Category: Commentaries

  • Find the killers of the Uniport Four

    Find the killers of the Uniport Four

    SIR: I doubt it if there can be any act of barbarism, bestiality and brutality that can match the notorious attacks and gruesome murder in their prime, of the four students of the University of Port Harcourt, by a mob.

    The latest victims in the ever increasing lawlessness in the land are Messrs Biringa Chiadika Lordson, Ugonna Kelechi Obuzor, Mike Lloyd Toku and Tekena Erikena, who were mercilessly killed by irate mobs in Aluu, River State.

    The gory video, published on various websites, showed how the crowd lynched the four naked men, who were eventually set ablaze after three of them went unconscious.

    Mob actions, like the Aluu massacre are usually carried out on the spur of the moment. Culprits are usually thoroughly beaten, tortured and burnt in a twinkle of an eye; so fast that even the fastest reacting police squad won’t get there on time!

    The alarming rate of criminality and extra-judicial killings in the nation is assuming a frightening dimension.

    Just on October 2, no fewer than 40 students were gruesomely killed by gunmen when they invaded the off-campus hostel of the Federal Polytechnic, Mubi with a hit list. Up till now, perpetrators of these heinous acts have really not been apprehended and brought to book.

    Rather, the law enforcement agents keep informing the populace that they are still investigation. It is the same old story, over and over.

    The federal and Rivers State governments, authorities of the University of Port Harcourt and indeed Nigerians, should as a matter of urgency ensure that justice is done by fishing out these wicked killers.

    The task should not be left to the Police alone. The government should immediately set up a powerful panel, comprising representatives of all stakeholders to unravel the mystery surrounding the massacre.

     

    • Adewale Kupoluyi

    Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta

  • Love affair between books and controversies

    Love affair between books and controversies

    There is perhaps no fate worse for a book than when it is ignored. If it is savaged by critics, some may even argue it is precisely the adrenaline it needs to thrive in the market. But when it is truly and sensationally controversial, well, the author’s dream will appear fulfilled. Ultimately, however, whether controversial or at first ignored, it is always difficult to tell how a book would fare in the market in the long run. For there is usually no proof the long run would not come well after the demise of the author. It may be too early to tell what will become of the new Chinua Achebe book, There Was A Country, but at least for now, no matter how bilious some literary critics think its content is, the controversial book will not be ignored. In Nigeria itself, it has raised a storm, with real and imitation critics polarised essentially along ethnic lines. But polarisation notwithstanding, both classes of critics will certainly not ignore the book, and to that extent, it is likely to receive some moderate to good amount of commercial attention.

    Except where an author sets out deliberately to be a woeful failure, the first principle to publishing success is for the author to shock the public with either too much logic and fair amount of truth or too little logic and outright fatuousness. The jury is still out on the Achebe book. But connoisseurs of great literature will recall instances of controversial books that became popular, thereby establishing the link between controversy and popularity. Take John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath, a social commentary on the economic plight of poor farmers in the United States in the 1930s, for instance. The Times of London had this to say of the book published in 1939: “It is one of the most arresting [novels] of its time.” Newsweek magazine described it as a “mess of silly propaganda, superficial observation, careless infidelity to the proper use of idiom, tasteless pornographic and scatological talk.” On the other hand, a New York Times reviewer suggested that “Steinbeck has written a novel from the depths of his heart with a sincerity seldom equalled. It may be an exaggeration, but it is the exaggeration of an honest and splendid writer.” But the Associated Farmers of California, displeased with the book’s depiction of California farmers, denounced it mercilessly as a “pack of lies…and communist propaganda.”

    The result was that in some places the book was burnt, and it even led to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) putting surveillance on Steinbeck who was considered a communist agent on account of the book. The Grapes of Wrath later won the Pulitzer Prize, sold 4.5 million in the US alone, and about 14 million worldwide. Consider also D.H. Lawrence’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover and Sons and Lovers, two novels either censored or banned because of their explicit sexual content. And who could ignore James Joyce’s Ulysses that drove many into fury because of its egregious reference to masturbation? It suffered an obscenity prosecution, was banned in some places, and was for a long time not even available in Ireland, where Joyce hailed from.

    Achebe’s latest work is unlikely to witness more than the controversy that has greeted it so far. There will be no burning, banning or censoring. But for him, it will be a controversy that warms the cockles of the heart. There are millions of books either ignored or completely forgotten today. Whether There Was A Country will be forgotten on a distant tomorrow cannot now be determined, especially considering its contribution to Nigeria’s civil war literature. In view of the fame of the author, even if the book’s accuracy is repeatedly and brutally called to question, as it is now, it is certain there will always be references made to it now and in the distant future. Achebe’s name guarantees that; as he becomes the latest quintessential example of the troubling love affair between books and controversies.

  • Enhancing the lives of millions Nigerians

    Enhancing the lives of millions Nigerians

    Within the hour in which you read this article, nearly 20 women will die in Africa.

    Those deaths will not occur from road accidents or flooding. They will not arise from sickness or war. Instead, they will happen to women in the prime of their lives through complications of pregnancy and childbirth.

