Category: Comments

  • CEmONC programme: Advancing maternal health through measurable actions

    CEmONC programme: Advancing maternal health through measurable actions

    • By Tony Ademiluyi

    I write in response to a feature story by Nkechi Onyedika-Ugoeze published in The Guardian on January 9, 2025, which painted an inaccurate and unnecessarily dismal picture of the Comprehensive Emergency Obstetrics and Neonatal Care programme. The article described the initiative designed to make Caesarean sections free for eligible pregnant women as a “gargantuan failure.” It misrepresented facts and smeared the ambitious effort towards reducing Nigeria’s high rate of maternal mortality.

    The report claimed that delays in awareness campaigns and in the rollout of the programme had spurred doubts about the viability of the initiative and also alleged that the programme was yet to take off three months after its announcement. Although large-scale health programmes often have bumpy starts in their implementation, branding CEmONC as a failed initiative will completely discount tangible evidence of progress made since its inception and the different phases the initiative has undergone. The Guardian needs to do some robust research and correct such inaccuracies by setting the record straight. It will surely uncover the serious efforts made and milestones achieved if the respected newspaper lends itself to the rigour of fact-checking.

    The launch of CEmONC was in August 2024 in four health facilities spread between Kano and Akwa Ibom. For Kano, the kick-off took place at Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital, Murtala Mohammed Specialist Hospital, and Mohammed Abdullahi Wase Specialist Hospital, while in Akwa Ibom, the University of Uyo Teaching Hospital was the flagship centre. The programme expanded to seven more facilities in Bauchi, Sokoto, Kebbi, and Borno States by December 2024― thus far from a stagnating programme.

    Others include the Federal Teaching Hospital Birnin Kebbi; Sir Yahaya Memorial Hospital, Kebbi; Maryam Abacha Women and Children Hospital; and Usman Danfodio University Teaching Hospital, Sokoto; Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University Teaching Hospital and the Federal University of Health Sciences Teaching Hospital Azare, Bauchi; and the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital, Borno. Of these newly added facilities, five have already started reporting and making active strides towards the objectives of the programme.

    In its first four months, CEmONC achieved several measurable results that contradict this bleak description of The Guardian report: between September to December 2024, 887 claims were facilitated through the programme, out of which 706 were independently verified and 663 paid. As of now, more than ₦87 million has been disbursed to participating facilities to support the cost of treatment for life-threatening complications arising during childbirth. More importantly, more than 2,600 women have accessed life-saving obstetric care in the pilot facilities, with 887 of them receiving comprehensive support that covered all associated costs. My perusal of verifiable documents from the Federal Ministry of Health and engagements with some of the hospital leadership prove that they have received support from the government and have started deploying some of these crucial services.

    Therefore, this is not the story of a failed initiative; rather, it is one of progress and dedication. The CEmONC program stands out as proof of the commitment by the government to stem the uncontrollable maternal mortality rate in Nigeria, estimated by the World Health Organization in 2023 to be 1,047 deaths per 100,000 live births, second in the world. This no doubt forms a call for targeted interventions, especially in the most economically deprived families who often do not have access to health facilities.

    Worth noting is that CEmONC is not an impromptu programme but rather one that was done with great planning and consideration of its sustainability. As early as December 2023, all 36 states and the FCT had already been engaged by letters to the State Commissioners for Health to provide data on eligible healthcare facilities. This engagement allowed for the prioritisation of facilities in terms of need and capacity, ensuring that resources go where they are most needed. As of the end of 2024, MOUs had been signed by 42 referral facilities across all six geopolitical zones, with ongoing efforts geared at onboarding all 69 eligible tertiary health institutions.

    Financial support for Caesarean sections is not the only impact that the programme has deployed. 

    A key component of CEmONC is upgrading healthcare infrastructure to ensure better service delivery. 40 percent of Level 1 primary health facilities are being upgraded to Level 2, enabling them to provide integrated sexual and reproductive health services, including family planning and post-abortion care. Furthermore, in 2024, more than 60,000 frontline health workers were trained for full-scale SRH services, and another 60,000 will be trained in 2025. All these activities represent comprehensive work regarding maternal health, striking at the very roots of maternal mortality and strengthening the general healthcare system.

    With these achievements, it is astounding how The Guardian went out of its way to selectively expound the delays in behavioural change campaigns and the initial glitch in implementation to make a point of failure. Such challenges are not new and are expectant in the case of most large-scale intervention initiatives that take multiple stakeholders’ coordination. Rather, the huge strides taken in such a short time and the fact that this could save millions of lives if supported properly should be what people should focus on rather than dwelling on some temporary setbacks.

    Unfortunately, it is sad to think that The Guardian, a newspaper with a history and reputation for balanced and fact-based reporting, would publish an article seemingly without proper research and nuance. Journalism is important to hold institutions accountable and spur public debate, but even then, it needs to be pegged on truth and fairness. Misleading narratives of such an important initiative as CEmONC risk undermining public confidence and preventing potential beneficiaries from seeking life-saving care. This is dire, in that misinformation moves fast in the country and spreads with real-life consequences among the most vulnerable populations.

    The most important focus of the CEmONC programme is on the five causes of maternal deaths in Nigeria: haemorrhage, preeclampsia, sepsis, post-abortion complications, and obstructed labour. It offers a lifeline to poor women who cannot afford to pay for the full cost of treatment. This is, in all honesty, a bold and highly commendable decision on the part of the federal government—a step that should be collectively supported by stakeholders, including the media, civil society, and health professionals.

    Read Also: Lagos govt partners firm on maternal health

    Crucially, the programme requires more awareness among the public for successful implementation. More families should be made aware that financial constraints need not stand in the way of life-saving obstetric care. Similarly, health workers and administrators should be properly informed and equipped with the necessary knowledge and skills to implement the programme. Constructive criticism by the media may prove extremely useful in pointing out deficiencies that need to be attended to, but this should be done responsibly, factually, and without sensationalism.

    Moreover, a tighter policy should be established to constrict the spread of misinformation through any conventional media or digital platforms. The damage caused by such incorrect reporting does not lie only in making wrong perceptions among the masses, but it can also hamper the efforts of the policymakers and healthcare providers who relentlessly work on programmes like CEmONC. At a time when Nigeria is striving to join the comity of nations in attaining the Sustainable Development Goal of reducing maternal mortality to less than 70 deaths per 100,000 live births by 2030, the media should be a partner in progress and not a promoter of undue cynicism.

    The CEmONC programme, therefore, marks a major milestone in Nigeria’s quest to stem the tide of maternal mortality and harness quality healthcare for its citizens. It is anything but the “gargantuan failure” as described by the Guardian report. Rather, it is a work in progress that has indeed started yielding fruits and holds so much promise for the future. I, therefore, call on all Nigerians, particularly the media, to give this initiative all the support it deserves to succeed.

    • Ademiluyi, a health journalist and columnist, wrote from Lagos
  • The ‘Gregorian’ Chief Bode Emanuel is gone!

    The ‘Gregorian’ Chief Bode Emanuel is gone!

    • By Bashorun J.K. Randle

    For well over a decade, Chief Bode Emanuel and Professor Theo Ogunbiyi the eminent surgeon (both of them were old boys of St. Gregory’s College, Obalende, Lagos) and I would converge on Monday evenings at the Basilica Lounge of the Yoruba Tennis Club, Onikan, Lago which is at a tangent to the Chief J.K. Randle Memorial Hall).

    Tuesday afternoon we would reconvene at the Metropolitan Club, Victoria Island for lunch.  Come Friday evening, we would savour our marathon session at the Lagos Motor Boat Club, Awolowo Road, Lagos.  This would last until well after midnight. 

    On Sunday afternoon, we would be back at the Lagos Motor Boat Club.

    Not in my wildest imagination did it occur to me that the leisurely routine of heated and long “Gregorians” and myself (an old boy of King’s College, Lagos) could be summarily punctured by the abrupt and fatal defection of Chief Bode Emanuel.

    Even our lunches or dinners in London followed the same patterns of jousting and vigorous disputations over which of the two colleges had provided enduring service and commitment to excellence in the interest of our beloved nation.  Matters did not end there.  Rather, we would stray into history, economics, governance, public policy, religion etc.  Eventually, we would revert to the eternal rivalry between St. Gregory’s College and King’s College – in athletics, cricket, football, patriotism, academics etc.

    Chief Bode Emanuel and Professor Theo Ogunbiyi were childhood friends and are separated in age by only ten days.  Perhaps, it was inevitable that they were allies.  Regardless, no matter how robustly they stood their ground I would never concede or surrender.  I thoroughly enjoyed those encounters and I suspect they did too.

