Category: Comments

  • Ajimobi, Olubadan, Buhari and South-West APC

    After a fairly consistent period of reading a particular newspaper columnist, you naturally begin to understand and even anticipate the form and content of his/her writings, the issues that motivate the columns, the overall style, language and analytical tools typically deployed in those interventions. Having started on a wide and rich diet of very distinguished columnists assembled on the editorial pages of The Nation newspapers, I soon gravitated towards a few columnists and settled with them almost on a ritual basis: Palladium  by Idowu Akinlotan happens to be one of them.

    Notwithstanding my admiration for the many fascinating skills of this columnist, I have had several occasions to completely disagree with both the form and content of some of his columns. For instance, I am usually very miffed at his ingratiating lack of restraint especially when talking about senior public citizens; his seemingly accustomed tendentiousness; his unrelieved sense of magisterial authority to declaim on any and everything and; the occasionally blatant and unpardonable partisanship of some of his interventions (Kogi State and its recent governorship elections is a prime example).

    His column of Sunday October 15, 2017 under the topic ‘Ajimobi, Olubadan, Buhari and Southwest APC” is the immediate trigger of this rejoinder. My concern will however be strictly limited to his references to Ajimobi and Olubadan while Buhari and SouthWest APC will preferably be left out of the scope of my interest for reasons that should soon be obvious.

    While Mr Akinlotan may be tolerated, even welcome,  to his typically indecorous, gratuitous and hasty characterization of a whole group of elected leaders as ‘third rate’ people with ‘demonstrable lack of assiduity in projects conception and implementation’, he should not be allowed to get away with the very rude description of Governor Abiola Ajimobi’s media briefing after his recent meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari  as illogical with such insouciant verbiage thrown in to describe the governor as a man that is ‘imperceptible’, and  whose “sense of history may be a little troubling’.

    How much more illogical and uncouth can you get when you use such words and phrases for a man who was the elected Governor and symbol of millions of people? This haul of insults is to a man who stated quite early and clearly that the whole matter of the Olubadan came up with the president only because of its security, and even political, implications for the State.

    Periodic intimation of goings-on in states is a normal routine, especially between governors and the President, particularly when they belong to the same political parties. Just a few days ago, the Governor of Kogi State (whom our columnist dislikes with a passion!) was seen in Aso Rock, and in fact spoke with reporters and was thereafter quoted as saying he came to brief the president about some critical issues that he thinks the President ought to know about his state. Few days afterwards, a delegation of about eight governors including Emmanuel, Bagudu, Abubakar, Akeredolu and Ahmed were led into a meeting with the President by Governor Abdul’Aziz Yari under the auspices of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum.  So, whether in groups or as individuals, governors have always visited the President either to brief, hold meetings or simply to pay courtesy calls. One is therefore bemused that the author of Paladdium and others like him consider Ajimobi’s visit any special and deserving of his acerbic comments.

    Briefing the president on the Olubadan chieftaincy review basically arose out of the need to acknowledge that while some dust had ben raised in certain quarters ostensibly in civil opposition, the real truth and present danger was that the whole process had been hijacked by a chieftain of an opposition political party and his group with grave security implications.

    Unknown to some, including our columnist, this group had surreptitiously converted the Olubadan’s palace not only into its operational headquarters but as a staging post from where it had started to deploy its political missiles and weapons of mass deception. Recall that a few weeks ago, some hoodlums were said to have made a dramatic appearance at the Olubadan’s palace during a chieftaincy ceremony. They were said to have been seen shooting sporadically at some guests for more than fifteen minutes in the full glare of a contingent of security operatives after which they sped away without as much as anyone getting a picture of any of the marauders. We are hopeful that the security agencies will eventually unmask the real actors. In the meantime, there are those who would swear today that the event was not only a theatrical charade made to look real, but that its primary purpose was to blackmail the government by creating the impression that the mayhem was sponsored against the Palace and its opposition cohorts. How ridiculous! Thankfully, that ploy failed as most citizens refused to buy into the obvious humbug.

    The red herring failed to fly because most stakeholders are not only fully aware of how trenchant Ajimobi’s government had been about issues of security since he was sworn-in in 2011, they have indeed celebrated the restored calm as one of the best dividends of democracy they had ever been given since 1999. Conversely, they also know too well how sworn-to brigandage this particular Opposition leader has always been and how inseparable his group is with all things violent and unruly, as demonstrated during their reign of terror when Oyo State, particularly Ibadan, was infamously known as a garrison of mercenaries.

    Another inconvenient truth that is obviously lost to our columnist is that this group and its many agents had virtually succeeded in misguiding our revered monarch into public conduct unbecoming of his high esteem; these include but are not limited to the series of highly provocative and incendiary public statements emanating from the palace. Even when he could have explored all the usually open avenues for dialogue with the governor, the old man was – to the embarrassment of all men and women of goodwill – goaded into embarking on a public show of his disagreement with government by going round major streets and markets, openly campaigning, inciting and dividing the people against the government. Despite these many regrettable assaults on proper protocols, the Governor only returned the favour with a consistent demonstration of courtesies and reaffirmation of respect and loyalty to the monarch and his proud Ibadan heritage.

    When Akinlotan therefore asks the rather lame question: how many other governors have toed his line and reported their monarchs to the President, our short response can only be, ‘how many governors have the same kind of potential security breaches unwittingly exacerbated by their monarchs?’

    Perhaps the most egregious statement is when our author questions Ajimobi’s ‘understanding of the city’s proud history and heritage’ as if he is any competent to claim superior understanding. This is to a man who is not only a full-blooded Ibadan indigene but a thoroughbred with noble family roots that stretch back to the foundations of the city and connect to some of the most revered family trees in Ibadanland – from his father’s direct lineage and ancestry that goes back to the legendary Agboluaje-Ibadan to his mother’s equally illustrious ancestry that traces its heritage to Olugbode. Even in contemporary times, the Ajimobis occupy an enviable place among the pantheon of Ibadan greats. Well, I suppose that it is not unusual to occasionally encounter an immodest fellow who brazenly claims greater knowledge of the origins and meanings of a song than the one who actually composed and sang it!

    As to Akinlotan’s judgment that the review of the Olubadan Chieftaincy Declaration was carried out to weaken and threaten the obaship institution, we can only assume that he had not been following the many arguments in favour of the review by a variety of eminent scholars, prominent Ibadan indigenes as well as the overwhelming majority of the custodians of traditional institutions including the eight members of the nine-man Olubadan-in Council. If he had, he would have been sufficiently educated to know that there was no way the governor would have conceived of the notion, not to talk of the act, of executing any assault against his

    fatherland. Why would he plot an assault against an institution of which he is a major beneficiary having recently been honoured with the title of Aare of Ibadanland by this same monarch of whom he is very fond? Conversely, his actions in the regard are very strictly motivated and guided by a fervent desire to help guide the institution into modernity as we have seen across other major cities in Yorubaland.  Not only was the idea for the chieftaincy reforms the culmination of several decades of community-driven demands, all due processes were followed to ensure stakeholder participation as well as strict compliance with the rule of law and traditional protocols. Mr Akinlotan may wish to adequately enlighten himself by reading the public documents before and all through the proceedings of the Judicial Panel of Enquiry as well as the Government’s duly published white paper on it.

