Category: Comments
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Murder in Benghazi
Libya and its pro-democracy revolution had no better friend than J. Christopher Stevens, the United States ambassador who was killed along with three other Americans in Tuesday’s attack on the consulate in Benghazi. It was an outrageous act that deserved the strongest condemnation.President Obama’s statement of outrage and his vow to bring the killers to justice received bipartisan support, including from politicians otherwise committed to partisan warfare, like the House speaker, John Boehner, and the Senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell, who rarely misses a chance to attack Mr. Obama.But not from Mitt Romney, who wants Americans to believe he can be president but showed an extraordinary lack of presidential character by using the murders of the Americans in Libya as an excuse not just to attack Mr. Obama, but to do so in a way that suggested either a dangerous ignorance of the facts or an equally dangerous willingness to twist them to his narrow partisan aims.Mr. Romney could easily have held his fire during this crisis, if he could not summon the decency to support the United States government. Instead, he misrepresented the administration as “sympathizing” with the attackers. There was no truth in what he said. In fact, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton made the first official comment on the killings, a strong condemnation, before Mr. Romney released his statement. Even after having a night to reconsider his response, Mr. Romney merely doubled down on his false charges, as he is prone to do.Mr. Stevens, 52, was Washington’s envoy to the rebels in Libya when they were overthrowing Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi. He became ambassador and, undaunted by the dangers, worked to build partnerships among the country’s disparate groups and guide the fragile new democracy during a difficult transition. A fluent Arabic speaker, he had a deep understanding of Libya’s culture and people.On Wednesday, the Obama administration said it appeared that an organized group armed with mortars and rocket-propelled grenades had exploited a protest over an anti-Muslim video to unleash the attack. Some news reports suggested Al Qaeda may have been responsible. American officials noted the contrast with Egypt, where unarmed protesters, decrying the same video, spontaneously stormed the Embassy perimeter and tore down a flag but did little other damage.Libya’s shaky new government will need American support to bring the killers to justice. The origins of the video, which mocks the Prophet Muhammad, are not clear. There is considerable speculation about who even produced the film, which largely went unnoticed until it was promoted on the Internet by Morris Sadek, an Egyptian-born Coptic Christian ally of Terry Jones, a Florida pastor and hatemonger whose threats to burn a copy of the Koran inspired deadly riots in Afghanistan in 2010 and 2011.However offensive the video is, it could never justify the violence in Benghazi and Cairo. But Mr. Jones, Mr. Sadek and whoever made the film did true damage to the interests of the United States and its core principle of respecting all faiths.Religious fundamentalists, moderates and liberal secularists are all jockeying for power in Middle East nations after the Arab Spring. The violence done on Tuesday was apparently the work of a relatively small group of radicals not associated with any legitimate protest.The worst thing now would be for the United States to turn away from its commitments to work with Libya and Egypt as they try to build stable new societies. A number of Libyan security guards died trying to save the Americans, and Libyan leaders have condemned the killings and promised to work to apprehend those responsible. Egyptian leaders, inexplicably, have not followed that lead.– New York Times -

The Dana dilemma
•Govt might have fulfilled legal righteousness, but will it find passengers for the airline?
We must state upfront that an air accident need not be the end of the operation of an airline as has been witnessed in Nigeria in the recent past. But on the other hand, the lifting of the operating licence of Dana Airline barely three months after a horrendous crash which cause has yet to be determined, and which pieces have not been picked, is bound to raise eyebrows and trigger pathos, and understandably so.A Dana Airline commercial plane had crashed in the Agege suburb of Lagos last June 3, killing all 153 passengers and crew as well as 10 persons on the ground. The Federal Government had promptly grounded the airline, ostensibly to keep it from flying while investigations and remediation went on. The Accident and Investigation Bureau (AIB) is yet to turn in its report, less than half of the bodies of the victims have been so far identified and retrieved by family members while a good number are still in the mortuary, caught up in identification controversy. Compensation issues are also still embroiled in forensic details with only $30,000, a small fraction, paid to few families. Interments and memorial services for victims are still going on across the country and the pall of mourning is yet to dissipate.It is under this circumstance that the aviation minister, Ms Stella Oduah announced the lifting of the suspension of the operational licence of Dana Airline. She said the “action is based on our satisfaction, after carrying out a technical audit of the operator, that the airline is airworthy.” As if to mitigate the uproar that action was expected to cause, the minister explained that it shared the pains of the family members of the victims of the crash and that the decision was taken with every sense of responsibility. It said further that none of the reports so far released on the June 3 crash had indicted the airline, noting that it was not usually the practice in the industry to ground the operations of an airline whose plane was involved in an accident but added that the step had to be taken because