    Read Also: How Adesoye College shaped my life

    On virtually every subject are under the sun, Chief Bode Emanuel and I had divergent views.  It made no difference that both of us are Chartered Accountants.  He quit the profession early to venture into business – Oil and gas; insurance; construction; publishing, telecommunications and property development, etc.

    He made a huge success of them all – as an entrepreneur and Board Room guru.  The long list of companies of which he was the chairman is only matched by those in which he was a Director or significant shareholder.  His business interests vaulted beyond the borders of Nigeria into Europe – UK; France; Italy etc.  He worked hard and played even harder.  His hospitality was legendary; but COVID-19 derailed his superlative annual Christmas party where guests readily succumbed to excellent food, fine wines and the best of champagne in a soporific and convivial environment combined with a huge dose of classical music, even moslem guests joined merrily in singing Christmas Carols.

    He loved to go on cruises and savour exotic musical adventures in London, Paris, Milan, Vienna, etc.  Nothing but the best of the best was good enough.  He lived his life to the fullest.  Indeed, he was a man of the world.  Critics and admirers alike could not but agree on a point of convergence –  he was larger than life !

    His taste in choice of restaurants in any part of the world was matchless and flawless.

    Over the years, he had amassed a huge collection of rare artworks – paintings and sculptures by Ben Enwowu, Yusuf Grillo and other masters.   I shall not be surprised if he has one or two Piccasos.

    Also, he was an avid reader and his vast library attests to his cerebral and eclectic disposition and intellectual curiosity.  He was until his death the Chairman of Macmillan – publishers of mostly textbooks for schools and universities, as well as plays and novels.

    There are of course aspects of his life which are strictly his private affair and judgment.  In his early life he carried the sobriquet “White Charger” with wry humour and bravado.  That was a long time ago.

    In recent years, he clung firmly to his catholic faith and was undoubtedly a pillar of CFS (Catholic Friendly Society) and numerous other societies which are far too many to be mentioned.  However, at the top of the list was St. Gregory’s College Old Boys’ Association !!

  • January 15th 1966: A morning of murder, mayhem and carnage

    January 15th 1966: A morning of murder, mayhem and carnage

    In the early hours of the morning  of January 15th 1966 a coup d’etat took place in Nigeria which resulted in the murder of a number of leading political figures and senior army officers.

    This was the first coup in the history of our country and 98 per cent of the officers that planned and led it were from a particular ethnic nationality in the country.

    According to Max Siollun, a notable and respected historian whose primary source of information was the Police report compiled by the Police’s Special Branch after the failure of the coup, during the course of the investigation and after the mutineers had been arrested and detained, names of the leaders of the mutiny were as follows:

    Major Emmanuel Arinze Ifeajuna,

    Major Chukwuemeka Kaduna Nzeogwu,

    Major Chris Anuforo,

    Major Tim Onwutuegwu,

    Major Chudi Sokei,

    Major Adewale Ademoyega,

    Major Don Okafor,

    Major John Obieno,

    Captain Ben Gbuli,

    Captain Emmanuel Nwobosi,

    Captain Chukwuka,

    and Lt. Oguchi.

    It is important to point out that I saw the Special Branch report myself and I can confirm Siollun’s findings.

    These were indeed the names of ALL the leaders of the January 15th 1966 mutiny and all other lists are FAKE.

    The names of those that they murdered in cold blood or abducted were as follows.

    Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, the Prime Minister of Nigeria (murdered),

    Sir Ahmadu Bello, the Sardauna of Sokoto and the Premier of the Old Northern Region (murdered),

    Sir Kashim Ibrahim, the Shettima of Borno and the Governor of the Old Northern Region (abducted),

    Chief Samuel Ladoke Akintola, the Aare Ana Kakanfo of Yorubaland and the Premier of the Old Western Region (murdered),

    Chief Remilekun Adetokunboh Fani-Kayode Q.C., the Balogun of Ife, the Deputy Premier of the Old Western Region and my beloved father (abducted),

    Chief Festus Samuel Okotie-Eboh, the Oguwa of the Itsekiris and the Minister of Finance of Nigeria (murdered),

    Brigadier Samuel Adesujo Ademulegun, Commander of the 1st Brigade, Nigerian Army (murdered),

    Brigadier Zakariya Maimalari, Commander of the 2nd Brigade, Nigerian Army (murdered),

    Colonel James Pam (murdered),

    Colonel Ralph Sodeinde (murdered),

    Colonel Arthur Unegbe (murdered),

    Colonel Kur Mohammed (murdered),

    Lt. Colonel Abogo Largema (murdered),

    Alhaja Hafsatu Bello, the wife of the Sardauna of Sokoto (murdered),

    Alhaji Zarumi, traditional bodyguard of the Sardauna of Sokoto (murdered),

    Mrs. Lateefat Ademulegun, the wife of Brigadier Ademulegun who was 8 months pregnant at the time (murdered),

    Ahmed B. Musa (murdered),

    Ahmed Pategi (murdered),

    Sgt. Daramola Oyegoke (murdered),

    Police Constable Yohana Garkawa (murdered),

    Police Constable Musa Nimzo (murdered),

    Police Constable Akpan Anduka (murdered),

    Police Constable Hagai Lai (murdered),

    and Police Constable Philip Lewande (murdered).

    In order to reflect the callousness of the mutineers permit me to share under what circumstances some of their victims were murdered and abducted.

    Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa was abducted from his home, beaten, mocked, tortured, forced to drink alcohol, humiliated and murdered after which his body was dumped in a bush along the Lagos-Abeokuta road.

    Sir Ahmadu Bello was killed in the sanctity of his own home with his wife Hafsatu and his loyal security assistant Zurumi.

    Zurumi drew his sword to defend his principal whilst Hafsatu threw her body over her dear husband in an attempt to protect him from the bullets.

    Chief S. L. Akintola was gunned down as he stepped out of his house in the presence of his family and Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh was beaten, brutalised, abducted from his home, maimed and murdered and his body was dumped in a bush.

    Brigadier Zakariya Maimalari had held a cocktail party in his home  the evening before which was attended by some of the young officers that went back to his house early the following morning and murdered him.

    Brigadier Samuel Ademulegun was shot to death at home, in his bedroom and in his matrimonial bed along with his eight-month pregnant wife Lateefat.

    Colonel Shodeinde was murdered in Ikoyi hotel whilst Col. Pam was abducted from his home and murdered in a bush.

    Most of the individuals that were killed that morning were subjected to a degree of humiliation, shame and torture that was so horrendous that I am constrained to decline from sharing them in this contribution.

    The mutineers came to our home as well which at that time was the official residence of the Deputy Premier of the Old Western Region and which remains there till today.

    After storming our house and almost killing my brother, sister and me, they beat, brutalised and abducted my father Chief Remi Fani-Kayode. 

    What I witnessed that morning was traumatic and devastating and, of course, what the entire nation witnessed was horrific.

    It was a morning of carnage, barbarity and terror.

    Those events set in motion a cycle of carnage which changed our entire history and the consequences remain with us till this day.

    It was a sad and terrible morning and one of blood and slaughter.

    My recollection of the events in our home is as follows.

    At around 2.00 a.m. my mother, Mrs. Adia Aduni Fani-Kayode, came into the bedroom which I shared with my older brother, Rotimi and my younger sister Toyin. I was six years old at the time.

    The lights had been cut off by the mutineers so we were in complete darkness and all we could see and hear were the headlights from three or four large and heavy trucks with big loud engines.

    The official residence of the Deputy Premier had a very long drive so it took the vehicles a while to reach us.

    We saw four sets of headlights and heard the engines of four lorries drive up the drive-way.

    The occupants of the lorries, who were uniformed men who carried torches, positioned themselves and prepared to storm our home whilst calling my fathers name and ordering him to come out.

    My father courageously went out to meet them after he had called us together, prayed for us and explained to us that since it was him they wanted he must go out there.

    He explained that he would rather go out to meet them and, if necessary, meet his death than let them come into the house to shoot or harm us all.

    The minute he stepped out they brutalised him. I witnessed this. They beat him, tied him up and threw him into one of the lorries.

    The first thing they said to him as he stepped out was “where are your thugs now Fani-Power?”

    My father’s response was typical of him, sharp and to the point. He said, “I don’t have thugs, only gentlemen.”

    I think this annoyed them and made them brutalise him even more. They tied him up, threw him in the back of the lorry and then stormed the house.

    When they got into the house they ransacked every nook and cranny, shooting into the ceiling and wardrobes.

    They were very brutal and frightful and we were terrified.

    My mother was screaming and crying from the balcony because all she could do was focus on her husband who was in the back of the truck downstairs. There is little doubt that she loved him more than life itself.

    “Don’t kill him, don’t kill him!!” she kept screaming at them. I can still visualise this and hear her voice pleading, screaming and crying.

