Category: Comments

  • Thoughts on opposition parties’ merger

    The decision by major opposition parties of Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), All Nigerian Peoples Party (ANPP), Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) and a part of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) to transform to Action Progressives Congress (APC) has elicited a lot of variegated reactions bordering on euphoria in some quarters and outright disdain or condemnation especially by the ruling Party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). It is instructive to state that the PDP has been the dominant and ruling party, at the centre since the inception of democratic rule in 1999 when the military handed power over to the civilians.

    It trite and apt to state that the PDP’s hegemony and strangle hold on power since 1999 has not relatively impacted positively on the lives of an average Nigerian. Instead of their lives improving, it is rather getting worse. Ironically, the PDP has been winning elections, despite the fact that they have not delivered dividends of democracy. The opposition parties attributed this to the fact that the party is a very efficient rigging machine with the sole aim of appropriating our collective patrimony for the promoters of the party. The PDP, being the beneficiary of the electoral heist, always stand logic on its head, by claiming that the victories are attributable to the fact that the party has a national spread and presence.

    Discernible Nigerians have been clamouring for the disparate but relatively parties to bury their differences and band together to form a formidable alternative to the proven rudderless PDP. It was discovered that, not to come together and form a formidable opposition to the PDP, the shining lights of the parties in opposition should rather be regarded as the stumbling blocks to chasing away the PDP from power through the instrumentality of election.

    It is now obvious that the ruling party is jittery with the realisation of the fact that the seemingly impossible merger of these parties is coming to fruition, after all.

    Efforts are now aboard to give the proposed merger a bad name, in order to hang it or make it dead on delivery. That is why clichés like “gang up”; strange bed-fellows are now being deployed to describe the effort. What is an opposition party and why is it necessary, in the scheme of things in a society? Is opposition necessary or anathema to the sustenance of representative government or not?

    Ideally, many parties will partake in an election but only one will emerge victorious. Depending on the kind of arrangement that subsists in a given clime, commentators have voiced a demand for uncluttered channels of protest for extra-parliamentary opposition, for effective and legal dissent. This arises from and includes two different characteristics. One is simple political frustration, a feeling that the wrong policies are being pursued and the right people going unheard. Two, is the belief that there is some positive benefit to be derived from having a form of communal opposition, of whatever hue, to the acts and policies of government, of whatever kind, coupled with a fear that this necessary opposition has become moribund or stifled, and its benefits emasculated or destroyed. The desire to secure effective means of communication for one’s beliefs and implementation for one’s policies is hardly a recent phenomenon.

    Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, the crises-prone national chairman of the PDP, who initially derisively waved away the perceived or actual threat the merger can constitute to his party that he described the PDP as the “Political Messi” must have realised that even the original Messi can be rendered ineffective during a football match. All the opponent need to do is to engage in a SWOT analysis and implement the result to the letter. A credible opposition is an ever vigilant critic and unapologetically of the government, searching out the weaknesses of its hold on the public and forever compelling it to defend and justify its policies before the court of public opinion.

    “A party, according to Edmund Burke, is a body of men united, for promoting by their joint endeavours, the national interest in a particular principle in which they are all agreed”.

    It needs repeating that one of the marks of a genuine democracy is the existence of a vigorous, legal, alternative government in- waiting that subjects the activities of the men in power to searching public scrutiny. That is why one views with wry amusement when some commentators were harping on the fact that the new party should not be formed with the primary aim of dislodging the PDP from power. I had cause to posit on a TV program recently that, it is only the APC that can prevent APC from forming the next post 2015 government at the federal level if egocentric considerations and ambitions are not relegated to the background. The credo and mantra of the promoters should be like the late President of Ghana stated over 50 years ago that “independence of Ghana first and all other things shall follow”. From empirical evidence, the merging parties do not have to exhume the corpse of the late Cicero of Esa-Oke, Chief Bola Ige to craft a manifesto because, by default, PDP had already done that for them. Highlight all those things they have not been able to deliver like good road network, effective health care delivery system, revamped educational sector, electrical power, vigorous and unbiased fight against corruption, free education to a level the finances of the country can sustain etc.

    In concluding this, we aver that (a) the merging parties must not allow themselves to be pigeon-holed into shying away from stating categorically that they have better and alternative policies in contra-distinction to those of the PDP that that had been all motion but no movement (b) the difference between all the political parties in Nigeria is like that between six and half a dozen, so nobody should sell the bogey of strange bedfellows to them in order to distract and sow seeds of discord in their midst. Their coming together has given Nigerians hope that, yes we can be dragged back from the precipice.

     

    • Mallam Jaji is executive secretary, Never Again Group, Lagos

     

  • A moment to reflect on the Talakawa condition in Nigeria and our world

    A moment to reflect on the Talakawa condition in Nigeria and our world

    Talakawa: Hausa, noun: Of or pertaining to the poor. The poor as a social category, as a community of the desperately needy deserving of the solicitude of the wealthy and powerful

     Herald: English, noun. 1. A person, event or thing that precedes or comes before; forerunner, harbinger. 2. A person, event or thing that proclaims or announces: A good newspaper should be a herald for truth.

    Dictionary.com (online)

     

    This Sunday, February 24, 2013, I begin this weekly column in The Nation. Readers accustomed to reading my column, Talakawa Liberation Courier, in The Sunday Guardian, will immediately recognize that there is an echo of that column’s title in the title of this new column in another newspaper: Talakawa Liberation Herald. I could have retained the former title in this new discursive context, this new journalistic space. But since my “migration” from The Guardian, so to speak, represents for me a momentous event in my journalistic work of more than forty years in the Nigerian press, I decided that it was necessary for me to also change the title of the column.

    Perhaps some months or maybe even a year or two from now, I shall write fully on why I left The Guardian for which I have written continuously since it was founded in 1983, perhaps the only one left among the old or aging writers, academics and commentators that were there at the beginning of the Guardian group. For now, all I will allow myself to say is that I left without rancour or bitterness but with a great deal of sadness and anger. In the meantime, my “migration” to The Nation, I feel, is an occasion that provides a unique opportunity to reflect on the column itself, hoping in the process to clarify both for myself and for my readers what it is I have tried to do – and continue hoping to do – with and through the column. In a nutshell, this exercise entails the question of the informing perspectives, ideas and values on which the column is based. And of course, with regard to these perspectives, ideas and values, the central concept is the term “Talakawa”. Concerning this concept, I wish to address two central propositions, two cardinal theses that the readers of this piece will find as startling and as confounding as I find them. What are these two theses or propositions?

    In our country, Nigeria and in many regions and nations of the world, age-old cultural definitions and social meanings attached to the poor as a definite, recognizable demographic category are changing beyond recognition to include social groups and strata that would never have been remotely close to the actual and potential ranks of the desperately poor or needy. That is the first of our two propositions. Permit me to expatiate on it carefully.

    Now, I do not speak Hausa and neither can I claim to have deep ethnographic knowledge of Hausa culture and society. What I do know about the meanings attached to the term “Talakawa” comes mostly from information I have gleaned over the decades from colleagues and comrades who both speak the language and have insiders’ ethnographic knowledge of its culture and traditions. From these colleagues and comrades, I have learnt that with the addition of the suffix “wa” to any ethnic or social group, a distinct collective identity is inscribed on the designated group. Examples are “Hausawa” or “Yarubawa” for the Hausa and the Yoruba ethnic groups respectively. I have learnt also from these “native informants” that in the wake of the oil-boom and the rise of a class of arriviste nouveau riches whose special symbol of new-found, lavishly spent wealth was the Mercedes Benz, the term “Benzawa” was coined on this same principle of adding that suffix, “wa” to identify and draw attention to a particular social group. [Incidentally, in Kiswahili, we have “Wa-Benzi” for the Hausa “Benzawa”, the same word serving reverse roles as suffix in Hausa and prefix in Kiswahili!]

    At any rate, the most important thing that I wish to draw attention to in the term “Talakawa” is implied in the first of the two epigraphs to this piece. This is the idea of the poor as a community of the destitute and the needy deserving of the benevolence of the wealthy and the powerful. Behind this idea is the historic fact that in many traditional and strongly hierarchical societies of the world, most of the poor remain poor generation after generation. Through unexpected good fortune, a few individuals in a particular generation might escape the scourge of desperate poverty but for the most part, most don’t and do not even expect to. To repeat: that is what the term “Talakawa”, in its traditional or received historical and cultural meanings, basically implies: a social identity, a worldview in which life circumstances and chances are more or less permanently fixed. I may be wrong, but I strongly suspect that this is what many readers of this column will instinctively think about when they see the term “Talakawa” in the title of this column.

    But capitalism in all parts of the world has changed that profile forever, giving new twists to what is involved in being within the ranks of the very poor, thereby opening up the range of experiences attached to being a member of the “Talakawa”. Abstractly, theoretically, there is no single modern capitalist country or economy in the world in which moving out of age-old, generation-to-generation poverty is completely or effectively blocked from anybody. People move from rural farming communities to the cities, they move from one job to another, and they move from one trade or profession to new ones perpetually, all in the hope, the promise that they stand a chance of having better lives than their parents and grandparents. But except in the richest countries in the world with high-income economies, most people in our country and our world in fact remain poor and only a sprinkling among their offspring will have better lives than they had.