    It certainly begets mischief to suggest that a review that enjoyed such citywide applause threatens that institution just because of a few politically motivated and strident criticisms whose sole purpose was to exploit the circumstance to fight a proxy war with the hope of achieving visibility and relevance after their serial political losses on the electoral field. One would have thought a well-regarded columnist would be circumspect in joining such an army of political ‘arsonists’. But apparently, you never know how some contagion spreads.

    As promised, this riposte is not concerned with the many pseudo-intellectual pronouncements, innuendoes and suppositions against President Buhari and Southwest APC. All I can add here is that Ajimobi, like his colleagues in the region, has been working assiduously to champion the cause of the Yoruba nation within the context of the country’s emerging political matrix. He has also been a rallying point of APC governors in the South-West to strengthen the party and reposition it for greater chances in coming elections.

    As anyone who has ever been in or around government will tell, and unlike what armchair critics would say, it is not as easy to weld a people together towards the attainment of a crystalline vision, especially when beholden to the many centrifugal and peculiarly Nigerian forces that militate against the most enthusiastic and gifted of leaders. Standing out – looking in is a much more convenient sport than working in and battling through the murky labyrinths of conflicting interests and values. Only the deep can speak to the deep as our columnist would say.

    The fact that a state house reporter and his newspaper chose to exaggerate and distort the sequence of a story or use a headline that masks actual context does not excuse a presumably more knowledgeable columnist to follow their track. Why would any state governor board an aircraft for Abuja just to ‘report’ a monarch who ordinarily is answerable to one of the local government chairmen? It is not only unfathomable that any governor would do that, it is preposterous for anyone to think so.

     

    • Layinka is the Special Adviser, Communication & Strategy to Governor Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State.
  • Davido, just remix your lyrics

    Davido, just remix your lyrics

    I only wish that investigators would be just as zealous in cases of outright murder – especially politically motivated murder “mysteries”!

    “30 Billion for the account, oh.” Make it – 30 thousand oh. … then just drop half, fifteen thousand so that they let you rest. The persecution is too much, haba!”

    It has been established that Davido had left the deceased in the much reported sudden death case, several hours before his demise.  Not only that, but Davido did not leave the man all alone, the fellow was in a crowded bar in the company of several other people.

    Let me recap some of my last week’s thoughts, just as I have been reading in other write-ups on the unfortunate incident.

    Davido I don’t like, I’m a little queasy about his videos, I like his music.  But since his ill-treatment of Sophie Momodu, Chief Dele Momodu’s niece – I have no love.  However, in this whodunit, I declare Davido innocent.  The fellow at the centre of it all met up with friends, including Davido for drinks.  About midnight (lawyer’s statement) Davido left their company – I watched that CCTV coverage.  Tall and lanky, the man in question was quite easy to identify in the crowd, he was so inebriated he was swaying like a praying mantis.  I even praise Davido here – as a friend he tried, even attempted to force the man into his car and take him home.  The man refused and wriggled away.

    I carefully read through the statement by his lawyer Norrison Quakers SAN.  Nice one by Davido to cancel coming concerts for now. Davido has my sympathy at losing 2 friends in 1 week.

    The Police Command press briefing informed that Davido instructed his backup car to escort the vehicle of the deceased to hospital – that has not be proven.  Know what?  Even if Davido did instruct so, he did very well to stick out his neck; knowing the next thing would be getting roped in.  What they failed to inform us is how Davido is being invited for day long questioning every few days.  And that since Wednesday 11th, Davido’s friends have been kept under arrest over the incidence!

    I only wish the investigators would also be as zealous in cases of outright murder – especially politically motivated murder “mysteries”!

    Edo Security Worsening

    I am not huge on keeping wild animals in captivity, but I admire the people who actually do the looking-after.  Animals have to be studied and then treated according to their kind; that to me is a gift I appreciate it in people.  That is why I am really displeased about the kidnap, since September 24th of Dr. Andy Ehanire, Director and Chief Executive of Ogba Zoo and Nature Park in Edo State.  Kidnapping is dastardly; its upsurge in Edo is alarming and calls for greater action.  On October 3rd, one musician Joseph Osayomore was abducted by gunmen while returning from a performance.  And even when his wife reportedly tried to persuade the gunmen to release her husband, she was shot in the head.  Less than 48 hours later, a Uniben Professor Paul Otasowie was shot dead as he drove into his house on October 5th.

    It gets worse: the Vatican spokesman Grey Burke has announced to the world that an Italian priest Maurizo Pallu has been kidnapped by gunmen in Benin (abducted on October 12th).

    Last week, a group of Edo indigenes stormed the nation’s capital to register their grievances.  They staged a protest from Edo House to the Louis Edet House and the National Assembly Complex, before calling a press conference in Abuja.  They are asking for the removal of the state police boss, Mr. Haliru Gwandu.  Gwandu has dismissed the felons as ‘militants’.  But the sophisticated kidnapping and murder gang(s) know enough to demand a N350m ransom for one of their victims – because they know his is the younger brother a federal minister.

    Would you imagine that 3 policemen were shot dead by the gang in the particular operation!  Puzzling is the report that the Police Service Commission had posted Gwandu out of Edo since the last quarter.

    Question – why did they not send his replacement?

    Something must be done before Edo State becomes anther bloody battleground among Nigeria’s states.

    I agree with the Concerned Citizens of Edo State that urgent action is needed.

    Condolences:

    To my General Manager and mentor Dr. Teresa Essien on the sudden passing of her sister, Princess Margaret who was laid to rest on Friday.  They are both sisters of the Head of Service of the Federation, Mrs. Winifred Oyo Ita.  My condolences.

    Mr. Donald Duke, when he was Cross River Governor headhunted a man, Elegance Edim, from America to head CUDA (the Urban Development Authority).  Elegance later became known as Mr. Clean Calabar when he deployed his American training and experience to uplift Calabar to Nigeria’s cleanest capital, as acknowledged nationwide.  On a budget of just N12m annually, including planting of trees and grasses, Elegance ensured that not one speck of litter was ever found in Calabar metropolis.

    Sadly, he passed on at 63 and was also buried on Friday.  My sympathies to his wife Dr. Mrs. Edim and Family.

    Congratulations:

    Even the Nation Sports pages decided not to predict anything on the Aiteo Cup final, but this column said it, in bold print may Akwa United, the best team Win!  So congrats to Akwa United, a big one as they along with Enyimba FC, will be on parade for Nigeria in CAF Confederations Cup.

