Tag: African

  • 2nd leg African Under-17 qualifier: NFF sends Eaglets to Abeokuta

    2nd leg African Under-17 qualifier: NFF sends Eaglets to Abeokuta

    The Nigeria Football Federation(NFF) picked Abeokuta for the second leg of the African U-17 qualifier against Congo, due to the on-going renovation work at the U. J Esuene Stadium in Calabar.

    The team was whisked to the rock city in a seamless transition from Lagos upon their arrival from Kinshasa on Monday.

    After two sessions at the Moshood Kashimawo Olawale (MKO) Abiola Stadium, the Golden Eaglets have settled down in Abeokuta ahead of their Under-17 African Championship qualifier against Congo DR on Saturday.

    The Eaglets, who are staying at the Intercontinental Suites, had a brief session on Monday evening to shake off jet lag after about a 12-hour flight from Kinshasa via Nairobi to Lagos and resumed their routine training on Tuesday.

  • African offers for ‘Nigerian Messi’ Michael Babatunde

    African offers for ‘Nigerian Messi’ Michael Babatunde

    Super Eagles rave of the moment Michael Babatunde is attracting offers from the Maghreb nations, SportingLife can exclusively report.

    The Nigerian international, who is currently holidaying in Lagos, revealed that the European offers he is currently considering are not willing to match up the valuation his Ukrainian side, Volyn Lutsk have set for him.

    “I will be making a decision of my next move once an agreement has been reached with my agent,” the 21-year-old player revealed.

    “Some Maghreb teams have tabled a lucrative offer for me but I want to join a team where I will be happy and play without regrets.”

    Babatunde also added that he was delighted that Nigeria escaped the FIFA ban.

    “My job is to play football but I’m glad we were not banned.”

    Nigeria was suspended by World governing body FIFA because of the interference from the government.

