Tag: Activist

  • Ominira Initiative joins activists in probe of mining firms

    Ominira Initiative joins activists in probe of mining firms

    The Ominira Initiative for Economic Advancement has teamed up with a consortium of international researchers and human rights activists to investigate the possible role of western mining companies in funding violence in West Africa.

    According to the group’s Co-Founder, Lanre Elufisan, the ‘Blood Gold Report’ research programme will explore and highlight the potential deals struck between western mining companies, authoritarian West African governments and Russian mercenaries.

    Military coups and anti-democratic violence are sweeping across West Africa, with the support of Russian Private Military Contractors (PMCs) such as the Wagner Group.

     These deadly bargains between Russian state-backed PMCs and local warlords are financed by the extraction of precious metals, especially gold. The profits from these resources looted from West Africa are in turn used by the Kremlin to fund Russia’s brutal war in Ukraine.

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    While the role of the Wagner Group is well-documented, much less is known about the role of western mining companies facilitating this system of resource extraction. In joining this research consortium, the Ominira Initiative will help investigate and highlight these links, and better understand how these business dealings may be undermining democracy and damaging economic development in West Africa.

    The consortium is inviting submissions on key questions around the impact of Blood Gold and the accountability of mining companies. Industry, governments and civil society are invited to make submissions via www.bloodgoldreport.com.

    The research will focus on resource-rich Mali, where the ruling junta – which seized power in 2020 – is propped up by Russian mercenaries. The junta retains Wagner Group’s brutal security services at a reported cost of $12 million per month. This hefty bill is settled largely through the tax receipts derived from western mining corporations, who already contribute more than 50 per cent of the junta’s revenue and have recently been asked to increase their contributions.

    Together with the junta forces, these Russian mercenaries have been involved in multiple atrocities including the Moura massacre, where the UN has found that 500 civilians were summarily executed last year.

    Commenting on the Ominira Initiative’s participation in the Blood Gold Report research consortium, co-founder and Executive Director, Lanre Peter Elufisan, said: “The growing presence of the Wagner Group across West Africa is of great concern, contributing to instability and violence in the region. If western mining companies are doing deals with authoritarian governments supported by the Wagner Group, then the public deserves to know.”

  • Activist calls for more women in politics

    A Non-Governmental Organisation, ActionAid Nigeria, has called for 50 per cent affirmative action on women inclusion in politics.

    Its Country Director, Mrs Ene Obi, made the call in Abuja yesterday at a press conference on Women Political Participation.

    She demanded accountability from the government on its commitment to gender equality as the country had signed on to it through the National Gender Policy.

    Obi said: “We have moved from the silencing, subjugation and discrimination of women and girls expressed through cultural norms and practices from the earlier years (1950s-1990s) to some level of recognition of women and girls’ right in Nigeria.

    ”Women are now organising and challenging the patriarchal systems that suppress their dignity and autonomy at community , state and national levels.

    “We have gained traction in dismantling these cultural norms and practices that sometimes transcend into national lives and space where sexism and sexist ideologies and policies are expressed to legislations and policies that promotes the rights of women and girls in Nigeria.

    ”We have seen increase in the opening of spaces and processes for women’s participation in decision making.

    ”We have also witnessed many women being included in the traditional councils which used to be a closed space for women in states like Enugu, Kaduna and Ebonyi.”

    Obi, however, regretted that the slow gains over the years in advancing women’s rights and the achievement of gender equality in Nigeria, especially in the area of women’s political participation was being eroded by lack of political will to create the enabling environment.

    She added that women’s equal participation in decision making was not a demand for justice or democracy but should be seen as a necessary condition for women’s interest to be taken into account.

  • Oshiomhole: Activist and political aficionado @ 67

    Human epochs are replete with great men and women in the various fields who defined and continue to define their peculiar histories with the magnitude of their accomplishments. Comrade Adams Aliyu Oshiomhole, mni, CON, national chair of the governing All Progressives Congress (APC) is one member of that tribe. It is on this score that it becomes apposite to celebrate the former president of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and former governor of Edo State who turned 67 yesterday, April 4.