    Sadly, those 444 women will lose their lives on the way to giving life; a carnage that is even more remarkable because it is avoidable.

    These deaths are taking place despite the fact that every African nation made a solemn commitment to reduce maternal death when they pledged their support to the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

    Nigeria’s maternal death rate is Africa’s highest. It is second in the world only to India’s. In fact, while Nigeria represents only two per cent of the world’s population, it accounts for over 10 per cent of the world’s maternal deaths.

    UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund, and its partners are working together to help African leaders deliver a future where every pregnancy is wanted, every childbirth is safe and every young person’s potential is fulfilled.

    At country level, UNFPA is pleased to note that Nigeria’s Saving One Million Lives (SOML) initiative is improving health outcomes by facilitating the delivery of life-saving medicines.

    However, the National Survey of Modern Contraceptives and Essential Life-Saving Maternal and Reproductive Health Medicines in Public Health Facilities, which was conducted by the Federal Ministry of Health and the National Population Commission in December 2011 in 567 health facilities, reported that while there was increased availability of reproductive health medicines, key stocks of basic life-saving medicines for maternal health were all in short supply.

    To its credit, the Nigerian government has continued to work in collaboration with partners to support maternal and child health at all levels to achieve its goals and to advance efforts to achieve MDGs 4, 5 and 6.

    But if we are to really deliver for women and girls, we need effective policies, innovative financial mechanisms, enhanced accountability, aligned and transparent budgets, and systems and programmes.

    We also need dedicated people who will work towards clear and measurable targets to improve maternal health, and our efforts must be coordinated for maximum efficiency.

    Most of all, we need sustained commitment, and the support of leaders like President Goodluck Jonathan of Nigeria, who is the co-chair of the UN Commission on Life-Saving Commodities for Women and Children.

    As co-vice-chair of the commission, UNFPA wants to ensure access to the critical supplies needed to save women and children. We are helping increase financial and political commitment to the implementation of its recommendations, with strong support from leaders in the Global South, especially the government of Nigeria.

    We believe we have a strong ally in this government because President Jonathan offered his generous commitment in New York in September, when he spoke about the forthcoming high-level meeting this October in Abuja to discuss the commission’s recommendations.

    Their implementation is part of UNFPA’s broader mandate as the UN’s principal global inter-governmental organization addressing issues of reproductive and maternal health, including voluntary family planning.

    Achieving this vision will change the lives of millions of women and young people all over the world. Yet, support for these efforts is shrinking at a critical time, when the world population has surpassed seven billion, and with close to two billion young people entering their reproductive years.

    Some 222 million women currently have an unmet need for family planning in developing countries. Fulfilling this unmet need would cost $3.6 billion annually, but current data shows that this investment would actually lower the cost of maternal and newborn health services by $5.1 billion, resulting in a net total savings of $1.5 billion.

    UNFPA has also taken the lead in efforts to increase access to female condoms as part of its work to foster high-impact interventions.

    Condoms, both male and female, are currently the most available technology to prevent HIV and other sexually transmitted infections, as well as unintended pregnancies among sexually active people.

    But female condoms, in particular, are hard to find. Its ready availability on a global scale is a challenge that the international community, political leaders and civil society must urgently address.

    The challenge before us all is to work together if we are to improve the well-being of women and children and help ensure Nigeria reaches the MDGs by 2015. To that end, we at UNFPA are calling upon all stakeholders, from government leaders to health-care workers to NGOs, to make voluntary family planning available to every Nigerian.

    This will make a positive contribution to Nigeria’s economic development. But even more importantly, it will significantly enhance life prospects and save millions of women and children.

    • Osotimehin is Executive Director of the United Nations Population Fund.

  • Combating the threat of flooding

    Combating the threat of flooding

    Flooding is a global phenomenon that has continued to constitute a major threat to cities and indeed nations across the world. At present, in most major cities of the world people are being displaced and in some instances killed by ravaging flood similitude of the Noah period described in the Holy Bible. With the prediction of more rains by experts, most cities of the world are currently battling with the reality of a flood ravaged year.

    In Nigeria, the magnitude of flooding being presently experienced is, without doubt, beyond the scope of agencies and organisations responsible for handling national emergencies. Various parts of the country are currently grappling with the destructive consequences of flooding. In states such as Kogi, Plateau, Anambra, to mention a few, people are faced with various threats of different environmental hazards. In Kogi, for instance, the people now live in awe of dangerous reptiles such as snakes and crocodiles.

    The extent of the damage caused by flooding has made the federal government to come out with a ‘Marshal Plan’ of action to bring relief to victims of the disaster as well as guiding against future occurrence. In an early morning broadcast last week, President Goodluck Jonathan assured Nigerians of his government’s readiness to tackle the danger of flooding in the country. Aside from promising to release funds to three categories of states hit by flooding in the country, President Jonathan equally set a committee consisting of eminent Nigerians with the primary objective of raising fund to provide succour for flood victims across the country.