    Saudi Arabia under King Salman Abdulaziz al Saud continues to give pleasant surprises to the world.  Aside its unceasing war against international terror, the Saudi Government is demonstrating its commitment to a more egalitarian society.  Last month, King Salman freed Saudi from the stigma of being the only country in the world to disallow woman from driving.  His decree says women will be issued driver’s license from next year.  Last week, the Saudi government appointed the first female Princess Reema Bint Bander Bin Sultan to head Saudi’s multi-sports Federation.

    This is wishing American-trained Princess Reema a fruitful tenure.

     

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  • Nigeria: A bundle of contradictions

    Recently I engaged a friend of mine in a lengthy intellectual

    discourse, and the crux of the discourse bordered on the hopelessness of the common man.

    My friend responded with one of the most common axioms that has over the years defined and positioned us for tyranny in the arms of an uninterruptedly wicked set of rulers masquerading as leaders – “when there is life there is hope”. After the discourse, I categorised hope in the Nigerian context into two -The pessimistic hopefuls and the religious hopefuls. The semantic recesses of the former hinges on paradox, given that the nation itself is a manifold of paradox. You might wonder if there is anything like hope in pessimism. Pessimistic hopefulness is a state of perfunctory hopefulness we found ourselves in which hope is just there as a mannequin; hope for only cosmetic purposes, a state where you have to be hopeful not because you see a hope of a brighter day, the elusive light at the end of the tunnel but rather it is an illusive form of hopefulness fanned by hopeless patriotism; the choicelessness of having no other country except Nigeria. The pessimistic hopefuls have a festivity dimension to their presumed hope, this is often expressed when Nigeria engages in her never-ending ceremonies and merrymaking – the new year, the independence day etc. situation in mild colours.

    The second category of hopefuls in the Nigerian context is that which borders on our religious piety; hopefulness that is motivated by religious teachings of confessing positively in the midst of storms and whirlwinds of life.

    From the above dissection of hopes, it is suffice to say that none of our dimension of hopes hinges on empirical facts, hence they are void of application in 21st century knowledge-driven economy. Its inapplicability is obvious in our nation state bedevilled with a harem of paradox. Is it not a paradox that despite her endowment with bodies of water, the citizens don’t have access to water? Even the pure water sold in Nigeria’s environment is as poor as the country that produces it. Is it not a paradox that in the midst of arable land, 70% of food items are imported? Is it not a paradox that we have spent so much on electricity only to have darkness as the only tangible result?

    As 2019 elections beacons another dynamics of contradictions that have defined our atrophied existence are to be displayed poignantly.

    In Nigeria, where life is so suffused in poverty and politics, such civic expression might be novel. Moreover, the oppression of the masses by the political elite is a deliberate one, purposed to ensure incumbency in perpetuity.

    The Nigerian elite are much aware of this contradiction, hence the oppression of the masses is deliberate. Our hope only resides in wonderland until we decide as a people, a nation, to collectively fan the embers of our unity, put collective prejudices aside and work for the collective good of the Nigeria nation; that is when we will truly escape from the cauldron.

     

    • Oluwatosin is a writer in Abeokuta, Ogun State
  • The gore and the glory

    Gani Adams embraces the Aare Ona Kakanfo jinx. 

    Warfare is gore and glory.  If you are killed, by that insane war illogic of kill-or-be-killed, it is gore.  If you kill, it is glory.  However, neither the killed nor the one that killed escapes the gore.

    Even then, the Aare Ona Kankanfo, war generalissimo of the empire years of the Alaafin of Oyo, has come with a frightful jinx of its own, aside from the basic gore of warfare.  It is this charmed title that Gani Adams, a humble carpenter of yore from the tough neighbourhood of Mushin, in Lagos, has inherited.  The Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi III, just named Adams the Kakanfo.

    Will Gani Adams buck the tragic trend of previous Kakanfo, consumed by hubris and jinx, or turn the latest to be consumed by the title’s dreaded jinx?

    The dread and the jinx underscored the Alaafin’s explanation on the inevitability of Adams’ choice.  He said worthier Yoruba sons, earlier offered the title, had balked.  But the intrepid Adams had not only been unfazed by it all, he actually applied and actively lobbied for it.

    Besides, the Alaafin was all praise for Adams’ cultural activism, hosting and largely funding the yearly Olokun Festival, generally making himself the cultural ambassador of the Yoruba in the Diaspora, not to talk of his Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) cells in all parts of the Yoruba South West.  His choice, the Alaafin declared, was not only well thought out but an excellent one.

    The Kankafo curse started with a complex court intrigue, aimed at eliminating the powerful Kakanfo Afonja (Afonja of Ilorin, whose treachery led to the Yoruba loss of Ilorin to Alimi, the Fulani friend-turned-foe, according to accounts from Samuel Johnson’s The History of the Yorubas).  Afonja demanded the Kakanfo title; and got it whether the Alaafin liked it or not.   That earned him the baleful Alaafin’s ire.

    But the plot ended with Alaafin Aole, surnamed Arogangan, committing suicide — no thanks to his army, camped in the field, rejecting his rule and sending word home for the king to kill himself.  Afonja — who else? — masterminded that counter-plot.

    Aole committed suicide.  But before he did, in what history has recorded as the dreadful “Curse of Aole”, he cursed Afonja and his co-plotters with wars and endless wars.  In what not a few have interpreted a prediction of the trans-Atlantic slave trade, of which the Yoruba were prime victims, Aole also sentenced the offspring of his treacherous chiefs to be slaves and captives, home and abroad, though their forebears were conquerors and empire builders.

    True enough, Afonja ended in grief.  He not only lost his Ilorin throne to Alimi, he got pumped with so many arrows that the sheer weight of it all held him standing — but stone dead.  Thereafter, his remains were burnt to ashes.  The Oyo Empire too was disintegrating fast.  Thus began the Kakanfo jinx.

    Then Kurunmi, the Ijaye warlord, perished in battle, with all his sons, and his Ijaye totally destroyed — all a victim of personal hubris.  His tragedy was the gripping fare of Kurunmi, the late Ola Rotimi’s profound and riveting tragic play.

    Down the line, another Kakanfo, Latosisa of Ibadan, flush from victory over the powerful woman, Iyalode Efunsetan Aniwura, in imperial Ibadan’s internal power play, also ended badly.  He died (though not from enemy fire) at the tail-end of the Kiriji War (1877-1893), which stalemate ended Ibadan imperialism.

    So did Samuel Ladoke Akintola, former premier of the defunct Western Region (Kakanfo from 1962-1966), killed in the first putsch of 15 January 1966.  Yet between Latosisa and Akintola was 75 years, during which the Kakanfo title was unoccupied.

