Tag: Again

  • Again, no to polls  shift

    Again, no to polls shift

        •Postponement of elections barely two weeks to E-Day is dangerous

    It started as rumour. It was too dangerous a thought to be entertained. Why would anyone want to shift the dates of elections fixed about one year ago? But, the call has now become too loud to be ignored, even though the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is yet to accede to the request. Proponents of the idea insist that the country is already in a bind and only a shift would protect the credibility of any election conducted as fixed this month.

    For this, they rely on the casual manner of production and distribution of the Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) by INEC. In a state like Lagos, only about 35 per cent of those registered in 2014 have been issued the card, which INEC insists is the only valid qualification to participate in the election.

    They have also pointed out that the widely touted magic wand for electoral integrity  – the card reader –  is a technology that remains untested. They argue that the general election, starting with presidential, senatorial and House of Representatives polls are too important to be used for the experiment.

    While the argument may sound somehow logical, we are constrained to reject it outright in the country’s interest. A shift of the polls could set the entire country on fire. First, while it is being argued that no date is sacrosanct since it is not enshrined in any law, it must be pointed out that all those involved – the electoral body, political parties, candidates, observers and the electorate had made all preparations towards the dates announced by INEC last year. A shift would put some strain on the stakeholders who had legitimately assumed that the only body saddled with the conduct and management of the process had done its homework before releasing the timetable.

     

    Calls for shift preposterous

     

    Besides, at the moment, INEC is yet to declare its inability to live up to its constitutional responsibility. If the commission should accede to this strange request at this point, it would be an admission of failure by a body that had more than four years to produce and distribute the PVCs. Nigerians had called for the use of the card readers and PVCs for the 2011 election, given the huge amount the country committed to the project. The public only relented on the ground that the commission that came on board in 2010 be allowed adequate time to prepare. It was believed at the time that the process would have been concluded within two years.

    We are bothered by the dire consequences of a shift. There are two major political parties in the land and it promises to be a keen contest. It is, in fact, the closest that the opposition has got to presenting an alternative to the ruling party. It has been observed in various parts of the world that the keener an election is, the more tensed the atmosphere. Nigerian elections have always been marked or marred by violence. To save the country this recurrent ugly experience, the election must not only be free and fair, it must be so adjudged by all, including the opposition, international observers, domestic observers and the electorate.

    In this instance, the shift is being championed by the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), but opposed by the main opposition party, the All Progressives Congress (APC). In view of this, the country sits precariously on a keg of gunpowder. Its fate is too important to be so trifled with. We are convinced that this is an example of when a matter may be permitted by law, yet inexpedient. We agree that the 2010 Electoral Act (as amended) allows an election to be conducted within the band of 150 to 30 days before the expiration of the incumbents’ tenure, but, having freely come up with the February 14 and 28 days, INEC should keep faith with them. In 2011, it had a false start and had to call off an election it had started, this should not be a repeat of sort.

    At any rate, what is the ruling party’s interest in championing the call for postponement of the polls? Some say it is to enable it put a few things in order so as to shore up its waning image because, as things stand, it is going to the polls from a position of weakness. But why should that be a burden that Nigerians must carry? How does that concern Nigerians? The ruling party has had more than five years under the Jonathan presidency to prove its mettle, if it has wasted the opportunity, whose fault is that? What is it that it wants to do even if the three months’ extension is granted that it could not have accomplished in five years?

    INEC has to understand that Nigeria is more polarised along ethnic, religious and partisan lines now than at any other point. This is the more reason why it should not toy with the idea of postponing the polls. What the situation calls for is for us all to play our parts by avoiding the ugly incidents that led to deep divisions in the past. This is a point at which all hands must be on deck to save the country. We therefore call on the federal and state governments to provide all the support needed by INEC to get all willing voters to obtain their cards within the 11 days left before the first set of elections. Nigeria invested heavily to make this INEC succeed and it would be a tragedy if it fails the test.

     

    Big tragedy

     

    It would be tragic for the commission to shift the election and set the nation on edge and ultimately prove right those who had predicted that the 2015 elections could ironically truncate democracy in the land.