    “Talakawa” has historically become a broad, inclusive term that includes millions of factory workers and wage labourers who earn significantly less than the national, regional or local minimum wage; hundreds of thousands of vendors and hawkers whose daily and monthly trade turnovers are unbelievably paltry; uncountable numbers of grossly underpaid teachers and junior clerical staff; multitudes of pensioners and old people without solvent children to act as their social safety net in their last years. As I have repeatedly tirelessly in my column in The Guardian, 7 out of every 10 Nigerians live below the absolute poverty level; in some parts of the country, the figure is close to 8 out of ten in rural areas. In other words, and to use an analogy to drive home the point, like the group of animals that when molting completely shed their old skins, the term “Talakawa” has taken on new meanings, new expressions that were unthinkable in the traditional meanings attached to it. This is why unlike the “Talakawa” of old, the new “Talakawa” cannot expect – and at any rate will never get – the consistent, regular paternalistic benevolence of the wealthy and the powerful; they must fight it out by themselves, with the non-paternalistic help and solidarity of members of the elite who take up their cause. This leads logically to the second of our two propositions which, in my opinion, is far more confounding than the first proposition.

    In the new millennium, the demographic constituencies of the “Talakawa” have been massively expanded by new patterns in which the young and the highly educated are significantly represented. Two years ago, the Central Bank Governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, gave the figure of over 20 million as the statistic for unemployed high school and university graduates with no prospects of employment anywhere in sight. This alarming figure is further compounded by the fact that the median age for Nigeria is 19. For those unfamiliar with the concept of the national median age, what it basically means is that 50% of Nigerians are below the age of 19 while 50% is above that age. If you raise the computational age to 30, then you get more than 65% of the Nigerian population below 30. In other words, there is a vast demographic bulge at the younger age strata of our population and this bulge feeds right into present and future specters of being and/or becoming “Talakawa” among considerable numbers of the young of our society.

    We might choose to take some comfort in the fact that this phenomenon of great numbers of young and educated people falling into joblessness and poverty is indeed a global phenomenon, the effect – and resultant cause – of spirals of global crises in world capitalism. As the saying goes, misery loves company! In some European countries like Greece, Spain, Italy and Ireland, the figures for unemployed, educated and restless youths are close to 40%. And drawing from a personal experience, I have simply been stunned by the number of my undergraduate students at Harvard University who, in the last half a decade or so, have been expressing to me grave, terrified misgivings concerning what the future holds in stock for them.

    Each region and nation of the world must of course seek its own answers, its own solutions to the specter of being and becoming “Talakawa” – without of course being indifferent to issues of great inequalities between the various regions of the world. In the case of Nigeria, I wish to give as much emphasis as I can muster in saying that poverty, or the “Talakawa” condition, is the one single factor that unites all our ethnic and regional communities. Show me any one single geo-political zone, any state or group of states in the country where the poverty rate is better than the 7 out of 10 absolute poverty level and I will eat my words. Show me any part of the country in which, no matter how well the elites are doing politically and economically compared to other regional, zonal and ethnic competitors in the political class, the masses of the people are faring better than ordinary folks in other parts of the country and I will mortify my spirit by attending an all-night vigil of one of our most fanatical evangelical sects!

    Indubitably, the “Talakawa “ question is the bottom line of all the crises bedeviling our country since it is both directly and indirectly linked to all the other crises and challenges. This, by the way, is why this column can never possibly exhaust the range of issues it can and will take up. Beyond this and more impersonally, I would argue that the “Talakawa” condition ought to be the first item of discussion in a sovereign national conference that will sooner or later have to be convened if Nigeria is to survive as one unified, egalitarian and democratic society. In the weeks, months and years ahead, I hope to join my voice to the voices of other members of the “commentariat” [this playfully ludic term is, I believe, Victor Ifijeh’s] in The Nation and other organs of popular and progressive national conversation in our country.

     

    Biodun Jeyifo

    bjeyifo@fas.harvard.edu

     

  • The delusions of today’s men

    The delusions of today’s men

    I read Dr. Reuben Abati’s article titled ‘The Hypocrisy Of Yesterday’s Men’’ (3rd Feb.2013) which was published in virtually every newspaper in the country with amusement. He sought to ridicule and demean those of us that served President Olusegun Obasanjo’s government and that are not very impressed with the performance of his boss. The fact that we asked President Goodluck Jonathan to account for the 67 billion USD that he squandered from our foreign reserves has clearly upset him. We dared to ask about the money and so we were singled out and targetted for a tongue-lashing and a long lecture from the Presidency. Yet we remain undeterred. This is how weak governments that have nothing to offer and something to hide always behave.

    They come after their perceived enemies with full force and they are petty and oversensitive. This is all the more so when they lack experienced hands and when they do not have anyone with deep insight or wisdom about the art of governance or politics within their ranks. In his response instead of answering our questions, addressing the issues or making any pertinent and sensible points about the numerous allegations against his principal, Abati chose to go on a delusional and self-serving joy ride.

    He simply refused to address any of our numerous concerns but instead indulged vainly in what can only be described as an utterly vulgar and distasteful form of intellectual, spiritual and psychological masturbation by telling us that he and his master were ‘’today’s men’’ who needed no lessons from the ‘’men of yesterday’’. The essay was nothing but the usual smear campaign and a crude attempt to intimidate which has been the hallmark of this Government whenever they are faced with even the mildest form of criticism. I will not dignify most of the insulting and childish submissions that Abati indulged in with a response other than to say that he told a shameless and pernicious lie when he wrote that as Minister of Aviation I ’’shut down Port Harcourt Airport for two years’’ and ‘’allowed grass to grow all over it’’. This is false. It is a classic case of disinformation coming from a man that is obviously suffering from a very low self-esteem.  It is clear that Abati, who is a journalist, has forgotten the most important tenet of his profession which is that ‘’facts are sacred and opinion is cheap’’. Ordinarily one would have ignored his bitter rant but it is important that I set the record straight for the sake of posterity. The facts are as follows.

    Port Harcourt International Airport was closed on Dec.10 2005 after the Sossolisso Air crash in which 100 people were killed. The crash affected the runway of the airport very badly and consequently the then Minister of Aviation, Professor Babalola Borishade closed it. I was redeployed from the Ministry of Culture and Tourism to the Ministry of Aviation in November 2006.

    This was 11 months after the Sossolisso crash took place and that Port Harcourt Airport had been closed. It is clear from the foregoing that I was not the one that shut down Port Harcourt Airport. When I took over at Aviation my priority was to carry out all the necessary repairs at Port Harcourt Airport and to open it as quickly as possible. I was saddened to discover that in the previous 11 months before I got there nothing had been done and the contract to repair the runway had not even been awarded. Consequently within a month of my being appointed Minister of Aviation we set to work and awarded the contract to Julius Berger at the cost of 3 billion naira. 50 per cent of the money was paid up front and Julius Berger set to work immediately. The runway was fully completed and the airport in pristine condition before I left office on May 29th 2007 just 6 months after I awarded the contract. However despite this the airport could not be opened before we left because the runway lighting system was still in the process of being installed. The Yar’adua government went ahead and opened the airport a few months after we left office even though the runway lights had still not been installed. The record shows that from the day that I was appointed Minister of Aviation and the time that our mandate ran out 7 months later my staff at the Ministry and Julius Berger worked night and day on the runway project at Port Harcourt International Airport in order to ensure that we finished it in record time. And this we managed to do. It was my project. I sourced the money for it, I paid for it, I forced the contractor to move fast on it and I finished it. The fact that the Yar’adua administration did not complete the lighting system and open the airport for another few months after we left office, even though the runway was ready, is for them to explain and not for me. Even though nothing was done at that airport for 11 months before I got to Aviation, once I was appointed we swung into action immediately.

    I repeat that it was under my watch that work commenced, that it was rebuilt, that it was completed and that it was fully restored and after that the airport was ready to be fully utilised. Given these facts how Abati can peddle the lie that I was the one that not only closed the airport but that I also kept it shut for two years, did nothing there, caused it to remain idle and allowed ‘’grass to grow all over it’’ honestly baffles me. I was Minister of Aviation for only 7 months and not 2 years and within those seven months, from scratch, I did all the work that needed to be done in order to make the airport functional again. I am proud of the fact that we succeeded in meeting our target and completing the job.