    From the foregoing, it is quite clear that flooding is no longer a situation that can be politicised. Recently when the Lagos Bar Beach experienced a surge, the opposition in the state tried, though unsuccessfully, to give the natural incidence political colorations. In its bid to find its voice, at all cost (even if it means being insensitive to the plights of victims of the ocean surge), the opposition ridiculously and callously called for the resignation of the governor state over the matter. How laughable! Now that almost half of the states in the country are in danger of flooding, do we call for the resignation of all the governors? Or better still, do we call for the resignation of the President?

    Moments of natural disasters offer unique opportunity for the people, irrespective of political and religious dissections, to bond together and collectively tackle the misery created by the force of nature. When the United States of America faced, perhaps, its darkest moment in the wake of the Al-Qaeda assault, its people were united in forging a common front against global terrorism. No wonder President Obama of the Democratic Party was able to finish what former President George Bush of the Republican Party started when he finally nailed Osama Bin Laden. This is a clear demonstration of the fact that human lives are too precious to play politics with.

    If not for the proactive measures which the Lagos State government has been taking with regards to the environment in the last 12 years, the flood situation in the country would have been more devastating. What we experience in Lagos anytime it rains is mere flash flooding which is natural to most coastal places. This is the outcome of the amount of work that the state government has done in sanitising the environment in recent time. Ironically, when the state government started its environmental regeneration programme, which led to strict enforcement of regulations that had been evaded for long, the same group of people that are now employing the flooding incidence to cause mischief were quite vocal in their condemnation of the programme. When the state government was converting hitherto abandoned loops into parks and gardens, they were the ones that thundered: ‘is it flowers we will eat’?

    Being a natural occurrence, flooding often time defies scientific solutions. Clearly, public safety and good sense call for scientific response to flooding. However, while upgrading environmental infrastructure is important, engineering fixes alone will not suffice. According to renowned ecologists Donald Hey and Nancy Philippi, despite the massive construction of levees throughout the upper Mississippi Basin during the 20th century, annual average flood damage during that time more than doubled. Consequently, what is needed across the country is a comprehensive plan to add ecological infrastructure to complement engineering infrastructure -specifically to expand wetlands and re-activate floodplains so as to mitigate future flood risks. Re-creating wetlands and re-activating floodplains in strategic locations will result in a more robust and resilient flood protection system. With more extreme weather and devastating floods likely in store in the months ahead, according to experts, public safety and economic security depend on enlisting nature’s defences along with our engineered ones. Instead of letting this ecological infrastructure degrade further, the federal and state authorities should work to expand and rebuild it.

    Furthermore, certain negative practices easily aid flooding. Despite, the availability of civilised options for waste disposing as provided by Lagos Waste Management Authority and its other PSP partners, people still turn canals, streams and drainages into refuse dumping sites. It is so bad that while it is raining, people come out to toss their refuse into the flowing water body. No matter the level of government’s preparedness at tackling flooding, such practices would continue to negate its goals. As much as the government is doing its bits, NGOs, Community Development Associations, the media, members of the Civil Society and all well meaning individuals and groups in the state should partner with the state government to achieve attitudinal change towards the environment.

    Perhaps, more importantly, states being affected by flooding should judiciously make use of the federal government intervention fund. They need to take a cue from Lagos State which has been investing heavily in the recovery, rehabilitation and construction of several drains such as the Macgregor, Achapo, and Orile Canals that are constantly being cleaned up. A major channel called System 5, which runs all the way from Surulere, down to Apapa, through Orile and through Ajegunle, has equally been dredged. At the last count, aside from routine maintenance that runs into thousands, major construction and drainage works completed and on-going are in excess of 500.

    On a final note, to avert future disaster, there is need for effective collaboration among emergency response institutions, across the country, to ensure to ensure swift response thereby reducing the number of causalities. To those that have incurred one loss or the other through the recent flooding in the country, one can pray that the Lord give them the fortitude to bear the loss while those living in flood prone areas should vacate those areas for now. God bless Nigeria.

    • Ibirogba is Honourable Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Lagos State.

  • Uduaghan and youth empowerment

    Uduaghan and youth empowerment

    SIR: When you want to assess governance at any level of administration, merely take a cursory look at the quality of lives of the governed and your assessment will not be far from being accurate.

    Looking down memory lane, there is no doubt that the Delta State of yesterday has changed for the better, going by the quality of life of the people. The average Delta man or woman who was unemployed can now boast of gainful employment courtesy of Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan’s administration in the state.

    No wonder the barometer of anarchy has dipped giving rise to peace and tranquility in the once boiling heart of the Niger Delta.

    Prior to his tenure, the average Deltan youth was unemployed, hence his restiveness. His past time was hunting oil company executives especially expatriate, in exchange for ransom. His grouse was that the oil companies employing the executives had taken lot resources from their land and instead of making life better for him through provision of social amenities; his environment had been rendered improvement yielding little or nothing.

    Also there was rampant disruption of oil production activities in addition to oil pipeline puncturing, in the country’s creeks, a development which sent down crude oil production to an all-time low level of 500,000 barrels per day.

    All that now belonged to history as Dr. Uduaghan has restored the hope of youths in the state by creating employment opportunities in quantum such that their restiveness has since given way to peace with crude oil production level climbing to two million barrels per day. This explains why the youths rallied behind the governor to secure a second term in office. In this first term in office, the governor fashioned out a blueprint that emphasized the empowerment of youths in order to encourage them to abandon the trenches, live a productive life and contribute their quota to the development of the state.