of the sentiments in Nigeria.We agree with the minister that an airline need not crash and go into oblivion just because of one accident as has been the case in Nigeria. Airlines like Bellview, Sosoliso and ADC have ceased to exist largely on account of long suspension of their licenses after a crash. This need not be so. On the other hand, we think the government has behaved most insensitively not only by giving Dana a clean bill of health while the major accident report was yet to be turned in, but by making what comes across like a gleeful pronouncement in lifting the suspension of the airline’s licence. A little more tact and sensitivity was required in handling such an emotive matter.The Dana affair is yet another example in which though the government may have fulfilled legal righteousness, it totally neglects the feelings and sentiments of the people in its approach and implementation. Given what we knew about the ill-fated air plane, that accident might have been avoided if the airline had not been carefree in its operations.We offer that Dana should not hurry back into Nigeria’s airspace; even though it already has the go-ahead from the government. And if it does without putting its house in order, hoping to circumvent the pervert system, Nigerians also have their way of voting with the choice of airlines to fly after such disasters. Countries where the regulatory authorities are up and doing can afford the luxury of not stopping airlines involved in crashes; we cannot vouch for our own regulators here. -

True heroes
•Nigerian athletes show the ability of disability
The old saying that “when the going gets tough, the tough get going” was spectacularly demonstrated in the feats of the Nigerian Paralympics team to the London 2012 Paralympics Games. Having battled a lifetime of hostility, disdain and prejudice, these remarkable men and women went into the competition with little more than an abiding faith in their own abilities. Their determination to bring honour to their nation was richly rewarded: Nigeria won six gold, five silver and two bronze medals at the Games, and set two world records. Overall, the country placed 22nd out of the 164 participating countries.This achievement stands in stark contrast to the below-par performances of the athletes Nigeria sent to the 2012 London Olympics. That woeful outing was characterised by unjustified expectations, preposterous over-optimism, and a plethora of excuses as to why the billions expended failed to yield any appreciable results.What makes Nigeria’s Paralympics feat all the more remarkable is the fact that it has been so consistent. In a succession of Paralympics Games, Nigeria’s physically-challenged athletes have shown, time and again, that they could be counted upon to uphold the country’s honour, compared to their able-bodied counterparts, who have often disappointed the high hopes placed in them. Paralympians representing the country won gold medals in the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, the 2000 Sydney Olympics, the 2004 Athens Olympics and the 2008 Beijing Olympics.Such a tradition of reliable feat is yet another pointer to the durability of the Nigerian spirit: the fierce determination to rise above the many peculiar challenges of the local environment. The country is replete with entrepreneurs, professionals, creative artists and other individuals who have refused to let administrative incompetence and political betrayal prevent them from attaining the formidable heights they have set for themselves. The Paralympics team conquered the world at multiple levels – they simultaneously triumphed over physical disability, fellow-competitors from other countries and an obstructive social system.The unambiguous nature of their achievement makes the low-key nature of their reception at Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos all the more inexplicable. While there was a band, a few banners, and a Liaison Officer from the Nigerian Sports Commission (NSC) to receive them, their reception was devoid of the pomp and pageantry that should have attended the return of conquering heroes. The vehicles in which they were conveyed were a far cry from the luxury transport the senior men’s football team, the Super Eagles, routinely receives. To make matters even worse, the Paralympic team was allegedly sent to dilapidated quarters at the National Institute for Sports (NIS), where they have had to struggle with the usual problems of lack of disability access facilities, power outages and the scarcity of water.Fortunately, the Federal Government has moved quickly to rectify this outrage. President Goodluck Jonathan on Wednesday ordered that the team be taken immediately to Abuja and given VIP treatment prior to his formal reception of them on Saturday. Such speed and decisiveness is heart-warming, but what is strange is that this situation should have ever arisen in the first place.Beyond the bestowal of national honours, houses, vehicles and cash, the Federal Government must ensure that official and social attitudes to Nigeria’s disabled citizens change for the better. For instance, how do they fair in employment or in the architecture of public buildings like wheel-chair-compliant elevators and steps? It is not enough to mouth clichés about ensuring that everyone has the opportunity to attain their full potential. There must be a deliberate policy of legislative action and social programmes designed to ensure that physically and mentally-challenged people are given the chance to live meaningful lives. As the Paralympians have shown, they are capable of achieving much more than their so-called “normal” compatriots. -

Readers’ Parliament
• Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab (Man in the mirror 1)