    Between Akintola and Moshood Kasimawo Olawale Abiola (MKO), the last person to hold the Kakanfo title was 22 years.  MKO was installed Kakanfo in 1988.

    Yet, the jinx would appear alive, for shortly after, MKO was involved in the Air Force “mad dogs” saga — a personal humiliation by Air Force other ranks who, AVM Nura Imam then dismissed as “mad dogs”.  MKO would die in detention in 1998, five years after he had won Nigeria’s freest and fairest presidential election; but never became president.

    This then is the jinx-laden title Gani Adams has just accepted — 19 years after MKO’s passage.  Would he buck the jinx and make the title whole for possible successors?  That is in the womb of time.

    In spite of the jinx, the Kakanfo is an important historical title, which underscores the political sophistication of the Yoruba, even in pre-colonial days, in which the army was submissive to the Crown, subject to constitutional checks and balances.  The Ibadan Latosisa tried to merge the title with the Olubadan, thus proclaiming himself a warrior-king.  He failed.  So, robust state institutions are no monopoly of Western democracies.  It was right there in Yoruba evolution in history.

    So, jinx or no jinx, the Kakanfo is no ordinary title.  That is why the new beneficiary must do well to brace up and uplift himself.

    The Alaafin rightfully lauded Adams for his cultural activism.  That is praise well-earned, for from a lowly carpenter of yore, Adams has thrust himself as a somewhat credible cultural ambassador for the Yoruba, especially among the Yoruba diaspora, thirsting for their essence.

    But Oba Adeyemi also cited Adams’ Odua People’s Congress (OPC) exploits which regrettably, are not too stellar.  OPC did its bit during MKO’s battle for the retrieval of his presidential mandate, illegally annulled by a reckless military junta.  But thereafter, it has never really risen above push-come-to-shove enforcement image of the quasi-underworld.  This has somewhat compelled civil and polite society to give it a wide berth.

    If the OPC is vital enough to Adams’ credentials for the Alaafin’s “citation”, then it is time for Adams to revamp the body to rise in tandem with his new Kakanfo status.  Not a few still cringe from the OPC brazen show of shame, on Lagos streets, just before the 2015 general elections, with its cadre going on an orgy of outlawry, for partisan purposes.  Aside from the condemnable outlawry of its action, in exchange for partisan political lucre, its naïveté was well and truly benumbing.

    That was Gani Adams, at his worst, punching above his weight and making uninformed political commentaries.  Then, OPC was also unfazed poster boy of political racketeering, going after dubious oil pipeline contracts, to the shock and shame of the generality of the Yoruba, its core constituency.

    All the racketeering, derring-do devilry and scandalous political naïveté must be a thing of the past, either for Gani Adams himself or for the OPC, the most vibrant faction of which he leads as “national coordinator”.

    Since he applied for the job of Kakanfo, Gani Adams must take responsibility and shun these past draw backs.  He may yet come from humble beginnings like eminent past Yoruba warriors,  Kakanfo Latosisa (a palm wine tapper) and Basorun Ogunmola (an apprentice blacksmith to the iconic Oluyole, the Ibadan paterfamilias) to make a  success of his new endeavour.

  • Osun 2018: Clarion call to APC,  others for peaceful election

    Osun 2018: Clarion call to APC, others for peaceful election

    The gubernatorial election for 2018 in Osun is fast-approaching  and the political gladiators; the serious, the pretenders and the spoilers are in the field. Like a field events, some have beaten the gun and are not ready to listen to the whistle of the umpire. To some, this coming election, the incumbent Governor Rauf Aregbesola must serve as the scape goat, if their victory must be guaranteed .

    The politicians have a culture of self-adulation; that lead to incivility. This attitude is in semblance with the story of the  elephant in our oral literature that highlights the catastrophe of pride. It goes that long time ago the elephant was deceived into the city by the tortoise that human beings have resolved to crown him a king. The elephant fell for the deceit and was heading for the King’s palace where a deep ditch has been dugged but covered with a beautiful mat and a stool was cleverly place on the pit.

    To get the elephant to its destruction,  a good song was composed and sang for it”: A o merin joba  ereku-eewele, Oba to dade owo  ereku ewele Oba to te  opa  ileke ereku ewele ao merin joba  ereku ewele “. Eventually,  the elephant got to the palace  and was about to sit on the throne when the staged-managed throne caved-in, the people immediately rushed at the elephant and killed it. The import of this story was a lesson in humility and the need to measure the mood of the generality.

    Every citizen of Nigeria has a right to aspire to any political office: while doing so,  one must be humble and and sensitive to the needs and feelings of the people one is aspiring to lead. When an aspirant is marketing himself to the people, caution must not be thrown to the wind in the campaign and promises the individual makes to the people. At the same time, there is no way for would-be candidate, who has not even scaled through the party primariee to start demeaning the achievements of the incumbent, no matter the observed  shortcomings. The people will take such an aspirant or aspirants as a spoilt and incorrigible son that has no respect or regards for the parents. If the opposition does that, it is allowed but for co-members to so do will breed hates and political crisis.

    What then should an aspirant do? The norm in political campaigns is for the politicians to start from where the incumbent has reached in the developmental strides; apraise his efforts and promise to perform far better or to promise to improve where the governor has stopped.

    However,  what we have witnessed by some few political actors from the ruling-All Progressives Congress  (APC) contestant or aspirants is an act of perfidy. A society where everyone else takes into perfidy cannot but falter, fail and fall. If we don’t want to falter, fail and fall in  the APC,  there is an urgent need to retreat and restrategise in the campaign that is ongoing.

    There is no doubt that there is misunderstanding here and there in all political parties of which APC is not an exception. What to do is not to play into the hands of political adversaries, rather to find a means of resolving the conflict. Politics itself is a system of conflict resolution. All men cannot think and behave in the same way. Consequently,  conflicts  are bound to manifest but it must be channelled positively towards the societal values and development.  When a political party sinks itself due to internal strife, it opens its doors to defeat and failure. That is why unchecked brinkmanship often breads cancerous social vices that poison the whole political system that may lead to systemic collapse.

    The Best Road To Political Victory.

    All men strive for success  but not all men succeed. Why, because  men are fallible; men hardly learn from the failure and success of others. Those who  read biographies tend to acquire  more knowledge about successful leadership. In life, we are all students, learning from past leaders.

    Surely, Rauf Aregbesola came to office in 2010 when the whole Osun looked  like the old Osun Province. Nothings seemed to be working and the infrastructure were nothing to write home about.   Schools were like poultry sheds. The then administration was borrowing  to pay salaries. It is no longer news that the first governor in Nigeria that employed 20,000 youths under the Osun Youths Employment Scheme (OYES) at a go was Aregbesola. That feat a lone marked Aregbesola out as a man on a mission. The mission eventually  crystallised  into a national phenomenon that the opposition Federal government sent for the governor to put them through the process. As if that was not all, the United Kingdom parliament  invited the governor on the  subject matter of free-feeding of primary school pupils in public schools that Aregbesola introduced  and eventually introduced same in the UK  that saved parents of £50,000 annually.