    The administration still has over three years to go and at the pace it is going now, it is believed that Governor Uduaghan will go down as one ruler who has the interest and the welfare of the masses at heart. By the time he vacates office he must have put his name down in indelible ink and his administration as unparalleled in the history of Delta State. I believe that by the time he aspires for higher positions in the land, the governor has a ready constituency among the youths who will ensure his victory at the polls.

     

    • Jonathan Emevor,

    Irri, Delta State,

  • Ondo elections and the Yoruba nation

    Ondo elections and the Yoruba nation

    The issues at stake in Ondo State as the governorship contest looms are quite dear to the discerming mind. It goes goes beyond the person of Dr. Olusegun or Aswaju Bola ahmed Tinubu. Any attempt to norrow the issue down to these eminent personalities totally misses the point. The central question is: What will advance the survival of the Yoruba nation in the tottering federation called Nigeria?

    International law clearly recognizes the right of nations within political states to self-determination and autonomy status.

    What is a “Nation”? A nation is a group/people with a common culture, language, destiny and social ambition. Where such a people finds itself clustered with other groups in a political state such as Nigeria, it is their right and prerogative to determine the terms of their association with such other groups. They may opt for integration and political participation into the political state by way of a federation or confederation if the circumstances are conducive. They may alternatively, opt for regional autonomy or self governance. Such a decision belongs to the group is a recognized and right under international instruments and principles – right to development, right to self-determination, control over natural resources, right of minorities etcetera.

    A political state also has its rights in international law – sovereignty and territorial integrity. The right of minorities and of political states have to be carefully managed and balanced and the path to achieving such balance is through discussion and negotiation. Where the discussion and negotiation are done in good faith, there is every likelihood that the political state will survive. However, where the negotiation or discussion is not done in good faith or even disallowed as in the Nigerian federation, then the result may be a collapse of that political state through war, terrorism or other forms political agitation culminating in secession as in India/Pakistan, Pakistan/Bangladesh, Sudan/South Sudan and Somalia.

    In the modern era, there is no truly homogenous political state. Most political states are an agglomeration of different people’s and cultures. One important hallmark of developed and successful political states is that they have managed the tensions of heterogeneity intelligently and sincerely. The United Kingdom went through its own period of political tension with the its Irish “tribe”. The Irish political organ Sinn Fein opted for armed struggle over a long period until the labour governments of Prime Minister Tony Blair and Gordon Brown agreed to regional self government for the Irish and the Scots.

    In Canada, the Quebec region consisting of the French speaking peoples of Canada has also achieved a measure of self-government leaving Canada in relative peace.

    In Spain, the Basque region has only recently worked out a truce with the central government and negotiation is being done to fashion out fresh terms of association.

    Germany, Switzerland, and the Netherlands have their own language and cultural divisions but these have been ably managed by the enlightened leadership of these countries.

    One common denominator in these various countries is that the nations with a nation have united themselves under a common political banner to advance their group interests and enhance their chances of stronger political bargaining and negotiation for the survival and advancement of their groups/nations.

    To my mind this is the raison d’etre for the existence of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) like its Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) and Action Group (AG) predecessors. Many who complain that these are regional/tribal parties need to understand the political dynamics of heterogeneous political entities. Political parties are vehicles of advancing political interests and no party needs to apologize for this. The Northern Peoples Congress (NPC), the National Party of Nigeria (NPN) and at inception, up to a point, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had a core northern agenda. Late Sarwuan Tarka saw through the subterfuge of an ubiquitous “Northern Region” and formed, in the First Republic, a separate political entity to cater for the interests of the Middle Belt but myopically his successors did not follow through on that initiative and now they are reaping the results of their self-deceit with the present crisis in the Plateau. The Eastern Region had its NCNC, its Nigerian Peoples Party (NPP) and now its All Peoples Grand Alliance (APGA). (Never mind, the inclusion a few persons firm other tribes to give it a national flavour). APGA’s inability to consolidate itself is one of the reasons why an Igbo Presidency will continue to be frustrated.

    For the Yoruba nation to advance its national, cultural and socio-economic interests in the Nigerian federation as presently constituted, therefore, all reasonable Yoruba sons and daughters should realize that their future, indeed their survival as a people lies in identifying with the ACN as a vehicle for ensuring the completion of the resuscitation and rescue of a Yoruba nation gasping for breath in the polluted by air political of Boko Haram, Northern irredentism, denial of equitable political participation, dwindling economic and social progress, and inept leadership.

    Consequently, the issue in the Ondo State elections is beyond Mimiko and the contrived personality disputation with Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Personally, I am unable to comment on any alleged achievement of Mimiko in Ondo State as I have not visited the state in recent times, but I have been to Edo State and seen the giant strides of Comrade Adams Oshiomhole and I do believe that the ACN does have a template for developing the states that fall under its sway so that a Rotimi Akeredolu, astute and competent as he is, works in tandem with a larger regional agenda..

