUH), but serve the same purpose as coitus interruptus as they temporarily prevent pregnancy. Hence they can – and should – be used today.

    A number of African countries, including Rwanda and Ethiopia, have made great commitments to increasing contraceptive prevalence and are seeing the benefits of doing so. Yet others, including Niger, Nigeria, the Congo and Chad, are still considered to be some of the worst places in the world to be a woman. Such disparities are unacceptable and debilitating to development, and we must continue to strive until they are eliminated.

    This May, the world will come together to do just that. Muslim community leaders will join other women’s health and rights advocates from all over the world for global advocacy organization Women Deliver’s third global conference, Women Deliver 2013. Women Deliver 2013 will take place in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, from 28-30 May. This is the first time a Women Deliver conference will be held in a majority-Muslim country. Malaysia has made great strides in improving women’s health and rights, and serves as a strong example of how investing in women pays. Women Deliver’s estimated5,000 attendees will drive conversations that ensure that global commitments to girls and women are kept at the top of the international development agenda.

    With the world’s Muslim population expected to reach approximately 2.2 billion by 2030 and the MDGs deadline fast approaching, this is the time to act for the girls and women of the Muslim world. It cannot be denied that Muslim girls and women across Africa and elsewhere are subject to a unique and complex web of political, social, cultural, and religious factors, but this does not mean that the battle for their health and rights is lost.

    To win this battle, we must continue to uphold the commitments we have made to our mothers, daughters, sisters, and wives, including those made to their reproductive health and rights. These commitments cannot waver based on cultural or religious misunderstandings. Reproductive rights are women’s rights, and women’s rights are human rights. We must keep fighting for them until every girl and woman has access to the life-saving contraceptives and family planning methods that she deserves.

    • Dr. Gamal Serour is the Director of the International Islamic Center for Population Studies and Research at Al-Azhar University, Egypt

  • Osun’s health-friendly environment initiatives

    SIR: I dare say that it feels good to be a citizen of the State of Osun, where evidently a visionary, purposeful government is fully on ground adding values to lives through structured and disciplined implementation of well-designed programmes. There is ample evidence that the present administration – led by Governor Rauf Aregbesola – places a high premium on the conditions of the environment and the health of the people.

    The dutifully observed monthly and weekly sanitation exercises; the clearing of waterways, canals and drainages; the organised and improved waste-disposal system; the landscaping, beautification of major junctions and road medians; and the introduction of environmental health officers, are part of the deft moves being made by the Aregbesola administration to create health-friendly environments across the state.

    What inspires my applause of the state government’s concern for promoting healthy living through sanitisation of the environment is the unmistakable impacts of the idea on socio-economic development. When people inhabit environments devoid of avoidable causes of illnesses and diseases, they are healthy and psychologically well-adjusted to bring about improved productivity. Equally remarkable is the fact that the efforts at ensuring clean environment makes the empowerment of many hitherto idle hands feasible. Surely, only a rigorously introspective government like the present one in Osun can make this happen.

    I recall that during the better-forgotten years of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), the cities, towns, markets, and major roads in Osun were largely defaced and made eyesores by heaps of refuse and waste items carelessly disposed.

    It was so disturbing that even the masked afro-beat maestro, Lagbaja, made it a subject of his masterful rendition, lamenting actually that “dirty full everywhere, no be small/dirty full anyhow, no be small ooo/ … for Osogbo, the same thing ni …”.

    The profusely hazardous environment (the subsisting conditions of the places where people lived and worked) had negative impacts on the well-being of the people as mosquitoes and their vectors found comfy breeding habitats from where they freely lobbed the lethal missiles of malaria into human bodies. No doubt, the capricious government of the time was out of tune with the modern method of waste disposal and management, even as it was abominably ignorant of the fact that environmental conditions can cause and worsen health challenges.