  • Imo, Bethel Amadi and Pan African Parliament

    With the recent granting of legislative powers to the Pan African Parliament (PAP) by the General Assembly of the Africa Union (AU), the stage is set for the body to play the expected role of accelerating the economic development of the continent and galvanise the peoples of Africa toward good governance and true democratic culture. This development is the result of years of effort by the PAP, led by Nigerian born Bethel Amadi, to reposition the parliament. Down home in Imo State where Amadi comes from, there is a growing euphoria over the strategic role this son of the soil is playing at the continental level. Many indigenes of the state believe that the experience being garnered by Amadi, who is a foremost governorship aspirant in the state, will be handy in repositioning the state for a comprehensive political, economic and social transformation.
    Right now, the people are battling over whom, among the several governorship aspirants, can foot the bill. As a matter of fact, at no time in its history has the state witnessed such a calibre of governorship aspirants: ranking legislators, erudite scholars, brilliant lawyers, top flight professionals, etc.
    Collectively, Barr. Bethel Nnaemeka Amadi, like other aspirants, savour in this salutary perception but chief among the things that really set him aside is the Pan African Presidency exposure. It is tempting to argue that the presidency of a Pan African Parliament, sitting in far away South Africa, has no immediate bearing with the welfare and aspirations of the people down here. But that is at once erroneous and fallacious. Such a notion might simply have arisen because Hon. Amadi, in his characteristic modesty and self effacing mien, has not deemed it fit to flaunt the PAP credentials. But as noted above, that amounts to, knowingly and unknowingly, concealing vital information from his own people, who are desirous of parameters that go beyond what they are used to for years, in the search for who presides over their affairs as political chief executive come May 29th 2015.
    Out there, the polity is almost saturated with allusions to the fact that the Imo electorate does not always go for the loudest campaigner in choosing their governor. They do not also like those who delight in flaunting opulence as a way of demonstrating that they are already too wealthy to succumb to the temptation of pilfering public funds. If these are just what the people are after, then Hon. Amadi, in the eyes of many, is one of the very few that are worthy of asking for the peoples’ mandate. But the truth is that the highly discerning and sophisticated Imo electorate is going beyond the ordinary this time around. Within the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for example, there are those who are advocating the “thief-to-catch-the-thief” theory.
    Another version is that it would take a fellow who can match the incumbent governor- thug for thug and violence for violence. Apart from the fact that this argument falls flat on the face of the experience in the state as already seen above, the highly discerning and sophisticated people of Imo State are very much conscious of the fact that the world is moving away from political hooliganism. If anything, there are strong indications that what the people will be looking out for are those with exposure that will make governance in the state not business as usual. This is where Hon. Amadi comes in. There is an Igbo adage to the effect that a breast owner should not suck the bare skin (Madu Anaghi Enwe Ara Na Anu Akpu). This aphorism may well illustrate the situation in Imo if the people are not made to take full advantage of the exposure of the likes of Bethel Amadi in the next dispensation.
    Amadi was elected president of the Pan African Parliament in September 2012 after a year’s stint as Vice President and after more than two years as a member of that Parliament. His ascendancy to that pre-eminent position came at a time when the parliament was going through a transformation process as a legislative organ of the African Union (AU).
    His presidency took this transformation very seriously because he believes that a Pan African Parliament, with legislative powers will strengthen African’s democratic institutions, promote continental integration and boost intra-African trade. In the last couple of years, the PAP under Amadi’s leadership has established a framework for deepening democratic governance as well as promoting peace and security. Under him, PAP has established relationships with regional and continental bodies. Among the benefits garnered from such interface is the recent strategic partnership between PAP and the United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) for the advancement of sustainable responses to the scourge in the continent. Also to the benefit of the continent is the strategic partnership with the UN for addressing the human rights challenges in Africa. His administration has also come up with programmes for integrating the African continent with regional and national parliaments.
    One key evidence of this is the emergence of the annual conference of Speakers of African National Parliaments. Through this conference, regional and national parliaments are sensitized on existing African Union legal instruments, the need to achieve speedy ratification and how to apply the legal instruments in the enforcement of basic human and legal rights across the African continent. Another area the PAP has made huge impact under Hon. Amadi is on the promotion of gender equality and affirmative action for women in the continent. This interest arises from Hon. Amadi’s personal belief that this vulnerable segment of the global community, which represents half of the global population, should be constructively engaged in Africa’s development agenda. To this end, PAP under Amadi established the Pan African Parliament and Women Conference during which issues on gender imbalances are highlighted.
    So, how will all this affect the lives of the common man on the streets of Owerri when Hon. Bethel Nnaemeka Amadi becomes the governor of Imo state? Here is how: Amadi’s job as PAP President has so exposed him that some describe him as the most exposed politician or public office holder in Nigeria today.
    As has been seen above, PAP has in the last couple of years under Amadi taken concrete steps towards inculcating the ideals of good governance and the strengthening of democratic institutions. The two are the bane of democracy in Nigeria.
    As governor, Amadi will be the cynosure of his contemporaries across the continent, nay all over the world, who will definitely be interested in seeing how he would apply his experiences to the benefit of his own people. Even for the worst pessimist, a stint as governor would offer an opportunity to practicalise what he had advocated for years.
    Apart from the benefits of a mere robust and democratic framework that would naturally trail a gubernatorial outing by Hon. Amadi, his wealth of contacts and networks across the continent and beyond will come handy in pursuing a sustainable development agenda for the state.
    In Nigeria, the federal and state governments have faced the perennial problem of inability to access funds and resources from international agencies due to lack of technical knowhow and correct contacts. That will no longer be the fate of a place like Imo under the leadership of a fellow like Bethel Amadi. Under him, Imo will cease to be among the states where governors have no contacts abroad and yet make a song and dance of bringing foreign investors to their states.
    Under Amadi, the state will save resources that were hitherto spent on foreign trips because most of the agencies, based on their established relationship with him, will come here on their own or at least on minimal expenses by the state.
    The narrowing down of the world into a “global village” came with stupendous benefits which have eluded the people of Africa, including Nigerians.
    Therefore, involving key players in the international corporate arena like Hon. Bethel Amadi will do Nigeria a lot of good. Needless to say, highly sophisticated people like Ndi Imo should develop a way of keying into the process by leveraging on the rare privilege of having amongst them a fellow like Amadi who is already there.
    —— Nwachukwu wrote in from Owerri, Imo State