You are a terrorist too. 08024613695. Ololade, you yourself can kill 300 people. You are a terrorist agent. FBI should add you to their list of wannabe terrorists. 07036268176.Tunji, please try to syndicate your column and have it published in all major newspapers. I believe it’s the kind of stuff Nigerians need to spur them to a greater positive mass political action. Your confinement to The Nation is a great disservice to the Nigerian nation and the youth in particular. May God continue to watch over you and strengthen your hand as our dear country inches steadily toward the zero hour. Wishing the best of every good thing this year…Shalom! 08025347716.Tell Farouk Mutallab that there is nothing like 70 virgins for any murderer of any kind. He is lucky, let him repent and accept Jesus for life. This may be his last chance. 08060428267.Your write-up makes very little sense. At a time the young generation should be involved in objective analysis, I am surprised by your myopic and suspicious analysis. You vitiate my hope in the ability of the youths to make this world a better place for humanity. 08033937531.My brother, I really enjoy your write-ups, please ride on. 08062219551.Tunji, you are shying from the truth or being too careful, isn’t the dictate of Islam to kill perceived anti-Islamists and that Allah accepts that? Sincerely Tunji, Israel’s God is not Islam’s Allah. Former ordered Abraham to sacrifice Isaac while the latter asked Abraham to sacrifice Ishmael. God isn’t a liar. Then one religion is premised on falsehood and inactions. From Mr Ajayi, Ibadan. 08051002762.The type of coverage given criminal acts like Abdulmutallab’s by the international media is uncalled for. It does not deter a lot of depressed and evil-minded people. The fight against terrorism should be executed with utmost secrecy while information should be made public after culprits have been apprehended. I don’t think Abdulmutallab got the help he needed while he was going through some internal conflicts. Parents should do more to protect their wards against undue peer influence. The pursuit of wealth and ambition should not make parents neglect their primary responsibility to their children. Spare the rod… 08035157850.Nice article, Mr Olatunji. I admire your objective take on the effects of religion on our psyche. Looking forward to the concluding piece. From Barrister Amiesimaka Tamuno. 08064884718.Your discourse on Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab (Man in the mirror 1) is simply thought-provoking, elegantly poetic and vivid in its images. Kudos! From Ayo (Esq) Calabar. 08038270988.Nigeria is always known for vices like money-laundering, advance-fee fraud, Farouk has decided to add terrorism to that list. He is a shame. 07036268176.Mutallab is a wasted material. His type is seriously needed to send a message to our leaders. From Olobi (Esq.) 08030707182.I read your piece, ‘Man in the mirror 1’and it’s really wonderful. How I wish all writers will be as objective as you are. We look forward to the second part. More grease to your elbows. Musab, Abuja. 08032953432.Every year, scores of people are senselessly murdered in the name of religion. Our politicians sweep it under the rug and carry on. Now they have carried it beyond our shores. Some homes in Lagos have parents with two different faiths and they live in peace, why is the north different? Bauchi alone had four religious massacres last year, why wasn’t it the same in Imo, Lagos, Delta, why? 08039293271Mr Olatunji, your piece on Umar is a classic and I must congratulate you for having the courage and conviction to write it. You spoke the mind of millions. 08038131304.Good talk but let’s call a spade a spade, USA is the terror to all. It trained them on the use of arms, produces and sells weapons to them. 08032155018.Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab (Man in the mirror 2)I tried to stop him when this action was deliberated upon and he told me of his moves…but too late. Let’s save others. 07033065434.If you truly admire Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, then encourage your children to do the same otherwise you are insincere. FromC.O. Kad. 08034526106.Please don’t ever have the impression that Jesus is a mere mortal. He is god. Good piece though. 08034416174.The controversy continues. Anyway, isn’t religion meant to be a subjective thing? 08033915632.Read your article and I must say, I am most impressed; such eloquence. I marvel at your writing perspective. Mind me asking if you schooled in Nigeria? 07032750275.Olatunji, believe it, you are great if not for other things but for today’s (Man in the mirror 2). May your brain and ink never get dry. I really love journalists like you. 08033264122.Mr Olatunji, your piece is superb and nothing but the bitter truth. I only wish our so-called clerics and leaders will stop being hypocritical and accept this truth (Reality Bites). Your column name fits perfectly. I look forward to more of these truths. Keep up the good work. 08136392193.Please don’t rationalize terrorism, condemn it in clear term. Farouk’s action was satanic. 07058845253.Indeed shame on you for hiding behind pun and unfortunate event to vent your probably long-held hatred for Christ and his followers. Damn masked fundamentalist! Shame! 07038278128.Dear Olatunji, compliments of the season. Your piece brought me close to tears. You said it all, we are to be blamed. Thank you. From Barrister Williams. 07025100415.You are too much! Kudos! And where the hell did you school? Who mentored and tutored you? 08062264032.For once, I read a piece that’s void of politics and elitist propaganda on serious issues. Tunji, I read your piece and the truth in it stole my heart. 08037011775.You are a fantastic writer even though I disagree with some of your premises and conclusions. You are a radical, I presume. From Kehinde. Akure. 08033899787.Since you are sympathising with Muslim fanatics instead of sanctioning their actions, why don’t you convert to Islam and blow up a church so you can make paradise? 08036327488.Your article was apt and on point. We lack depth. We are such simpletons that we have lost the art of deep reflection. Reality Bites just got a new convert. Let’s go deeper. From S.M. Dikwa. Jos. 08034515362.End of the working class heroes…I have been reading your editorials for a very long time now. I must admit that you are a fearless writer in a country where yellow is orange and where people always have reasons to fear. To say that 80 per cent of Nigerians are cowards is an understatement. Sad thing is how many have access to your column? Sadder still; how many are aware of events about the Arab spring. They need electricity to be connected to the outside world via CNN or more. When the negligible light is available, they will rather watch African Magic on DSTV. So how the hell can they be able to borrow a leaf from the Arab spring? Mark my word, fuel subsidy will be removed and nothing will happen as usual. Nigerians will only blow hot air. After one week of strike action, the outcry will fizzle out… 08064286736. -