    The matter, as we noted,  is worsened by the fact that it is the ruling party that is behind the calls for postponement of the polls, using all manner of subterfuge, thus preparing our minds to travel the usual roads that we travelled in the past.  INEC must be wary of falling into the temptation, lest it be accused of bias even before the contest starts.

    The commission’s chairman, Prof Attahiru Jega, must understand that all eyes are on Nigeria and the way he handles the polls, particularly the calls for postponement, would go a long way in testing the commission’s impartiality and independence. As we have always argued, rigging of election does not start on voting day; it starts with little details like the one under consideration.

  • The social media again

    I arrived almost two hours early for a public lecture at the University of Lagos two weeks ago and decided to use the extra time to visit my former lecturers. I was walking briskly to the Faculty of Arts complex when an elderly lady standing beside a young lady politely beckoned on me to come. After exchanging pleasantries I asked why she wanted my attention.

    “Take a good look at this young lady and tell me what you see,” she said. Confused, I looked at the lady, who is probably between 18 and 19 years old and couldn’t immediately picture anything since I was seeing both of them for the very first time. When she saw my befuddled look she said: “Just look at what she wore, I know her parents and I know she can never dress like this at home. I have been talking to her for a while and she did not see anything wrong in dressing so provocatively. This is why I wanted you to be a witness that I voiced out my concerns.”

    Not knowing what else to add, I appealed to the young lady to listen to the counsel of the elderly lady. One thing I deduced before leaving was the young lady’s disposition, she wasn’t rude or defensive. She said what she wore was what “my mentors wear on social media and I don’t see anything wrong with it.” Beyond this brief encounter, the social media may be controlling our lives more than we think.

    The social media, a platform for social interaction among people in which they create, share or exchange information and ideas in virtual communities and networks has radically altered the way we live and interact. Anchored on mobile and web-based technologies to create highly interactive platforms through which individuals and communities share, co-create, discuss, and modify user-generated content, it is considered revolutionary. Like everything about life, it has both positives and negatives. This is where the issues lie because most people do not know how to draw the line.

    On my way from work recently, I stopped at a provision store to pick up some items. As I walked out of the store something caught my attention, I saw a young man of about 22 watching raw pornography on his mobile phone. What however got me worried was a young boy of about 9 years watching with him, I stopped in my track and felt I have a duty to perform here, I told the child to walk away while I sat down with the young man to see why he would be so unconcerned showing such lewd stuff to a child.

    It turned out that he’s an undergraduate of one of the universities in Lagos. He said he only watches it when he is “bored” and “it does not affect my being in any way.” Probing further, I asked “what about the child?” “Well, I did not invite him to watch” was his lame answer. The positive side is that when we met weeks later he proudly told me he does not watch “such stuff anymore because they are not good for my spiritual life.”

    Social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace allow us to find and connect with just about anyone, from a coworker to a long lost neighbour. Browsing these sites can make you feel connected to a larger community, but such easy, casual connection in an electronic environment can also have its downside. They can make it more difficult for us to distinguish between the meaningful relationships we foster in the real world, and the numerous casual relationships formed through them. By focusing so much of our time and psychic energy on these less meaningful relationships, our most important connections may weaken.

    Some of us may have heard about cyber-bullying. Kids especially are vulnerable to the practice of cyber-bullying in which the perpetrators, anonymously or even posing as people their victims trust, terrorise individuals in front of their peers. Though not yet popular in Nigeria, the devastation of these online attacks can leave deep mental scars on kids as some have even been driven to suicide.

    The veil of anonymity afforded online can bring out dark impulses that might otherwise be suppressed in real life. In the west – where we copy nearly everything – cyber-bullying has spread widely among youth, with 42% of American youths reporting that they have been victims, according to a recent CBS News report.

    While many businesses use social networking sites to find and communicate with clients and customers, the sites can also prove a great distraction to employees who may show more interest in what their friends are posting than in their work tasks. Wired.com posted two studies which demonstrated damage to productivity caused by social networking: Nucleus Research reported that Facebook shaves 1.5% off office productivity while Morse claimed that British companies lost 2.2 billion a year to the social phenomenon. It is based on this that new technology products have become available that allows social networks to be blocked, but their effectiveness is not total.