  • African Students Parliament honours ex-Tinapa boss

    African Students Parliament honours ex-Tinapa boss

    For committing time and resources to the development of Africa, the former Managing Director of the Tinapa Resort in Calabar,  Bassey Ndem, has been honoured with the Kwame-Nkrumah Leadership Award by the African Students Union Parliamant (ASUP)

    The Speaker of the Union, Culibaly Ahmed, from the Kigali Institute of Science and Technology, said the parliament is the umbrella body that covers all students within the 54 AU recognized African countries with core objectives of encouraging corporation and harmonious coexistence among member states’ student for the purpose of students exchange programme, objective analysis of issues that affect them, encouragement of individuals, stakeholders and public office holders for the much needed peace, development and economic stability continent .

    He said in doing this, the sought role models and mentors in life as Ndem.

    Ahmed, who spoke in French said: “The parliament has taken her time to scrutinise leaders, public office holders, business moguls and individuals who have committed their time and money to serve the common good in the Pan-Africanism ideology.

    “At this point that the youths need to have exemplary leaders and role models, we are carefully selecting such leaders like your highly respected person and honouring them with the Kwame Nkrumah Leadership Award.

    “Our recipient for today is a detribalized Nigerian, lover of students/youths and charismatic personality whose credible credentials of efficient serviced delivery, high administrative acumen and community service yet unsung marks him an iconic patriot in our Nigerian society worthy of emulation.”

    His speech was translated by the Majority Leader of the parliament, Comrade Allao Assao Chance Wallaki from Universiti du Sheikh Antar Diop, Dakar, Senegal.

    Ndem said he was honoured to have been chosen for the award and promised to keep working hard for the betterment of the continent.

  • African Bishops storm Port Harcourt

    African Bishops storm Port Harcourt

    Religious leaders from all over the world gathered in Port Harcourt, Rivers State last weekend for the African Prayer Summit, a three-day programme with the theme, ‘Pulling down the Wrong Foundation in Africa’. It was organised by I Care Ministry International Church in Akpajo, Eleme Local Government Area of Rivers State, in conjunction with Africa chapter of Yesua Embassy Network of Churches International led by Archbishop Richard Ngozi Innocent.

    The organiser, Bishop Maxwell Oghenerume Okoro who is President of I Care Ministry, said it was to uproot all wrong foundations in marriage, family, religion, politics and economy, adding that wrong foundations are limiting people from achieving God’s purpose in their lives. He said that the only way to be free from certain bondages is to demolish their satanic foundations.

    Preachers at the programme included Bishop Franklin Mondo Muguisha (Uganda), Bishop Onana Compbell David (Cameroon), Bishop Dr. Denis Ejila (Gambia), Bishop Dr. Momodou Daffeh (Gambia), Apostle Dr. Israel Momo (Sierra Leone) Apostle Prince Ukandu (Liberia) and Apostle Livingstone Banjagala (Tanzania).

    There were a lot of shocking and unbelievable testimonies at the end of the programme. The representatives of the conference of Bishops also went out for evangelism, preaching to people to accept Christ. They also took the gospel to the palace of His Royal Highness Eze Wellington Nkpor, the Paramount Ruler of Akpajo Town, and the palace of His Royal Majesty Eze Robinson O. Robinson of Ekpeye land.

    Bishops, who spoke to The Nation during the prayer summit, said they were in Nigeria to destroy the wrong foundations which they blamed for the Boko Haram insurgency and other crisis in Nigeria. They noted that poverty, political assassinations, nepotism and corruption in African countries are due to wrong foundations which must be destroyed before Africa could have peace.

    Bishop Momodou Daffeh said God brought them together to pray for Africa and to free Africans from several bondages which have limited African countries from achieving and overcoming many challenging affecting them. “I want to thank God that we are in Nigeria. Our leader Archbishop Innocent, who God has used to gather us for a great spiritual work like this, visited my country sometimes ago. While he was there he said Africa must be prayed for. This is because when you look at the African countries today you will see crisis, nepotism, corruption, tribalism, lack of education, unemployment, killing etc. It is happening everywhere including Gambia and Nigeria. These are things that would undermine the development of African countries. African moral is no longer there, so the vision came that we should pray for Africa and Nigeria was chosen as the host country while I care Ministry in Port Harcourt was the venue.   We are here to pray for Nigeria’s wrong foundation especially the issue of Boko Haram which we know came as a result of wrong foundation.”