    The issue is that the Yoruba need the ACN as a weapon of offence and defence against internal colonialism in Nigeria. Ondo people should not be the chink in the Yoruba armour.

     

    • Prof. Ibidapo-Obe is of Faculty of Law, University of Lagos.

  • In praise of Senator Victor Ndoma-Egba

    In praise of Senator Victor Ndoma-Egba

    Lately, the profile of Senator Victor Ndoma- Egba, the Senate Leader rose again with the conferment of another national award of Commander of the Order of the Niger (CON) after having had the Order of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (OFR). However, not that his profile ever went down, it is just that within the Nigerian political class, people have come to acknowledge him as the life and soul of the Senate. Indeed, he is regarded as the most visible among his colleagues. What’s more, he is the most regularly seen lawmaker at the complex of the National Assembly.

    The Senate Leader is a rare breed, a patriotic silent achiever and one who believes in Nigeria’s potential and greatness. This seasoned lawyer believes in loyalty and has always guided his path in his endeavour, setting the pace for his extraordinary greatness.

    Senator Ndoma- Egba has assumed a well-deserved seat and a front player position and has developed to a strong legislative brand name that has made him a reference point.

    No doubt, his outstanding record of uncommon achievements continues to endear him to his constituents, Cross Riverians and most Nigerians regardless of the senatorial district he represents.

    He is a lover of people; he is always very passionate about the plight of his people and enjoys solving all problems.

    For him, the passion that drives a man defines his focus and agenda for life. He is driven by a well-defined passion to elevate the human condition of his constituents and many times he has spoken and done things in affirmation of his drive.

    For the Senate Leader, governance is steward for God; it is serious business and not for personal aggrandisement. It is also not for pleasing a group of friends at the expense of the people. His representation has always shown empathy for the plight of the people.

    According to his philosophy, political virtue must be inextricably bound up with the good of the whole community and cannot be reduced to individual’s success in gaining office and power. He believes that all men are equal by nature and should be so in society. Perhaps that is what defines his approach to governance and in public service. There are leaders who are utterly self-impressed, who regard political office as the pathway to a frontier where will and ego can proceed virtually unbounded. There are leaders who foot-loose in search of opportunity for self aggrandisement. There are leaders who are not noted for any strong passion or ideological direction.

    Senator Ndoma-Egba is a mobiliser and a motivational speaker, who has not for once wavered despite the many struggles he gets confronted with. He is likeable, amiable but blunt. He is a stickler for time, accountability and transparency.

    You will always be struck by his extraordinary warmth and kind disposition evident in his life through the great man who brought him up in the finest tradition of Christian charity, discipline and fear of God.

    Though in his 50s, the Senate leader does not look his age one bit. The only thing that could easily give him away is his grown-up children.

    Although he could be jovial, he is a no nonsense man when it comes to assignments and delivery on deadlines. But underlining his playful disposition is a seriousness that nobody dares take for granted. He is so good natured that the welfare of his constituents remains his primary duty.

     

    By Peter Willie

    Abuja

  • Many pains, few solutions to flood disaster

    Many pains, few solutions to flood disaster

    The recurring flood disaster along the coastal communities in the country has left no fewer than 25 million people displaced and devastated. Those living along the coastal communities of Rivers, Niger, Benue, Sokoto, Katsina, Lagos, Ondo, Bayelsa, Delta, Akwa Ibom, Anambra, and Cross River states are gravely affected by the incessant flood menace which has made the governors to direct victims to leave their communities and providing makeshift relief for them.

    It is sad that the federal government has abysmally failed to explore proactive measures in tackling perennial flood in some disaster –prone northern states and blocked drains and water channels in the South- East and some states in the Niger- Delta region which has equally rendered many Nigerians homeless and helpless. No matter how government will provide relief materials cannot salvage the suffering dwellers of these affected communities. The worst is that property worth billions of naira has been destroyed by the flood.

    Although the warnings of climate change on flood disaster were issued to Nigerians by experts, our government never provided solutions. The continuous ravaging flood has put many Nigerians into untold hardship in which those in the coastal communities are grossly affected while the relief materials provided by some of the affected state governors are not adequately enough to cater for the people. Since the upsurge of the flood challenge, economic activities have been totally grounded without immediate solutions to it. Even some of the highland communities are gradually taken by the flood while death casualties have increased to 95 percent. The prices of goods and services and transportation are at geometrical progression.

    Torrential rains have caused havoc in some states of the federation, most especially in the North and Niger-Delta region. The problem with this mordant and corrosive flood disaster is that Nigerian leaders do not know how to contain disasters. The fact remains that the flood is rising on daily basis while the state governors of these affected regions are overstretched. The flood has brought the invasion of dangerous reptiles including crocodiles and snakes in many communities. The Presidential committee on flood led by Hadiza Mailafiya, Minister for Environment is yet to provide any panacea to the situation. The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and some of the state ones are overstretched while the absence of surface drains and blockage of existing drains with municipal waste, refuse and eroded the soil sediments are the major cause of the dreaded flood. This flood is a Tsunami.