    Abati also so asserted that I closed down ‘’other major airports’’ whilst I was Minister of Aviation ‘’for the purposes of renovation’’. Again this is not true. Not one of the four major airports in the country were closed down for renovation works or any other reason whilst I was Minister of Aviation. And neither, to the best of my recollection, did I close or suspend the operations of any of the smaller airports except perhaps for safety reasons. As a matter of fact the opposite was the case. I actually installed and completed the sophisticated Safe Tower Project in three of the four major airports in the country, resurrected and funded the Tracon Radar System which is operational in our country today and which gives us full radar coverage in our airspace, upgraded the facilities in many of the old smaller airports and granted permission for the establishment of new airports in places like Gombe. Quite apart from that we not only stopped the terrible cycle of plane crashes that was prevalent at that time but there was not one aircraft that crashed under my watch and no loss of life from the air under my tenure. I am the only Minister of Aviation in the last 10 years of our country that can boast of that and yet Abati seeks to tarnish my name, stain my record and rubbish my efforts with his lies. All this and far more and Abati accuses me of ‘’running the aviation sector down to a state of near collapse’’. For that I commit him to God’s judgment. It is obvious that he is just being malicious and dishonest. I take strong objection to his specious lies, his brazen falsehood and his distortions of fact. The suggestion that I closed Port Harcourt Airport and neglected it for two years, that I closed other airports for renovations and that I ran the aviation sector down to the ground is what I would refer to as a figment of his malicious, overactive and fertile imagination. It is a  glaring mendacity, a brutal assault on truth and an affront to my sensibilities. I find it utterly reprehensible and repugnant that a man that is entrusted to speak for the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria can indulge in such petty lies.

    Let me end this contribution by pointing out the fact that being ‘’yesterday’s men’’ does not mean that some of us cannot be ‘’tomorrows men’’ as well. Only God knows what lies ahead for each and everyone of us. So when Abati glibly writes people off as if they will never be in power again it is a sad reflection of his lack of experience and naivety. It is God that determines our tomorrow. It is He that lifts men up, that pulls them down and, sometimes if it be His will, lifts them up again. There are countless examples of that in our history. Finally I have a few questions for President Jonathan and his ’’todays men’’.

    When will they take President Obasanjo’s advice and finally do something concrete about Boko Haram and our security situation? Does the fact that at least 4000 Nigerians have been killed by these terrorists in the last two years under their watch not bother them? How can they sleep well at night with all that innocent blood that has flowed and precious lives cut short whilst they were at the helm of affairs of our nation? More innocent souls have been killed in the last 2 years by terrorists than at any time in the history of Nigeria outside the civil war. How does President Jonathan and his ‘’today’s men’’ feel about winning such a dubious and dishonorable title? Does he still regard Boko Haram as ‘’his siblings’’ who he ‘’cannot hurt’’? Why has the President refused to visit the good people of the north east despite the fact that dozens of people are still being slaughtered there by Boko Haram every day? Moving to the issue of corruption and the economy when will our President and ’’today’s men’’ answer the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom David Cameron’s question and tell him what they did with the 100 billion USD that they made from oil sales in the last two years? When will they answer Obi Ezekwsile’s question about how they squandered 67 billion USD of our foreign reserves? When will they answer the question that Nasir El Rufai asked sometime back about how they spent over 350 billion naira on security vote in one year alone?

    When will they answer the many questions that Dr. Pat Utomi and many other distinguished and courageous leaders and ’’yesterday’s men’’ have raised about the trillions of naira that have been supposedly spent on oil subsidy payments in the last two years? When will they implement the findings and recommendations of the Nuhu Ribadu report on the thivery that has gone on in the oil sector? When will they cultivate the guts and find the courage to respond to a call for a public debate to defend their abysmal record?

    When will these ‘’today’s men’’ stop being so reckless with our money? Why would our ‘’today’s man’’ FCT Minister budget 5 billion for the ‘’rehabilitatioin of prostitues in the Abuja’’? Why would he budget 7.5 billion naira for a new ‘’FCT city gate’’? Why would he budget 4 billion naira for a house for the First Lady? Why would the Federal Government of ‘’todays men’’ budget 1 billion naira for food in the Villa? Are these the priorities of ‘’today’s men and women’’?  And all this when Nigeria is back in foreign debt to the tune of 9 billion USD and is still borrowing, when local debt has hit almost 50 billion USD, when graduate unemployment has hit 80 per cent, when 40 per cent of Nigerians do not have access to good food and ‘’are hungry’’ and when 70 per cent of Nigerians are living below the poverty line? Is this the vision of ‘’today’s men and women’’? If so may God deliver Nigeria.

     

    •Fani-Kayode is a former

    Minister of Aviation

  • Kalu and Abia politics

    Kalu and Abia politics

    Of recent, the media has been inundated with the infantile vituperation of some journalists of Lagos based media trying to defend their benefactor, former Governor Orji Kalu, who likes to seek attention where none exists.

    I have read the accounts presented variously by the media and I am able to decipher that they are all headed in one direction, to create noise in abundance. But it is not his fault, he wants to divert attention by mocking at our collective and corporate intelligence. Are those noise makers not aware that their benefactor is now gallivanting in a political valley and wilderness, and therefore seeking desperately to gain undue attention by telling them to attempt a comparison between him and Governor Theodore Orji?

    No amount of money can purchase integrity because it is not a commodity. What I find difficult to understand is why Kalu thinks he can always fool all the people all the time. He is angry because he has failed to supplant the incumbent governor of the state with his former deputy; he was beaten flat in his own game. In as much as we want to set records straight, I will try to avoid replying him and his workers word for word because doing so will give him undue attention and comfort since his motive is mainly to be seen as someone who is in popularity contest with a sitting governor.

    The rejection of Kalu both in PDP and Abia is not the fault of Governor Orji but his own fault and everybody knows why. Today, he is saying he left PDP because of Obasanjo, tomorrow he will say Jonathan is a bad man and the next time he will abuse PDP and Orji, all to no avail. Governor Orji was a civil servant and was later redeployed to Government House where he played the role of an administrative and intellectual back bone of Kalu’s government to the extent that he was considered good enough to become governor, at a time the EFCC and Obasanjo were at the heels of Kalu. This led to his incarceration since Kalu was under immunity while Ochendo (Orji) was presumed to have had prior knowledge of the financial recklessness of Kalu. Everybody knew Ochendo’s incarceration was a blessing in disguise because without it he could have failed in that election. The massive support he received was as a result of protest vote in Abia State and not because of Kalu.

    Governance is soldier go, soldier come, and not a private estate of any man, who is trying by all means to reckon with the elites of Abia State, who have, in conjunction with the people of Abia, said with one loud voice, ‘enough” of politics of brigandage in Abia’.

     

    •Onyechere is Special Adviser, Public Communication to Abia State Governor, Theodore Orji

  • Ajimobi and the myth of Iwo Road

    Ajimobi and the myth of Iwo Road

    By all traditional indices and parameters, Iwo Road is qualified to be called “the crossroads that troubles the visitor”. It is a major road with several intersections. A section of the road takes you to Ife; another one leads you to Iwo Town; one also takes you to Oyo via Ojo.

    The other two lead you to “Gate” in the heart of Ibadan and Lagos respectively. Iwo Road also has its own traditional narratives. The myth about the road is that it is the crossroads where deities and other weird creatures converge in the dead of the night; and it is believed that such assembly is good for the state because of its divine returns. In Ibadan, as in other major Yoruba towns, the visit of the gods at any point in time is always a sign of blessing. It is therefore in the interest of the state to allow the deities ascend and descend at will to avoid blessing deficit. It is this myth that was said to have constrained past administrations in Oyo State from lifting Iwo Road from its accustomed labyrinth.

    The convocation of metaphysical agents and forces within and around Iwo Road and the conspiracy of previous administrations in Oyo State, evident in their unwillingness to liquidate this evil assemblage, confirm the cultural indulgence the notorious road had enjoyed in the past years. But whatever may be the myth around Iwo Road should not conflict with its political metaphor.

    Each time I pass through Iwo Road, I see the vacuity of our political leadership, the depravity of humanity and the desperation of a struggling people. I see the rejects of the society that are in the world but as mere walking corpses. I see disgruntled and angry women strapped their future to their back with a loose sash, looking askance into a tomorrow that is already dead to them. I see a colony of malcontents dramatising the vanities and inanities of an unjust society. I see a people with mangled aspirations drooping their heads in total submission to their failed visions and the remnant of their expectations.

    Even in its present appearance of grandeur, Iwo Road remains the theatre of the absurd where people of diverse destinies connect with their existential realities. Iwo Road is the crossroads that leads some people to their destinations and frustrates others from reaching their destinies.

    Iwo Road is home to different human characters: the money changers, hawkers of anything under the sun, madmen and specialists, beggars of diverse tactics, touts and thugs, assassins and apprentices of evil, food vendors and their consuming multitude, jobless graduates roaming around and about, urchins with their tools of crisis, labourers and their implements of grit, security agents and their revenue collectors, street sweepers with their brooms of pity, goggle-eyed intellectuals and their observatory ladders, government officials with their tax files. The list is endless. Then the traffic. This is the major phenomenon of Iwo Road. It is a disservice to grammatical expression to say that what people experience daily at Iwo Road is ‘go slow’. No, it is more than that. Without being hyperbolic, it is a gridlock. On a daily basis, travellers are trapped for hours in the gridlock, workers get late to office because of it. The traffic wardens end up creating traffic stalemate. They stand in the midst of the traffic not knowing what to do, where to start from or who to blame. The confusion begins from nowhere and ends at nowhere. This gridlock is tied to its mystery.