    Aregbesola infrastructural development in Osun is humongous,  to the extent that Osogbo Descendants Union gave the governor a special award for his effort in changing the face of the ancient city to unbelievable modern city.

    The educational sector in the state cannot but be a plus for the governor that there is virtually  no local government councils areas that have not gotten one or two gigantic ultra modern school located in their domain.

    All the then 30 local government council areas and Area Office in Modakeke witnessed  construction of roads and bridges. Aregbesola administration’s giant strides in almost all the set out six-point Integral Action Plan became headache for the opposition to the extent that some of them decamped to the new sheriff in town to share in his success . While a few others were lamenting over how funds were procured for the projects that turned the state to construction sites.

    Politics, some said, is a dirty game; maybe true or not, some of those who by virtue of being members of the ruling party were awarded the contracts of some of the projects that adorned the landscape of the state today, only for one or two of them who have shifted their allegiances to a new political group to turn around accusing the state and the governor of incompetence. If opposition fear the humongous  achievements of  Aregbesola and turn to the accusation of high debt profiles and members who are now scheming for power now find solace  in painting Aregbesola in bad light in order to sell themselves, one wonders about the logicability of such campaign. It is not a democratic culture to destroy or ridicule your political platform just for the sake of pursuit of power.

    It is  better  to avoid the same bad politics that was played over the late Senator Isiaka Adeleke’s death. That was when some members of the family laid the blame of the said Adeleke’s death at the door of the state government, whereas it was eventually made known to the world that the sudden death was due to medical-mistake of a quack dispenser through the report of a special panel over it. The unfortunate death of the man of the people  (Late Isiaka Adeleke ) was politicised  and the rest is history today.

    It is needful that those who want to tread the same path must pause and note that the gubernatorial election is wider in scope and intense in pursuit. The then APC has  woken up to its responsibilities. The party is up and doing and it is better for all aspirant to work together towards the primary elections and the post-primary.

    There is no shenanigans that can make anybody rubbish the governor in order to win the heart of the people. The people know the challenges  confronting the state; a general problem in the nation, which is paucity of  funds. While some states are worse off  that they could not pay salaries of workers, Osun has continued to pay full salaries to workers in level 1 to 7 and 75% to workers in level 10 to  12, while those who are on 13 and above that earned half  salaries.

    What democrats do id to sell themselves to the electorate, first to acknowledge the achievementsof the incumbent and urge for continuity; urging the people by saying although Aregbesola has done well in his eight years and if given the chance to  continue from where he would stop, you will improve on them or in another word, you may say you will do better.

    To avoid rancour and internal strife in party politics, a democrat can acknowledge what the opposition party has done well . Telling the people that if given the chance they stand to perform  better. But each time aspirants thought the best way to get their dream fulfilled is only to rubbish the good works of others; will always spark off politics of bitterness and snowball into political violence.

    If in the process of climbing the ladder of political power, the lives and blood of the common man is shed, there is no way the death can be compensated because  the living dog is better than the dead lion. But no matter how hard one’s heart may be, once in a while, there is a flash of recall of the violent hours in which the blood of the  innocent were shed for you to ascend to that seat of power and how will you feel if in the political struggle, you lose your son due to the hand work of polititical thugs. Till you bid the world good night, your memories will keep reminding you that you lost a child. The same happened to those who lost their beloved ones  to death due to power struggle. Have you asked yourself about their feelings about those who are in power when their bread winners were killed because of an aspirant?  To save yourself of bad memories, is to be cautious of how you go about your electioneering. Life is precious, don’t let anybody shed blood for your sake. Peaceful election must be pursued.

     

    • Yomi Obaditan is a political analyst.
  • VAIDS and Nigeria’s future

    The sharp dip in the prices oil, Nigeria’s major source of revenue, has badly exposed the country, leaving government at all levels gasping. For years, all tiers of government have relied almost totally on oil revenue and, in the process, neglected tax revenue.

    The current state of the global oil industry, particularly since mid-2014, has shown clearly that near-total dependence on oil revenue is unsustainable. Taxation, all over the world, has been found to be a more predictable and sustainable revenue source. It, however, faces threat from a culture of non-compliance, as shown by tax collection data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

    The data make a depressing reading. NBS figures showed that the 36 states of the country collected a total sum of N683.6 billion in taxes in 2015. Of this sum, Lagos State accounted for N268 billion, the equivalent of 40% of the total revenue collected by all the states of the federation. Lagos State collected more than all the other states combined, with the notable exception of Rivers, Ogun and Delta states. Figures from the Federal Inland Revenue Service also show that not many Nigerians are paying tax.

    According to the FIRS, out of 70 million taxable adults, only 14 million pay tax, with 96 per cent of them on the Pay-As-You-Earn (PAYE) system. A 2015 Knight Frank wealth report estimated that Nigeria has about 770 billionaires (in naira terms). Out of this number, only 214 pay taxes of N20 million and above. This proves that self-employed people account for only four per cent of taxpayers and that the country’s billionaires are either not paying or underpaying. It also indicates that tax compliance in the private sector is grossly sub-par.

    This is the situation the Voluntary Assets and Income Declaration Scheme (VAIDS) was conceived to correct through the boosting tax awareness, compliance and offering tax defaulters a time-limited opportunity to put their tax affairs in order with the federal and state governments.

    This is to be done through voluntary, truthful declaration of tax arrears within the nine-month window.

    VAIDS is an initiative of the Federal Ministry of Finance and runs from 1 July and runs.

     

    • Oyeyemi wrote from Lagos
  • Endless probe on NNPC

    My guess is like yours when I read a recent report that the Senate is to probe the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, the NNPC.I can’t tell the outcome of the Senate probe this time but like many probes conducted by the National Assembly I don’t have much anxiety at all. Thirty-Seven years ago I was anxious about such a probe. On December 12 1979 I covered the sitting of the House of Representatives and a motion was brought by Mr Dagogo Princewill(Degema) and Mr. Fola Omidiji (Egba Alake Constituency) to probe the NNPC. Following a report that certain money was stolen in the Corporation.

    The Speaker of the House then, Chief Edwin Ume-Ezeoke(1935-2011) from Nnewi in the present Anambra state ruled both of them out of order. He then asked the two members to bring a substantive motion for deliberations.