    Comrade, as he is popularly referred to by associates and devotees, happened on the national stage in 1999 when he emerged as the fourth president of the NLC. As someone who restlessly craves the institution of legacies for posterity, he immediately set out and committed himself to building an independent, militant and socially responsive fighting organisation. To be sure, the independent, militant and socially-responsive dispositions were not for gratuitous appropriation of the spoils of office.

    He deployed the powers of his NLC presidency in becoming the number one defender of the rights and welfare of the working people. He provided leadership by staying in the frontline in resisting arbitrary increases in the prices of petroleum products. The NLC under his watch was a nemesis of the Olusegun Obasanjo administration on its harsh fuel pricing policy as well as other socio-economic policies that were injurious to the wellbeing of Nigerians.

    Combating arbitrary increases in fuel pump prices was one turf of policy antagonism; the other turf was the battle for salary increases for workers. He secured significant salary increases for workers, the last being the 15 percent increase across board. Under his presidency, the NLC became the most popular and influential non-state actor in the country, which provided effective opposition to then ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    For his courage, tenacity and single-minded devotion to labour issues, he earned himself such monikers as “Hurricane Adams” and “Adamant Adams”.  But the workers and masses loved to refer to him as the “People’s President” (which was eventually as the title of a book written on his eight-year robust leadership of the NLC that was publicly presented in Abuja on 10 February, 2011).

    In April 2007, he was overwhelmingly elected governor of Edo State on the platform of the Action Congress (AC) but his mandate was stolen, thus precipitating an intense legal struggle to reclaim his mandate.  The Edo State Election Petition Tribunal restored the mandate, which was re-affirmed on November 11, 2008 by the Court of Appeal.  On November 12, 2008, he was formally sworn in as governor of Edo State.

    As governor, Oshiomhole adopted what is now popularly referred to as participatory, people-driven and bottom-up approach to governance.  This is based on his well-advertised campaign slogan, that is: “Let the people lead”.  He shunned the bogus title of “executive governor” and did not tolerate the pretentious appellation of “His Excellency.”  To Edo people, Oshiomhole was simply and truly the comrade-governor, people’s governor or just simply, comrade.

    A foremost apostle of “one man, one vote” and the most methodical visionary and transformer that the Edo people have seen in this generation, Oshiomhole was rewarded with a resounding victory for a second term in office in the governorship election that was held on 14 July, 2012.  For the first time in Edo State, Oshiomhole won election in the entire 18 Local Government Areas.

    He was a phenomenal figure whose wisdom was required by the federal government in conflict resolutions. For instance, the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua requested him to negotiate and resolve the stalemate that led to a three-month strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU). Comrade did not fail to deliver.

    Oshiomhole shattered the assumption, prior to his emergence as governor that labour leaders don’t do well in public offices, by delivering the goods in Edo State. Having inherited a state with decayed infrastructure, a state that was held hostage by powerful cabal in the PDP, he did not despair but rather rose to the occasion by confronting the problems head-on.  He did not complain but rather he started the battle by ensuring that his party, the then ACN got the majority in the state House of Assembly and eventually took over the leadership of the House.

    Oshiomhole strategically embarked on massive construction of roads across the state, commenced what was referred to as the red roof revolution in both primary and secondary schools through the construction of red roof schools equipped with modern teaching facilities in all the local governments and 192 wards in the state.

    In addition, he embarked on a N30-billion Benin water storm project which had effectively checked the menace of flooding in Benin City and its environs. His administration also built a state-of-the-art Benin Central Hospital, which was geared towards bolstering the health needs of the people of the state and the South-south zone.

    Even out of office, Oshiomhole is widely known as the father of modern Edo State. He constructed solid roads with walk ways and street lights across the state. He provided water especially in Edo central senatorial district, an area where it was earlier believed that it was difficult to extract water.

    Some politicians who started well did not end well when it has to do with enthroning a successor. But Oshiomhole is not in that category. He used his political foot soldiers – the good, the bad and the ugly – to deliver the incumbent governor, Godwin Obaseki, who was the chairman of the state’s Economic and Strategic Team, as his successor.

    Despite several efforts by his adversaries to muddy his good name, Oshiomhole has continued to soar higher politically.  On June 23, 2018, he was unanimously elected as the national chair of the APC and  promised to embark on reforms that would shape the future of the party and he has not looked back since then.