    He said the men of God also used the summit to pray to God to give African leaders the wisdom to understand that Africa cannot go anywhere until they recognize the need to involve the new generation.   “I feel we can do it, I feel we can stop corruption, political assassination, nepotism etc. and to introduce the youths to the new way of doing things where they could take over in future. The reason why youths take up arms in Africa today is because of lack of respect, we don’t give them what belongs to them, there is no job and you are riding big cars before them when you know that they are jobless.”

    Apostle Israel Momo from Sierra Leone said they have decreed into the land of Nigeria for peace to reign, assuring that very soon Nigeria will begin to witness peace in abundance.

    “In Egypt God raised a foreigner in the person of Joseph to solve their problem, in Africa God has raised us to solve African spiritual problems through the word of God. So no matter what the Boko Haram is doing they cannot do more than the power of God. We have already started a great job that will make Boko Haram to flee the country. ”

    He said their gathering at the palaces of the paramount ruler of Akpajo and that of Ekpeye Land was to ensure that God enters the heart of the indigenes and free them to possess their possessions.

    “We gathered at the kings palaces and I saw that the indigenes of this state are going to take their possessions. It is time for foreigners in Niger Delta region to line up at the back of the indigenes. This is an environment they had told me has enormous resources. It is time to take charge of their resources that is the reason we are here to pull down the wrong foundations so that people and countries can be free.”

    The host, Bishop Maxwell Okoro said Africa is a blessed continent and Nigeria is abundantly blessed. He regretted that wrong foundations have jeopardized the manifestation of God, making people and countries to live under the influence of darkness.

    “These things cannot be fought with dynamites, terrorism, gun; the only weapon strong enough to change the face of this country is fasting and prayer. God Almighty gave this inspiration to our Archbishop who spoke to me to host all the great men of God. Our prayer is for the breakthrough of the Niger Delta region, Rivers State and Nigeria as a whole, Port Harcourt is the womb of Nigeria and Niger Delta produces the resource of Nigeria. Anything that happens in Port Harcourt affects the Niger Delta and Nigeria. We prayed for economic stability, redirection of political economy, infrastructural development and everything that is inimical to the transformation of this country.”

    Bishop Okoro, who revealed that he was born deaf and dumb said God changed his testimony. “My mother is still alive, she stays here with me in Port Harcourt, you can ask her. According to my mother, I was in her womb for 11 months, and she delivered me deaf and dumb on January 18, 1968 at Imode Town, Ughelli, Delta State. As it is expected of every child to cry when they are born, but mine was different. I didn’t cry even my two hands where folded. They did everything humanly possible to ensure that I cried. My mother said the whole village gathered to initiate ideas on ways out. You can imagine a new born baby receiving a serious beating on his bottom just to ensure that I cry, yet I didn’t.”

    He said while the community gave up on him that he would amount to nothing, his mother stood by him until God intervened and opened his mouth.

    “It is God and my mother that kept me alive, because everybody had agreed to throw me into the forest but my mother insisted that she will accept me the way I am. But after three months when my mother was water-feeding me, she said amazingly I finally cried. So, when human effort fails, God starts working”.

  • ‘African SMEs have boundless opportunities’

    The growth in sub-Saharan Africa offers African small and medium scale enterprises (SMEs) opportunities in 2014, as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) expects economic growth in the region to be slightly higher than of that in 2013, at six per cent.

    This is coupled with more than one billion consumers on the continent who spend $600 billion yearly, with the fastest growing middle class in the world and the significant opportunities in connecting with the world.

    Managing Director, DHL Express SSA, Charles Brewer, said that SMEs are the growth engine for Africa and the critical driver for sustainable economic growth.

    “According to Deloitte, Africa’s middle class has tripled over the last 30 years, and the current trajectory suggests that the African middle class will grow to 1.1 billion in 2060.

    As African economies are some of the fastest growing in the world, the outlook for the continent is very positive going forward.