    Those horrible realities defined the interred years of the PDP-led government in Osun. Since Governor Aregbesola took office, remarkable changes have occurred in the areas of health and environmental cleanliness. The reprehensible habit of improper disposal of waste and unsightly scenes that were roundabouts on major roads across the state have yielded space for effective system of waste disposal and beautification projects that now give engaging aesthetics to parks, motorway medians and bus-stops. Through its O’Clean programme, the government has been able to convince and mobilise the people to always ensure that their environments are in sanitary condition.

    Truth be told, the current health-friendly environment initiatives of the state government deserves not only applause but continuous support by citizens, clean environment advocates, and even the harshest traducers of the helmsman – if only for the sanitary environment in which they labour lucklessly to pooh-pooh the unprecedented changes birthed by Aregbesola. I counsel the government to not by any means take off or slacken its hands on the plough of health-friendly environment programmes and other socio-economic development efforts.

    • Idowu Adediran,

    Ipetumodu, Osun State.

  • Mike Adenuga at 60

    Mike Adenuga at 60

    It is not necessarily true that you will live longer if you don’t drink, smoke, or chase women—it is the feeling that you get that matters. The poor tend to abuse such privileges which explains the good health of the one they call ‘The Guru.’

    According to Ark Linkletter, there are four stages of man: infancy, childhood, adolescence…and obsolescence, but in the case of this icon, youthfulness characterizes his personage at 60.

    Perhaps the greatest secret of the success profile of The Big Boss is that he does not believe in pleasing everyone. He does not care about what his hypercritics think of him and does not flow with the current.

    The mogul we are celebrating today, especially, and at other times has no immediate plans to retire from economic activism even as he begins the eventful journey to 70 and beyond.

    Did you know that at the age of 26, Dr. Michael Adeniyi Ishola Adenuga, Jr. was already a multi-millionaire by American standards? Dr. Adenuga laid the foundation of what he is today by learning the ropes from his late mother whom he cherished till her last breath. He owes everything to her.

    Family members will intimate you to the fact that this Grand Commander was most loved and favoured of all her mother’s five children. And that the virtuous woman in her heyday imbued this last-born with entrepreneurial spirit.

    This multi-billionaire even at the age of 60 still looks so youthful that you will think the Adonis is just about 40! It has to do more with gracefulness than deep pocket. His dreams, vision and astounding entrepreneurship are unparalleled in this part of the world.

    Were you aware that this colossus was a director in the old Newswatchweekly newsmagazine before the brusque intervention and acquisition by Barrister Ibrahim Jimoh?

    With the celebrator, there is no dull moment and life must be lived to the fullest? His fountain of compassion and philanthropy is an ocean that never dries? His generosity is confounding. He does not segregate on grounds of religion, ethnicity, gender or class? All those who have encountered him will readily confirm this.

    The oil and gas magnate hates people who are liars, thieves, irresponsible, lazy, unimaginative, unintelligent, timid, fraudulent and dirty. And profusely loves those on the converse. He loves to the extreme and beyond human comprehension!

    Dr. Adenuga has a passion for good life which explains why he is splashing more than N100 billion on his aristocratic home on Banana Island (Lagos) where he neighbours Alhaji Aliko Dangote. Birds of a feather flock together! Virtually everything for the massive residential network of buildings is imported! What do you expect from a man with paradisal taste?

    It will eternally be on record that it was Dr. Adenuga’s bullish entry into the GSM industry that revolutionized Nigerians’ way of talking through the instrumentality of per-second billing.

    You may not believe this: Dr. Adenuga works almost round the clock and scarcely has time for relaxation. He spends virtually the whole day holding meetings with directors and managers from his group here and overseas till the early hours of the next day and by 9 a.m. the day continues with fresh challenges and different sessions with new sets of managers. Indolent people cannot work with or even for him! Indeed, some employees of his wonder whether he sleeps at all!

    This will interest you: it is easier to access President Goodluck Jonathan than to interface with Dr. Adenuga. I say this from experience and with all sense of responsibility. You cannot see him unless he invites you no matter who you are (with few exceptions)! Nobody can present your challenge to him except he demands to know your circumstance, which he does periodically.