    The Abiola Ajimobi government with its ‘consensual sloganeering credo must have been intrigued by the Iwo Road mystery hence its resolve to unravel it. Ajimobi must have realised that the secret of the success of his administration lies in his ability to deal with this mystery through a systemic despatch of its nuisance contents. The governor, therefore, decided to engage the Iwo Road mafia in a battle of wits which he seems to be winning. The first move was the relocation of the parks. Though, some of them have refused to obey this relocation order, it is not as bad as it used to be. Then, some structures encroaching on the road were demolished while some traders were sent packing. Some of the illegal bus parks are now undergoing beautification and landscaping evolution. Thus, a new Iwo Road stripped of all forms of traditional razzmatazz is emerging.

    No responsible government in this modern age will subscribe to a risible myth or succumb to the fallacy of a witch-cult fantasy. Why should Iwo Road not undergo a revification simply because some weird creatures are said to have turned the place to a midnight eatery where they feast on “appeasement menu” in assorted calabashes brought by patrons of herbalists and promoters of “IÌc¹Ìce”? The best the government can do for them in this regard is to relocate their eatery to places like Dugbe, Yemetu, Orita Challenge, Idi-Arere, Beere, Oje and the rest. Ibadan, and indeed, Oyo State as a whole, does not appear to me like a state that will lack a convenient venue for the convocation and revelry of midnight principalities and other entities of darkness.

    All previous administrations before Ajimobi were unable to solve the Iwo Road mystery because they lacked the creativity to deconstruct its metaphor and understand the contemporariness of its social construct. These days, governance requires depth of ideas, good thinking, poetic logic, political theatrics, oratorical dramatics and above all, divine wisdom. When you lack all these, you lack initiative. Any inspirational and creative administration must understand and appreciate the economic dynamics of roads. When you have gridlock spots where vehicles are trapped for several hours, there is an alarming decline in economic activities and by extension, in revenue. Unrestricted movements of human personnel and the facilitation of their economic goods are revenue-friendly to a government that develops and maintains its infrastructure, especially roads.

    The massive road constructions going on in states like Lagos, Osun, Ekiti, Ogun, Oyo, Edo and Imo, confirm the linkage between roads, economic growth and other development indicators. Strategic road networking is key to development and is also a major boost to regional integration. Since all the states in the South West are determined to forge ahead with the process of integration, all efforts must be made towards upgrading their infrastructure by making it trade-friendly. This way, they will stimulate and create massive opportunities for their peoples and invariably guarantee their economic prosperity.

    The rehabilitation work at Iwo Road is, therefore, the elixir that the Ajimobi government needs to provoke the inspiration it requires in unlocking the problematics of other projects and similar policy gridlocks.

    With the new law banning street begging in Oyo State, the transformation of Iwo Road is nearing total completion. Besides, the Oyo State Traffic Management and the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) have deployed personnel to the road for effective monitoring. These days, movement around the road is somehow smooth and stress-free.

    What Ajimobi is doing in Iwo Road was what Babatunde Fashola did to Oshodi some years back.

    I am not too sure if Oshodi had its own myth but what I do know is that Fashola’s intervention has demystified the notorious Oshodi. Since that intervention, Oshodi has remained quiet, fomenting no crisis, witnessing no trouble and engendering no conflict. The gridlock had since disappeared. Vehicular and human traffic now flows without the stress of the past. Ajimobi and Fashola’s action on Iwo Road and Oshodi respectively exemplifies how visionary leadership and administration should respond to obstacles of development. Myths are obstacles to progress and until they are disparaged and treated with contempt and disdain, our society will be held hostage by mere soporific narratives and antiquated traditions.

    While crediting the Ajimobi administration for its creativity and sagacity in coming up with the magic for the revival of Iwo Road, I am proposing that the government should come up with the mechanisms including legislations, that will give an enduring value to the various measures and structures that are being put in place at Iwo Road.

     

    •Thomas, a former Special Adviser to Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, is a lecturer at the Department of History and International Studies, Lagos State University.

     

  • Alison-Madueke: A minister and her passion

    Alison-Madueke: A minister and her passion

    Vilified and often attacked for being responsible for the rot in the nation’s oil and gas industry, the minister of petroleum resources, Diezani Alison-Madueke, has borne everything with strong equanimity and an unwavering determination to deliver the goods. In this report, a look is taken at those areas where the minister has acquitted herself well in the face of daunting challenges and limitations.

    While ‘bashing’ public officials seems to be the pastime of Nigeria’s criticising public, only very few public officers have been subjected to attacks, both personal and official, like Diezani Alison-Madueke. While some had said she is the most corrupt minister, some said she is so powerful to the extent that she dictates to the president. She has also been accused of being behind the recent crisis that has bedeviled the oil and gas sector in the last few years. Recently, she was accused of being behind the ugly drama that characterised the submission of the report of the committee set up in the wake of last year’s subsidy protests and headed by former chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu. But come to think of it, what have they not accused her of since she joined government? Some members of the committee had openly disagreed with the version of the report being presented to the President. Critics said Diezani and some Presidency officials actually colluded with the ‘disgruntled’ members of the committee to discredit the report so as to protect some friends of the president.

    While these and other such debilitating criticisms have been made against the woman, they have not in any way prevented her from recording some modest achievement which even her staunchest critics could not deny her. In fact, observers of the oil and gas sector have singled her and her Aviation counterpart, Stella Oduah, another female minister, as two ministers who are really executing President Jonathan’s transformation agenda

    The local content champion…

    Determined to ensure that there is greater participation of Nigerians in the oil and gas sector, the minister has been pushing for creating the enabling environment for more Nigerians to come in into the capital intensive but lucrative upstream sector of the petroleum industry. Diezani is said to be so passionate about this that she is more or less a lone soldier pushing the Petroleum Industry Bill, PIB. Though the bill has faced a lot of opposition both from politicians and some foreign oil interests, sources said this has not deterred the woman from trudging on. Observers also state no past oil minister has helped local indigenous companies like the current minister who always jumps at any opportunity to help any indigenous company in the sector to succeed.

    That the nation may have adequate fuel.

    One of the reasons adduced for the rise of oil subsidy thieves and the attendant fleecing of the country that went with it was the fact that the federal government did not have adequate storage facility and even when the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, imported fuel at times, it had to rely on private tank firms to store the commodity. But the minister of petroleum resources seemed to have noticed this when she initiated the refurbishment of the Benin Depot of the Pipelines and Products Marketing Company, PPMC, which was commissioned last week. The facility was first constructed in 1978 and was commissioned the following year. But since 2005, the facility has been dormant due to lack of adequate maintenance. The depot has a combined capacity of over a hundred and twenty thousand litres of petrol, kerosene and auto mobile gas oil. Apart from this, the facility has nine loading arms which make it easy for trailers to come in and take products simultaneously. The depot was meant to serve the evacuation of products from the Warri refinery through a gas pipeline that spans almost ninety kilometres. Speaking at the re-commissioning of the depot, an elated Alison-Madueke said she was delighted that government of President Jonathan was living up to its promise of ensuring adequate fuel supply. “I am delighted that under the administration of Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, the depot has been put back in operation and able to deliver products to the good people of Edo State and its teaming consumers. Also, I am pleased that through the concerted effort of NNPC Management and Staff, under my leadership, we are steadily yielding the desired outcomes.” Not done yet, the minister informed her audience that “the Depot we are re-commissioning today has the capacity to hold 59 million litres of PMS, 32 million litres of DPK, and 28 million litres of AGO. The resumption of commercial activities to this very important facility is a major milestone towards the restoration of steady products supply to Benin and its environs.”

    Alluding to the menace pipeline vandalism had become in the country, the wife of the former military governor of old Imo State, Rear Admiral Alison Madueke said it was worrisome “that the menace of pipeline vandalism has now become a national security challenge with the latest example being the incident in Arepo, Ogun State which forced the shut-down of an entire line segment that serves as the gateway for petroleum products supply and distribution of over 60% of national requirement. Furthermore, the cost of products losses and repairs due to vandalism has continued to grow to an alarming level. In addition, the consequential cost of environmental remediation from the resulting spillage associated with vandalism and the loss of lives and properties of innocent Nigerians are unnecessary burdens we should not have to bear as a nation.”

    An obviously impressed former Labour leader and incumbent governor of Edo State, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, said he was impressed by the re-commissioning of the depot in Benin, the Edo State capital. He said he was now sure that the trips he usually made to Warri to solicit for the supply of petroleum products to Edo State was no over with the commissioning of the depot.