    “Manufacturing, on a large scale, is still somewhat embryonic in Africa and as such, there is a definite opportunity for SMEs to fill the gaps which are not being serviced by these large global companies. As important, a growing SME base will create hundreds and thousands of new jobs, which is an absolute must for this ever growing continent.”

    Brewer said other than the usual challenges that SMEs are likely to face in Africa, such as infrastructure challenges, customs regulations and controls, access to finance may be an obstacle going forward.

    “The Institute of International Finance reported that due to many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa struggling with controlling price pressures, central banks have tended to keep monetary policy fairly tight. Despite this challenge, we expect SMEs to create growth opportunities through increased consumer spending power and expansion into untapped markets.

    “The growing internet user penetration in Africa also provides a sizeable opportunity for SMEs, and as Africa continues to adopt e-commerce as a way of life, businesses are able to leverage this online market, while reducing traditional customer acquisition costs.” World Wide Worx’s 2012 Internet Matters report reveals that the local e-commerce market is growing at a rate of about 30 per cent a year and shows no signs of slowing down.

    The findings of the 2013 National Small Business Survey, conducted by the National Small Business Chamber (NSBC) revealed that the key need expressed by SMEs includes expanding customer base, increasing sales and going global.

    “Accessing new markets by trading across borders is the key to growth and competitiveness and the key driver for small and medium enterprises in South Africa,” says Mike Anderson, NSBC founder and Chief Executive Officer (CEO).

    Brewer said the more an SME can tap into global opportunities and the more it can look into global expansion, the better the chances for growth become.

    “When it comes to global opportunities the key to success for many SMEs is knowledge. Knowing which markets to target, how to market their product, how to identify customers, how to get paid and critically, how to ship globally. We have 25,000 SMEs who work with us across Africa and every day we work on understanding their needs better and help them to go global. DHL is well-positioned to partnering with African SMEs and helping them to connect with the world – so I ask you, what are you waiting for?” Brewer added.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Nanjing 2014 Youth Olympics: IOC picks four African reporters

    Nanjing 2014 Youth Olympics: IOC picks four African reporters

    The International Olympic Committee (IOC) on Wednesday selected four African young reporters for the Young Reporters Programme for the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics Games (YOG) in Nanjing, China.

    The reporters listed on the committee’s website, include two male and two female reporters selected from Algeria, Botswana, Ghana and Sudan. The reporters are 24-year-old Yasmine Torche from Algeria and Maria Lovemore from Botswana who is also 24. Others are 20-year-old Stella Annan from Ghana and Sudan’s Zaki Saheed who is 23.

    According to the website, the reporters were selected through a rigorous process across the five continents.

    “ Following the success of the first programme launched at the Singapore 2010 YOG, young reporters were again selected by the Continental Associations of National Olympic Committees through a rigorous process.

    “Representing each of the five continents, they are between the ages of 18 and 24 and are journalism students or have recently started their journalism careers. The initiative is one of the elements which makes the YOG such a unique event.

    “It demonstrates the IOC’s commitment to encouraging young people all over the world to be part of the YOG spirit and was developed as part of the Culture and Education Programme (CEP). It will provide the budding reporters with a cross-platform journalist-training programme and on-the-job experience during the Youth Olympic Games,’’ it said.

    It said the training and assignments during Games time would be driven by highly qualified and renowned professionals in the fields of broadcast and print journalism, social media and photography.

    NAN reports that 31 young reporters have been selected from 23 countries to participate in the programme for the YOG which will hold from August 16 to 28.

    The Games will feature 26 sporting events in 15 venues with 204 countries participating. NAN also reports that the YOG are an elite sporting event for young people from across the world.

    It integrates a unique Culture and Education Programme (CEP), based around five main themes: Olympism, Social Responsibility, Skills Development, Expression and Well-being and Healthy Lifestyles.

  • China to grant African SMEs $1b loans

    China is to establish a $1 billion special fund for the development of small and medium enterprises (SMEs), financed by China Development Bank (CDB).

    The additional funding will increase the Special Loan for the Development of African SMEs to $2 billion, the Deputy Head of the international department at CDB Liu Hao told Xinhua news agency.