    He does not like to be persuaded over things he desires to do—the moment you do that, he is enraged and that could hallmark doomsday! Nobody risks his anger up to the point of timidity, which he abhors in contradistinction.

    Dr. Adenuga’s retentive memory and general cerebral comportment leave people gasping for breath. He knows something about everything and is well-informed on all organisational issues concerning constituents of the Mike Adenuga Group, Nigerian and global economy.

    Nothing makes this entrepreneurial whiz-kid happy as diligence, which explains the robustness of his passion for hard work by those privileged to be associated with his vast empire. Apart from the direct human capital in his supranational institutions, he has fertilized and watered innumerable private initiatives of people who have come his way over the years from all walks of life. His accommodative organizational capacity is unparalleled in this part of the world.

    Overall, Adenuga, an unprecedented visionary symbol, has a profundity of energy, enthusiasm and empathy running in his veins. At times, those who know him closely wonder whether he would ever retire from economic activism. I have the conviction that his beneficiaries’ prayers for him have the propensity to keep him for the next 60 years and possibly beyond. Simply put, this man has affected and continues to affect uncountable lives, many of whom I know. He enjoys offering Nigerians and non-Nigerians unlimited opportunities particularly through the instrumentality of Globacom as long as they believe in themselves.

    Most times, those who have access to this sports benefactor wonder if he has time for relaxation considering the maze of documents that crave his attention daily, including weekends, multifarious meetings that span all day and other official engagements that are equally time consuming and energy sapping. Does he have time to sleep at all? No weakling can work with or for this big boss: the challenges are pleasurably demanding and appreciated at the earliest opportune time.

    Another thing you may, probably, not know about this global torch-bearer is his morbid phobia for failure. As I pointed out earlier, Mr. Chairman abhors all manner of drawbacks. This explains why he goes for the best of anything. He doesn’t compromise standard. And for him, no half-measures at all. On this score, one can call him a Eurocentric person because of his unmitigated subscription to foreign things which he passionately believes have incomparable quality with products from this locale. This applies to even betrothals, branding, concepts and even obsequious circumstances.

    Adenuga is a cultivator of acquaintanceship, companionship and friendship, but, in the same breath, he does not hesitate in calling it quits if associational challenges arise in breach of his rare privilege craved by one and all. Surprisingly—because of his large heart—he gracefully allows room for serial make-ups and continual reunion. Contrarily, too, some of the relationships taste better as they get older just like wine, with time. In his relational activities, he does not just nurture bosom relationships; he pampers most of his friends and even few lucky staff in his employ up to the point of superfluity and satiation!

    A very ambitious man and a study in diligence, he rejuvenated—after acquisition—National Oil and Chemical Marketing (NOLCHEM) which metamorphosed into Consolidated Oil (Conoil) with upstream and downstream prospecting portfolios. It was the first indigenous oil company to strike oil on December 24, 1991.

    Clearly, he is a generational anchor endowed with divine blessings. He personifies entrepreneurship strewn with benevolence. A gentleman with Midas touch who has mastered his environment by conquering all the latent constituents and elemental forces against all episodic odds, this investment captain remains an embodiment of industry, a beacon and blistering light in usually impossible tunnels and difficult terrains.

    I round off this tribute by underscoring the fact that God’s favours to our unassuming big boss are immeasurable. He is 99 per cent self-made. There is nothing else to add here except Happy Birthday, Sir! May you continue to find favour in the sight of God and man. Let me paraphrase the Psalmist: may the Almighty cause your name to be celebrated in all generations. On retirement—if ever—you will be remembered for your unfazed economic nationalism and philanthropic superfluity.

  • Nebo and the power sector

    Nebo and the power sector

    There is a particular saying that when a child is crying and pointing in a particular direction, it is either the mother or father is there. When the Minister of Power, Prof. Chinedu Ositadimma Nebo, stood before the Senate earlier this year to declare that he was going to exorcise the demons in the power sector, it immediately made headlines in the media.