Justice Mustapha Akanbi (rtd) at 80
Honourable Justice Mustapha Adebayo Akanbi (CFR) (rtd), a father, Wakilin of Ilorin, an elder (non-partisan) statesman, a man of impeccable integrity, an intellectual by all measures and an untiring judicial activist turns 80. His globally acknowledged courage, patriotism, pan Africanism and above all compassion for human advancement are worthy of celebration. The cliché is; not how long, but how well.Remarkably, it’s been well, worthwhile and long for Justice Akanbi. Activists of alternative social order are often critical of state judicial officers in particular and men and women of “law and order”, in general. History is rich with abundant evidences of how laws, some lawyers and indeed many judges were parts of the strong links in the chain of class oppression, exploitation and tyranny against the weak. Judges sentenced Nelson Mandela (himself a lawyer!) to life imprisonment. His crime: dare to fight against apartheid. Madiba spent 27 years of his precious life behind the bars “legally”. “Rule of (apartheid) law”once prohibited what turned out to be icons like Nelson Mandela (of royal extraction), Desmond Tutu, and Winne Mandela from making use of White Only toilet.Unjust apartheid laws for a century criminalized and segregated toilet usage!The apartheid “laws” were certainly drafted by some “lawyers”. Some “judges” also enthusiastically enforced the “laws” with all the brutality associated with them! Here at home, not few Judges, lawyers and judicial officials enlisted on the side of injustice and dark dealings. It was a judge who granted the infamous injunction putting on hold a process of free and fair elections in 1993. The annulment of June 12 election by IBB dictatorship was “”legitimised”” by “legal” drafters of draconian laws of that dark era of our life. It was a Judge who judicially murdered Ken Saro Wiwa, a globally acknowledged writer and poet.It is important to recall these others and their sordid legal misdeeds to underline the significance of the dignity, courage and honour Honourable Justice Mustapha Akanbi brought to bear during his eventful tenures both at the bar and the bench. Record shows that retired Justice Akanbi is an acknowledged judicial officer with integrity, steadfastness and fairness in the process of adjudication on the bench even under a hostile military regime. Following the brutal murder of four ABU students in 1986 by Mobile special Police on the order of the university authority led by Professor Ango Abdulalhi, students crisis erupted which degenerated and assumed national dimension. ASUU, NLC and NANS were united in protest in protest against the Abisoye Panel set up by the regime to whitewash the administrative mess of Ango Abdullahi leadership of ABU. The crisis of confidence that rocked the Abisoye panel compelled the regime to set up a more credible judicial commission headed by Justice Akanbi. His commission restored confidence such that National Association of Nigeria’s Students, (NANS) and other civil society organizations freely and confidently participated. The perception was that with Justice Akanbi on the bench, there would be justice for all. The commission’s problem solving (not persecution methodology) characterized by openness allowed for free expressions. The high point was the courageous sensational testimony of the intelligent police officer, Alozie Ogbubuaja who freely offered suggestions on students-police relations with a call for the improvement on the conditions of service of the police in general. He made a case for reform of the police and made his historic damning pepper soup remark and coup plotting.Honorable Minister of Communication and Information, Labaran Maku (then NANS PRO) owes his university graduation from Jos to the historic sense of justice of the commission’s findings which were reformist not punitive as the military regime desperately desired. As the founding chairman of the ICPC, in keeping with the mandate of the commission to apprehend public graft in 2003, ICPC intensified its search light on the activities of senators among other public officers. Some senators under the leadership of Senator Pius Ayim moved to weaken the ICPC through a belated review of its enabling Act in a way that would insulate senators from accountability and prosecution. Remarkably the retired Honourable Justice Akanbi made a case for anti-corruption at the chambers of the Senate insisting that any attempt to tamper with the ICPC Act means truncating the anti-corruption crusade. He was even determined to resign his chairmanship of the commission rather than allowing the commission to be compromised by the legislators. The public sympathy was in favour of Justice Akanbi-led commission, largely on the account of the integrity of the chairman.Justice Akanbi is a living library of progressive and spiritual ideas for the younger generation. His life shows that, age is no barrier to value addition, hard and smart public work. Within a short spell, with maturity and determined systemic approach, he mainstreamed ICPC from nowhere as an institutional bulwark against public graft. Notwithstanding the limitations of resources and political hostility, ICPC under him investigated and arrested some judges of the High Court, customary court and Sharia court for collecting bribes. The