    On January 15 1980, Prince Dagogo Princewill brought a fresh motion to probe the NNPC. He said “My enquiry has revealed, Sir, that in this Company there are no adequate personnel especially in the field of accounting and internal audit. I understand too, Sir, that people are being scared away for one reason or the other because they do not come from a particular part of this great country and too, Sir, because they do not belong, or because they were not ex-students of a particular institution. As a result of this, Sir, well qualified people left their jobs in this Corporation. I am told,Sir, that one Mallam M.Y. Wanka,from Bauchi State, a qualified Chartered Accountant, was the only one in the Audit Department. He was frustrated, and he had to leave, and today, he is in the Nigerian National Supply Company as a Representative/Agent in their London Office. Even as at today, Sir, there are only four qualified Chartered Accountants in that Company.

    Mr Speaker, Sir, members of the profession of which I am one are very difficult to get—I mean the Chartered Accountants. A Corporation of the magnitude of the NNPC should have gone to the Nigerian labour market and tried its best to get these people. Instead of that, Sir, there are only four Accountants, two in the audit department and two in the main accounts department. Fo a Corporation of this magnitude, this is grossly inadequate. The four Chartered Accountants are not even sufficient in one department not to talk of the whole Corporation. A Corporation of this standard should get at least twenty Chartered Accountants. I am also told that the service condition is very bad in this Corporation, and the service condition has mae good people to run away from this Corporation.

    Now, Sir, the audit report as given by an internationally recognized and reputable firm of Chartered Accountants, disclosed that they were unable to confirm or find any justifiable reason for the misappropriation of N2.8billion. This is very serious. In this country, we are told that the Press is the watchdog of the nation. During the Army regime it was very difficult, if not impossible, to investigate this matter. Now it is falling on our shoulders to do this onerous task. I would like to commend the Punch Group of newspapers who were able to tell us what was happening in this Corporation, but they were unable to investigate further what had happened to N2.8billion. Either as a result of inefficiency or misappropriation, this amount is unaccounted for”.

    Other members who contributed to the debate were Mr. O. Akinboro)Oke-Ona/Owu/Gbaguar), Mr. M.O. Ugwu(Udi), Dr. E.J. Sowho(Ethiope North), Mr Debo Akande(Ibadan North), Mr Gbadebo Adewumi(Osogbo South), Professor Opayemi Ola(Ekiti West), Mr Abubakar Audu(Anpa South), Prince Awa Ekpo(Eket II), Mr. Charles Adigwe(Awka), Mr E.D.N. Nwandu(Mbaitoli), Alhaji Sanda Kunduga(Kunduga), Dr Junaid Mohammed(Kano West Ward) and the leader of the House then, Alhaji Yinusa Kaltungo(Tangale-Waja South).

    At the end of the day the House set up a Committee to probe the NNPC.  Alhaji Yinusa Kaltungo declared”the motion standing in my name read: That in accordance with House Resolution 48 of 15th, 1980 the Special Committee on the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation should be made up of 15 Members to be composed as follows: 6 Members of the NPN, 4 Members of the UPN, 3 Members of the NPP, 1 Member of the PRP and 1 Member of the GNPP. The Motion was seconded by Mr Jimoh Damisa(Adabbi/Okehi).

    After the motion, two members spoke again. They are Mallam Sidi Ali(Dambata) and  Dr Junaid Mohammed(Kano West Ward).

    Dr Junaid declared,”Another thing is that we have to subpoena the Council Memo which was written and submitted to the Council asking for a transformation of the NNOC into the NNPC. These are very vital documents and vital personalities. Another person will be the former Chief Internal Auditor who has resigned and is now in Britain as the Representatives of the Nigeria National Supply Company. We have got to summon some of these people. It is absolutely important, Sir, that you co-opt more people as the Speaker of this House in order to make this Committee’s work succeed, otherwise, we are up against a very powerful clique. The Senate has been sitting on the Bill sent by the President to discuss and re-organise the NNPC. This gives us room for enormous suspicion and I think it is absolutely important we know the enormity of the task before us so that we do not deceive ourselves. Mr. Speaker, Sir, we may find that the Committee with all its intentions may be a worthless exercise. I want to add that we it with all seriousness”.

    On February 4 1980 the committee was inaugurated by Chief Ezeoke and it was headed by my friend, Dr. James Taribo Sekibo(1939-2013) (Bonny II))  who later became the Odo-Abaji of Canoe House in Okrika, Rivers State.

    On March 31 1980, Chief Ezeoke told the House that “I think I would seize this opportunity to congratulate ourselves for the progress we have made so far in respect of the investigation of the missing N2.8 billion in the NNPC. (Applause) Following the events of the last week and the newspaper publications, the stand of this House in respect of the misappropriation of N2.8 billion by whoever it might be in this country, has now been fully justified. (Applause) I will maintain that the investigation must continue. We must satisfy the aspirations of the people who elected us into this august Assembly. I must maintain that we must not be a successful victim of any blackmail, any subversion, and any attempt by inside and outside sources to impede sources to impede the continuation of this investigation. This money, in whatever account it may be anywhere in the world, must be recovered and brought back to this country.(Applause)

    As soon as we conclude our investigations, the appropriate committee will introduce a legislation to enable the repatriation of this money, and to ensure that the people involved are adequately punished. Accordingly, the special Committee on NNPC will meet in my office immediately after today’s meeting”.

    Sadly, that was the last we heard about Dr Sekibo’s Committee and the report of the Committee. On December 31, 1983, the Military headed by Major General Muhammadu Buhari took over power.

    Here, we go again.

     

    • Eric Teniola, a former director at the presidency stays in Lagos.
  • The journalist as a king maker in Idumuje Kingdom

    The journalist as a king maker in Idumuje Kingdom

    It is a rare phenomenon to see a news media practitioner move from the news room to the apogee of traditional political institution, unless he or she has a blue blood running in the vein. Even at that, Royals hardly fancy the hazards and hassles that go with hunting for news.

    The Akran of Badagry, De Aholu Menu-Toyi I, The Oslo of Isolo, HRM Oba Kabiru Agbabiaka, the Obi of Idumuje Unor, HRM Charles Anyasi stand out here for mentioning.

    We have another close case in Idumuje-Ugboko where the occupant of the next most powerful office to the monarch, the Iyase of Idumuje-Ugboko, Chief Chris Chukwuka Ogwu, is a veteran journalist of repute.

    This year marks ten years of his being in the office of the Iyase, which is the traditional prime minister and he heads the Onotu, the traditional army that defends the kingdom against internal insurrection and external aggressive activities from neighbouring communities.

    For a profession where public appreciation is hard to come by and hard working professionals shun the limelight, Chief Ogwu hardly wants to be seen shaving his own hair.

    Idumuje-Ugboko is one of the towns in Anioma with one of the highest percentage of educated elite in every sphere of life. So, it is not a mean feat that a media person has been on this throne for the past ten years.

    But since the demise of the king of Idumuje-Ugboko in February this year, the significance and function of his office has made him the gold fish that has no hiding place.