    It had to, because this line of thought was completely new. Nobody before him had openly pursued it. If they contemplated it, they never brought it to the public space. That Nebo has blazed this trail, is not surprising.

    He possesses what many of his ilk lack, or overlook. It is strange that many people who have gone through the academic mills and acquired the first-grade credentials he has, soon abandon the most essential and crucial part – God. Many of them even begin to delude themselves and commit the most atrocious infamy and sacrilege of declaring with their mouth that there is no God, while others, at best, pay half-hearted heed to His existence and dictates.

    That, of course, is one of the major fundamentals the former Vice Chancellor of two federal universities in Nigeria, is bringing to the table, which, rather than serving as a footnote, is likely to define his era in his present job and from there create the template to leapfrog Nigeria into the future of greatness that has become so elusive, but which everybody, including its enemies, believe is waiting right at the next bend.

    And nobody is guessing here. It was the same talisman that Nebo used to end the many years of rot at the University of Nigeria Nsukka (UNN), which, before his arrival, had gained notoriety for being a theatre of war and bloodshed due to student’s cultism. Who didn’t hear that the menace grew so high that Nebo’s predecessor, Prof. Ginigeme Mbanefo, was actually kidnapped and for some days, became game for the unconscionable elements? Who didn’t hear of the killing of 15 students in a fell swoop in the university in 2003 or how a former dean was butchered thereafter?

    What magic did Nebo apply to ensure that his five-year tenure, between June 2004 and June 2009, led to a totally different story in the university, not only in infrastructural development but total eradication of cultism?

    Of course, his story at the Federal University, Oye Ekiti, evokes a similar sentiment. There, he practically squeezed water out of stone in his attempt to build a first class institution that would train the body and mind of Nigerians constantly in search of quality education, such as the likes that the minister had. Needless to say that he was still at this project when his new appointment came.

    This streak of successes, where many have failed, can only mean one thing – that Nebo, does not only possess the credentials to achieve his goals, but applies them with a rare single-mindedness.

    That is why, he must therefore, be taken seriously when he said that he is going to succeed in the power sector and deliver on President Goodluck Jonathan’s promise of making Nigerians enjoy constant electricity during his tenure. That is why those he has been pointing at since his coming on board as the spoilers, must not only think seriously about their options, but become wiser and more prudent with their ideas of doing things the old way.

    Reading the riot act for the umpteenth time, during an interview on a Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) programme, Platform, recently, the minister accentuated the fresh impetus thus: “We are setting up a very robust monitoring device. One thing I can assure you is that all leakages will be plugged. It’s not going to be business as usual. The legacy that we have now will not tolerate the so-called Nigerian Factor and leakages. It is time for everybody to know that it is no longer business as usual. If anyone wants to continue in the old games, then we will hold them accountable. I can assure you that we have put in place a solid mechanism to ensure that when government puts in funds somewhere, government gets a concomitant, good, quality work that it has paid for.”

    Nebo would also lament on how a cabal had grown out of some people seized by evil forces. These people, who he described as powerful, would not want the Nigerian power sector to heal, because of their proclivity to benefit from the suffering of the people by absconding with funds they obtained for specific power projects.

    “I mean, it is all too obvious that lots of funds have gone into the sector but in some areas, you don’t see a concomitant development in the sector, so there are problems within and without. There is the issue of Nigerian factor, cartels that feel that once there is power, they lose their own businesses,” he added.

    Reiterating his resolve to solve the problem in line with the President’s resolve, Nebo, who said he was equally troubled vowed to do everything required to ensure that the present crisis is resolved in favour of Nigerians.