    Although the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NIMET) had alerted that there would be an above normal rainfall in strategic parts of the country which might lead to flooding incidents in 12 states of the federation, yet nobody gave consent to that instruction.

    The menace of this incessant flood indicates the natural disaster which cannot be controlled by any government. For President Goodluck Jonathan to submit a supplementary budget to address the current plaguing flood disaster and victims of the affected states is a welcome development. The National Inland Waterways Authority (NIWA) must take steps to clear waterways and tributaries which are silted and taken over by shrubs to allow for channels and easy flow of water to contain the ravaging flood in coastal communities. This flood has created untold poverty for many affected communities thus invariably sending wrong signals of hunger and strife in the next two years together as well as high profile criminal activities, if the government does not take urgent steps to avert the situation. Even wild animals are chasing away people from their homes while the rescue centres provided by the government are not adequate enough to cater for the flood victims. Deaths are being recorded in the so-called rescue centres while some flood victims who refuse to vacate their communities are being invaded by criminals. The only means of transportation in those affected flood communities is speed boats and local canoes.

    Lastly, only God can avert this unbearable and inevitable flood. The federal government must collaborate with other relevant agencies and international communities to initiate proactive and preventive measures to fight against future recurrence of flood disasters in the country.

     

    By Godday Odidi

    Apapa, Lagos.

     

  • The Governor as public intellectual

    The Governor as public intellectual

    In states with a history of display of intellect by their leadership, there is the tendency to dismiss the current leadership of Oyo State’s new-found romance with display of the cerebrum as a non-issue. In Oyo, renowned for its acronym as a Pacesetter but which had, over the years, lost both the pace and the setting potentials, as intangible as it may sound that its governor arrests national and international audiences with impeccable intellectual delivery, this is a major celebration for the people of Oyo State.

    In the recent past, Oyo State suffered terribly in the estimation of the world as one administered by a leadership that was everything but deep. Every anti-intellectual story that filtered from the state to the world then stuck as emerging from a familiar terrain. When miscreants of the National Union of Road Transport Workers, (NURTW) reported to have permanent chalets inside the Government House, had their villainy and spillage of blood abetted by the state, this cohered with the perception of Oyo State as a state run by everything but intellectual leadership.

    But Oyo had not always been like that. For a state once run by geniuses like Bola Ige and Omololu Olunloyo to have relapsed that irretrievably became a song on the lips of dirge-crooners. Many analysts bemoaned the fate of Oyo, once administered by Ige, poet and literary icon and Olunloyo, mathematical genius and wizard of polemics, falling into the hands of such a vacant-minded leadership.

    Doubtless, this nostalgia to reconnect with a deep-minded past recommended the election of Abiola Ajimobi at the April, 2011 polls. Engaging polemicist and a man who can answer to a description of French author, Voltaire as one unusual brain homed in a human skull, his rich credentials as Managing Director of a multinational oil corporation persuaded the electorate that his could not be a replay of the vacuity of Oyo’s recent past.

    Having set on an even keel the construction of 199 roads, about 20 fallen bridges in the state, mobile health to the nooks and crannies of the state, treating almost half a million people in the process, Ajimobi, On September 20, 2011 set the ball rolling. His unspoken intention, no doubt, was to rebrand Oyo State as the intellectual capital of South West Nigeria that it had always been. Sitting on the same seat where Obafemi Awolowo sat to proffer those intellectual responses to the post-colony of Nigeria, it would be uncharitable of Ajimobi not to rekindle the flame of an intellectual incubator which Oyo had always been.

    So to Igbinedion University, Okada, Edo State, Ajimobi moored the intellectual boat. The hall was filled to the brim. Could anything good come out of Nazareth, the audience seemed to be asking. From an Oyo State said to be possessed of a leadership that valued necklace and bleaching cream? Decked in the academic hood and gown of a Guest Lecturer, the Oyo Governor went on an academic journey that struck his audience as unique and scintillating. Speaking to the topic, Challenge of Progress In The Midst Of Plenty, Ajimobi pleasantly shocked the institution’s Vice Chancellor, himself a foremost scholar on federalism, Eghosa Osaghae, who listened as the governor cited his journal articles of yore with astonishing rapidity.

    Then Ajimobi went into the nitty-gritty of the topic, dissecting it as a cheetah would an impala. He dissected the concept of crisis, submitting that it is at the core of the Nigerian nation and that it is impossible to take a shuttle into the Nigerian past without giving an ample space to its conflictual background. Indeed, while summarizing the Nigerian situation, Ajimobi said that the country’s post-independence situation was a long drawn-out decay or decline, whose empirical features are political instability, a low level of national cohesion and economic crisis, stating that all these indices, as far as Nigeria was concerned, are mutually reinforcing.

    He went into the post-independence Nigerian situation, especially during the First Republic where crises among the political class tore the republic apart. Thereafter, he went comparative on African experience of crises and expatiating on the interwoven nature of crises in Africa. “What makes conflict or a conflicting situation at the core of today’s globalized world’s concern” he began, “is its tendency to leave its border, making an internal conflict to burst out of its seams, and refusing to be confined within the borders of a single country… A good example of this could be found in the recent conflict situation that sprung up in Liberia in the 1990s. This Liberian crisis sowed the seeds of conflicts that eventually spread to countries like Sierra Leone, Cote D’Ivoire and Guinea.” The audience was enthused.