    I didn’t know where my brother or sister were at this point because the house was in total chaos.

    I was just six years old and I was standing there in the middle of the passage upstairs in the house by my parents bedroom, surrounded by uniformed men who were ransacking the whole place and terrorising my family.

    Then out of the blue something extraordinary happened. All of a sudden one of the soldiers came up to me, put his hand on my head and said: “don’t worry, we won’t kill your father, stop crying.”

    He said this to me three times. After he said it the third time I looked in his eyes and I stopped crying.

    This was because he gave me hope and he spoke with kindness and compassion. At that point all the fear and trepidation left me.

    With new-found confidence I went rushing to my mother who was still screaming on the balcony and told her to stop crying because the soldier had promised that they would not kill my father and that everything would be okay.

    I held on to the words of that soldier and that morning, despite all that was going on around me, I never cried again.

    Four years ago when he was still alive I made contact with and spoke to Captain Nwobosi, the mutineer who led the team to our house and that led the Ibadan operation that night about these events.

    He confirmed my recollection of what happened in our house saying that he remembered listening to my mother screaming and watching me cry.

    He claimed that he was the officer that had comforted me and assured me that my father would not be killed.

    I have no way of confirming if it was really him but I have no reason to doubt his words.

    He later asked me to write the foreword of his book which sadly he never launched or released because he passed away a few months later.

    The mutineers took my father away and as the lorry drove off my mother kept on wailing and crying and so was everyone else in the house except for me.

    From there they went to the home of Chief S.L. Akintola a great statesman and nationalist and a very dear uncle of mine.

    My mother had phoned Akintola to inform him of what had happened in our home.

    She was sceaming down the phone asking where her husband had been taken and by this time she was quite hysterical.

    Chief Akintola tried to calm her down assuring her that all would be well.

    When they got to Akintola’s house he already knew that they were coming and he was prepared for them.

    Instead of coming out to meet them, he had stationed some of his policemen inside the house and they started shooting.

    A gun battle ensued and consequently the mutineers were delayed by at least one hour.

    According to the Special Branch reports and the official statements of the mutineers that survived that night and that were involved in the operation their plan had been to pick up my father and Chief Akintola from their homes in Ibadan, take them to Lagos, gather them together with the other political leaders that had been abducted and then execute them all together.

    The difficulty they had was that Akintola resisted them and he and his policemen ended up wounding two of the soldiers that came to his home.

    One of the soldiers, whose name was apparently James, had his fingers blown off and the other had his ear blown off.

    After some time Akintola’s ammunition ran out and the shooting stopped.

    His policemen stood down and they surrendered. He came out waving a white handkerchief and the minute he stepped out they just slaughtered him.

    My father witnessed Akintola’s cold-blooded murder in utter shock, disbelief and horror because he was tied up in the back of the lorry from where he could see everything that transpired.

    The soldiers were apparently enraged by the fact that two of their men had been wounded and that Akintola resisted and delayed them.

    After they killed him they moved on to Lagos with my father.

    When they got there they drove to the Officer’s Mess at Dodan Barracks in Ikoyi where they tied him up, sat him on the floor of a room, and placed him under close arrest by surrounding him with six very hostile and abusive soldiers.

    Thankfully about two hours later he was rescued, after a dramatic gun battle, by loyalist troops led by one Lt. Tokida who stormed the room with his men and who was under the command of Captain Paul Tarfa (as he then was).

    They had been ordered to free my father by Lt. Col. Yakubu Gowon who was still in control of the majority of troops in Dodan Barracks and who remained loyal to the Federal Government.

    Bullets flew everywhere in the room during the gunfight that ensued whilst my father was tied up in the middle of the floor with no cover. All that yet not one bullet touched him!

    This was clearly the Finger of God and once again divine providence as under normal circumstances few could have escaped or survived such an encounter without being killed either by direct fire or a stray bullet. For this I give God the glory.

    Meanwhile three of the soldiers that had tied my father up and placed him under guard in that room were killed right before his eyes and two of Takoda’s  troops that stormed the room to save him lost their lives in the encounter.

    At this point permit me to mention the fact that outside of my father, providence also smiled favourably upon and delivered Sir Kashim Ibrahim, the Shettima of Borno and the Governor of the Old Northern Region from death that morning.

    He was abducted from his home in Kaduna by the mutineers but was later rescued by loyalist troops.

    When the mutineers took my father away everyone in our home thought he had been killed.

    The next morning a handful of policemen came and took us to the house of my mother’s first cousin, Justice Atanda Fatai-Williams, who was a judge of the Western Region at the time. He later became the Chief Justice of Nigeria.

    From there we were taken to the home of Justice Adenekan Ademola, another High Court judge at the time, who was a very close friend of my father and who later became a Judge of the Court of Appeal.

    At this point the whole country had been thrown into confusion and no one knew what was going on.

    We heard lots of stories and did not know what to make of what anymore. There was chaos and confusion and the entire nation was gripped by fear.

    Two days later my father finally called us on the telephone and he told us that he was okay.

    When we heard his voice, I kept telling my mother “I told you, I told you.”

    Justice Ademola and his dear wife who was my mother’s best friend, a Ghanian lady by the name of Aunty Frances, were weeping witgh joy.

    Read Also: JANUARY 15th 1966: A MORNING OF MURDER, MAYHEM AND CARNAGE by Chief Femi Fani-Kayode.

    My mother was also weeping as were my brother and sister and I just kept rejoicing because I knew that he would not be killed and I had told them all.

    I believe that whoever that soldier was that promised me that my father would not be killed was used by God to convey a message to me that morning even in the midst of the mayhem and fear. I believe that God spoke through him that night.

    Whoever he was the man spoke with confidence and authority and this constrains me to believe that he was a commissioned officer or a man in authority.

    The mutineers who carried out the coup were not alone: they got backing from key Igbo leaders who conspired and secretly identified with them.

    This was obvious from the way that Igbo leaders like Chief Michael Opara (the Premier of the Old Eastern Region), Owelle Nnamdi Azikiwe (the ceremonial President of Nigeria who was Major Ifeajuna’s cousin), Chief Nwafor Orizu (the Senate President), Chief Kingsley Ozumba Mbadiwe (Minister of Trade and Communications) and so many others behaved before, during and after the mutiny.

    I shall elaborate on this in another contribution as time and space will not permit me to do so here.

    To further shed light on this point it is pertinent to note that not one Igbo politician was killed that day by the mutineers and there is evidence to suggest that every Igbo military officer (including General Aguyi Ironsi) was actually tipped off and spared with the exception of Major Unegbe who refused to cooperate with the rebels and give them the keys to the armoury. They shot him dead because of it.

    On that day political leaders from every single one of the six zones of Nigeria except for the East were targetted and murdered.

    This is not a coincidence and in my view it was contrived.

    Some have said that it was an Igbo coup whilst others have said that it was an UPGA (referring to the political alliance between the Action Group and the NCNC) coup but that is a story for another day.

    Whatever anyone calls it or believes two things are clear: the consequences of the action that those young Igbo officers took that night were far-reaching and the way and manner in which they killed their victims was deplorable and barbaric.

    Such savagery had never been witnessed in our shores. There has never been another night like that and the results of that night have been devastating and profound.

    In my view not enough Nigerians appreciate this fact.

    Some in our country cannot forgive those who participated in the mutiny and though I do not share that sentiment or disposition this is understandable.

    Others believe that those young men (they were all in their 20’s) did the right thing and claim that those killings were necessary and heroic.

    This is a sentiment which I not only despise but which I also find unacceptable and appalling.

    There is nothing heroic about rebellion and the cold blooded murder of innocent and defenceless men and women.

    The coup affected the country in an equally profound manner because the events of that night led to a counter-coup six months later. It was a devastating and disproportionate response.

    Sadly after that came the horrendous pogroms and slaughter of the Igbo in the North which eventually led to the civil war in which millions of people died, including innocent children. This was also horrendous and deplorable.

    Yet the bitter truth is that if the new Head of State, General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi who himself happened to be Igbo, had done the right thing and actually prosecuted the ringleaders of the coup namely Major Kaduna Nzeogwu, Major Anufuro, Major Ademoyega, Major Timothy Onwuatuegwu, Captain Emmanuel Nwobosi, Captain Okafor, Captain Ben Gbulie and all the other young officers that planned and executed the mutiny of January 15th 1966 after it was crushed, there would have been no northern revenge coup six months later.

    I have not added Major Emmanuel Ifeajuna (who was actually the leader of the coup) to the list because he could not have been locked up or prosecuted by General Aguiy-Ironsi simply because he ran away to Ghana immediately after the mutiny in Lagos failed and after he and his co-mutineers were routed by Lt. Col. Jack Yakubu Gowon and his gallant officers.