    And this resolution, according to him would mean a robust economy, where the giant will wake up again; where virtually the about 70 per cent or more of all the Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), that have died in Nigeria would wake up again; where the barbing saloon, hairdressing saloon, vulcanizing, welding businesses and the likes, would be alive and well; where Nigerians would go back to work earn their living honestly and as a result, reduce all the vices currently plaguing the nation due to idleness and absence of alternatives; where the big businesses, like the telecommunication companies would cut down operation costs by half, because they would no longer rely on diesel, thus producing competitive goods and services like telephone tariff that is currently the highest in the world.

    It is a common saying in Nigeria that only a tree will hear that it would be cut down and still stand in one place. A human being would shift grounds. Is it not time for this cabal to rethink their position?

    Indeed, many people have actually argued that cabals are not necessarily bad by their name, but in what they do. They insist that most developed economies have their own versions of cabals, which corner all the big contracts and businesses, make huge profits, but still deliver. In so doing, they may even become instruments for checking charlatans and quacks.

    Perhaps, Nebo, may not be as virulent in his resolve to end their reign if the Nigerian version would try this option. But it is indeed up to them to explore it and see what happens next. But to obdurately remain a clog in the wheel of progress, could become a recipe for their doom.

    The blacksmith, who doesn’t know how to make the gong, it is said, must study the shape of the kite’s tail. Most of the big empires in America today, who have established foundations to help humanity, according to some history, were actually bandits, who involved in all manner of crimes. But they had to give up, do a rethink and turn a new leaf when the time was up for them.

    A similar wind is blowing in Nigeria today. The momentum is so fierce it will certainly destroy all obstacles on the way. It is hurricane Nebo.

    • Igboanugo, a journalist, wrote from Lagos

  • CBN’s somersault on polymer notes

    SIR: Despite public apathy to the introduction of polymer Naira notes in year 2006, Professor Charles Chukwuma Soludo the then rabid and super Central Bank governor ignored every dissenting voices and went ahead to launch N10, N20 and N50 notes at the whopping sum ofN750 million Naira. In fact, the policy was a done deal forced down our throats for the governor and his team had their mind made up despite our ranting so to say.

    The only cogent reason he adduced then was that polymer notes were better and could last longer than paper notes. Today the aesthetics and texture of the notes cannot compete favourably with pure water nylons littering our streets. Seven years on, the pessimists of that time have been proved right as CBN is ready to revert back to the same paper notes.

    According to Tunde Lemo, deputy governor Banking Supervision, the apex bank decided to scrap the polymer notes because they fade easily, despite earlier experiments which showed that the notes could last longer than paper notes.

    If earlier experiment has shown that polymer lasts longer than paper currency, what went wrong with ours? I suspect that somebody encouraged made in China polymer naira notes instead of that of an Australian note-printing firm – Securency which won the contract. Why should it take CBN seven odd years to realise that the project they spent so much tax payers money in promoting was a complete failure? This matter needs to be thoroughly investigated by the National Assembly and other relevant security agencies.

    Mismanagement of public fund for any reason is a crime. The apex bank only succeeded in mismanaging the resources of Nigeria and at the same time shamelessly appeals to the sensibilities of the same poor people to bear the brunt of their mistakes. In developed climes people should be talking of resigning their appointments instead of self-exoneration. It should be noted that the same Tunde Lemo who released the statement was deputy governor banking operations when the polymer notes were introduced.

    It is common for Nigerians in position of authority to go about with the impression of being omniscient. Their ideas are the best and worst at last. The country itself is unfortunately run with myriads of inconsistencies and policy somersaults. However, if we are ready as a nation to get out of this doldrums, Public views should be taken into cognisance in policy making while errant leaders should be made accountable for their negligence in the discharge of their duties no matter how highly placed.

    • Sunday Onyemaechi Eze ,

    Zaria, Kaduna State

  • Olayinka: When death is honour

    SIR: “To fear death, my friends, is only to think ourselves wise, without being wise: for it is to think that we know what we do not know. For anything that men can tell, death may be the greatest good that can happen to them: but they fear it as if they knew quite well that it was the greatest of evils. And what is this but that shameful ignorance of thinking that we know what we do not know?”- Socrates

    The first time I read the above quote by Socrates, I couldn’t but disagree, for being alive while he wrote it, how could Socrates have know that death could be the greatest good? If Socrates knew so much about death, why didn’t he kill himself at the time to enjoy the greatest good?