    SMEs will receive loans of up to $1 million with a maximum duration of five years.

    The objective is to boost the growth of SMEs in Africa, broaden their financing sources, boost the local economy and contribute to job creation, Le Soleil newspaper reports.

    CDB will establish rates depending on the importance of the project, the borrower’s level of credibility and the results of the project’s risk assessment.

    The targeted sectors will include agriculture, export led industries, construction, health and medicine, irrigation, education, environment protection and energy savings.

     

     

  • Celebration of African beauty

    Joseph Olatunji Ogunlowo’s name may not ring any bell within Lagos exhibition circuit. But his art works are collectors’ items, especially among foreign diplomats. His wood works which are both functional and decorative are creatively embellished with iconic images that depict everyday life of the people and the natural environment.

    Last week, his first solo art exhibition, Re-Awakening, held at the National Museum Onikan, Lagos showcased wood pieces, which capture people in celebration mood and animals ranging from giraffe, hippopotamus, elephants and tortoise. Other works include bust of female figure, storage boxes, mirror flower frames, bead brass centre table, lion, and masks of deferent sizes among others.

    “My focus in the exhibition is to re-awake the beauty of African pride (woodcarving), develop functional wood work to an enviable level where everybody in the country will appreciate art, most especially the elites. To that extent, get more young people involved thereby reducing the level of unemployment in our society,” Ogunlowo said.

    He noted that many Africans have myopic mind set toward art thus believing that artists who use wood as a medium, do nothing but carve woods. “They fail to see the meaning behind the artist’s works. This is why westerners utilise the opportunities in art profession more than Africans who have it as our inheritance. Thanks to some collectors who traveled abroad and saw the value of our wood works and had change of mind to patronise us,” he said.

    The finishing and intricate design of his works are unique with overflowing curves, threads, lines and grooves that highlight the beauty of the three-dimensional pieces. The texture of the wood further makes the works more attractive to viewers. One of the works rendered in ebony wood, a portrait of a woman titled: Ebony Queen is an example of such work every viewer is tempted to look many times over. When asked if there was any philosophy behind the piece, the artist said the piece represents the true beauty of an African woman.

    “I called this work Ebony Queen because artists create works from imagination. I created this piece with king ebony wood because African beauties are black, and I didn’t want to carve just an image that is why I made it a portrait,” he said.

    Another piece which could not be ignored is a tall piece, measuring about 103inchs, titled: Celebration of Iyemoja. It’s a celebration of the virtuous woman, especially in Yoruba land. “The Yoruba believe in Iyemoja because they see her as a caring mother, which her children can run to and seek children, favour, wealth and other things from her when the need occurs.”

     

    That is why you can see the woman with a child strapped to her back in this work. And these other people around her who are dancing and drumming are celebrating her and this celebration takes place every year in Yoruba land till date,” he said.

    Ogunlowo spoke on why he is showing diverse collection of wood works: “I mixed my works in this exhibition so that people will have various choices, if I present only traditional carvings those who do not like traditional carvings will not patronise my works.”

    The artist who hails from Oyo State trained as an apprentice under Lukman Azeez at Lekki, Lagos in 1995 where he learnt the craft. He also learnt painting and how to market art works for 2 years before he chose wood as a medium to work with. For another 8 years, he learnt how to buy, treat and identify good wood before establishing his own workshop in Ketu, Lagos.

    Like many artists, Ogunlowo is faced some challenges: “One of the challenges I am facing as an artist is that non-professional artists have ventured into the field and are producing counterfeit at cheaper rate. The customers therefore price our works so low due as result of this and this affects us. After spending months to produce a piece of art work, customers price it for thirty thousand naira, which is discouraging,” he said.

    He is a member of African Pride of Art and Crafts of Nigeria. He has participated in various group exhibitions which include American Woman’s Club, Chevron, Lagos.