    For some curious reason after the coup was successfully crushed, General Aguiyi-Ironsi just locked these young mutineers up and he refused to prosecute them.

    This bred suspicion from the ranks of the northern officers given the fact that Aguiyi-Ironsi himself was an Igbo.

    The suspicion was that he had some level of sympathy for the mutineers and the fact that they did not kill him during the course of the mutiny only fuelled that suspicion.

    The northern officers also felt deeply aggrieved about the wholesale slaughter of their key political figures that night.

    In my view that, together with Aguiyi-Ironsi’s insistence on promulgating the Unification Decree which abolished the federal system of government and sought to turn Nigeria into a unitary state, made the revenge coup of July 29th 1966 inevitable.

    The revenge coup was planned and led by Major Murtala Ramat Mohammed (as he then was) and it was supported and executed by other young northern officers like Major T.Y. Danjuma (as he then was), Major Martins Adamu and many others.

    This is the coup that was to put Lt. Colonel Jack Gowon (as he then was) in power and when they struck it was a very bloody and brutal affair.

    The response of the northern officers to the mutiny and terrible killings that took place on the night of January 15th 1966 and to General Aguiyi-Ironsi’s apparent procrastination and reluctance to ensure that justice was served to the mutineers was not only devastating but also frightful.

    300 hundred Army officers of Igbo extraction who were perceived to be sympathetic to the January 15th mutineers were killed that night including the Head of State General Aguiyi-Ironsi and the Military Governor of the old Western Region who was hosting him and had refused to abandon him, the courageous Colonel Adekunle Fajuyi. This was sad and unfortunate.

    What happened on the night of January 15th 1966 was indefensible, unjustifiable, unacceptable, unnecessary, unprovoked and utterly barbaric.

    I beg to differ with those that believe  that there was anything good about such a mutinous bloodbath and this is especially so given the fact that it was carried out by a small handful of ungrateful, cowardly and treacherous men.

    Blood calls for blood: when you shed blood, other people want to shed your own blood as well and sadly this is the way of the world.

    The minute the shedding of blood in the quest of power becomes the norm we are all diminished and dehumanised: and this applies to both the perpetrators and the victims.

    The January 15th coup set off a cycle of events which had cataclysmic consequences for our country and which we are still reeling from today.

    I repeat with greater detail, this included the Northern ‘revenge’ coup of July 29th 1966 in which 300 Igbo officers and an Igbo Head of State (Gen. Aguyi-Ironsi) were killed, the pogroms and mass murder in the North in which over 30,000 Igbo civilians were killed and a civil war in which 3 million Igbos (including 1 million children) and hundreds of thousands of Nigerians were exterminated and cut short.

    What a tragedy!

    Coups may have happened in other countries in Africa but that did not mean that it had to happen here.

    In any case the amount of blood that was shed on the morning of January 15th 1966 and the number of innocent people that were killed was unacceptable.

    It arrested our development as a people and our political evolution as a country.

    Had it not happened our history would have been very different. May we never see such a thing again.

    Yet regardless of the pain of the past I believe that we should do all we can to put these matters behind us.

    We must not allow ourselves to become prisoners of history. Rather than being propelled by pain and bitterness and becoming victims of history, we must learn from it, be guided by it and move on.

    We must learn to forgive, even if we do not forget and, equally importantly, we must first establish the truth about those ugly events and understand what actually transpired.

    What happened that night traumatised the nation. None of us has been the same since.

    I can identify with that because I was a part of it, I witnessed it and i was a victim of it.

    Yet by God’s grace and divine providence my father’s life was spared: not because he was special but simply by the grace of God.

    Every day I think about those that were killed that night and I remember their families.

    We share a common bond and we are all partakers of an ugly and frightful history.

    I tell myself: “were it not for divine providence, my father would have also died and I would not have been what I am today, because he was the one who educated me and did everything for me.”

    If nothing else I know there was a purpose for that.

    We must resolve among ourselves that never again will people be attacked in their homes, dragged out, abducted and shot like dogs in the middle of the night.

    Never again will women, wives,  children and the unborn be slaughtered in this way.

    Never again shall we witness such barbarity and wickedness in our quest for power.

    Never again must any Nigerian suffer such brutality and callousness.

    May the souls of all those that were murdered on January 15th 1966 continue to rest in peace and may God make Nigeria great again.

    • (Chief Femi Fani-Kayode is the Sadaukin Shinkafi, the Wakilin Doka Potiskum, a former Minister of Culture and Tourism of Nigeria and a former Minister of Aviation of Nigeria)
  • Climate Change: The ongoing global initiatives that will shape our lives in years to come

    Climate Change: The ongoing global initiatives that will shape our lives in years to come

    • By Adebayo Adeleye

    Climate change is one of the most pressing issues of our time, with far-reaching consequences for our planet and its inhabitants. Rising global temperatures, melting ice caps, and extreme weather events are just a few of the devastating impacts of climate change. However, there is hope. Governments, organizations, and individuals around the world are coming together to combat climate change through various initiatives. In this article, we will explore some of the ongoing global initiatives that will shape our lives in years to come.

    The Paris Agreement: The Paris Agreement is an international accord that aims to limit global warming to well below 2°C and pursue efforts to limit it to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. The agreement, which was adopted in 2015, has been ratified by over 180 countries and is considered a landmark achievement in the fight against climate change.

    Renewable Energy Initiatives: Renewable energy is a crucial component in the fight against climate change. Governments and organizations around the world are investing heavily in renewable energy sources such as solar, wind, and hydroelectric power. For example, the European Union has set a target of generating at least 32% of its energy from renewable sources by 2030.

    Electric Vehicle Initiatives: Electric vehicles (EVs) are becoming increasingly popular as governments and organizations encourage their adoption. Many countries have set targets for EV adoption, with Norway aiming to have all new cars sold be electric by 2025. Additionally, companies like Tesla, Volkswagen, and General Motors are investing heavily in EV technology.

    Carbon Pricing Initiatives: Carbon pricing is a mechanism that puts a cost on carbon emissions, providing a financial incentive for companies and individuals to reduce their emissions. Many countries have implemented or are planning to implement carbon pricing mechanisms, including carbon taxes and cap-and-trade systems.

    Read Also: Climate Change: Methods of predictions and cases of climate change-related disasters

    Sustainable Land Use Initiatives: Sustainable land use is critical for mitigating climate change. Initiatives such as reforestation, afforestation, and sustainable agriculture practices are being implemented around the world. For example, the Trillion Tree Campaign aims to plant, restore, and conserve 1 trillion trees by 2050.

    Climate-Resilient Infrastructure Initiatives: Climate-resilient infrastructure is critical for protecting communities from the impacts of climate change. Initiatives such as sea walls, levees, and green roofs are being implemented around the world. For example, the Netherlands is investing heavily in flood protection measures, including the construction of sea walls and levees.

    Climate Change Education and Awareness Initiatives: Climate change education and awareness are critical for inspiring individual and collective action. Initiatives such as climate change education programs, awareness campaigns, and community outreach programs are being implemented around the world. For example, the Climate Reality Project, founded by Al Gore, provides climate change education and training programs for individuals around the world.

    Conclusion Climate change is a pressing global issue that requires immediate attention and action. The ongoing global initiatives discussed in this article demonstrate the commitment of governments, organizations, and individuals to combating climate change. As we move forward, it is essential that we continue to support and expand these initiatives, inspiring individual and collective action to mitigate the impacts of climate change and create a more sustainable future for all.

    • Dr. Adebayo Matthew, Adeleye (Ph.D., Ibadan) Researcher on Environmental Pollution and Control badeleye@gmail.com  +234 803 525 6450
  • Lessons from Ghana

    Lessons from Ghana

    Nigeria’s self-proclaimed status as the ‘Giant of Africa’ is being questioned once again, and a recent example from Ghana highlights this reality. The ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP) in Ghana conceded defeat even before the polls closed, showcasing a level of democratic maturity. This incident serves as a reminder that Nigeria’s claim to being a giant may not be entirely justified, considering factors beyond mere size or population.

    To begin with, a lot of what happened in Ghana was a stark and painful reminder that Nigeria is not a competitive political economy. The sooner we face this reality, the better! Ghana’s ruling party, the NPP, was ready to concede defeat, even before the polls closed, because its own exit polls had shown that the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) was already having a massive, irreversible lead in the voting.

    The key issue is that you must have a competitive economy to even measure the temperature of exit polls. A country must have data to have exit polls. So, which exit polls do we have in Nigeria and why do we not have exit polls? The modern economy is data-driven, and it is clear that Nigeria’s economy is not data-driven. This is the key fault-line that must be urgently rectified in order to build a proper economy with the condition of today’s world.