    Whatever misgivings I had against Socrates, these past few days changed that. For the first time in my life, I see people envying the death of another. A young man said to me that if not that it would sound out of place and weird, he could have wished to die. As a friend later joked, even if this young man gets his weird request to die, can his death be as honourable as the one that he covets – that of Adunni Funmilayo Olayinka, the late Deputy Governor of Ekiti State?

    The issue here is not about whether the young man’s death would be as honourable; the issue is that he was moved enough to covet death just because that of Adunni Olayinka is honourable. This young man’s weird but meaningful covetousness and the empathy that the death of the Deputy Governor has generated changed my mind towards Socrates’ quote, making me agree further with him that “Death may be the greatest of all human blessings.”

    It is also at times like this that we know who love us, the dead and the people they leave behind. It is in identifying with the grief of those left behind by the dead that one knows whether the dead or the people he/she left behind were/are good people. That the whole world is identifying with Ekiti shows beyond words that Adunni Funmilayo Olayinka was a good person. It shows also that those she left behind, her husband, her children, her relations, Dr. Kayode Fayemi and Erelu Bisi Fayemi are good people, people who have overtime demonstrated the ability to be above board.

    • ‘Dimeji Daniels

    Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State

  • A toast to the Grand Commander at 60

    A toast to the Grand Commander at 60

    TOMORROW (Monday, April 29, 2013), one of the legends of our time will clock 60 years. Expectedly, the media, especially the print will be agog with congratulatory messages to celebrate this unique Nigerian who has made a success of his socio-economic endeavours. Otunba Mike Ishola Adeniyi Adenuga (Jr.) has become a business colossus and the barometer for benchmarking the country’s economic and philanthropic landscape, and indeed, those of the West African sub-region.

    A cerebral business mogul, Otunba Mike Adenuga entry into the economic arena became noticeable in the 1980’s and in quick succession he founded and nurtured Devcom Merchant Bank Limited, Equitorial Trust Bank Limited and Conoil Limited to enviable heights. The advent of the Global System for Mobile Communications (hitherto known as Groupe Special Mobile), in Nigeria saw the enigmatic Mike Adenuga (Jr.) floating what is up to the present, the only indigenous and private telecommunications company, Globacom Limited to challenge the earlier three entrants- Zain (now Airtel), MTN, and NITEL. Ever since, the industry has never been the same, as Globacom brought with it innovation, patriotism, and zeal yet to be matched by any other telecommunications company.

    The auspicious event of Adenuga’s diamond birthday is a consequential and monumental moment to celebrate success, resilience, excellence, generosity and kindness, humility, optimism, patriotism, corporate social responsibility, and many more as exemplified and personified by this thoroughbred Ijebu.

    How do we define or determine success? To paraphrase Bessie Stanley, to achieve success is to live well, to gain the respect of those around us, to fill our niche and accomplish our task, to leave the world better than it was met, to look for the best in others and give them the best one could, for one’s life to be an inspiration to others, and for one’s memory to be a benediction. The cumulation of all these point to the fact that Adenuga (Jr.) is a success story in every material sense.

    A resilient entrepreneur, his achievement in life has been built on concrete personal achievement and damning the challenges of failure. No doubt, business has not been a bed of roses. He once made an attempt to acquire the moribund and defunct NITEL, but for some inexplicable reasons, this did not materialise. Re-strategising, he launched Globacom, which introduced what was then said to be impossibility, the Per Second billing regime that has now become the vogue in the mobile telecommunications community.