judges were eventually dismissed by the NJC. To the credit of his legendary modesty Justice Akanbi bowed out of the commission in 2005, even when he had the right of tenure extension. Here Justice Akanbi shares the great value of resignation with great leaders like Nelson Mandela of South Africa and Julius Nyerere of Tanzania.Mandela said:” I must step down when there are one or two people who admire me”- Justice Akanbi actually stepped down when many actually admired him. On retirement, he set up Mustapha Akanbi Foundation (MAF). Inaugurated in Ilorin, Kwara State on September 12, MAF has added value to national discourse within a short time. Out of simple and enduring noble objective to serve as “…a veritable platform for promoting democratic values and fostering sustainable and viable democratic development in Nigeria”, MAF has left bold imprints in areas of Education, Human empowerment, health, Anti-corruption campaign and Good governance. The Foundation is acting local but thinking global through high profile public agenda setting lectures. The singular commitment, passion and courage of Justice Akanbi manifest in yearly topical themes that elevate public debate from the pedestrian. Today Mustapha Akanbi Foundation (MAF) is giving so much in a country of official non-giving, official grabbing, elite greed and state denials of roads, light, water and security of lives and property. To understand Justice Akanbi’s tremendous contributions to jurisprudence, national and continental development we must come to terms with his roots in Islamic jurisprudence of the great ancient city of Ilorin that has produced other equally great jurists like retired Justice Alfa Moddibo Belgore and Justice Ayo Salami. Significantly too, we must appreciate his profound ideological and historical grounding dating back to the progressive ideas of Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana in the 40s and 50s, Sekou Toure of Guinea and Julius Nyerere of Tanzania. Justice Mustapha’s contribution has shown that spiritual/ideological/political consciousness is indispensable for lawyers to maintain and sustain integrity both at the bar and on the bench. We recall with nostalgia ideologically conscious lawyers like late Aka Bashorun, late Gani Fahemihin SAN Femi Falana SAN among others. A visit to the Africa’s Peoples Hall, the Head Quarters of MAF in Ilorin says it all. An inventory of the consciously arraigned portraits of the great African Leaders and trade unionists from Kwame Nkrumah to Nelson Mandela, Gamel Nazer to Tom Mboya, Patrice Lumuba to Sekou Toure will attest to the ideological preferences of the role model, Justice Mustapha Akanbi. With uncommon valuable service at 80, he is ageing gracefully but also mentoring a new generation to take over. His recent bold comments on national issues such as state police and independence of anti-corruption agencies underscore his intellectual clarity and sincerity of purpose at 80.• Aremu, mni (issaaremu@yahoo.com) -

Of deathways, highways and Onolememen’s N652bn
HEADLINE: Four Igbinedion Varsity lecturers die in car crash. If you think the headline is tears-evoking, what about the story. It says that the Audi 80 car bearing the four victims plunged into Ovia River along the Lagos –Ore-Benin Express road. According to eye witness, the driver of the Audi car was trying to avoid a truck whose driver took the wrong lane when the accident occurred. Though the report did not say so, regular users of the Lagos-Benin highway (deathway, more like it) know that commuters often have to resort to driving against traffic to avoid the numerous failed portions of the road.The horrific plunge of four university teachers on Wednesday, September 5, 2012 is just half of an infernal, never-ending tale. The accident happened at about 3.30 pm on that day and according to the Federal Road Safety Commission’s (FRSC) report, local divers were only able to find the car in the river at about 7.00 pm. Rescue efforts started the following day at about 8.00am and nearly 24 hours after the accident occurred, which was at about 12 noon, local divers were able to retrieve only two of the four bodies. It is not certain whether the other two bodies were ever salvaged.There is more to this gruesome tale of a nation in the throes of death. The photographs from the scene of the crash will surely make you stop and shed a tear for our dear mother land. You see half-clad youths in wooden canoe on the river tugging at the wreckage and another group of men including FRSC officials and perhaps, passersby on the bridge straining to pull the wrecked car out of the river with ropes and raw chimp strength. The photographs and the actions looked as ancient as shots from the black and white movies of the 1940s.Lastly, the story says that an officer of the fire service who pleaded anonymity, said that the (Ovia River) Bridge is in a “very bad state.” And last November, a Zonal Commander of the FRSC had called for the repair of the Ovia River Bridge. According to him, “the Bridge had claimed many lives in less than three months due to accidents, many of which are avoidable.”We want to wager that no day passes on the Lagos – Benin deathway without the blood of hapless Nigerians being spilled, a veritable libation to the gods of Nigeria’s corrupt leaders. Just last Saturday, three days after the Ovia bridge carnage, another crash occurred along this road, this time, near Sagamu and 12 commuters reportedly perished on the spot. Apart from the Lagos –Benin highway, most other roads across the country like the Lagos-Ibadan, Abuja-Suleja, Owerri-Aba-Port Harcourt, Oyo- Ilorin, Akwanga-Lafia and Enugu-Onitsha highways, to name a few, are highly accident-prone because they are in various states of dereliction.Ironically, the same day (Wednesday, September 5,) the four university dons plunged to their ghastly end, the Federal Executive Council (FEC) was signing off on an approval for the sum of N652 billion for the repair of the phase three of the Lagos- Benin deathway. That is a huge sum; more than the entire budget