    Fundamentally, the Electoral Commission of Ghana (EC) was transparently independent of the ruling party. This reality was accepted as an incontestable fact by both the political and the civil society organizations. The EC Head, like Caesar’s wife, was above board. Even in the parliamentary constituencies, nobody is talking about ‘going to court’. It is ironic that the Head of Nigeria’s Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was in Ghana and one hopes that he’d publish the full report of his assessment of the electoral process, including the collation and transmission or results.

    Just as the EC demonstrated its independence, elections also serve as crucial indicators of a nation’s economic stability. An election is not just about the rights of voters in a democracy, it is also a signal to credit analysts as well as potential investors about the fundamental structure, orientation and competitiveness of a nation’s economy. Very importantly, it is about the stability of its institutions. In every electoral cycle, a country sends out signals about its economic stability in the short-, medium-, and long-term. Elections are actually very key economic indicators!

    Ghana is different from Nigeria because its two major political parties – the NDC and the NPP – are institutional memories of Ghana’s political history, going back to the days of the Gold Coast before the country was renamed as Ghana. The two political parties represent the split in 1949 from the original nationalist movement. The NDC represents the ideological fervor of the younger elements such as Archie Casely-Hayford, Kwameh Nkrumah and others, who left to form the more progressive-oriented Convention People’s Party (CPP). The NPP represents the more conservative elements such as J.B. Danquah, Joe Appiah and others, who stayed with the conservative tendency. This ideological divide, in one shape or another, has dominated and continues to be the central thrust of Ghana’s politics from 1949 till today. This is why we do not have people decamping from party to party.

    Read Aso: Africa’s coming of age and Nigeria-Ghana’s example

    In 8 years in the opposition party, we did not hear of any notable, even inconsequential decampees from the NDC to the ruling NPP. You can place a safe bet that nobody is going to decamp from the NPP to the now-ruling NDC in the next four years. This is because, unlike in Nigeria, the ideological basis upon which politics is anchored is very well-structured and institutionalized. We may care to ask ourselves: ‘What institutional memories and values, shaped by over 80 years of history, do Nigeria’s major political parties – APC, PDP, Labour Party, and others – truly represent? Yes, there’s poverty in Ghana, but this has not led to people jumping from party to party, looking for something to eat!

    A closer look at Mexico’s political landscape is instructive. The country’s political parties, like the Institutional Revolutionary Party (Partido Revolucionario Institucional, PRI), and the National Action Party (Partido Acción Nacional, PAN), are more than just parties – they’re movements with deep roots. If a local councilor defects, it’s front-page news. These parties even have their own banks, offering loans to members. In Nigeria, where is the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) Bank and where is the All Progressives Congress (APC) Hospital? This disparity highlights Nigeria’s struggles with building robust, ideologically-driven political parties.

    Similarly, in Nigeria, the absence of robust research departments in political parties hinders their ability to drive effective governance. A proper political party must have a Research Department. It is the fruit of research over the years that leads to effective governance. When they were in opposition in Brazil, the Workers’ Party (Partido dos Trabalhadores, PT) simulated the building of affordable housing on a mass scale for low income people to purchase on a monthly rent-to-home basis. By the time they came into office, they had worked out cost-effective, mass housing construction solutions, based on local materials.

    In 8 years in office, they built 1,000,000 affordable housing units per year and, in the process pulled millions of people out of poverty, created generational wealth and built enduring social capital. To be honest, the Lagos Executive Development Board (LEDB) in the 1950s, and Lateef Jakande in the early 1980s, were also on this trajectory. Unfortunately, no political party since then has imbibed the institutional memory to build upon them.

    What Ghana, Mexico, South Africa and Brazil, even India have shown is that Nigeria needs solidly-structured, ideologically-cohesive and data-driven political parties to have real, sustainable development as opposed to booty-sharing which inevitably leads to unsustainable cost of governance. We had better consider the consequences of a country spending more on debt servicing than investments in education and health, and how this affects sustainable development. This is bizarre! It defies commonsense and it’s not aligned to any known model of economic development!

    The success of the transfer of power in Ghana should be for us in Nigeria an opportunity for introspection and very sober reflection. It should also be a wakeup call to reboot our political process in order to regain international competitiveness. International competitiveness is now make-or-break, with Trump 2.0 manifesting itself on January 20! This should be taken as a warning! The problem with our political leaders in Nigeria is that they don’t invest in the institutions or people, but in themselves. Of course, that’s why they don’t quit, resign or retire but, like water, at the mercy of temperature, they move from one state of coldness to another of hotness. They undergo constant transformation, yet remain inherently unchanged.

    Like a butterfly flitting from flower to flower in search of nectar, these leaders move from one position of power to another, leaving behind a trail of fake promises and superficial solutions. This self-serving approach is rooted in a deeper societal issue – a culture of entitlement and lack of accountability – which perpetuates the suffering of a people whose promise has been aborted, at the hands of “hypocritical praise singers and men with hardened hearts and closed ears” who “believe in nothing but their own voices of lies.”

    This self-serving approach has far-reaching consequences, as evident in the 2023 presidential election, where the IReV Portal lost its authentic ring. Who knows what aspect of our fragile democratic processes will “succumb to the tempting froth from the cup of politics” in 2027?

    May the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world, grant us peace in Nigeria!

  • Fortunes and foresight: Ogun’s journey with trillion naira budget

    Fortunes and foresight: Ogun’s journey with trillion naira budget

    • By Kunle Somorin

    Nigeria’s national budget surpassed the trillion-naira mark in 2011, a milestone that underscored the country’s fiscal growth and economic development. Fast forward to the present, Ogun State has joined the esteemed ranks of Lagos and Rivers, boasting a budget estimate of N1.054 trillion. This ambitious “Budget of Hope and Prosperity” is designed to consolidate the administration’s achievements and drive development across various sectors.

    Ogun State’s trillion-naira budget is a testament to the state government’s commitment to addressing infrastructural deficits, enhancing social welfare, and promoting economic growth. The budget’s substantial increase from previous years indicates the state’s ambitions to accelerate development and improve residents’ quality of life. Significant allocations have been earmarked for key sectors such as education, health, housing, community development, and agriculture/industry.

    In the realm of education, the state has allocated N177.835 billion. This funding is expected to revolutionize the educational infrastructure, providing modern facilities, and improving the overall learning environment. The emphasis on education highlights the administration’s understanding that a well-educated populace is crucial for sustained development.

    The health sector is set to receive N134.538 billion. This allocation aims to enhance the state’s healthcare system, ensuring that residents have access to quality medical services. By investing in healthcare, the state hopes to improve life expectancy and quality of life, making health a cornerstone of its developmental agenda.

    Infrastructure, the backbone of any growing economy, has been allocated N284.4 billion. The governor’s focus on reconstructing critical roads, such as the Lagos-Ota-Sango-Abeokuta road and the Akute-Ijoko road, is expected to enhance connectivity and access to essential services. These infrastructural projects are vital for facilitating efficient transportation and economic activities within the state.

    Housing and community development are also prioritized, with N66.382 billion set aside. This investment will not only address housing deficits but also promote community welfare and improve living standards. By focusing on housing, the state aims to create a conducive environment for its citizens, fostering a sense of belonging and stability.

    One of the most noteworthy projects under this budget is the Gateway Agro-Cargo International Airport, which is nearing completion. This airport is expected to significantly boost the state’s economy by providing job opportunities and enhancing agricultural exports. By creating a hub for agro-cargo, the state is positioning itself as a critical player in Nigeria’s agricultural value chain, which will have far-reaching economic benefits.

    However, while the budget’s priorities appear well-aligned with the needs of the population, several challenges must be addressed to ensure its successful implementation. The fluid nature of Nigeria’s political economy poses a significant threat to the budget’s projections. Fluctuations in oil prices, exchange rates, and inflation can impact the state’s revenue and expenditure plans, creating uncertainty that could hinder the achievement of the budget’s goals.

    Read Also: Will Naira volatility and inflation abate?

    A cornerstone of Ogun State’s ambitious budget is its increased Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) profile, which reached N240.24 billion in 2024. This impressive financial performance is crucial for supporting the state’s expansive budgetary commitments. However, debt sustainability remains a concern. With a substantial portion of the budget allocated to debt servicing, effective financial management and prudent borrowing practices are imperative. The state must balance its ambitious development plans with fiscal discipline to avoid compromising its long-term financial health.

    Ogun State’s trillion-naira budget presents a unique opportunity for growth and development. While challenges and concerns abound, the state government’s commitment to addressing infrastructural deficits, enhancing social welfare, and promoting economic growth is commendable. As the state embarks on this ambitious journey, it is essential to maintain financial stability, ensure debt sustainability, and promote transparency and accountability. By doing so, Ogun State can transform its aspirations into tangible benefits for its citizens and serve as a model for other states in Nigeria.