    According to Rick Pitino, ‘excellence is the unlimited ability to improve the quality of what you have to offer’, while Booker T. Washington, said that ‘excellence is to do a common thing in an uncommon way; Adenuga (Jr.) is a man of rare and consummate excellence. He does not belong to the wasted or wasting generation. Rather, he dazzles us with his virtue and outstanding qualities, and above all, his commitment to achieve the best for his race.

    Talking about his generosity reminds this writer about the quotation from Albert Pike that “what we have done for ourselves alone dies with us; and what we have done for others and the world remains and is immortal”. Equally true is that “those who bring sunshine to the lives of others cannot keep it from themselves”. These two statements exemplify the spirit of Adenuga (Jr.). He has done much for Nigeria and Africa. He has also brought fame, honour and prestige to the black race.

    A leader among men, he has always avoided putting himself above others. To some’ he is elusive or evasive, but those who know him attest to his uncommon humility and shyness. Humility, according to George Arliss “is the only true wisdom by which we prepare our minds for all the possible changes of life”. The transformation of Adenuga (Jr.) to one of the richest men of our time can surely not have been achieved without a good dose of humility.

    It is no gainsaying that “no pessimist ever discovered the secrets of the stars, or sailed to an uncharted land, or opened a new heaven to the human spirit (Helen Keller)”. The achievements of Adenuga (Jr.) have been built on optimism- seeing the light at the end of the tunnel. His life is telling us that we can conquer our nightmares because of our dreams, and that there are possibilities in impossibilities. Indeed, it is possible to operate from a higher level of consciousness if and when we identify the opportunities in any good, bad and ugly environment. The dream in us will die if we are pessimistic.

    A patriot of no mean order, his business empire attests to his commitment to and belief in the country. Directly and indirectly employing over 500,000 workers, he is a major stakeholder in the Nigerian project. The queuing into the philosophy of corporate social responsibility has been a great uniqueness of Mike Adenuga (Jr.). Every part of the country has benefitted from his tremendous spirit of giving to charity, sports, culture, education and many more.

    Recently, he was conferred with the second highest national honour, the Grand Commander of the Order of the Niger (GCON). He is the greatest ambassador of Ijebuland in the socio-economic sphere and an indefatigable pillar of sports and youth development in Nigeria. Adenuga (Jr.) is an indomitable employer of labour and the economic generalissimo of our time.

    On a personal level, when the Awujale of Ijebuland appointed this writer the Coordinator of the centuries’ old Annual Ojude Oba of Ijebuland some seven years ago, the involvement of his company, Globacom has changed the face of the festival. The festival, through the instrumentality of Adenuga (Jr.) has become a global event playing host to millions of people annually including Presidents, Governors, National and State legislators, diplomats and foreign tourists. He is undoubtedly, the foremost benefactor of our Ijebu’s cultural heritage- the Annual Ojude Oba Festival.

    In conclusion, the diamond jubilee of the Otunba Apesin of Ijebuland, Mike Adenuga (Jr.), is indeed, a unique opportunity to salute his selfless and unwavering commitment to humanity and astonishing accomplishments in life. May his Diamond Jubilee usher in more grace to his glory as he continues to further manifest his destined greatness.

    Happy Birthday to a quintessential and an amazing son of Ijebuland. May his mega vision, octopus mission and unassailable journey of purposeful and selfless service to humanity continue to magnify.

     

    •Yusuf is former Ogun State Commissioner for Information and Culture .

  • ….And amnesty is not the answer

    ….And amnesty is not the answer

    Abraham Lincoln got it right when he said “Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves and under a just God cannot retain it.” Nigeria is now home to the world most despicable ogres that kill in the name of religion & education. Young boys and girls, men and women who congregate in places of worship in part of northern Nigeria transit in pieces to the grave beyond. While others end up being victims of permanent disability.

    It is in the news that those merchant of sudden death who specialise in transmuting birth certificates into death certificates via weapons of ‘mass destruction’ are on the verge of getting amnesty. Oh what a country!

    Even if they get the so-called amnesty from man, I doubt if they will ever get the real amnesty that cometh from God alone. To kill a man in the presence of his God in the mode of worship is not an expression of strength but of weakness and cowardice.