    “The honourable minister has demonstrated that indeed good things can come from the petroleum industry as well as the NNPC. I thank God that I don’t have to make such long walk to Warri again because the Benin depot is back to service,” he said. Another major milestone in the minister’s stewardship was the commissioning of the Oredo Gas Handling Plant last week. Speaking at the event, Alison-Madueke said the facility, its construction and commissioning were an indication that the nation has arrived in the production of gas and allied products.

    “It is of interest to note that NPDC is now the major gas supplier to the nation’s domestic market, with a current supply of approximately 400MMscfd and an expected growth to 600MMscfd by year end. Today’s commissioning of the Oredo Early first gas phase, which is currently delivering 65MMscfd to the domestic market clearly demonstrates this growing capability of NPDC to take a leading role in the Federal Government’s quest to rapidly increase gas supply, and it is my hope that by the end of this year, the complete Integrated Gas Handling Facility (IGHF) which will deliver 100MMscfd of lean gas, and about 330 tons of LPG per annum to domestic consumers will have been completed.”

    The announcement by PPMC Managing Director, that the Maiduguri Depot will be rehabilitated in the next 60 days is another cheery news for people of that zone. A it will significantly ease the fuel challenge the people of that zone face daily.

    Jobs for teeming youths.

    As earlier stated, one of the things dear to the heart of the petroleum minister was greater participation of Nigerians in the oil and gas sector. While she has pursued this vigorously, little did critics of the government know that as at today, the participation level of Nigerian-owned companies in the oil and gas sector has moved up to an impressive eighty-seven percent. While this might not mean so much to the man on the street, the fall-out of this is that about thirty thousand jobs have been created out of this. Speaking at a meeting, the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board, Diezani said by asking companies to do the ‘right thing’, they have succeeded in getting more and more Nigerians to be involved in the oil and gas industry “just by insisting on using Nigerians in the industry, we have deepened the local supply chain.”

    The minister said the jobs were generated in the engineering, fabrication, marine transportation, logistics and exploration and production sub-sectors of the oil and gas industry, and expressed optimism that the job growth would be sustained.

    “I have no doubt that more jobs will be created in 2013 and we shall achieve greater localisation of the industry services, manufacturing and fabrication in 2013,” she said.

    Alison-Madueke noted that the Nigerian content implementation had increased the level of participation of Nigerians in oil and gas contracts to 87 per cent. “The board has to a large extent achieved consensus in most aspects of Nigerian Content implementation to the extent that there has been no major dispute amongst stakeholders on interpretation of provisions of the Nigerian Content Law.”

    Suddenly everything seems to be coming together under her leadership for the good of country. Now there is no denying the fact that she has done quite well; especially in the area of ensuring more local participation in the oil gas industry. Even if critics would never give her the credit.

     

    Affia wrote in from London

     

  • A symbol of hope

    A symbol of hope

    They do not call the state of Osun helmsman, the Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola the symbol of good governance for nothing. Aregbesola closed his account for 2012 with a flourish. As usual the signature tune was a trajectory of meticulously planned new initiatives.

    The symbol is quite captivating when it comes to breaking new grounds. They appear to just keep rolling in; not by accident though. For it must be recalled that Aregbesola came in courtesy of a six-point programme of action. It represented at the time an old-fashioned sort of thing. Time was when a few people of a certain age will recall political campaigns where fought on the basis of well thought out, solidly put together programmes. Political operators of that era were as they used to say “blessed with a plan anchored on a vision”.

    This was not just meant to be sloganeering. It connoted that a well conceived manifesto is invariably the beginning of good governance with sensibly implemented programmes. The manifesto thereby represented the beginning of a game changing administration. Unfortunately the intervention of the military interregnum induced militicians changed the ball game. Programmes were replaced with all manners of vacuous sloganeering. The end result was predictably, very predictably disastrous. Nowhere, so more than the now rechristened ‘State of Osun.’

    When he was elected, Aregbesola met a broken down infrastructure and a demoralised people. Such was the effect of the interregnum of the militicians. Only a well conceived programme of social and economic reconstruction could rebuild spirits. This is precisely what he is doing. To close his deal on an eventful 2012, the symbol put into play a couple of new initiatives. Once again the thrust was on the social sector. And yet again they provided an example of a dividend of democracy. God knows that nobody needs a democratic dividend more than the hitherto hard-pressed people of the state of Osun.

    In the first instance the Ogbeni Governor launched the uniform scheme for 750,000 students of the state recently. This is a magnificent path breaking scheme. Aesthetically, the designs of the uniforms were very enticing and pleasing to the eye. The design itself is bound to increase the confidence of the pupils who will wear it. Secondly and very importantly, it will increase the feeling of self-esteem; a feeling of self-esteem is a vital bedrock psychologically at a certain age.

    In an observation on a not too dissimilar proposition, the British war time leader and statesman, Sir Winston Churchill had cause to observe that, ‘We shape our buildings after which our buildings shape us.’ He was absolutely correct, although here he was referring to a housing project and its effect on the public good. We can however translate the essence of its message to the new uniforms in Osun State. The new uniforms will definitely shape the mood of the students; increase both self-esteem and self confidence which will translate to a better receptacle for the learning process.

    It must also be stated that the progressive governor as usual made a direct link between a social advancement and an overall economic policy. The linkage is obvious. Design and implementation of the project took place within the state’s economy. A social policy was in this way turned into part of an economic stimulus. In this way both seasonal and permanent employment were created across the board in the state. It is a very good example of social and economic linkage. It is also an indication of what happens when you use your brain.

    What we have here is an example of a sound body and mind in a pleasing and indeed eye-catching uniform. The resultant effect of pride and fulfilment will soon begin to become obvious. We must remember vitally that the new uniforms go hand-in-glove with refurbished and new school buildings and structures. The change is therefore all encompassing; coupled with a reinvigorated teaching workforce, what we are observing is a new deal for education in the state with the sobriquet – State of the Living Spring. Indeed it is a new lease of life and the effect on another generation in the state will be most positive.

    There is of course now a convergence of opinion that education is now the key battleground. He who wins the race for the acquisition of knowledge is certainly the champion in this epoch. As in so many things this is again a throwback to another era when for example the now revered educational policy of the government of the western region was launched in the early 1950’s and looked like a lot of ado. “Why?” The disinterested would say “should you get so excited about a mere educational initiative”. The rest of course is history.

    The policy turned out to be a seminal piece of social engineering. An entire region was transformed. Within a generation, every household had produced a graduate of a tertiary institution. Aregbesola is in reality carrying on from there by refurbishing old schools and building new ones, providing new uniforms, as well as the revolutionary Opon Imo (learning tablet). All of these are the roadmap for a future which is based on winning the knowledge arms race. History is bound to be benevolent in its judgement on this and similar initiatives.

    Closing the deal for the year also saw the distribution of free health books. Again the thrust here once again is on the social sector – the creation of the total personality who has a healthy mind in a sound body. The transformation of the state of Osun is bound to accelerate in 2013. The linkage between social transformation and the deepening of the economic sector will be strengthened. Inadvertently, Aregbesola is a living example of the old German Social Democratic rallying cry – ‘Macroeconomic stability as the precursor of social justice.’ He is showing that fiscal rectitude, prudent management of resources and the emphasis on production will lead to an enhancement of the social sector and the provision of social services. On their part the people of the State of Osun can’t seem to get enough of initiatives such as the one we have just highlighted.

     

    • Oke writes from Lagos.

  • Many faces of corruption

    Many faces of corruption

    The pages of leadership history in Nigeria are saturated with unending stories of treasury looting, election-rigging, nepotism, tribalism, bribery and its twin, corruption.

    This, invariably, result from public officers – both elected and appointed – regarding their positions, not as call to service to their fatherland but as a gold-mine.

    Therefore, they get preoccupied with not how to initiate rewarding policies that would place Nigeria and Nigerians on a pedestal, but with the easiest and clandestine way of looting the country’s treasury and cause more damage to Nigeria’s already-comatose economy.

    Interestingly, while we seem not to have a hope in hell in wriggling out of this social and moral hemlock, President Goodluck Jonathan became worried that corruption is becoming an albatross despite relentless even though puny fight against it. He had said that Nigeria’s problem is not corruption but the people’s attitude. His sincere comment on corruption raised some dust which has not settled. Trust Nigerians. They vilified and demonised him. One believes that these verbal attacks on President Jonathan are warped, lame and blinkered.

    Moral gate-keepers have argued that an individual’s action is morally good not only because it conforms to moral law, but also in so far as it flows from a moral conviction. They also maintain that actions are deemed right or wrong according to experience and the conclusions of reason.

    It should be noted that our idea about morality has changed, and majority of Nigerians believe that whatever produces happiness and well-being is, in the highest sense, moral. They forget that unreasoning obedience is not the foundation or the essence of morality.

    It therefore follows that since every mankind has a moral responsibility which only his conscience can teach, it is imperative that one should be conscious of what one does. One has the need to rationalise what value one’s apparent damaging actions would add to the society.