    It is now obvious now that most social networking sites encourage people to be more public about their personal lives. Because intimate details of our lives can be posted so easily, users are prone to bypass the filters they might normally employ when talking about their private lives. What’s more, the things they post remain available indefinitely.

    While at one moment a photo of friends doing “funny stuffs” at a party may seem harmless, the image may appear less attractive in the context of an employer doing a background check. While most sites allow their users to control who sees the things they’ve posted, such limitations are often forgotten, can be difficult to control or don’t work as well as advertised just like the nude iCloud pictures of some celebrities that were released to the public after their accounts were hacked.

    While on the surface it appears social networking brings people together across the Internet, in a larger sense it may create social isolation. As people spend increasing amounts of time on social networks, they experience less face-to-face interaction.

    Scientists have evaluated social isolation in many studies, and have determined that it can lead to a host of mental, psychological, emotional and physical problems including depression, anxiety and many others. In fact, a University of Illinois, Chicago School of Medicine animal study showed social isolation impaired brain hormones, which is the likely reason socially isolated people experience tremendous levels of stress, aggression, anxiety and other mental issues.

    While the above studies show actual correlations between social networking and negative consequences, others argue that many other negative consequences may exist that have not yet been studied.

    What about it encouraging poor grammar, usage and spellings? Most youths these days find it difficult to write five straight sentences without abbreviation. Beyond that, it also allows the spread of misinformation that may be perceived as fact even in light of evidence to the contrary thereby creating a culture in which a single mistake, such as a careless picture or poorly thought-out comment, can cause irreparable harm to an individual’s reputation.

    Even though no disease or disorder has yet been linked to social networking addiction, still a number of behaviours associated with excessive use of social media have lately become the subject of much discussion and research. A social networking addict could be considered as someone who uses social media excessively to a point where it interferes with other daily activities.

    A research team headed by Wilhelm Hoffmann of Chicago University in 2012 concluded that twitter is harder to resist than cigarettes and alcohol. The team used Blackberry’s to gauge the willpower of 205 people aged between 18 and 85. The results showed that with each day the ‘self-control’ dropped lower and lower and concluded that between social media, cigarettes and alcohol, the ‘self-control-failure’ rate was highest with social media. Other researchers have also linked anxiety, sleep deprivation, depression and some psychological disorders to people who spend too much time online.

  • Nigeria will rise again, says cleric

    The General Overseer of God’s Mercy Revival Ministries (GOMERM) Idimu Lagos, Dr James Akanbi, has assured that Nigeria will rise again.

    The nation, he stressed, will not go down despite the socio-economic challenges bedeviling it.

    He urged Nigerians to stand firm and patiently wait on God to fix the seemingly intractable problems in the country.

    Akanbi spoke on Thursday with reporters ahead of the 15th anniversary of the church with the theme “Arise and glow.

    He noted that the country is bleeding but assured that the phases will come and pass because “the sons of Baals cannot hand-on for life.”

    According to him, all the terror attacks and insecurity in several parts of the nation will soon disappear.

    “Nigeria,” he reiterated, “will arise again and glow. All the things we are witnessing now will drop down and go away.”

    On why no man of God has been able to make a prophetic declaration that will lead to demise of Boko Haram, Akanbi explained such declarations will create chaos.

    He said: “If you expect a Thou Saith the Lord on Boko Haram issue, you will be creating an Armageddonic situation.

    “The maximum a man of God can do is to speak to the conscience of those in power. None of us can speak and expect government to listen.

    “The most we can do is to pray and hope our leaders listen to the voice of God”.

    The anniversary, which starts tomorrow, holds at the church’s headquarters.

    The grand finale holds at Mercy Camp ground KM 4 Papalanto-Shagamu road, Ofada Ogun state, next Sunday by 10am.

    The prophetic impartation service will also witness the ordination of over 200 pastors, assistant pastors, elders, deacons and deaconesses.