    I think the solution is not amnesty but a genuine renouncement of violence against citizen’s regardless of their faith. Granting amnesty to men who operate under the mask is nothing but an abuse of amnesty. Even the Lord, our God, identifies sinners before he forgives them of their sin. As at today, no body has come out to say he is a member, leader or sponsor of the deadly sect yet they claim they need amnesty. Amnesty from who? God, the devil or from Mr. President? All we know is that men in masks give press release threatening violence against innocent souls with religious inclination.

    Those who are calling for amnesty for men who kill in the name of religion and education should be courageous and fearless to also compel the group to lay down their weapons and embrace dialogue. They should be admonished to respect others, right to freedom of worship. We must learn to resist the temptation of using force to expand the boundaries of our faith.

    God bless Nigeria.

     

    G. O. Ehi

    Benin City.

  • The youth as engines of democracy

    I suggest that there should be youth assemblies in the three tiers of government which include, the local, state, and federal levels.

    Let’s make use of the upcoming review and amendment of the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and give the youth their constitutional role to play in piloting the affairs of this nation (Nigeria). This is because youths in any society constitute the major breakthrough which the success or failure of any kind of developmental initiatives by the government, corporate organisation or philanthropist gestures can be adequately rated or utilised.

    The Nigerian youth association should, therefore, wake up to their dreams and visions of discovering, catching, arresting and transforming a better future for the present and future Nigerian youths through ensuring that the proposed constitutional review and amendment by the national assembly in Nigeria provides for vital roles for their assembly to effectively play their various roles as regarding youth development in Nigeria democracy.

    The youth assembly of Nigeria has recognised individuals between the classified ages of 12-40 for a common aim and objective geared towards achieving a positive development and transforming influence on them. if this particular age group is developed in this county it will certainly stand for a better chance for the future of democracy in Nigeria.

     

    Muhammed Bala Musa,

    Dept of Mass Comm.

    IBB University, Lapai, Niger State

  • The Boko Haram menace

    The Boko Haram menace

    Nigeria is a complex entity and sometimes I just pity our leaders’ helplessness in a system where people who are in positions and are expected to be very objective in state matters do otherwise. I am referring to the call by the highly respected Sultan of Sokoto, that Boko Haram should be granted amnesty. Without mincing words, I have great respect for the Sultan because from the little I have known and followed about him, he is a detribalised Nigerian. But on this issue of giving amnesty to Boko Haram, I wish to say, he goofed.

    On the other hand, my thinking tells me, going by his precedence, that he may have been under pressure from some unknown forces, or is this call a cry of helplessness? If the issue of Boko Haram is politicised then the end will not be close. You can only grant amnesty to a known offender. The question now is that who are the representatives or leaders of Boko Haram, what are their grievances, what are the objects of their rebellion? For me, we are shying away from the root of the crises staring glaringly at us.

    My worry is the daily emasculation of socioeconomic life of northern Nigeria and by extension the whole nation by the actions of Boko Haram.These are trying times for our nation, but we must all stand for what is right regardless of whose ox is gored. I can still remember during the critical days of militancy in the Niger Delta, that the militant groups and their leaders were known. That was why elders from the region, like Chief E.K. Clark, went to the creek several times to negotiate with them. Can you negotiate with spirits? Let’s face the fact, Boko Haram is faceless and have not been able to state categorically what their grievances are except that western education is forbidden according to them. If that premise is anything to go by, then it will be safe to conclude that Boko Haram is an ideology. Even at that, let the leaders come out and identify themselves. It is at this juncture that I call on the elders from the north to stand up to the situation, after all what are elders for? Granting amnesty to Boko Haram is like running around the issue. We must rise up collectively to fight against this crippling phenomenon. If we must see the end of this ugly trend, the north has a major role to play. May God keep and strengthen our nation.

     

    Alexander Ighoro

    Warri, Delta State.