     

     

  • Championing the cause of African women

    Championing the cause of African women

    Let me begin with Chinweizu, the non-conformist pan- African intellectual who wrote The West and the Rest of Us, a lucid, penetrating and fierce critique of the imperial conquest and enslavement of Africa. In October 1990, Chinweizu published Anatomy of Female Power,a book he described as amasculinist dissection of matriarchy. Echoing Esther Vilar’s The Manipulated Man, he argues with passion and wit in this book that men may rule the world, but women rule the men who rule the world. According to him: ‘’There are five conditions which enable women to get what they want from men: women’s control of the womb; women’s control of the kitchen; women’s control of the cradle; the psychological immaturity of men relative to women; and man’s tendency to be deranged by his own excited penis.” Chinweizu, not surprisingly, dedicates Anatomy of Female Powerto the countless number of women who have slipped in and out of his life especially those who attempted to marry him! He calls on men of the world to unite and refuse to accept the claim that men are natural oppressors of women. Chinweizu’sbook, I must admit, is seductive. But the moment you ask yourself the question: Is there really no oppression to liberate women from? And if your answer is a resounding yes, his argument then becomes not just provocative but reductionist.

    In Speaking for Myself BisiAdeleye-Fayemi indicts such reductionist patriarchal notions and ideas.The five hundred-page-book is a generous collection of many essays, academic papers, lectures, speeches, opinion pieces in newspapers and magazines, poems, reviews and tributes that she wrote between 1987 and 2012. All the pieces tell a coherent story of three decades of dedication to the cause of women, a mission in which she has found true meaning and contentment. We have here extended ruminations of a giver of light. With depth and clarity of thought she combines personal anecdotes and layers of data to offer a lively and rigorous defence of the concerns and needs of women, particularly women in Africa. Substantially, her contention is that a society where liberty, equality and fraternity do not have a prime of place is very dangerous to live in.We are told that, apart from the love and encouragement of his father in her early years, the University of Ife was where the seeds of her intellectual engagements with feminism were planted and nurtured. This is where she earned her first and second degrees in History and International Relations. This was where she read Germaine Greer’s The Female Eunuch for the first time. Greer’s book was given to her by Dr. Femi Taiwo, now a professor at Cornell University in America. The Female Eunuch was a source of inspiration. As she grew rapidly in thought she wrote a joint paper with Dr. Taiwo for a conference organised by Professor Bolanle Awe’s Women’s Research and Documentation Centre at the University of Ibadan in 1987. That paper remains relevant to women’s studies. The mentor and the mentee argue in the paper that: “There is no future for women’s studies in Nigeria unless it is premised on some plausible, coherent, and adequate theory (or theories) of women’s oppression which, while remaining faithful to the universalist dimensions of theory construction, will be alert to the specificity of the Nigerian situation and its diverse manifestations and reorient itself accordingly.” They propose that women studies be taught in our Universities. More crucially, they observe that “we should not permit ourselves to think that the emancipation of women can be done outside the context of the general emancipation of humankind’’.

    Ten years of working at Akina Mama wa Afrika (AMwA) further strengthened her theoretical capacity and resolve. That she designed the African Women’s Leadership Institute (AWLI), a training centre for young African women; that she helped to establish the African Feminist Forum which serves as a rallying point for African feminist scholars; that she, along with activists like Sarah Mukasa, built and nurtured the African Women’s Development Fund (AWDF); that the Ekiti Development Foundation came into being and, in a short time, inspired a legislation against rape, are all a result ofreflections and game –changing experiences.

    As an African feminist she bounces herself in this book against all Eurocentric white feminists and the local conservative women organisations peopled by those she describes as home fronters and gender activists as opposed to feminist activists. It is a clear ideological position she is not afraid to take. She argues robustly that all identities that locate women in spaces that make them vulnerable are not acceptable. She questions histories and heroics which refuse to honour women who excelled or who were just difficult to understand or categorise. In essay after essay, she calls for a dismantling of regional and global structures of social injustices which reduce women to second class citizens, which make their labour unremunerated and which make them permanent objects of validation by men. The increased impoverishment of the African continent, Adeleye-Fayemi argues, inevitably brings about the disempowerment of women, or to use her much beloved phrase, brings about “the feminisation of poverty”. She proves convincingly that, due to biological, social and economic reasons, women in Africa suffer more from the consequences of inadequate healthcare, conflicts and wars. How come, she asks, that women do not have the right to transfer citizenship to another national? “If you are a full citizen of a country, you should have the power to legally transfer citizenship. If the constitution says that you cannot, then your status as a full citizen is questionable”.