    In the heart of this ambitious journey lies the hope that Ogun State’s foresight will pave the way for enduring prosperity and set a benchmark for inclusive growth and development across Nigeria. The “Budget of Hope and Prosperity” is more than a financial plan; it is a beacon of ambition and vision, guiding the state towards a future of sustained development and collective well-being.

    • Somorin, former Chief Press Secretary to Governor Abiodun, writes from Crescent University, Abeokuta
  • Trump’s America, Nigeria and the world

    Trump’s America, Nigeria and the world

    By Sanya Onayoade

    The American democracy has always been the model for the Nigerian media, and by extension the country Nigeria. The US is too important to be ignored. It’s the only empire straddling the globe with power and might, with all the appurtenances of super privileges. They can’t be wrong dispensing democracy, an acclaimed representative governance system; foisting it on some weak countries and enforcing it on some ragtag leaders. It beggars logic that Nigeria was colonised by a parliamentary United Kingdom, but fused into the American presidentialism. It’s no brainer that an American president is the most powerful man in the world, and also deemed to be a bearer of freedom and diplomacy. 

    Since time immemorial, the Nigerian media had always glued to the international news media and worked the phones for expert opinions on each American election circle, drawing parallels with Nigerian systems and spewing analyses on how those crooked systems could straighten up to the adorable advanced democracy.  

    By the time Donald Trump settles in the White House, the United States would be grappling with democracy ideals and freedom of the press. Now is the time for the media and the political class in Nigeria and elsewhere in Africa to change the narrative. 

    Fela’s music is in sync with today’s reality. Teacher don’t teach me nonsense speaks to the impending fall of the global hegemony from the Olympian Heights, and we need not look in that direction for democratic patronage or reverence any longer.  

    Donald J Trump represents all that is undemocratic and apostate.

    In his book, The Age of Unreason, former British Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, dwelt on the crisis in democracy and capitalism. The book examined the rise of “populist nationalism” embodied by Donald Trump’s US presidential bid.

    “Capitalism and democracy is in crisis. The West is in retreat. The forces of populist nationalism and prejudice are on the rise, amplified by new technology. The likes of Donald Trump say to people, what the hell have you got to lose. The answer is, a lot. Peace, prosperity and security.”

    We have been severally warned by people of good conscience and leaders with foresight that Trump is not fit to be president; that he is fascist, vengeful and divisive. He is the first convicted felon to be elected as US president. He is unabashedly nepotistic, a misogynist, and the only president in history condescending to ableism (making fun of people with disabilities or nursing prejudice against them). 

    Americans and the world might have been saved the ugly theatrics of a Trump losing the election, because he had built up an empire of ‘fake elections’ and ‘fake results’ prior to the election and refused to accept any outcome that did not favour him. The joke was on the US electoral system, however robust it was in the past. From time immemorial, US election monitors and sitting presidents had always admonished African countries, and other Third World to obey people’s wishes and refrain from electoral malpractices or violence; following up with threat not accept results fraught with rigging in those countries or denying reapers of such electoral exercise access to the US. Imagine civil societies in those countries admonishing US to obey people’s wishes and refrain from rigging; and taunting that any US citizen involved in rigging would be denied access to their countries? Ridiculous, you may think, but the US 44th President Barack Obama may now redirect his admonition of African leaders: that Africa does not need strong men, but strong institutions. The truth is, Trump is a strong man attempting to weaken the country’s strong institutions.    

    He has severally called many heritage media outlets ‘fake news,’ calling for the licences of some media like NBC and ABC to be revoked. He has threatened CNN and Washington Post countless times. Reporters Without Borders, a media watchdog, claimed in its research findings that Trump verbally attacked media more than 100 times in the two months run-up to the election. He coaxed ABC for a $15 million defamation settlement and threatened to go after Jeff Bezos’ businesses if he didn’t rein in Washington Post’s criticisms. Bezos, the recent publisher, caved in, annulling the newspaper’s decades-long endorsement of a presidential candidate, which in the last campaign favoured the Democratic candidate Kamala Harris. The Post, which I visited as part of my fellowship in 2003, and which I hallowed for its heritage and journalistic excellence is now in reputational tatters; currently bearing the weight of a slew of retaliatory resignations including a recent one by a prodigious cartoonist whose illustration was dropped for depicting Bezos and some other tech giants cringing before the all-mighty Trump. The Pulitzer award winner, Ann Telnaes, who had been at The Washington Post since 2008, said: “In all that time I’ve never had a cartoon killed because of who or what I chose to aim my pen at, until now. The cartoon that was killed criticizes the billionaire tech and media chief executives who have been doing their best to curry favor with incoming President-elect Trump.” Besides the resignations, The Post lost an estimated 250,000 subscribers. 

    Trump had threatened to jail the no-holds-barred TV host Jimmy Kimmel and Mark Zuckerberg, founder of Facebook which yanked him off the platform for spreading insurrection during the invasion of the Capitol. His first time in the White House was a rough ride for the media, it’s going to be barbaric from January 20. 

    Kimmel said Americans had a choice between a prosecutor and a criminal, “they chose a criminal”. He said of the election day: “Terrible day for women, journalists, the physically challenged, for healthcare, poor people, also terrible time for those who voted blindly without knowing him.”

    Read Also: Chevron Nigeria reaffirms commitment to climate action, conservation

    He is historically black-hating, thumping up his familiar refrain during the last presidential debate that Black Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, were eating cats and dogs. He was sued in 1973 for refusing to rent apartments to black families. Several Black participants in The Apprentice, a reality TV floated by him expressed gross racial biases. His shithole reference to African countries and stereotyping Blacks as lazy are well documented. It’s no brainer that his Africa foreign policy would be hugely negative.

    A leader should inspire hope and trust. But Trump’s second coming is sending waves of anxiety and fears in a world already stressed with wars, hunger, deaths and disasters. World leaders are in unanimous panic attack right now because of the election of one man. Leaders in EU, North America, NATO, Africa and the Middle East are bracing up for a war-mongering and self-serving, impulsive and ill-mannered president. You are yet to take the levers of power, and you are already touting annexing Greenland, an autonomous territory of Denmark; Panama Canal owned by the sovereign country of Panama. You serially ridiculed a more respected prime minister of Canada, calling him Governor Trudeau and mouthing a self-serving rhetoric of making Canada the 51st state of US. He has been on a threat binge against numerous countries including Iran, Mexico.

    The privilege of the US as a superpower cannot be underrated. But countries of the world need to be unanimous and make concerted efforts in confronting the Trump threat lest their inaction or passivity breed another Hitler, and another World War.

    Africa needs not look unto today’s US as a repository of democratic conduct or judicial impartiality. The Western World have always sermonised against the vote-buying prevalent in Nigeria and other parts of Africa. But how do you explain the pro-Trump pre-election deals by the tech giants led by Elon Musk in anticipation of government contract patronage? African countries need to grow their own systems in consonance with local demands. In Trump’s America, Africa won’t be on the table.

    •Onayoade, journalist and brand consultant, is a Freedom House Fellow.

  • A ticking time bomb

    A ticking time bomb

     By Mike Kebonkwu

    It is good to hear when our leaders speak of Nigeria as one, united indivisible entity.  Yes, the Constitution also says so; but are we truly a united, indivisible entitle in the true sense of the word; in our acts and conducts? 

    Nigerians contest and win elections in countries abroad, especially in Europe and American countries where they are supposedly aliens.  Here in Nigeria, our elections are characterized by divisive, inflammatory rhetoric of deep ethno-religious dichotomy.  At the drop of a hat, we are chasing our neighbours to go back to their regions with equally same characterization and stereotyping. Our unity has been reduced to political sloganeering and media propaganda just about everything. We do not like the truth said about our real situation because it hurts. Our guiding political philosophy is, ‘see-no-evil and say-no- evil’. 

    The only united tribe in Nigeria is the political elite that is, just only for the purpose of sharing and allocating our resources to themselves.  They employ and deploy the masses as their ready tools for political negotiation.

    We are pretentious and live in denial, wearing the face of Janus just to enjoy the better of two worlds.   We parrot greatness of our country as if greatness is just synonymous with size and natural endowment in vast natural and human resources without more.  Yes, we have brilliant people in all fields of human endeavours doing well in science, medicine, business arts, etc.; especially those in Diaspora because they have the necessary platforms.  Bring them back to Nigeria, the eerie jinx in the system inflict them with virus.  There is deep-rooted institutionalized corruption that blossoms like the morning rose. 