    Observing that some powerful individuals within the APC had hijacked the party, Oshiomhole promised to return the party to the members who overwhelmingly voted for President Muhammadu Buhari in 2015. He commenced the direct primary mode of selecting candidates for the party so that all members of the party would be part of the process of electing their leaders unlike when it was done through few delegates.

    For the first time in the history of the politics of the nation, a presidential candidate of a party, in the person of President Muhammadu Buhari, emerged through direct primary election. That paid off as the president garnered overwhelming victory across the nation in the just-concluded presidential election. When he accepted the job of national chairman, Oshiomhole made it clear that the national working committee (NWC) would embark on reforms that might not be easy but that such reforms would make the party much stronger and people-oriented. He had pointedly indicated his readiness to wield the big stick where necessary.

    According to him, “It will no longer be business as usual in party affairs. From membership, discipline, funding, party management and respect for party constitution to conduct of party members in the arms of government; working with the president, we shall reinvent the ability to reward positive conduct and sanction recalcitrant, anti-party conduct. My task is to work with Mr. President, governors, leaders of the party at all levels and other stakeholders to pull our members together to build a strong and united party…”

    Oshiomhole has not deviated from his promises 10 months after he stepped in the saddle. For instance, through his reforms, ministers who were not at home with the party or their people were disqualified from participating in the primary election. Governors who played gods in their various states against the party’s interest, including alleged involvement in anti-party activities, were either suspended from the party or queried.

    For Oshiomhole’s NWC, supremacy of the party is paramount. Whether you like him or not, under his leadership, President Buhari was re-elected. The APC is on the path of nicking the leadership of the 9th National Assembly where it enjoys overwhelming majority just as it maintains a majority control in the states. Happy birthday to a dogged fighter and reformer!

     

    • Ebegbulem is Chief Press Secretary to Comrade Oshiomhole.
  • Activist warns against PDP’s propaganda

    The Movement for Actualisation of Campaign Promises (MACP), has urged Nigerians not to succumb to the propaganda of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), as it has failed to deliver on its promises.

    A statement by its Executive Director Olushola Olaleye, said: “There is need to alert the public to ensure they do not succumb to massive propaganda by the PDP, which, throughout the campaign period till now has been busy embarrassing the sensibility of Nigerians.”

    The PDP, he said, had portrayed Nigeria as a country where events and history could easily be distorted and the nationals could easily be confused through propaganda.

    It said while the not so popular parties were busy trying to sell their programmes and mission statements to the populace, the PDP were busy pushing out fabrications.

    Olaleye said: “The PDP, through those they called their handlers, have failed to realise that their sins, which they apologised for early last year, were actually the ones that put Nigeria down to her sorry state. Nigerians and indeed the present Muhammadu Buhari–led APC government have accused the PDP-led 16 years of misrule and massive looting of Nigeria’s resources with evidence and facts. The PDP was the one that sold many of the country’s infrastructures allegedly to her cronies.

    “They (PDP) were accused of not doing anything to our roads, our schools, the health sector and the economy for 16 years despite huge sum of revenue from oil. For 16 years, the PDP, according to the Buhari–led APC government, told Nigerian (with some proofs) that PDP administration ensured that not only that our electricity was crippled, it succeeded in selling same to people, who have no known capacity, knowledge and financial strength to handle such sensitive and strategic project.”

  • Activist laments rising number of women in prisons

    Rights activist, Sylvester Uhaa, has expressed concern over the increase in the number of women prisoners in the country.

    Uhaa, the Executive Director of a prisoners’ rights advocacy group, Citizens United for the Rehabilitation of Errants (CURE-Nigeria), noted that women’s incarceration around the world is growing at an alarming and disproportionate rate.

    In a statement, Uhaa noted that, between 2000 and 2007, the total female prison population globally increased by 53 percent, while that of men increased by only 19 per cent.

    He added: “The situation is the same in Nigeria, where female prison population is growing fast.

    “Available statistics show that the female prison population in 2000 was 709, 722 in 2005, 897 in 2010, 1,156 in 2014, and 1,564 in 2018, which represents 2.1 percent of the prison population.