of some African countries. The repairs job, under Mr. Mike Onolememen’s Ministry of Works, will be handled by Messrs RCC Nigeria Limited and it has three years to complete it. But one can almost hear Nigerians sneering at this news convinced that the road will never be done. And if done, they would wager; it would never be completed so that at the end of 2015 when we ought to have a near-perfect Lagos-Benin highway, we will remain where we are today, daily evacuating the carcasses of Nigerians from this monstrous road.Nigerians are justified in being cynical about Onolememen’s capacity to deliver on this job. They point to his godfather, Chief Tony Anenih, who had a similar opportunity to fix the road when he held a similar position during President Olusegun Obasanjo’s time but he left the highway worse than he met it. Nobody asked questions and no accounts were given. Further, Messrs RCC does not have a great tradition of timely delivery of jobs or the best of quality. At the end of the day, we are ‘comfortably’ ensconced in the cusp of powers that do not stickle for country or the people.Lastly, the country is also stuck with an FRSC that is today, neither a bat nor a rat; a body that has been savaged by the system and is merely going through the motion, merely faking at its duties of accident prevention. Like every other MDA, it probably never gets it revenue allocation and whatever it gets, gets mired in the system. It even lacks the capacity to capture all the accidents on our roads; and when commuters careen off the road into the deeps, they are often sentenced to eternal damnation. And ‘life’ goes on, shall we say? And where on earth is the Federal Road Maintenance Agency, FERMA in the face of vanishing highways across the country. FERMA is toady, a mere bureaucracy that has become as derelict as the federal roads it was set up to fix. It has grown into a problem.Offshore convictions: what will Adoke do now?Why do I have this tinge of sympathy for Mohammed Adoke, Nigeria’s Attorney-General and Minister for Justice? One ought to feel only contempt and disgust for our number one law officer who is seemingly getting lost in his own maze of judicial infamy. Look at the sorry situations: the Americans convicted their citizens who bribed some Nigerian money mongrels to win NLNG contracts in Nigeria between 1995 and 2004; the French have slammed the companies and officials who bribed Nigerians in the 2003 national identity cards contract scam while the Germans have punished Siemens for its role in a bribery scandal in Nigeria.Not one person or company has been prosecuted, not to mention conviction in Nigeria where the criminal acts were perpetrated. Yet our Attorney-General sits on all these sordid, stinking files, unperturbed, unmoved and perhaps dishing out national honours to some of these criminals and damagers of our national honour. Our leaders of today are so, so pathetic in their inability to muster any sense of shame. What a pity.LAST MUG: Again, national honours to all comers: after the ruckus that trailed last year’s national honours award and President Jonathan’s promise to improve the process, this year’s list released early in the week shows that nothing has changed. The award has remained a gift for a few and an expensive purchase for many Nigeria’s high and mighty who seek an icing on their mouldy cake. In other countries, it is not enough to be a ranking politician, governor, judge, academic or businessman for everyman can be promoted to a high rank, you must exhibit some acute distinction in your field to qualify for national honours.Not so in Nigeria. So we end up honouring hundreds of people who the people know are without any honour or character and the country continues to reek of the stench of odium, criminality and corruption. We say it does not matter but it will matter someday because it all goes around and comes around. -
Hazards of social network age
S
IR: One of the biggest and most enduring problems in Nigeria today is the rapid disappearance of the reading culture. Many people barely read even newspapers, preferring instead to chat away their time in the social networking sites. And others use it for fraudulent and heinous acts.
It is difficult to escape the influence of social networks. The trouble with being born in the social networking age is that it discourages concentration and encourages serial, kaleidoscopic exposure. Its variety becomes narcotic, not a stimulus; you consume not what you choose and when, but when they choose and what.
Almost anything interesting and rewarding in life requires some constructive, consistently applied efforts. But not social networking sites. In short, too much social network usurps one of the most precious of all human gifts––the ability to focus your attention on yourself–– something only humans can do. Social network sites have adopted a particular device to do this to capture ones attention and hold it, because holding attention is the prime motive of any social networking site.
The economics of social networking site require them to assemble the largest possible audience for every moment (because that enhances its role as a profitable advertising vehicle). Social network sites live in fear of losing anyone – the rich or the poor, the dull or bright. So, the safest technique to guarantee mass attention is to keep everyone happy and allow them unlimited freedom.
I see the ethos of evil socialization pervading this nation and its culture. I think that evil socialization has become a model in all social networking sites, where the sites management allows the people unhindered liberty to do what they like and want. I think it has become fashionable to think that, like fast food, social networks are the way to build a relationship and engage in romance.
In our schools and homes today, teachers and parents think that social network is the best way to impart knowledge and create relationship. It has dire consequences, as students have abandoned reading, but that does not mean that social network is not good for students.