    And he drew the crises situation home, to the Oyo State example. At this stage, the university audience could not hide its delight at the depth of his analysis. Encouraged by the enraptured silence of the audience, Ajimobi went on: “You will recall the periodic violent skirmishes that our state was renowned for under this regime. Blood was shed at will as if in appeasement of some blood-sucking deities. Politicians became indistinguishable from thugs and motor-park kingpins. Inside this vortex was the state government which was said to be in cahoots with the motor-park kingpins. The very sad episode of the death of a notorious NURTW kingpin, who, with the support of the state godfather, took over our State Assembly in 2006, is still very fresh in our memory. .. Indeed, an NURTW thug moved the motion for the impeachment of the then state governor, hitting the gavel on the table in a manner reminiscent of how it is done in a sane legislative House. And rather than pronouncing the governor, who was the target of his patrons, he “the Speaker is hereby impeached”. The rest, as they say, is history.”

    By the time the governor finished delivering the lecture, the audience gave him a standing ovation.

    No doubt due to the news of his intellectual intervention, Ajimobi was again invited to deliver a keynote address at the Town Hall meeting held at the Dusable Museum of the African-American history, Chicago, United States. “The Need for True Federalism in Nigeria: The Oyo State Example” was the topic he had to do justice to.

    Ajimobi first went into the history of the contiguous territories of Nigeria’s 350 ethnic groups and the constitutional history of Nigeria, from Clifford, Macpherson to the current effort at constitutional amendments. He itemized the four phases of the attempt at federalism in Nigeria which he named to be, one, under colonial rule when Nigerian nationalists struggled for the enthronement of a federal system as an integral part of the political independence agenda; the post-independence era when the political class debated the political architecture bequeathed by the departing colonial power; the third being under military rule when Nigerians rose against elements of military unitary system that ran contrary to their federalist expectations and final phase which began immediately the present democratic dispensation started in 1999.

    The governor then went into the anti-federal nature of the Nigerian federal practice. “Extant laws that are anti-federal include the Land Use Act; the Laws on Petroleum and Gas that give these resources to the federal government; the Federal Inland Revenue Act of 2007 which empowers the Federal Inland Revenue Service to collect revenue for the three tiers of government, the Monitoring of Revenue Allocation to Local Government Act of 2005, which compels states to set up joint local government account committees and empowers the federal government to deduct from funds allocated to States money they failed to pay to local governments in the previous year.”

    He also went experiential in his governance of Oyo State. “From my experience as a Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria between 2003 – 2007 and governor of Oyo State since last year, I make bold to say that there are too many responsibilities and resources at the federal level to allow for efficiency. The federal government has become so big that it is theoretically and practically impossible to guarantee efficiency… There is no way, given the capacity of the bureaucracy at the federal level, that efficiency can be guaranteed in the deployment of resources in this circumstance.”

    By the time he ended the address, he had succeeded in drawing the attention of the foreign audience to the wonky federal practice in Nigeria, especially through his conclusion that, “For me, the federal government should be limited to setting policies – after consultations with the states – on areas like road, agriculture, sports, etc. while the states are granted the powers and resources to manage these responsibilities that affect the lives of our people at the grassroots.”

    It was apparent now that Ajimobi’s renown as a public intellectual had reached a crescendo. This must have informed the London Chamber of Commerce and Industries’ (LCCI) invitation to him to address it on the business potentials in Oyo State. Held at the…., the governor, speaking through a power-point presentation, took his audience on a shuttle into the historical greatness of his state, the stasis it relapsed into and the promise it holds for investors. As usual, at the end of the presentation, the audience, which comprised white investors and friends of Nigeria, gave him a resounding applause for his mastery of the turf and his exhibition of high mental acuity.

    Two days after, Ajimobi was at the prestigious Chatham House. Asked to discuss, extempore, the topic, “Review and Reform: Key Elements and Implications of Nigeria’s Constitution Review Process,’’ again, he received a standing ovation of his deep understanding of the issues under reference. By the time, the second day, the governor arrived at the University of Oxford to talk on “Federalism and the Imperatives of Political Restructuring for the Development of Nigeria,” the audience had been convinced that in its midst was an emerging public intellectual who, at lecture podia, theoretically dissects knotty issues, while at home, in his Oyo State enclave, he brings solutions to a people who still have nostalgia for a state that was a complete package of a performer and one they could be proud of his élan.

    Adedayo is Special Adviser (Media) to Governor Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State.