    Having recognised, sincerely or sanctimoniously, the deleterious effect which corruption has had on the growth and development of the country, President Jonathan had vowed to stamp the monster out of the system. But how committed he is to winning this fight against graft is left for posterity to judge.

    Honestly, the President’s assertion is flawless. Corrupt tendencies are functions of the mind. Crimes are hatched in the mind before they manifest physically. If the mind constantly breeds evil, corruption will multiply. Corruption is simply a deformity of the mind.

    This leads us to asking what constitutes corruption. Does corruption manifest only when money exchanges hands? This is a terrible perception. It is a matter of how refined, tacky or bestial our minds are. One who exhibits purity of mind may or may not be corrupt in a sense.

    Again, any mind that is disposed to justice, mercy, honesty, and intellectual development is also not corrupt. But any man or boss, who is not willing to give to every mankind every right that is due he is just so much nearer a barbarian than Nebuchadnezzar.

    The current humiliation of personalities that has become the lot of the mighty and the elite of our land has confirmed that corruption had never been a defining element of the Nigerian poor but a feature of the super class in our political milieu.

    All those that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has arrested for alleged financial crimes are celebrities, even though they are treated as sacred cows as it were. The war against fraud is directionless or so it appears. One believes that the fight against corruption should go beyond financial inducement as is currently construed. This is so because corruption is a multifaceted phenomenon.

    The attention of the media, government and its anti-graft agencies is focused on inane societal contradiction that involves financial inducement. But there are other grotesque behaviours that are more sinister than bribery and corruption.

    Therefore, anti-graft agencies’ searchlights should be beamed on people’s attitudes towards their fellow mankind and issues.

    A boss who feels he is god, who despises his subordinates, robs them of their respects, denies them of their rights, regards them as beasts or less human, and denigrates them is corruption personified.

    It is necessary that the boss should give every mankind every right he claims for himself. He should keep his mind open to the influences of nature. He should also receive new thoughts with hospitality.

    Any man who is not willing to treat his fellow mankind with love, sincerity and openness is dishonest, selfish, and brutal. All these are manifestations of corruption.

    Manipulation of issues in a terrible manner has often led to a creation of nauseating deformities so much so that the beauty of human mind and integrity seem somewhat subjected to malicious damage and insult both to self and others.

    We seem to be less sympathetic towards a man who fails to adjust to a low level of expectation than we are to one who fails to adjust to a high level. We should have no pity for some corrupt rogues who steal money or exhibit uncongenial attitudes towards their fellow mankind simply because they are in position of authority because they succeed in defaming themselves. They are so poor that the only thing they have is money.

    The present campaign against corruption should be serious, total and sustained. Any one implicated in any form of scam should be disgraced publicly and jailed. This way, integrity would be an integral part of our daily lives.

    One significant question those whose minds have been darkened by their poor-quality attitudes should mull over is: would their reputation, integrity, honour, and good work be recognised by their character should they meet in the dark?

     

  • Making a mess of Mali

    Making a mess of Mali

    •In the space between Hades and Hell lies the reality of war

    Landlocked and straddling the edge of subsistence in the best of times, Mali has slipped into the lap of chaos. Trapped between the evil of the past and that of the present, the sleepy, bucolic state has transmogrified into a battlefield between the West and that which the West dreads: violent radicals seeking to establish a society based on a mutant understanding of Islam on any inch of dirt to which they are able to stake claim no matter how wretched the soil. Bit players in this showdown are the Malians themselves. The sad motif recurs. Once again, Africans become the dangling branches of a strange tree planted on their land. They are the recipients, not the makers, of their destiny.

    For decades, Mali complied with the neocolonial instructions of the western powers. The nation was heralded as a model of African development and democracy. Little of this was African and not too much of it was development or democracy. Having invested significantly in Mali, the West had to proclaim Mali worked well in order to vindicate the neoliberal molding of that nation’s political economy. The West dubbed the country a resounding success; the West was guilty of false advertisement. The nation’s progress was shallow and transient. Even this progress in miniature was not a homegrown, organic occurrence; it was imported in the briefcases and tutorials of Western subvention. In effect, Mali stood on borrowed legs. Borrowed limbs are never enough to prevent a tumble for the limbs always return to their master.

    The nation’s slow descent would have gone unattended by foreign hands but for the Libyan crisis. Libya represents an abject lesson in foreign policy humility. Libya should have remained an internal affair. Western claims that Gaddafi was intent on massacre in Benghazi is not substantiated by objective evidence. Gaddafi never threatened such a thing. The claim was a manufactured pretext for Western intervention to oust the hated dictator though he posed no threat beyond his borders.

    So confident in their superior power, Western nations believed they could firmly control the crisis and its aftermath. They were wrong. In operation were complex undercurrents and riptides the West did not even recognize, let allow comprehend. Gaddafi was a ruthless man whose rule constituted a grave disfavor to his people. A man who cannot govern his impulses cannot wisely govern a nation. Yet, he served as warden in a harsh, parlous neighborhood. His demise loosed destructive forces which he had contained despite his long tryst with mental derangement. These forces would leave Libya to find homestead in weak, decaying Mali.

    On one hand, Taureg irregulars from Mali had allied with Gaddafi. The dictator’s relationship with the Tauregs served both countries. It shored Gaddafi’s security machinery while being a release valve for Taureg separatist pressure in Mali. When Gaddafi fell, the Tauregs went home with war hot on their minds. Their return transformed meandering separatist activity into a purposeful, well-armed independence movement.

    So eager to undo Gaddafi, the West allied with radical Islamists to reach this goal. The union dissolved as quickly as it had come. With Gaddafi, the West was assured extreme Jihadists were not welcomed in Libya. Now that he is gone, violent radicals who once had no say now seek to control Libya and have poured into Mali for the same purpose.

    Although foes in Libya, Tauregs and Jihadists joined hands in Mali. Mainstream news reports claim the Jihadists have taken over the insurrection, embittering and sidelining the Tauregs in the process. These reports must be taken with a grain of suspicion. Dissension between the two groups has occurred but probably not to the extent the media claims. Reports of Taureg-Jihadist scrimmaging are infrequent and do not imply a total split. Moreover, it seems unlikely that ad-hoc contingents of foreign intruders could advance so adroitly over unknown terrain without significant local help.

    War often is bought on the cheap but its end always is a costly purchase. In this exchange, the world purchased war with Libya and acquired an unwanted one in Mali. For the West, this is a considerable mistake causing its nations to expend resources they would have rather kept inactive but on the ready. For Africa, the crisis is a bulging error. Supporting the West in a war that did not need fighting, sub-Saharan Africa has brought to its doorstep a war it must fight but one for which it is ill-suited.

    Opportunistically focusing on Mali, the Jihadists realized the country was a chicken ready for plucking. The government was in disarray and the army in tatters. Key Taureg commanders and soldiers had defected from the army to join league with their brethren returning from Libya. In an instant, the balance of military power had shifted in Mali. Regional and domestic dynamics had suddenly turned the low-simmering Taureg revolt into the dominant power. When Jihadists entered the fray, the balanced tipped more unfavorably against the demoralized government. In short order, the rebels seized the northern half of the nation and advanced toward a strategic airfield, important water and agricultural installations and ultimately, toward the capital. The demise of the government in Bamako seemed ordained. Enter the French to save its former ward.

    The previous years of western investment in Mali have come to naught. America has engaged in the unreliable business of training West African militaries for years under the Trans-Saharan Counterterrorism Initiative, the precursor to today’s AFRICOM. Until the coup, the Malian army was considered one of its achievements. The coup calls into question the utility of American military training to the goal of democratization. After all, the putsch was engineered by a captain who had been one of the primary beneficiaries of intensive American training. Sad coincidence? Perhaps. More likely it is form of caveat emptor regarding struggling African nations and Western military training. Upon purchasing a rabid wolf, one must not be surprised or declaim too loudly when it rips at your leg.

    The struggle for Mali is now portrayed as one of democracy versus religious intolerance, the West against the Jihadists. This portrait ignores the genuine internal fissures that afflict Mali. Tauregs ignited this rebellion for reasons they believe important. Land and water grabs by Western and Libyan firms linked to the West threaten Taureg economic interests. Without settling these issues, the crisis in Mali will not be resolved. As long as Tauregs are disgruntled, Jihadists will find an alcove among them just as they do with frontier tribes in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Yemen. Sadly, events have taken on such a martial trajectory that political discussions will be precluded for the time being.

    The French have rapidly deployed well over a thousand troops and have commended daily bombardment of the Islamists’ forward positions. This decision was not a sudden one. The French had a counteroffensive contingency plan on the ready. Paris hoped the Malian army would have been better at self-defense, thus making French direct intervention unnecessary. When the army crumpled like a cheap box, the French were forced to act.