If it must be used in the process of learning, its use must be critical and more selective. I believe it is called “internet literacy” if it is used to whet the appetite of students for other discipline and courses. It becomes useful if it is used to prepare a child for core competence and build skills that will positively benefit the society in the future. But that is not what I am talking about.
I am talking about the tendency that I have noticed to surrender to the ethos that social network subtly purveys: the idea that things are gotten easily, with little effort; that information can be absorbed passively; that by reading few lines online and watch pictures; children are absorbing as much information as they might through the printed pages. That is what I mean by pandering to the easy virtues of social networks, of letting young people believe that ideas are conveyed by tasty bits; that intellectual efforts need not be applied; that you can get it (as they say) quickly and painlessly.
The world is being force- fed with trivialities, with ill-perceived effects on habits of mind, language, and our tolerance for effort and our appetite for complexity. That is the adverse effect of social network.
In my opinion, there should be a way to balance freedom with responsibility of the use of social media. Parents must endeavor to educate their wards on the dangers of the internet and allow them use it profitably. Today’s teenagers sleep online doing practically nothing but chatting away their time. They can channel their energy into research using their gadgets-phones, laptops; Ipads etc to increase their knowledge which will in turn increase their academic performance. This way, we will reduce if not eradicate criminal urge cum tendencies.• Uwalaka Temple
Daejeon, South Korea. -
Oyo Public Service needs round pegs in round holes
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IR: We salute the courage of His Excellency, Senator Isiaq Abiola Ajimobi in his unwavering commitment to the execution of his three-prong agenda of Repositioning, Restoring and Transforming of the lost glory of the Pace-Setter state, most importantly, the public service in recent times.
If Oyo State is to behave true to type, as her name, Pace-Setter typify, it must ensure professionalism in the public service. We should take professional approach in our dealings. A professional man will ensure values/ethics; standard (best practices) and discipline in all his dealings. One of the natures of Public Service is that we are producing service nobody can measure, quantify and put price, yet our accountability is universal. Public Service has to be a place of best practices. The case of class struggle that now rears its ugly head in the Public Service is uncalled for.
To cite one example, the finance and supplies departments of government agencies particularly in the 33 Local Government of Oyo State headed by non-professionals in spite of avalanche of Associate Chartered Accountants (ACAs) in the service of the local governments who are professionally and technically competent to direct the affairs is a case in point.
If the state is serious about its three-prong agenda, she should be courageous enough at beaming its search light on the leadership of finance department of the local governments by ensuring that round pegs are put in round holes if the state is desirous of conforming with international best practices as far as accounting profession is concerned. The present scenario where Finance and Supply departments of the Local Governments are headed by all manners of mediocres in place of ACA, ACCA is grossly unprofessional. Other states in the South-west have gotten this off their back.
Let the Pace-Setter state, set the pace and hold the ace!• Olorungbagbe Joseph,
Onipanu, Lagos. -
Still on the N5,000 note debate
SIR: The controversy that has trailed the proposed N5, 000 note has refused to surrender, but as usual with every discourse in the Nigerian polity, it has remained a dialogue of the elites, something distastefully referred to as the “dialogue of the deaf”. In a country purportedly made up of about 160 million people (assuming it is not more than that), an economic policy that will affect their already crippled standard of living to its very root, has remained only on the table of the microscopic few who are privileged to be educated and in the same token privileged to have access to the mass media, while the congregation of other less privileged Nigerians, who are only less privileged because their country made them so, have been shut out of the discussion room, only waiting to be served with whatever the outcome is.
Among the legion of views that have trailed the proposed currency note, various undertones can necessarily be inferred. While some are plainly political views trying to masquerade as economic sense, others are nothing but textbooks economics that seriously has no place in a seriously challenged economy like the Nigerian economy. One of such is the argument by the CBN that the new not would not cause inflation, but the CBN quickly forgets that the new policy is of a twin nature, thus even if the N5,000 note may not cause inflation, the coining of N5, N10, and N20 certainly will.
Let us consider this: The least transport fare for any route in a place like Osogbo is N20, and in some instances N30, therefore once N20 is coined, is it not only commonsensical that with the kind of payment infrastructure that we have as a country, no bus driver or conductor will ever want to carry loads and loads of N20 coins in his pocket (that is if they have any pocket, because the money is always in the hand)?
Evidently, given our peculiar circumstances as a people, the next thing that those drivers will simply do will be to raise the fare to the nearest note currency i.e. N50. Is that not inflation? Does that have to be written in any textbook? One wonders while it’s only the CBN policy-makers who do not seem to see this picture. For those in the CBN to so persist in the N5,000 note struggle as they’ve been doing as if it’s a personal ambition they must achieve, are they not suggesting by their body language that there is more to this than just a periodic review of the currency structure?
Who says the currency re-structuring cannot take place without the introduction of the N5, 000 note and the coins? Must the CBN force coins down the throat of Nigerians when the necessary and supporting infrastructure such as vending machines, e.t.c is totally unavailable?