    “Punitive drug laws, over dependence on incarceration, lack of use of alternatives to imprisonment, the increasing lack of economic, social and political opportunities for women are some of the driving factors behind the rising figures.

    “Our survey on women prisoners and babies residing in prison in eight states of the Federation – FCT, Benue, Nasarawa, Lagos, Plateau, Kaduna, Niger, Enugu and Rivers, show that many women are incarcerated for minor, non-violent offences such as street begging and financial crimes.

    “Many of those convicted or charged with violent offences said they committed them in self-defence or for financial reasons.

    “Most of these women have little or no education, live in poverty, and are mothers, and some are in prison with their children.

    “They usually enter into the drug trade or commit these offences out of economic necessity or because of bad influence, while some are coerced by intimate or abusive partners or family members.

    “Mass incarceration and overly punitive drug laws and policies, over dependence on imprisonment for women destroy women’s lives and that of their children and families, and thwart their economic opportunities to live meaningful lives and contribute to society.

    “It is imperative that the our criminal justice system use alternatives forms of imprisonment for women who are charged with non-violent offences, and address the social, economic, cultural, traditional practices as well as the prevalent culture of oppression, subjugation, discrimination, abuse and violence  that push many women into crime,” he said.

  • ICYMI: Activist Deji Adeyanju faces 10-year imprisonment

    Detained activist Deji Adeyanju may be facing a ten- year jail term for his alleged rabid criticism of the Federal Government and top functionaries, it has been learnt.

    Top sources within the security and intelligence system confided Adeyanju is likely to be arrested and taken before a Federal High Court for allegedly contravening aspects of The Cybercrimes (Prohibition, Prevention, Etc) Act, 2015.

    Last Wednesday police spokesman, Ag. DCP Jimoh Moshood in a statement titled “Dispersal Of unlawful Assembly and unruly protesters” alleged Deji Adeyanju, along with Daniel Abobama and Boma Williams were arrested for “ Criminal conspiracy, joint act, defamation of character, public nuisance, disobedience to order duly promulgated by public servant, disturbance of public peace, inciting public disturbance, threat to public security and safety, criminal defamatory and derogatory conduct against constituted authority and breach of law and order.”

    The police further accused Adeyanju and his two associates of “ criminal defamatory comments and utterances capable of inciting public disturbance, threat to public security and safety, criminal defamatory and derogatory conduct against constituent authority and breach of law and order pasted by Deji Adeyanju on his Facebook page.”

    The police spokesman, in another statement same day, stated the trio others have been remanded in a prison outside Abuja, the Federal Capital.

    “The Nigeria Police Force today arraigned Deji Adeyanju, Daniel Abobama and Boma Williams at Karshi Magistrate Court, Federal Capital Territory for criminal offences of Joint Act, criminal defamation, disturbance of public peace, threat to public security and safety and inciting public disturbance under the Penal Code Law.

    “The lawyers to the suspects were equally in court. Deji Adeyanju, Daniel Abobama and Boma Williams were remanded to Prison custody in Keffi, Nasarawa State after they failed to meet the bail conditions.

    “The matter was adjourned to 21st January, 2019 for hearing,” Jimoh Moshood stated.

    Our correspondent reliably gathered a process may have commenced towards getting the police and the office of the Attorney-General of the Federation involved in arraigning Adeyanju on fresh charges under the Cybercrime Act before a Federal High court as his current issues are before a Magistrate court.

    Detailed exhibits gathered for use in prosecuting Deji Adeyanju include several postings on his Whatsapp and Facebook accounts with allegedly unproven allegations against President Buhari, Vice President Osinbajo and Army Chief Buratai.

    A competent source said the police have already publicised some of the online postings that may be cited under contravention of the Cybercrimes Act.

    Penalties under the Cybercrimes Act range from ten years to life imprisonment though it remains to be seen how prosecution intends to interpret how Adeyanju infringed the law.

    Part Three Section 5 (2) and (3) of the Act states that:

    “Where the offence committed under subsection  ( 1 ) of this section results in grievous bodily harm  to any  person, he  offender  shall be liable on conviction to imprisonment for a term of not more than 15 years without option of fine.