    Once France made its dramatic entry, African nations were duty bound to follow. Yet, this situation gives sad testimony to the present state of many African nations. Instead of looking toward an independent future where the nation can plot its own way, Mali is left with the choice of falling into the hands of its colonial master or of falling prey to the excesses of vile zealots. No doubt, the former comes with strings attached. The latter comes with the danger that one’s head might be detached at the slightest perception of heresy.

    Consequently, the nation is left to choose between bad and worse.

    All of this places African nations in a diplomatic bind. The French objective is to stop extremists from gaining a toehold from where they can hatch plots against France. While this may give respite to Malians, French concern s more to stop the extremists than to help Mali out of the bog. However, ECOWAS’s objective is to restore the American dream of constitutional democracy and free markets to Malian soil. The French have firepower but a limited objective. ECOWAS has less firepower yet the larger objective.

    There will be friction between the two allies. This will be resolved to France’s liking. The military division of labor will be that France controls the airspace. French troops will protect Bamako and other strategic points. Some French troops will engage as skirmishers to halt radical advances and to probe for alleys of counterattack. The French are unlikely to commit themselves to a significant ground assault. In essence, the French are in a holding position. They are biding time for ECOWAS to deploy. Once deployed, ECOWAS troops will be expected to take the frontline to spearhead the decisive counteroffensive with the aid of Western aerial support. This accords with the division of labor used in Libya. Just as in Libya, the conflict in Mali will take months to determine if this truly becomes the division of military labor between the West and Africa. Such gradualism will heavily test the capacity of African nations but suits Western interests. The longer the war, the larger the profits for the Western military complex. Moreover, the weaker other African states become due to this exertion, the more leverage the West will have over them.

    Already, the trouble in Mali has not stayed in Mali. Mayhem has spilled into Algeria in dramatic and lethal fashion. The deadly hostage episode there will not be the last in that nation. Ironically, Libya announced it had closed the border with Mali due to the unrest. Tripoli apparently feared the desert winds would blow back into Libya the unrest Libya had chased into Mali. As such, the border closure is a sad joke. Additionally, the weakling Libyan government does not control the streets of its own capital. How does it think it can regulate a distant border separated by hundreds of miles of desolate sand, heat and lawlessness?

    Perhaps the most salient news this week was a CNN report confirming United States Defense Secretary Panetta’s previous statement that American unmanned drone bombers may soon fly Nigerian airspace. This confirms America sees a direct, growing link between Al Qaeda and Nigeria’s Boko Haram. Given the violence Boko Haram has unleashed on innocent people, the American position incites an emotional appeal. Hardliners and Old Testament, eye-for-an-eye apostles will applaud this move. Yet, the logic behind it is deceptive and dangerously so. The policy’s bottom line is to kill Boko Haram leaders in retribution for their murder of the innocent. This is easy to conceive but nigh impossible to implement simultaneously with precision and decisive effect.

    Pakistan and Afghanistan are the laboratories were drone experiments have been conducted the longest. The drone campaigns have succeeded in killing thousands of people, many of them the intended terrorist targets. But many have been unarmed innocents whose only crime was to reside in close proximity to the bombs’ targets. Despite the years of strikes, neither Pakistan nor Afghanistan is better off. Both are rife with violence. For every terrorist slain, another is recruited. The same goes for Yemen and Somalia. While effective tactical killing machines, drones have demonstrated only negligible strategic value in defeating the organizations of terrorism.

    In Nigeria, terrorist leaders hide in more urbanized, densely populated areas than in Pakistan and Afghanistan. If drones are used in this environment, more innocents will be killed here than in the other nations. Yet, like Pakistan and Afghanistan, it is unlikely the drones will decapitate the target organization.

    Resort to drones only makes strategic sense based on the conclusion that Boko Haram will collapse if a few key members are silenced. However, if Boko Haram is an amorphous affiliation of gangs and sub-sets, drones will do no better in Nigeria than in Pakistan. Instead, constant bombings will raise anti-Western sentiment to a higher pitch. For every innocent person killed, two will come to sympathize with or join Boko Haram. The empirical evidence indicates that drones contribute to a war of attrition where the thing mostly attrited is peace. Drone use tends to radicalize populations affected by the bombing. Tactical kills are registered but the objective of ending terrorism grows more distant because bombing is reviled by the people on the ground. This is the human factor that drone advocates ignore. Ending an insurgency is predicated on shifting the goodwill of the people away from the insurgents. Yet, assassination by drone is a campaign more vindictive than victorious. If drones are deployed, America would have tossed the hearts and minds of the people into the gutter.

    Should Defense Secretary Panetta have his way, planes dispensing death will soon be overhead in northern Nigeria. These planes belong to a military superior to any in Africa. That foreign military will decide which Nigerian is a terrorist and will make the decision based on secret factors of which no Nigerian will be aware. This will take place in the skies over Africa’s strongest nation. To say that colonialism is dead is to mouth one of the world’s seven greatest fables and no one presently remembers the other six.

    In the early 20th century, the gunboat was the preferred instrument of strong-arm diplomacy. In the early 21st century, the gunboat has been supplanted by an unmanned aerial assassin, the drone. While the devices have changed, the mean calculations rationalizing their usage remain constant. Scientific man has advanced but political man remains a beast that prowls on all fours. He perverts science to create machines that fulfill selfish objectives more incarnadine than intelligent, more feral than fine.

    Africa has entered a dangerous period. Mali is the first nation forced to walk the slim precipice between the neocolonial interests of the West and the rapine ways of extreme Jihadists. Instead of determining its own fate, an African nation once again has become the playground for the machinations of others. Sadly, Mali will not be last of our nations made to take the dire walk. The weaker the nation and its institutions, the more likely it will be to fall into the swell. This is a moment for the nations of the continent to marshal their scarce resources to take the lead in rescuing Mali and not merely trying to hold the extremists to a stalemate. It is beyond time for the nations to marshal their diplomatic courage, wisdom and foresight to forge a coordinated, strategic response to the twin dangers (neocolonial encroachment versus jihadist chaos) made manifest by the Malian crisis. The time is late. Soon the clock strikes twelve.

     

    08060340825 (sms only)

     

  • Making a mess of Mali

    •In the space between Hades and Hell lies the reality of war

    Landlocked and straddling the edge of subsistence in the best of times, Mali has slipped into the lap of chaos. Trapped between the evil of the past and that of the present, the sleepy, bucolic state has transmogrified into a battlefield between the West and that which the West dreads: violent radicals seeking to establish a society based on a mutant understanding of Islam on any inch of dirt to which they are able to stake claim no matter how wretched the soil. Bit players in this showdown are the Malians themselves. The sad motif recurs. Once again, Africans become the dangling branches of a strange tree planted on their land. They are the recipients, not the makers, of their destiny.

    For decades, Mali complied with the neocolonial instructions of the western powers. The nation was heralded as a model of African development and democracy. Little of this was African and not too much of it was development or democracy. Having invested significantly in Mali, the West had to proclaim Mali worked well in order to vindicate the neoliberal molding of that nation’s political economy. The West dubbed the country a resounding success; the West was guilty of false advertisement. The nation’s progress was shallow and transient. Even this progress in miniature was not a homegrown, organic occurrence; it was imported in the briefcases and tutorials of Western subvention. In effect, Mali stood on borrowed legs. Borrowed limbs are never enough to prevent a tumble for the limbs always return to their master.

    The nation’s slow descent would have gone unattended by foreign hands but for the Libyan crisis. Libya represents an abject lesson in foreign policy humility. Libya should have remained an internal affair. Western claims that Gaddafi was intent on massacre in Benghazi is not substantiated by objective evidence. Gaddafi never threatened such a thing. The claim was a manufactured pretext for Western intervention to oust the hated dictator though he posed no threat beyond his borders.

    So confident in their superior power, Western nations believed they could firmly control the crisis and its aftermath. They were wrong. In operation were complex undercurrents and riptides the West did not even recognize, let allow comprehend. Gaddafi was a ruthless man whose rule constituted a grave disfavor to his people. A man who cannot govern his impulses cannot wisely govern a nation. Yet, he served as warden in a harsh, parlous neighborhood. His demise loosed destructive forces which he had contained despite his long tryst with mental derangement. These forces would leave Libya to find homestead in weak, decaying Mali.

    On one hand, Taureg irregulars from Mali had allied with Gaddafi. The dictator’s relationship with the Tauregs served both countries. It shored Gaddafi’s security machinery while being a release valve for Taureg separatist pressure in Mali. When Gaddafi fell, the Tauregs went home with war hot on their minds. Their return transformed meandering separatist activity into a purposeful, well-armed independence movement.

    So eager to undo Gaddafi, the West allied with radical Islamists to reach this goal. The union dissolved as quickly as it had come. With Gaddafi, the West was assured extreme Jihadists were not welcomed in Libya. Now that he is gone, violent radicals who once had no say now seek to control Libya and have poured into Mali for the same purpose.