    Chief Ogwu was Sports Editor at the Guardian newspaper from 1983 to 1990, Editor-in-Chief of Daily Telegraph, 1994 to 1996, Chairman, Editorial Board of Thisday Newspaper from 1997 to 1999 all in Lagos and later, the pioneer Editor of Delta State owned ‘The Pointer’ Newspaper in Asaba.

    He became the Iyase of ten years ago but the passage of the Octogenarian Monarch of Idumuje-Ugboko Kingdom and the tussle for who becomes the next king has brought him in the eyes of history, customs and tradition of the people in contemporary circumstances.

     

    Presiding Over the Rite of Passage

    The culture of Idumuje-Ugboko Kingdom requires that a King must be interred within 24 hours of his passage but the rite must be initiated by the Iyase of the town who has the right to summon the Council of Chiefs consisting of the Iyase, the Odogwu, the Isama and the Uwolor.

    These are four high ranking Chiefs who oversee their various four quarters of the town namely Atuma, Ogbe Ofu, Ogbe Obi and Onicha Uku respectively.

     

    Making a New King

    When the throne is vacant after the burial of a dead monarch, the administration of the Kingdom falls into the hands of the Iyase for three months, being the next most powerful chief after the monarch.

    Traditionally, the Iyase is the first person to be contacted when the Obi, joins his ancestors. Thereafter, the Iyase will inform the Diokpas in the four quarters and invite them to the Palace to perform the necessary rites and respect.

    The death of the Obi will then be made official to the town and his burial will take place within 24 hours. A period of three months is set by the Iyase to select a new king.

     

    Selecting a new king

    When the throne is vacant after the burial of a late monarch, the administration of the Kingdom falls into the hands of the Iyase for three months, being the next most powerful chief after the monarch.

    The Iyase presides over all meetings in the Palace during these 3 months and after the formal announcement, he then directs the Onotu and/or the Omu to ensure that the town’s market is closed and the people shave their hair as a mark of respect to the departed Obi. These directives are to last until the king is buried traditionally.

    It is only after the burial ceremonies of the departed Obi that the process for the coronation of a new Obi commences. This must be religiously followed as the culture and tradition clearly demand.

    During this period, the Iyase, the Odogwu, the Isama and the Uwoloh take time to scrutinise the Crown Prince, once he scales through all the huddles, this Council will organise a one-man leadership training course for him where he will be coached by eminent scholars on traditional customs and leadership.

    In the case of Idumuje-Ugboko, it is the duty of the Executive Council that has just been formed that will have the final say and advise Umu-Ologbo on who should be the new king.

    The May 25 attack on the Iyase by a group of young men brought in from outside the kingdom was very symbolic as it meant an attack on the person, the institution, that has a primary responsibility to defend the king, and the Kingdom as the Head of the Local Army. The Iyase cannot use his office to take the life of an indigene of the town. He cannot use the office to appropriate the land of the community for himself or friends.

    The Iyase, Chief Ogwu, who was not ready to discuss the issue, confirmed that the prospect of peace in the community was extensively discussed.

    Those who attacked the Iyase had a clear idea of their mission and the danger is not over. They know that they must get his support to convene the process and traditional protocols to select a new king.

    He was opposed the unlawful Izu Ani (General Assembly) that was convened by persons whose agenda was to remove hime from office, ostracise and banish Prince Ned Nwoko, the former representative of Aniocha/Oshimili Federal Constituency from Idumuje Ugboko, settle personal animosities.

  • There’s a hero in you

    There’s a hero in you

    I woke up this morning with my eyeballs swollen, I crave for more sleep. Oh! I wish I could sleep and sleep and …gosh the thoughts of the work load on my desk in the studio flashed through my mind and my heart started panting with fear of the hassle and bustle of Lagos life. While setting out for the day’s work suddenly a song; Hero by Mariah Carey, sneaked into my mind and set me beyond the skies. ‘There’s a hero if you look inside your heart, you don’t have to be afraid of what you are…..inspiring songs such as this have a way of making one feel like running through a time portal and taking hold of the future. A pertinent question aroused my mind while singing this song, who is a hero? I found out from research that ‘ A hero refers to a character who, in the face of danger and adversity or from a position of weakness, displays courage and the will for self-sacrifice.’ In other words heroes are not spirits they are  people who had their fears and weaknesses but rather chose to act courageously in the face of danger. They consider mountains worth taking instead of settling for less.

    In history, my favourite hero is Thomas Alva Edison, an American inventor and businessman who developed many devices that greatly influenced life around the world. These includes phonograph now known as turntables, the motion picture camera, the electric light bulb and many others. It took over 10,000 attempts for Thomas Edison to finally succeed in inventing an electric bulb in 1879. Did you know that this prolific inventor, as a boy was called an ‘addled’(a confused mind) by his school teacher because his mind often wandered while in class. This ended his official schooling and his mother taught him at home. Much of his education came from reading. In his words Edison recalled ‘ My mother was the making of me. She is so true, so sure of me and I felt I had something to live for, someone I must not disappoint.’

    No doubt to accomplish any great feat in life you need supportive relationships, surround yourself with people that will inspire, motivate and more importantly guide you on your path to success. No man is an island, no one makes it alone! This reminds me of the geese sense. Geese like many other birds which have to migrate over very long distances, sometimes covering more than half the earth, fly in beautiful formations either in ‘V’ , ‘U’ or ‘/’ formations. Have you ever wondered why? The bird leading a flock is the only one in the whole that is exerting its full energy. By taking advantage of the wing tip vortex of the bird in front the birds behind can save energy by as much as 50%! In lay language, the bird behind enjoys the draft created by the birds ahead in the formation. That way the bird at the rear will be practically sleeping as it is carried along by the others. The birds take turns to lead and then retire to the rear to sleep. Geese sense! No goose will ever attempt to make it alone. You too cannot afford to walk alone, have a network of like-minded individuals.

    Heroes refuse to be intimidated. I remember a time in my life when I was at a crossroads in my career. I started a new job in a bank and within the first three months of resumption, I became pregnant. Ah!! I  never planned for this… I was all at sea. The bank’s policy categorically stated that an unconfirmed staff must not be pregnant and in case this happens the staff must report to the management and her appointment will be terminated. She could re-apply after having the baby. With the avalanche of financial challenge confronting our family business, my husband and I desperately needed an additional income flow. I confided in a senior colleague, a mentor who frankly told me I had two options;1. Abort the pregnancy, 2.Report and lose the job. I blew a fuse at the thought of the first option..abort my baby?? Never!! I heard myself vehemently speaking up saying ‘ Never I will not abort my baby, I will have my baby and keep the job. My colleague shrewdly said’ hmm..the heroine..let’s see how you will achieve that. He kicked me in the teeth.