     

  • New leadership paradigms to achieve strategic transformation

    New leadership paradigms to achieve strategic transformation

    AT the risk of stating the obvious, the easiest means to become a leader is by inheritance – as a prince or princess already adorned with the title of “Crown Prince” or “Crown Princess”. A variant of this is in the political arena where following the demise (or incapacitation) of the President, the Vice-President automatically becomes the new leader as was the case in Ghana where late President Attah Mills was promptly replaced by his Vice-President and in Malawi where late President Bingu wa Matharika was similarly replaced by his Vice-President, the formidable and feisty Mrs Joyce Banda. However, it is instructive that within a few days of becoming President, Mrs Banda has not only reversed a significant number of policies which her predecessor held sacrosanct e.g. the prohibition of the President of Sudan from attending the meeting of the African Union held in Addis Ababa. The International Criminal Court had issued a warrant for the arrest of the Sudanese President but Matharika had assured him that he would be welcome regardless of the threat by major aid donors such as the United States of America; Britain; France etc to withhold badly needed funds meant to sustain debt-ridden and landlocked Malawi.

    Transformational leadership theories emphasize the task and organizational integrity and this helps focus one’s attention to more appropriately defining a task. The transformational theories emphasize cooperation, ethics and community in addition to the higher human values. Long-range goals are emphasized which leads to increasing the survivability of a system. It has been showed in studies, such as in gaming theory, that cooperation, as opposed to competition, is more successful in achieving goals.

    Transformational leadership theories are adaptive and can be tailored to support the fulfillment of the most pressing of needs in people. There is greater stability of a leader’s position, as there is greater support by those who are being led. Transformational leadership theories can bring harmony to a situation that could otherwise be exacerbated by a quarrelsome organization. If one has an educated population, transformational leadership theories are more likely to work.”

    Even more startling was the revelation by Mrs. Banda that on assuming office she was shocked to discover secret files that left no doubt that her predecessor was actively enmeshed in the plan to assassinate her by sending a rogue lorry to ram into her convoy. Her salvation was that at the last minute, she had changed the car in which she was to travel while returning from an official engagement. Nearer home, there were allegations that the late General Sani Abacha the “maximum ruler” of Nigeria was neck deep in the plan to blow up a plane in which his second-in-command, General Oladipo Diya was expected to travel. Apparently, it was a sudden bout of “running stomach” that delayed General Diya from being on the plane to keep the appointment with certain death.

    Shortly afterwards, the tale developed a new twist. General Abacha charged General Diya and others with plotting a coup d’état.

    All alleged coup plotters were subsequently sentenced to death. It was only the sudden death of Abacha that saved them from the waiting bullets of the firing squad.

    In war-torn Ethiopia, the late Prime Minister Meles Zenawi who ruled from 1995 to 2012 took ill and died at the relatively young age of 57 years in a Belgian hospital on Monday 20th August 2012. He has been immediately replaced by the Deputy Prime Minister, Hailemarian Dasalegn who is expected to hold office until 2015 when the next elections are due.

    We should also reflect on the upheaval over change of leadership in Togo; Cote D’Ivoire; Senegal; South Africa; Democratic Republic of the Congo; as well as the trenchant cases of “Arab Spring In Africa” – Tunisia; Egypt and Libya.

    Of course we cannot ignore the marathoners – Robert Mugabe [Zimbabwe]; Angola, Teodoro Mbasogo (Equatorial Guinea); Yoweri Museveni (Uganda) who rule by fear and intimidation, combined with utter ruthlessness in eliminating opponents, rivals, potential successors or whoever is perceived to challenge their supremacy. They have no intention whatever of surrendering power under any circumstances!! Hence, the “Strategic Transformation” component in the title of my address is totally alien to this crop of dictators.

    “Of course, any thinking underpinning a system can be excessive and transformational leadership theories aren’t an exception to the rule. Whereas it can be argued that more can be accompanied through a collective action and this is justification for totalitarian states and one can also argue that any individual development, necessary for social competence, is reason to have a participatory society, such as a cooperative. Aristotle argued in his Politics that a society is strengthened with diversity in ideals and capabilities and as a result, democracy was a better form of authority. Game theory, as exemplified in the Prisoner’s Dilemma, supports the view that cooperation produces more results than competition and that the strength of the cooperation is enhanced when people of diverse backgrounds and capabilities are encouraged to participate in achieving the common goals and to make decisions collectively. The simple truth is that if everyone is involved in decision-making, they will be more committed to working to achieve making the ideal goal a reality.

    A test of the efficacy of transformational leadership theories could be how a group of island survivors fare. It is clear that if there is no cooperation, the chances of survival are greatly diminished. On the other hand, if the necessary tasks are of an urgent nature, there may be a need for a commanding person. William Golding’s Lord of the Flies is an excellent scenario from which to draw lessons such as this. Transformational leadership theories could have brought harmony to this situation that ultimately turned out with the characters fighting each other to the point that some lost their lives because of the turmoil.

    The leader strives to exhibit the qualities of a good role model – must be paradigm of good character. S/he is the personification of the ideals of the system, its ethos and motivations driving the organization. The manner in which s/he leads is imbued with desirable human qualities, such as intelligence, compassion, noble ethics and exemplary courage. The leader is a counsel to the rest, lending his/her support to enhance the well-being of each essential member of the organization.”

    Regardless, we are obliged to deliberate on the profound issue of the search for “New Leadership Paradigms” which to my mind suggests that we need to define leadership and rise to the challenge of crafting a fresh road map that would hopefully lead to the emergence of new leaders who are distinctly different from mere rulers.