    Although foes in Libya, Tauregs and Jihadists joined hands in Mali. Mainstream news reports claim the Jihadists have taken over the insurrection, embittering and sidelining the Tauregs in the process. These reports must be taken with a grain of suspicion. Dissension between the two groups has occurred but probably not to the extent the media claims. Reports of Taureg-Jihadist scrimmaging are infrequent and do not imply a total split. Moreover, it seems unlikely that ad-hoc contingents of foreign intruders could advance so adroitly over unknown terrain without significant local help.

    War often is bought on the cheap but its end always is a costly purchase. In this exchange, the world purchased war with Libya and acquired an unwanted one in Mali. For the West, this is a considerable mistake causing its nations to expend resources they would have rather kept inactive but on the ready. For Africa, the crisis is a bulging error. Supporting the West in a war that did not need fighting, sub-Saharan Africa has brought to its doorstep a war it must fight but one for which it is ill-suited.

    Opportunistically focusing on Mali, the Jihadists realized the country was a chicken ready for plucking. The government was in disarray and the army in tatters. Key Taureg commanders and soldiers had defected from the army to join league with their brethren returning from Libya. In an instant, the balance of military power had shifted in Mali. Regional and domestic dynamics had suddenly turned the low-simmering Taureg revolt into the dominant power. When Jihadists entered the fray, the balanced tipped more unfavorably against the demoralized government. In short order, the rebels seized the northern half of the nation and advanced toward a strategic airfield, important water and agricultural installations and ultimately, toward the capital. The demise of the government in Bamako seemed ordained. Enter the French to save its former ward.

    The previous years of western investment in Mali have come to naught. America has engaged in the unreliable business of training West African militaries for years under the Trans-Saharan Counterterrorism Initiative, the precursor to today’s AFRICOM. Until the coup, the Malian army was considered one of its achievements. The coup calls into question the utility of American military training to the goal of democratization. After all, the putsch was engineered by a captain who had been one of the primary beneficiaries of intensive American training. Sad coincidence? Perhaps. More likely it is form of caveat emptor regarding struggling African nations and Western military training. Upon purchasing a rabid wolf, one must not be surprised or declaim too loudly when it rips at your leg.

    The struggle for Mali is now portrayed as one of democracy versus religious intolerance, the West against the Jihadists. This portrait ignores the genuine internal fissures that afflict Mali. Tauregs ignited this rebellion for reasons they believe important. Land and water grabs by Western and Libyan firms linked to the West threaten Taureg economic interests. Without settling these issues, the crisis in Mali will not be resolved. As long as Tauregs are disgruntled, Jihadists will find an alcove among them just as they do with frontier tribes in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Yemen. Sadly, events have taken on such a martial trajectory that political discussions will be precluded for the time being.

    The French have rapidly deployed well over a thousand troops and have commended daily bombardment of the Islamists’ forward positions. This decision was not a sudden one. The French had a counteroffensive contingency plan on the ready. Paris hoped the Malian army would have been better at self-defense, thus making French direct intervention unnecessary. When the army crumpled like a cheap box, the French were forced to act.

    Once France made its dramatic entry, African nations were duty bound to follow. Yet, this situation gives sad testimony to the present state of many African nations. Instead of looking toward an independent future where the nation can plot its own way, Mali is left with the choice of falling into the hands of its colonial master or of falling prey to the excesses of vile zealots. No doubt, the former comes with strings attached. The latter comes with the danger that one’s head might be detached at the slightest perception of heresy.

    Consequently, the nation is left to choose between bad and worse.

    All of this places African nations in a diplomatic bind. The French objective is to stop extremists from gaining a toehold from where they can hatch plots against France. While this may give respite to Malians, French concern s more to stop the extremists than to help Mali out of the bog. However, ECOWAS’s objective is to restore the American dream of constitutional democracy and free markets to Malian soil. The French have firepower but a limited objective. ECOWAS has less firepower yet the larger objective.

    There will be friction between the two allies. This will be resolved to France’s liking. The military division of labor will be that France controls the airspace. French troops will protect Bamako and other strategic points. Some French troops will engage as skirmishers to halt radical advances and to probe for alleys of counterattack. The French are unlikely to commit themselves to a significant ground assault. In essence, the French are in a holding position. They are biding time for ECOWAS to deploy. Once deployed, ECOWAS troops will be expected to take the frontline to spearhead the decisive counteroffensive with the aid of Western aerial support. This accords with the division of labor used in Libya. Just as in Libya, the conflict in Mali will take months to determine if this truly becomes the division of military labor between the West and Africa. Such gradualism will heavily test the capacity of African nations but suits Western interests. The longer the war, the larger the profits for the Western military complex. Moreover, the weaker other African states become due to this exertion, the more leverage the West will have over them.

    Already, the trouble in Mali has not stayed in Mali. Mayhem has spilled into Algeria in dramatic and lethal fashion. The deadly hostage episode there will not be the last in that nation. Ironically, Libya announced it had closed the border with Mali due to the unrest. Tripoli apparently feared the desert winds would blow back into Libya the unrest Libya had chased into Mali. As such, the border closure is a sad joke. Additionally, the weakling Libyan government does not control the streets of its own capital. How does it think it can regulate a distant border separated by hundreds of miles of desolate sand, heat and lawlessness?

    Perhaps the most salient news this week was a CNN report confirming United States Defense Secretary Panetta’s previous statement that American unmanned drone bombers may soon fly Nigerian airspace. This confirms America sees a direct, growing link between Al Qaeda and Nigeria’s Boko Haram. Given the violence Boko Haram has unleashed on innocent people, the American position incites an emotional appeal. Hardliners and Old Testament, eye-for-an-eye apostles will applaud this move. Yet, the logic behind it is deceptive and dangerously so. The policy’s bottom line is to kill Boko Haram leaders in retribution for their murder of the innocent. This is easy to conceive but nigh impossible to implement simultaneously with precision and decisive effect.

    Pakistan and Afghanistan are the laboratories were drone experiments have been conducted the longest. The drone campaigns have succeeded in killing thousands of people, many of them the intended terrorist targets. But many have been unarmed innocents whose only crime was to reside in close proximity to the bombs’ targets. Despite the years of strikes, neither Pakistan nor Afghanistan is better off. Both are rife with violence. For every terrorist slain, another is recruited. The same goes for Yemen and Somalia. While effective tactical killing machines, drones have demonstrated only negligible strategic value in defeating the organizations of terrorism.

    In Nigeria, terrorist leaders hide in more urbanized, densely populated areas than in Pakistan and Afghanistan. If drones are used in this environment, more innocents will be killed here than in the other nations. Yet, like Pakistan and Afghanistan, it is unlikely the drones will decapitate the target organization.

    Resort to drones only makes strategic sense based on the conclusion that Boko Haram will collapse if a few key members are silenced. However, if Boko Haram is an amorphous affiliation of gangs and sub-sets, drones will do no better in Nigeria than in Pakistan. Instead, constant bombings will raise anti-Western sentiment to a higher pitch. For every innocent person killed, two will come to sympathize with or join Boko Haram. The empirical evidence indicates that drones contribute to a war of attrition where the thing mostly attrited is peace. Drone use tends to radicalize populations affected by the bombing. Tactical kills are registered but the objective of ending terrorism grows more distant because bombing is reviled by the people on the ground. This is the human factor that drone advocates ignore. Ending an insurgency is predicated on shifting the goodwill of the people away from the insurgents. Yet, assassination by drone is a campaign more vindictive than victorious. If drones are deployed, America would have tossed the hearts and minds of the people into the gutter.

    Should Defense Secretary Panetta have his way, planes dispensing death will soon be overhead in northern Nigeria. These planes belong to a military superior to any in Africa. That foreign military will decide which Nigerian is a terrorist and will make the decision based on secret factors of which no Nigerian will be aware. This will take place in the skies over Africa’s strongest nation. To say that colonialism is dead is to mouth one of the world’s seven greatest fables and no one presently remembers the other six.

    In the early 20th century, the gunboat was the preferred instrument of strong-arm diplomacy. In the early 21st century, the gunboat has been supplanted by an unmanned aerial assassin, the drone. While the devices have changed, the mean calculations rationalizing their usage remain constant. Scientific man has advanced but political man remains a beast that prowls on all fours. He perverts science to create machines that fulfill selfish objectives more incarnadine than intelligent, more feral than fine.

    Africa has entered a dangerous period. Mali is the first nation forced to walk the slim precipice between the neocolonial interests of the West and the rapine ways of extreme Jihadists. Instead of determining its own fate, an African nation once again has become the playground for the machinations of others. Sadly, Mali will not be last of our nations made to take the dire walk. The weaker the nation and its institutions, the more likely it will be to fall into the swell. This is a moment for the nations of the continent to marshal their scarce resources to take the lead in rescuing Mali and not merely trying to hold the extremists to a stalemate. It is beyond time for the nations to marshal their diplomatic courage, wisdom and foresight to forge a coordinated, strategic response to the twin dangers (neocolonial encroachment versus jihadist chaos) made manifest by the Malian crisis. The time is late. Soon the clock strikes twelve.

    08060340825 (sms only)