    The episode started, I had to be strong despite the morning sickness, and with my physique, nobody ever suspected I was pregnant until the sixth month. At this time, the senior management staff in my branch whom I confided in decided to take advantage of my situation. My mentor suddenly became a tormentor, he wanted me to dance to his tune..obey orders that were obviously unethical or he will report me to the management. The battle became fierce, no solace even in a confidant…I was pushed to the wall. Left with no other option, I sent a mail and reported myself to an executive director and pleaded for mercy. Guess what! My case was referred to the Managing Director of the bank..lo and behold the judgement; I was given approval to proceed on a maternity leave when due, but without payment for the first six months after resumption. In other words I had my baby and retained the job(as I earlier prophesied), my appointment was not terminated I resumed after the three months maternity and continued my job..in fact my colleagues were so benevolent to assist during the ‘no salary’ season.  My story is simply heroic even though I am an unsung hero I’m proud that I made the decision to save my baby, today he is a very intelligent boy. I gladly resigned from the bank two years ago, after serving for seven years, truly I fought and conquered. In every situation in life there are always options, you need to weigh your options carefully, if you ask me the easiest one is not always the best option. Dear hero, refuse to be intimidated!

  • What’s going on in our police establishment?

    I had suspected for some time now that there’s something untoward going on within the Police establishment but I really could not put my finger to it until a few months back.

    Don’t let’s start by comparing the Police here with their counterparts in the UK from where we got our independence. They are poles apart, not just in their orientation and their operational modus, but even in their pay.

    For months on end, there’s perhaps no month you flip through the pages of newspapers and other journals that you won’t see stories on the pay packets of our elected representatives at the Senate and the House of Representatives, not excluding snippets on what our president and governors earn and their comparative analysis with what their counterparts in some advanced democracies earn. They boggle the mind.

    But because it is in the nature of our people to celebrate scandals, focus hardly shift to doing same with what our policemen earn vis a vis their counterparts in other places.  An exception though. The former cop now a serving Senator who’s currently spilling the beans on the incumbent IG, is serving the mouth-watering menu that’s not only of interest to the public, but now a matter for the court to pronounce on. But that may be waved away with what I grew up to hear from my elders in the community, to wit: “Gambari pa Fulani, ko l’ejo n’nu”, meaning “if Hausa kill Fulani, case no dey inside”. It is an important exposure, no doubt, and the menu must be served to the last course.

    What is of greater importance to this narrative, however, is that the role and place of the Police in a democracy are hardly accorded their pride of place in our country, perhaps because of our long romance with military dictatorship and more because there’s perhaps no proper understanding of the fact that as far as internal security is concerned, Police should enjoy premium in the scheme of things.

    I checked and I discovered that our Police is perhaps the most understaffed and underfunded all over the enlightened world. That our cops are even coping with crime detection or prevention in the land, in spite of institutional drawbacks, speaks volumes to the endurance and operational capability of these men and women in the officers’ cadre and the rank and file.

    Their efforts can best be appreciated when you realise that in spite of the fact that Britain ranks among the best policed in the world, crime rate is still higher there than here, with all their access to modern technology. They have more men and women than we have, have emolument packages that are more lucrative than we have and have a better orientation than we have.

    If the authorities are persuaded to apply universal standard of confining members of the Armed Forces to their constitutional role of defending the nation against external aggression and internal insurgency, then there can be serious consideration of adequately funding and equipping the Police to serve its primary constitutional purpose of maintaining law and order in a civilian setting; and even dealing with internal insurgency. It is in very rare cases of national emergency that we should see soldiers involved, and, on the streets, not in little matters of putting down demonstrations or strikes or in getting involved in supposedly routine election matters.

    If you find policemen and women exhibiting foul and improper manners on the roads and at their stations or diminishing themselves before touts and land speculators, unacceptable as it may be, that can be excused on the ground that the setup of the Police establishment itself is constitutionally faulty and should be looked into. That, to me, is far more important than the unending skirmishes between the executive and the legislative arms.

    It seems those who drafted the constitution and embodied the law setting up the Police Service Commission did not realise that they were unwittingly building in anarchy into the Police establishment. A quick look into the law setting up the Police Service Commission (PSC) exposes this major flaw. While the commission is empowered to deal with the discipline and promotion of ALL policemen up to the rank of deputy inspector general of police, it gave it no role in the case of the Inspector General of Police (IGP).

    That, to my mind, is a major loophole that can be exploited by a smart IGP, for which he cannot be faulted but which inevitably will have negative impact on the morale and efficiency of the Police. I hope that is not already playing out in two recent incidents I will refer to presently.

    Before Fatai Owoseni was finally dislodged as Commissioner of Police, Lagos State Command, we had two pieces of news previously that he had been posted out and on those two occasions, the rumoured posting turned out to be untrue. Anyone conversant with this serious constitutional and administrative loophole, in the PSC – IG relationship, knew that it was a matter of time before the rumour of Owoseni’s posting out of Lagos became real. It happened shortly afterwards.

    Now, the new Police helmsman in Lagos, an acting CP, Imohimi Edgal was rattled a few days ago with the news that he had been demoted back to DCP by a letter said to have been written by a permanent secretary in the Police Service Commission, a letter which eventually was disowned as unauthorised by all the commissioners in the Commission, san their ubiquitous permanent secretary.

    The implication of that demotion was to render the hard working young man’s position as the CP for Lagos immediately untenable. That’s wrong, unfair and absolutely unjustifiable, especially in the knowledge by most Lagosians that the new CP, barely two months in office, has shown flashes of brilliance that should not be rewarded with demotion.

    These two incidents may not be unrelated to the lacuna between the PSC and the IGP, and I bet,  if someone is not exploiting this to blight the morale and efficiency of the working cops.

    My hunch tells me that all the IGPs, past and present, knew of this major flaw and it is beyond debate that a mean, overzealous and ambitious IGP can exploit it to his advantage, but to the detriment of the overall national interest.

    It is apposite, to properly ask:

    • what is the working relationship like between the PSC chairman who was until a few years back an IGP himself and the present occupier of that seat?
    • Did he have any issue with IGP Okiro when he served under him?
    • If yes, will he be angelic sufficiently enough not to want to have it back at him now that he’s IGP and he’s administratively licensed to act without regard to the PSC?
    • If not, how cordial is his relationship with the PSC whose chairman was once his boss in the Force?

    When we get answers to these posers, we will then know, as Yorubas say, if the snake doesn’t have a hand in its underbelly, as far as this infamous letter of demotion of Lagos and Kogi acting CPs by a permanent secretary and the eventual denouncement by the PSC, is concerned.

    But if in truth members of the PSC are unaware of, and did not approve of the letter issued by the Perm Sec, then he must be a fifth columnist in the PSC serving other nebulous interest and giving the Buhari Administration a bad name. He should therefore be relieved of his position and shown the door; the nation can do without such officer!