    “Where the offence committed under subsection ( 1 ) of this section results in the death of person(s), the offender shall be liable on conviction to life imprisonment”.

     

     

     

  • Lawyers to honour activist Pa Gomez at 90

    The Lagos Branch of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) is rolling out the red carpet to celebrate one of its foremost elders and veteran Bar activist, Pa Tunji Gomez who turns 90 years on March 18.

    Popularly known as “A matter of conscience,” the decision to honour Pa Gomez, a Life Bencher, was initiated by the Chukwuka Ikwuazom-led Branch Executive Committee.

    It was ratified during the branch’s last monthly meeting of the branch via a unanimous resolution of the members.

    A statement by chairman and secretary of the Pa Tunji Gomez at 90 Planning Committee Mr  Chukwuma Ezeala and Mr. Alfred Akinjo said the birthday celebrations will kick off on March 16 with a novelty match at 3 pm at King’s College Pitch, TBS, Lagos between the branch and the college team. Pa Gomez is an alumna of King’s College.

    The game will be followed by a Thanksgiving Church Service on March 18 at the Cathedral Church of Christ, Marina, Lagos.

    There will be a birthday lecture/dinner to be held the same day at the MUSON Centre, Lagos.

    The lecture is entitled: The SAN Rank: To be or not to be? It will be delivered by leading human rights activist, Mr. Femi Falana (SAN).

    A Life Bencher and former Chairman of the Body of Benchers, Chief Simeon Olakunri (SAN) will chair the occasion.

    Pa Gomez was admitted to the English Bar in 1961, about 57 years ago. The activist-lawyer, who is reputed for his courage and candour, still attends the meetings of his beloved “Premier Branch” regularly even at 90.

    He was the arrowhead and convener of the popular Movement for the Abolition of the Rank of SAN (MARSAN), contending that the process for the award of the title of Senior Advocate of Nigeria was riddled with flaws and that the rank had outlived its usefulness.

    Pa Gomez was born in 1928 and enrolled into King’s College, Lagos in 1944. His activism manifested early in his eventful life, as he is reputed to have led the 1948 strike at the College which significantly turned around the fortunes of the students.

    Pa Gomez was part of the legal team that defended late Chief Obafemi Awolowo during his celebrated treason trial in 1962. He is also reputed as the first lawyer to sue the Military Government in Nigeria in the celebrated case of Madam Shapara vs. Lagos State Government.

    An avid yoga practitioner, Pa Gomez is a longstanding advocate for the welfare especially of young lawyers. He is the author of the book: Guide to Happy Marriage.

  • Babalola; exit of a patriotic activist

    There was a period in this our troubled country when the students of the tertiary institutions were the conscience of the society. When students in those days took positive actions on society’s problems, the people listened because such actions were altruistic and usually they are for the betterment of the society. This is a far cry from the present situation where our students in the tertiary institutions are rudderless and are readily available to be hired for all sorts of malfeasance which are detrimental to society’s orderly growth and development. A key figure during the golden era of students’ activism in the country was Chief Moses Abidoye Morakinyo Babalola who was buried at Ibadan on February 9. The late Abidoye Babalola was a selfless students’ union leader, quintessential administrator and a caring community leader. He was born in 1934 to the family of Joseph Omowumi Babalola, the Alatunse of Ipetumodu in the present Osun State. The family is noted for its love for education and the family has produced notable scholars among whom was Professor Adeboye Babalola, the renowned Yoruba literary icon.

    The late Abidoye Babalola attended Offa Grammar School between 1950-1956 and in his final year was the Senior Prefect and won the coveted leadership prize. In 1957 he entered the Nigerian College of Arts, Science and Technology where he caught his teeth as a students’ union activist. In the college, he was elected secretary of the students’ union in 1958/59 session and later as a Public Relation Officer of the defunct National Union of Nigerian Students (NUNS), which was the umbrella organizations of all the students in the tertiary institutions in the country then.  It was in this position that he became one of the honoured senior ushers during the Nigerian independence celebrations. According to him, ‘he was within a whispering distance’ of the Prime Minister, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa and other shakers and movers of Nigeria in those days during the celebrations.