    We are in a very precarious situation as a nation but we prefer to mute it.  In the circumstances, fixing the Nigeria is as illusory as looking for a needle in a haystack. Even dealing with the leviathan called corruption is not likely the highway to economic recovery or development if we fail to fix security. No investment or economic activities can thrive in an atmosphere of insecurity like we have.  I have said umpteenth time that if you fix security, you fix every other thing; investors can come in, food production will improve.  Furthermore, farmers would go back to the farms and economic activities would come alive again and there will be less hardship and hunger. 

    Read Also: Chevron Nigeria reaffirms commitment to climate action, conservation

    Economic hardship had never brought pain and suffering on citizens like we have witnessed recently where people solicit for food aids from foreign donors and institutions. It has never been so bad that people are killed in stampede while queuing for food whether at social events or religious grounds.  Palliative has become virtually a major part of government economic support model for citizens. There is no food security because people are not engaged in productive agricultural activities due to insecurity.

    With all the assurances from the government and probably the honest efforts by the security forces, there is escalation of insecurity across the country. The situation is dire in the Northwest where bandits and recently, the Lakurawa terrorists turned the lives of the people to a living hell. Travellers on Zamfara–Sokoto axis are kidnapped for ransom and killed almost on daily basis; communities pay taxes to bandits and terrorists, and security men are also targeted and killed even in their bases.

    The same is true of Katsina State and most of the state governors sit and negotiate with bandits and gang leaders. In the North-central states of Kaduna, Plateau, Niger, Benue and Kogi, non-state actors, bandits, insurgents, kidnappers and armed herders are on the rampage. The people are counting their losses daily as they are butchered on their farms, homesteads and on the roads. Just the other day, the governor of Niger State warned farmers to stay away from their farms for fear of bandits and insurgents. 

    There is a continuous bloodbath in the Southeast while criminal elements give no-work-order, disrupting economic activities of the people. This is in addition to mindless attacks on citizens and even security agents with brazen audacity.  In the South-south region, cultists, oil thieves, kidnappers and political thugs reign supreme and the government is not able to disarm them. The Southwest also have a fair share of the insecurity caused by migratory armed elements comprising bandits, insurgents and kidnappers which the local criminals have also joined..  Just the other day, the governor of Oyo State raised the alarm that bandits have invaded some communities in the state and killing people.  If you travel in safety on any road, it is only the grace of God and our legendary good luck that the criminal gangs are not on duty.

    When you allow criminal gangs to hold military grade weapons and terrorize citizens without effective law enforcement, it will be a matter of time before you will be confronted with Haitian situation. When you allow tribal militias and terrorists to keep their weapons and control territories and levy taxes on citizens, you will soon have Libya and Syria on our hands; it is just a matter of time.  It is now a common knowledge that the terrorists in Nigeria enjoy franchise of international terrorist groups like the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), Al-Qaeda and the Taliban. 

    The government appears comfortable with pacifists approach in dealing with insecurity, offering the criminals training, support and rehabilitation.  Meanwhile, the displaced victims whose means of livelihood have been disrupted by activities of these criminals are abandoned in internally displaced peoples (IDP) camps.  It is a sign of weakness for government to negotiate with criminals; and the military should distance itself from that approach and remain faithful to what the doctrine of their training demands.  The military should forcefully disarm and destroy criminals terrorizing the country; not to dialogue or negotiate with them.  After all, soldiers are not trained in the art of religious warfare to be sermonizing to criminals to repent; leave that to the clerics in the pulpit.   Governors are busy releasing criminals in their numbers from the prisons and correctional centres.  Are we running government for criminals? 

    If we want to fix Nigeria, we should get serious; the fight against insecurity and corruption should not be selective or half-hearted.  How can armed groups muster the courage to stage attacks on soldiers in their bases or spring ambush stealing their weapons and someone is telling us we are winning the fight against insurgency?  Policemen are killed in lines of duty by armed criminal gangs who operate with temerity.  We are not talking about isolated incidences, but a regular occurrence almost with defined pattern. The level of insecurity is grossly alarming but under-reported.

    What is happening in what appears to be distant places may well be a lesson that we should embrace with forthright commitment and honesty.  Insecurity in the country is not abating; let us first agree on that basic irreducible minimum. Our efforts are also not enough in part due political consideration. One is not in doubt that the military has the capacity to rein in the criminals behind insecurity in the country but they would rather they watch the body language of political leaders, reading their lips; not to talk about pervasive corruption in the entire system without exception. 

    We cannot afford to continue like this and be parroting unity and indivisibility.  The military high command should conduct honest security evaluation our country and come out with strategic plan to deal with it.  No foreign partner can fight your wars and battles; Britain, America or France.  We should be careful not to cede the sovereignty and territorial integrity to foreigners.  We do not need foreign military bases in Nigeria.  Israel is fighting its battles in multiple fronts; not with American boots on the ground. Ukraine is fighting its battle with essential lines of supply from NATO and Europe; no boot on the ground.  We should be able to provide basic intelligence for our fighting forces and follow through.  Criminals have taken over our forests and farm lands while security agents are busy chasing yahoo boys with laptops on street corners.  The nation is sitting delicately on a time bomb on a tripod of ethnicity, religion and insecurity.  When the bubble will burst, the castles we build like high security prisons walls will collapse on our heads.  Sadly for us, with very brilliant soldiers, we are not gifted with military thinkers and philosophers to lead our charge.  But we can start now!

    •Kebonkwu Esq writes from Abuja.

  • Kayode Ojewale (1984-2024): Departing soon at noon

    Kayode Ojewale (1984-2024): Departing soon at noon

    By Banji Ojewale

    January 17, would have marked the 41st natal anniversary of Solomon Kayode Ojewale, the young man who was beginning to be noticed as a regular name in Nigeria’s vast media space, online and main-view. He was a migratory writer. One time he’d be in The Guardian, The Punch, The Nation, Nigerian Tribune, or Vanguard, all in Nigeria’s south, or another time up north in Daily Trust, Leadership or New Nigerian. Kayode also had a promising presence in the online publications: Premium Times, Newspot, Sahara Reporters etc. He wrote and read lustily. On a number of occasions, he would query me: ‘’Dad, what’s going on? I haven’t seen you write lately.’’ Sometimes, he was a monitoring spirit, searching for my articles on the internet and railing at the ubiquitous devil in the print. He also preyed on books. He took from me a book on John McCain, once a US presidential aspirant, which Emeka Eluem Izeze, former MD of The Guardian, loaned me.

    Kayode’s articles were regularly run by Alausa Alert, a publication of Lagos State Ministry of Information, edited by the versatile Tayo Ogunbiyi. At a time, we projected a joint collection of essays by himself and Ogunbiyi.

    The young man ardently desired a future with the media. So he took a professional course in radio production and script writing at the Radio Nigeria Broadcasting School in Lagos.

    Finally, he was approached by a business newspaper in Lagos to serve on its editorial board. The editors reckoned that pinning the prolific contributor exclusively to their desk might be more profitable to the paper than having him shared with others in the industry. The offer seemed OK for Kayode; it would give him a ready, regular and recognizable platform to express himself on hot-button issues.

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    Still, the deal wasn’t consummated for some reasons. Kayode was a civil servant, on full time employment with the Public Relations Department of the Lagos State Traffic Management Agency, LASTMA. He troubleshot for the organization a lot. In succession, his bosses, Mahmoud, Olumide Filade, Taofiq, Mrs. Aluko, required Kayode to leverage his pen and bond with the editors to step in with a write-up in defence of LASTMA. He obliged always; but he was careful not to compromise principles of mutual goodwill. So he did it daintily, without taking his cordial stand with the journalists for granted.

    Now, would he be able to answer to the true professional and nonaligned calling of the member of the editorial board of a reputable medium and remain in the service of LASTMA? There’s far more to being offered juicy contracts because of your current running or past performance. Those hiring you are more moved by what you’d give them from the moment of your joining them after exit from your old station, scarcely excited about the exploits that made them notice you in the first place.

    These were some of what we were considering when a concatenation of health incidents set in for Kayode and hindered a logical resolution of the puzzle. First, a call from his wife, Bunmi, on Wednesday July 4, 2024, that Kayode was gravely down with cough and unsettling breathing issues. She was taking him to a private hospital in their neighbourhood at Alakuko, Lagos, she told me. There, her husband’s condition deteriorated. Bunmi, herself a professional nurse with a degree in the discipline, suggested a switch to Olabisi Onabanjo University Teaching Hospital, OOUTH, Sagamu, Ogun State. Bunmi had worked there until recently. She was familiar with the facility and was fully convinced her husband would receive much better care there. Indeed, Kayode also had a history with OOUTH, having undergone successful medical procedures at the institution in previous years.

    But suddenly on the night of Saturday July 6, 2024 at OOUTH, Kayode lost the struggle against the complications of irregular breathing, dragged from life into death, leaving behind a son, Othniel Oluwalonimi, (barely five months old then), his wife, parents, siblings and in-laws. We all and his friends along with other loved ones have long since been comforted over this huge loss.