The most disgusting part of the entire N5, 000 note propaganda by the CBN, is the total lack of regard for the people, the same people who the policy would affect. For the CBN to tell Nigerians that presidential approval for the project has been secured since November last year, speaks volume of the calibre of men who wield power in Nigeria, and for the Minister of National Planning, Dr. Shamsudeen Usman to come on air and tell Nigerians that the announcement of the new currency note was just to brief the people, simply leaves a bad taste in the mouth.• Olusola Adegbite, Esq.
Town Planning Way, Ile-Ife, -
No to N5,000; N65b Benin-Sagamu Rd in 6 months Pls; NGOs; MMA Arrivals a disgrace; Zamfara lead poisoning
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igeria is a strange place politically and economically. Prices go up not by one or five percent but by 20 or 50 or 100%. No matter the politics of faces and names on the proposed new currency note, the economics of the proposed introduction of the N5,000 note is wrong. Who will benefit from this contract? Why does CBN not suggest a N2,000 note! We go to 500% increase. Is it to devalue the naira to toilet roll? With all the real money flying around in Nigeria, there is no requirement to devalue the naira. In fact it should appreciate. Now N1,000 is $6 or £4 when it should be $60-600 or £40-400.
FEC approves N65,223,000,000 or N65b for the 300km or so Benin-Sagamu Expressway for a contract to last a very long 36 months. Far too much and far too long a time frame. Why cannot anyone agree to do some important things urgently for long suffering Nigerians who were not responsible for that destruction of the road? Does no one love Nigerians enough to give them a completed Benin- Sagamu Expressway in six months? This can easily be done by employing 20 more gangs of engineers and men each taking short five kilometre segments of the road in a blitzkrieg of massive work. This is also employment generation. Nigerians deserve better. When will the Nigerian leadership realise that the only urgent matters are not political matters but people matters. The Benin-Sagamu former Expressway is a Matter of Urgent National Importance-MUNU and should be treated as such. In the Nigerian upper political class can we ever find the politicians who will accelerate this process if the Federal Executive Council filled with ministers supposedly in a hurry to make a name does not care sufficiently to accelerate simple contracts? A time frame of 36 months is three years and maybe 500 needless deaths away. We are told that 5,000 sq metres of potholes have been filled by FERMA. Hurray but what about all the other potholes nationwide? Speed up pothole filling throughout Nigeria.
The suggestion that ‘NGOs are conduits for money laundering’ announced by EFCC is worrisome for the majority of NGOs who are merely trying to do good and fill in the government gaps in social delivery and also make ends meet by paying their staff and also office services. People often view NGOs as those who milk them for the personal greed of the NGO leadership. The first lady NGOs have not helped this image. The public must distinguish between the NGOs identified as bad by the EFCC and the rest or else many beneficiaries will suffer.
We are told that government seeks to spend N109b on nine airports. The Lagos Murtala Mohammed Airport (MMA) still has major construction and passenger comfort problems? The airport officials and politicians always use ‘VIP’ entrances and exits and therefore are unaware of these problems. A caring government and airport authority should please first widen the arrival hall area and the stairs where Nigerians and foreigners are forced into a tiny ‘arrival hall’ space to be inspected by customs and immigration. The MMA is a laughing stock. Passengers deserve better and more space and have been waiting for this expansion. Have you tried parking in the disaster area and pothole filled ‘temporary car park’ where the airport authority has the effrontery to abuse the nation and charge a fee for use of a mass of potholes as a parking lot?
It has been disgraceful since the day it was opened while the engineering works took place on the original site to make a hotel. The hotel, with its foundations already in place, remains unfinished with government refusing further building for imaginary safety reasons. Do those putting the hotel on hold visit airports around the world where hotels inside airports are essential for tourism and business growth? Have you ever seen the mayhem in the arrival hall at the luggage collection area, with everyone crowding around the luggage delivery area instead of standing back so all can see their luggage coming? Do not mention the poor power supply which denies the air-conditioner of power and plunges 300 arriving passengers into torture from heat. In short someone should be doing ‘Time and Motion’ studies during passenger arrival especially when two loads of passengers arrive at the same time.
NNPC has announced the long overdue and happily awaited discovery of crude oil in the Lake Chad area. Hurray for all Nigerians. There are three ways this could have happened. Nigeria may have been geographically tilted to allow oil to flow from South to North, someone may have buried a petrol tanker full of crude for ‘discovery’ or there may actually be oil in the Lake Chad area. Most Nigerians have prayed for this moment for 30 years. Congratulations Nigeria. Hurray! You are truly blessed by God but cursed by man. As the story unfolds and more and more oil is discovered, will Nigeria remain one?
Zamfara state is in the news again for the wrong reasons. Gold mining and lead poisoning released from the stones crushed and also used for their housing which has killed 400 children with 2,500 under treatment. Dr Ivan Gayton and others have worked with these children but was all this necessary? Why were they not protected from childhood? The Boko Haram instability will provide the excuse for the return of polio which was almost eliminated.