    To claim and sustain political space for women is essential. But access to mainstream decision-making and political power for African women is very difficult. If political terrain is tough for men, it is tougher for women. She observes that “The outrageous costs of running for office, the logistics of coordinating an effective campaign, the fluidity of politicians’ meeting hours, fear of violence, the need for a political godfather – these are factors that serve to exclude women from making a decision to serve their countries”. Even when women survive all these hurdles, what about the difficulty of working in an environment that is so hostile to the empowerment and equality of women? To her, this should not lead to indifference. The situation demands courage, it demands that serious women should be identified, put forward and supported. This will involve cultivating leadership among young women.She encourages feminist activists to work with men and seek them out as allies. But she quickly enters a caveat: carrying men along must not include employing them to run women’s organisations, speaking on behalf of women, counselling women who are suffering from abuse. She suspects that men will not give up easily the powers and privileges which patriarchy confers on them. In an attempt to solve the problem of women subjugation, however, feminist activists should not end up instigating their sons to form a men’s movement for equality.

    The negative representations of women in literature, drama, films, music, advert copies and other forms of communication have always given BisiAdeleye-Fayemi a lot of concern. In this book, she interrogates the forms and contents of Shina Peters’ ‘Shinamania’, Jimoh Aliu’s Arelu, Isola Ogunsola Iyawo Alalubosa and shows how women are trivialised or dubiously elevated when they should just be celebrated or condemned as human beings if they truly deserve it. She praises ‘Warrior Marks’, Alice Walker’s documentary on genital mutilation, not only for the veracity of her story line and the power of photography but also because the documentary could serve as an effective weapon for all those who value human dignity. You will recall that the African Women Development Fund sponsored a well-attended conference in Lagos three years ago toexamine the dynamics of women’s representations in Nollywood films. Professor Abena Busia, Dr. Bunmi Oyinsan and Joke Silva were among the resource persons. She suggests that one way of projecting the positive image of African women, of putting an end to what she calls ‘’the effective silencing of African Women’s voices and experiences” is for all gifted feminist activists to rise to the challenge of writing their own stories. According to her, “We have to scale up our contributions to the rich debates on feminist theory and practice worldwide”. For her, it is only when all voices have been heard can feminismbe described as truly global.

    If all the articles she wrote occasionally for newspapers, radio, magazines, journals and television are in this book it is essentially to demonstrate that she has always added her own voice to those of others who fight for comfortable space for women through their writings. As you read them, and possibly disagree with some of her positions, you will not miss the tender honesty of her writings, their unfailing sense of justice andthe weight of their wisdom.She makes a strong case for courage, solidarity and accountability. She also talks about the necessity of memory in our national lives. Her argument is that if we don’t forget the bad ones among us, we are most likely not going to forget the good ones. She remembers the living and the dead from whom she has learnt a lot. She salutes Mrs Ronke Okusanya and other great women in Ekiti for the dignity in their exemplary lives. She appreciates the likes of Bene Madunagu, Tawakkul Karman, Ellen Johnson-SirLeaf, Laymah Gbowee, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Aisa Imam, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and Joyce Banda. By paying glowing tributes to her father, Mr Emmanuel Adeleye, who just left his house one day and has not been found, dead or alive, since then; by paying tribute to Dr.Tajudeen Abdul Raheem, Funmi Olayinka, mama Dorcas Fayemi, Flora Nwapa, Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti, Sally Mugabe, Wangari Maathai, Kudirat Abiola, May Ellen Ezikiel, Brenda Fassie, Yetunde Obafemi, Annie Mubanga and a host of others who have spent their lives keeping faith with women, caring for the underdogs, working for the common good, raising wonderful families and building institutions, she calls our attention to some of the virtues that will make our country and the world grow and endure.

     

    •Mr.KunleAjibade, Executive editor of TheNEWS magazine, read this review at the Fountain Hotel in Ado Ekiti on 11 October 2013 at the public presentation of Speaking for Myself