    By 1960, when the late chief entered the then University College Ibadan, he was already an accomplished student unionist and his reputation as a unionist prevented him from being admitted to do an honours degree in English because that department detested students’ unionism. He was subsequently admitted to a more liberal department of history for an honours degree.  In the 1961/62 session, he became the president of the Students’ Union, University College Ibadan and his tenure as the students’ union president was the golden era in students’ unionism in this country and it is yet to be surpassed. Unknown to the generality of Nigerians, our pre- independence leaders signed a secret pact with the British government for the establishment of a British military base in Nigeria after the attainment of independence by our country. This was at the height of the cold war and such a base could have made Nigeria a target of attack by the former Soviet Union in case of any conflict between the Soviet Union and the Western powers which included Britain, the owner of proposed military base in our country. Somehow, the arrangement for the secret base was made known to the students at Ibadan.

    The students under the late Abidoye Babalola quickly mobilized themselves into action so as to thwart this secret agreement. A strategic committee under the late legendary student union leader, Dapo Falase was set up and on November 21, 1961, Ibadan students under the late Babalola trooped to Lagos from their base at Ibadan. They carried their protest to the parliament buildings where the parliamentarians were meeting. Many parliamentarians on seeing the students ran for cover in their flowing agbada and babaringa. The demonstration, planned without detection by the authorities at the University of Ibadan and security agencies of the federal government, awoke the whole nation to the danger of having a military base in our country. The whole of Lagos was turned upside down on that day as a result of the students’ demonstration. The demonstration by these students which many people in the country regarded as a patriotic act jolted both the Nigerian and the British government and as a result the defence pact was abrogated on January 22, 1962.

    The second patriotic action taken by the students at Ibadan during the tenure of the late Abidoye Babalola was the protest against the insulting description of life in Nigeria in a postcard written by one Miss Marjorie Michelmore, a member of American Peace Corps. In the postcard, the young American who probably had never left her country before, wrote about the squalor and primitive conditions in which Nigerians lived. The students at Ibadan protested against this unflattering image of Nigeria and their protest nearly derailed the Peace Corps programme which was designed by the late President John Kennedy to win the friendship of people in the third world. Although the young lady apologized for her unguarded comments, she was sent home but the demonstration had salutary effect as the programme subsequently enjoyed improved training and orientation for those taking part in the programme. It is interesting to note that 58 years later, the President Donald Trump of USA also described the situation in our country in the same unflattering terms.

    The first Rag Day ever held by the students at the tertiary level was held by the students’ union of the University College Ibadan led by the late Abidoye Babalola. It helped to boost the image of the students not only in the eyes of University authorities but more importantly in the eyes of members of the public who regarded university students, because of their privileged position in the society as aloof and arrogant. The idea was mooted by the versatile Professor John Ferguson, the renowned Professor of Classics of the University. The rag day programme was designed to make ‘young privileged, able-bodied, mentally alert, future leaders of the nation to identify with the poor and the unfortunate in the society.’ The money collected from such venture was donated to the poor and charity homes. This is unfortunately a far cry from what happens nowadays when students in tertiary who participate in rag day event use the money collected for their personal upkeep instead of giving the collected money to the poor.

    On completion of his university education at Ibadan in 1964, as an history graduate, the late Abidoye Babalola joined his alma mater as an administrator rising to the post of Senior Assistant Registrar. One important post he occupied in the university was the post of an assistant to Mr. John Harris who was the acting Vice- Chancellor of the university when the country was at the verge of breaking up during the political crisis of 1966 and 1967 which led to the civil war. From the University of Ibadan, the late Abidoye Babalola was appointed pioneer Director of Administration of the Nigerian University Commission (NUC)  in 1974 and before he could settle fully into this job, he was appointed in 1976 as a commissioner in the then Western State  by the military governor of the state Brigadier David Jemibewon. He served at various times as commissioner for trade, industries, and co-operatives; education and agriculture and natural resources. After his stint as commissioner, he returned to University of Ibadan from where he eventually retired. As a seasoned administrator, he put his thought and administrative experience down in a book titled ‘The making of a University Administrator.’ In this book, he gave an insight into the administrative and political debacle faced by the authorities at the University of Ibadan before and during the Nigerian civil war. It should be a compulsory reading material for any aspiring university administrator. In retirement he helped to mobilize his people at Ipetumodu for the development of the town and for this he was conferred with the title of Alatunse of Ipetumodu , a title previously conferred on his father and brother.