    Kayode was a faithful follower of Jesus Christ. He believed in His Word that if you die in genuine salvation, it’s only a temporary physical deprivation.

    Colleagues at workplaces, childhood friends and those with whom he attended Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, LAUTECH, Ogbomoso, have offered profuse eulogy endearment. Fashakin, Yeye, Kola, Sunday Ogunsola, Yemi (Baba Ibeji), Fisayo, Segun Hammed, Samson etc. say affable Kayode touched their lives not only in the campus, but also away from its environment. They fondly referred to him as Professor, “because he had the carriage of a prof”. One of them said Kayode led him into writing for the media. He has since showed me some of his published works. One of his closest pals said their late friend was the one who always checked on them one by one, and reminded them to felicitate with each on their birthdays.

    He was also known for that in the family, serving as our PRO and point man on our WhatsApp platform. If you needed the stats and pictures of an old family event, Kayode was the one to turn to. You’d get the info while rounding off your conversation. He could sometimes play games with this great gift. He would drop embarrassing ancient pictures of you which you thought had disappeared with time. At other times, if a young person in the midst of older ones acted big and felt he had arrived, Kayode would move in and cut him to size by pointing to an elderly woman and announcing, “Young man, hope you know that woman over there was the one who circumcised you!” He meant no harm in his pranks. Kayode had a kind and accommodating heart that didn’t allow him to hurt anyone with his gibes.

    I was a ‘victim’ of one of his sportive surprises, when years ago he conspired with some editors and had them publish his article on my 71st birthday. It was no small embarrassment when I woke that morning to a tumult of calls and messages. I got to know later that they were responding to Kayode’s stealthy tribute.

    We used to call Kayode ‘Old Man Kayus’, because from his early years he looked like his paternal grandfather. The name stuck. Till Kayode passed on, Dapo Olorunyomi, publisher of Premium Times, would always refer to him as Old Man, dropping Kayus. They were good friends, a bond built from the late 80s in Ilorin, Kwara State, where ‘Uncle Dapoh’ used to drive Kayode and Lanre, his elder brother, around town.

    Solomon Kayode Oyedotun Adigun-Odi Ojewale wanted to read Medicine, for which he was given admission at a private institution in one of Nigeria’s south-eastern states. Somehow, it didn’t work out, and he went for Pure and Applied Chemistry at LAUTECH. He graduated in November 2008 and was posted to Bayelsa for his NYSC in July the following year. He served in Asamabiri. His experiences there are documented in his book, “Asamabiri: A Youth Corps Member’s Experience.’’  Unfortunately, the 12-chapter book wasn’t published; a blundering bureaucratic bullock bred by the NYSC authorities stood in the way of the work, whose conclusion foresaw the food crisis now pillaging the land and recommended a strategic solution: ‘’Asamabiri can…be the food basket of the Niger Delta if the authorities harness its agricultural products. Its potential is enormous, waiting to be tapped to the full realities of full economic activity and industry. Government and the private sector must join hands to move into Asamabiri and turn the area into a developed and prosperous region. This way we can truly talk of diversifying the Nigerian economy and freeing it from dependence on oil.’’

    •Ojewale, an author, mailed this piece from Accra, Ghana.

  • Promises and perils of the mining sector

    Promises and perils of the mining sector

    By Oladele Oladipupo

    Nigeria, the most populous African nation is blessed with abundant mineral resources which are yet to be tapped. These resources include but not limited to the following: Gypsum, Gold, Lead, Granite, Iron Ore, Cobalt, Lithium, Magnesium and Columbite. The federal government, in an effort to revamp the ailing economy is contemplating on diversifying the nation’s economy by exploring the economic potential in mining sector which is a right step in the right direction. This action can be seen in the recent bill that was sponsored and presented by one of the lawmakers in the National Assembly.  The bill is to ensure adequate funding for mineral resources exploration and extraction through public-private-partnership. One of the objectives of the bill is to make sure that our mining sector reaches its full potential, creating jobs, fostering economic growth and enhancing Nigerians self-sufficiency in mineral sector. The primary goal is to secure adequate funding for exploring and extracting Nigeria’s abundant mineral resources through public-private sector participation. The bill will also provide for the creation of a technical management and advisory council comprising experts in law, geology, mining engineering, banking, and civil engineering.

    It is my conviction that once this bill is passed into law, it will definitely solve most of the challenges in the mining sector. For instance, today the sector is being dominated by illegal miners who are not professionals. These set of miners operate in an unsustainable way and are engaged in unethical practices; not only that, they also do not operate in line with international best practices. 

    Even some  so-called professionals who possess valid mining licence do not operate in accordance with the federal government’s regulations. For instance, there have been cases of some mining companies that do not operate in line with international best practices. A recent example is the pathetic story in the Vanguard of January 7, concerning a registered mining company operating in Ebonyi State.  According to the story, two communities in Ebonyi State, Enyigba and Ezza, have a large deposit of lead which is supposed to be a blessing but unfortunately, it has brought untold hardship and misery to the two host communities. A mining company was granted a licence by the Federal Ministry of Solid Minerals to mine lead in the two communities. As a result of their unsustainable practices, the two communities have been seriously devastated with the sources of their drinking water and soil  contaminated by lead.  In fact, many people in the two host communities have been afflicted by lead-related ailments, resulting from the eating crops, vegetables, fruits, tubers, grains harvested in the two places and drinking polluted water. One of the community leaders in Enyigba Community Chief Ewa Nworie was quoted to have said: “We are not finding it easy to live in this community.  Lead pollution is affecting both our health and farm produce, our water is already polluted and the soil is contaminated by lead”. The people in the two communities are now appealing to the federal government to come to their aid.

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    After reading the story, I came to the following conclusions:

    First, An Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) of the project was conducted in line with the EIA Act CAP E12 LFN 2004; however, the mining company failed to comply with the recommendations in the EIA document;

    Second, mitigation measures that were recommended in the EIA final report were not put in place.

    Third, most of the people in the host communities have been afflicted by lead related ailments resulting from eating contaminated crops.

    Fourth, the mining company refused to fulfill the provisions in the agreement which they signed with the state government and the host communities where they promised to provide hospital, schools, potable water, electricity and employment.

    Fifth, there was no proper monitoring of the activities of the miners by those that are saddled with the responsibility.

     I think it is important that the federal government take a drastic action by revoking their licence as well as closing down the mining sites and compel the miners to remediate the mining sites. Recall that similar incident happened in Zamfara State a couple of years ago where thousands of children died of lead poisoning and eventually, the mining sites were closed down. Lead is a highly toxic metal, it could be absorbed through the skin, respiratory organ and digestive system. It bio-accumulates in the body organs, tissues and saliva. Research has shown that young children are particularly vulnerable to lead and it can lead to permanent adverse health impact particularly in the development of the central nervous system.

    Various research findings have also indicated that lead causes long term harm in adults, including high blood pressure, cardiovascular diseases, renal failure, respiratory disorder, chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases and stroke. In recent times, humans are exposed to lead through the food chain by consuming plants or fruits grown in the lead environment or animals that graze on grasses around lead mining areas. It is important that the people in the host communities are educated and enlightened to know that some of the plants they eat contain lead which could harm them in future.

    Mining causes environmental degradation across the world not only in Nigeria but also in Asian countries. Therefore, miners need to be checkmated so as to adhere to the relevant mining laws. The federal government has put in place some instruments of intervention in order to ensure sustainable mining in Nigeria. These include but not limited to the following: the National Policy on Environment, the National Guidelines and Standards for Environmental Pollution Control in Nigeria, the Enactment of the Environmental Impact Assessment Act CAP E12 LFN 2004 which makes it mandatory for proponents of all new major development activities to carry out an EIA for their proposed project and Development of EIA Sectoral Guidelines for the Mining, Manufacturing, Energy and Agricultural Sectors.

    I would like us to cast our minds back to what happened in New York State in the early sixties where industries were dumping toxic wastes into Love Carnal River. Later, pregnant women around the carnal were giving births to deformed babies –  without limbs, nose, mouth and genital organs. Also in the early 1970s in Japan, a lot of people died of “Minimata disease” due to the application of mercury in cultivating rice. We need to take pro-active measures in order to avert such a disaster. Therefore, I am suggesting that any mining company that refuses to comply with the nation’s environmental laws should be sanctioned and have its licence revoked.

    Finally, the Federal Ministry of Solid Minerals should make sure that the mining companies are monitored to ensure that they carry out their mining operations in line with international best practices.

    •Oladipupo sent this from Agbara Estate, Ogun State. He writes via oladeleoladipupo@gmail.com