    The late Abidoye Babalola is gone but the legacies he left as a students’ leader should be emulated by students in our tertiary institutions. His generation made the views of students on national issues to be known and respected. Nowadays, it is difficult to know the stand of our students on important national issues such as restructuring of the governance of the country, the quagmire in the security sector of the country, decay in the educational sector and other issues. This is tragic because the future belongs to them. Our students need to articulate their stands on how to get our country out of the present political, economic and social debacle so that they themselves will not turn out to be another ‘wasted generation’. The life of late Chief Abidoye Babalola is a pointer to how our students can make themselves relevant to the society.

     

    • Professor Lucas writes from Old Bodija, Ibadan.

     

  • Activist reported missing

    An anti-corruption activist has been reported missing from his home in Ota, Ogun State, prompting fears for his safety, his family and fellow activists confirmed during the week. Kayode Sorunke, Executive Director of the International Institute for Forensic Accounting Research and Development (IIFARD), was known for his grassroots activism around the issue of corruption and rights abuse.

    According to a statement by IIFARD, Sorunke went missing on January 18, few hours after his home was burgled overnight by yet-to-be identified assailants. “The fence of the house was scaled by the bandits who ransacked the main bedroom and library and made away with some files and documents. The matter was reported at the nearest police station but Sorunke is yet to be seen since then,” the statement said.

    Sorunke, a renowned accounting scholar with research interest in public sector fraud and corruption, has published extensively in both local and international journals. Following an attack on him last October by hoodlums who damaged his laptop and manhandled him publicly, the anti-corruption crusader spoke of his intention to publish a book on his findings. IIFARD is a non-governmental research institution registered and incorporated in Nigeria.

     

  • IYC, activist urge Fed Govt to be cautious on IPOB

    The Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) has urged the Federal Government  to be cautious on the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB).

     In a statement by its factional president, Eric Omare, the group advised the government to approach the matter through dialogue.

    In its statement, IYC noted that the demands of IPOB is not different from what other groups had been making, saying government should employ dialogue, instead of using force.

    It called for the termination of the Operation Python Dance II and the withdrawal of soldiers from Abia and other parts of Southeast, describing the operation as human rights violation.

    “The Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) worldwide says that dialogue is the way out of the conflict between soldiers and members of Independent People of Biafra (IPOB) in Umuahia, Abia State and other parts of Southeast.

    “The deployment of soldiers in the form of Operation Python Dance would only succeed in escalating the tensed situation in Southeast. The Federal Government should learn from experience from other parts of the country where military application has led to radicalisation of youths and escalation of conflicts as evidenced in Niger Delta.

    “It would be self-deceit for government to think the issues can be resolved through might. There is no amount of military application that would stop the agitation for  Nigeria to be renegotiated”, the statement said.

    National Coordinator,  Centre for Peace and Environmental Justice (CEPEJ), Sheriff Mulade, advised government to end the military operation in Southeast, saying use of military would not save the situation.

    Speaking while receiving members of the Correspondent Chapel of the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ), Delta chapter, led by their chairman, Akpokona Omafuaire, in Effurun yesterday, Mulade lamented the escalating trust and unity crises across the country.

    “There have been several calls, demanding secession and this is as a result of government’s failure. If this issue in the East is not well handled, Nigeria will become history. The government should be careful and adopt peaceful means in resolving this issue.

    “Nigerians are not happy and they are no longer patriotic. Nigeria is degenerating into ethnic and regional divides. The government cannot sit in one place and give order to arrest people and kill them, they are not rats. You cannot go and surround Kanu’s house.

    “The government should use the traditional institution because using political means in solving these issues may degenerate to a low level.

    ‘’Sometimes, if we adopt political ways to solve these problems, a lot of things may go out of hand. Before independence, we have our traditional ways of solving these issues and I think we should go back to those methods,” he said.