  • Ogbu scores again for new Chinese club

    Ogbu scores again for new Chinese club

    Nigerian striker Derick Chuka Ogbu scored his third goal for new Chinese club Liaoning on Thursday.

    Liaoning lost 5-1 at home to Guanghzou RF with Ogbu getting his consolation goal in the 40th minute.

    The 24-year-old Ogbu had netted a brace on his debut for his new club in a 3-3 draw with Shanghai East Asia FC.

    The well-travelled striker has signed a one and half years contract with Liaoning.

    Ogbu’s club are second from bottom of the 16-team Chinese Super League with 15 points from 17 matches.

  • Omeruo rejoins Boro again

    • Signs one-year loan deal
    • Eagles defender happy to return

    KENNETH OMERUO has confirmed he is rejoining Middlesbrough on a season-long loan, with the Chelsea defender expected to link up with the rest of Aitor Karanka’s squad before the end of the week.

    Omeruo was one of Boro’s key players as he spent the second half of last season on loan at the Riverside, and Karanka was desperate to re-sign the 20-year-old this summer.

    The Boro head coach’s close relationship with Jose Mourinho was always going to be a key factor in discussions, with the Chelsea boss having been impressed by Omeruo’s development while on Teesside.

    The centre-half made a number of impressive performances for Nigeria at the World Cup finals, leading to fears that Premier League clubs could attempt to lure the youngster away from the North-East.

    However, Omeruo used his personal Twitter account to confirm he will be returning to Middlesbrough last night, having been granted an extended period of leave from Chelsea following his exploits in Brazil.

    He tweeted: “Holiday is finished. Almost time for work again. Happy to be rejoining Boro for a new season…”

    Middlesbrough take on Atletico Clube de Portugal in the final game of their training camp in Marbella this morning, with the squad due to return to England later in the day.

    They will resume training at Rockliffe Park on Thursday, with Omeruo expected to link back up with them at that stage.

    Boro claimed their second pre-season victory on Saturday morning as goals from Lee Tomlin, Bradley Fewster, Luke Williams and Grant Leadbitter secured a 4-0 win over Real Balompedica Linense.

    Rather than running his squad into the ground, Karanka has prioritised close-control work and tactical instruction, with full-back George Friend claiming the decision has already paid dividends.

    “It’s been all football with very little running,” said the full-back, who was one of only two players to play the full 90 minutes of Saturday’s game. “It suits me. I need to get my fitness through football. I think we’re reaping the rewards of that.

    “It was a good win (on Saturday). It was good to play the full game in the heat and to get my fitness up. I was very pleased. Wednesday’s game (when Boro lost to Lucena) wasn’t good enough. You take the negatives out of that and turn them into positives.

    “The manager wasn’t happy after Wednesday and he doesn’t hide that. He was upset, we were all embarrassed, we had to put it right on Saturday. And we did that.” Tomlin opened the scoring in Saturday’s game when he converted from the penalty spot, before Fewster added a second goal at the start of the second half.

    Summer signing Kike came off the bench for the final 23 minutes of the game, with Williams claiming a third with five minutes remaining.

    Leadbitter rounded off the scoring three minutes later, latching on to Kike’s through ball before slotting home.

  • Okoronkwo scores again

    Another good spell in front of goal for lanky Solomon Okoronkwo ensured that German Bundesliga 2 campaigners Erzgebirge Aue won 2-1 against Hallescher in a pre-season friendly match.

    The away side were ahead when Mike Könnecke fired them into the lead from the edge of the box 14 minutes into the match. Sören Bertram on the edge of the box lashed past Martin Männel to level the scoring.

    However,Okoronkwo hit the winner for Erzgebirge a second before the break, to take his pre-season tally to three goals.

    The former Flying Eagles forward scored one each in previous friendlies – against Hradec Kralove and Banik Sokolov.

    Okoronkwo’s Erzgebirge will start their bid for promotion to the Germany Bundesliga 1 with a tough clash against FC Nürnberg in the next fortnight. The match will get underway by (15:30 GMT).

  • Echiejile: I’m fit again

    Echiejile: I’m fit again

    Elderson Echiejile has said he has put behind him the disappointment of missing out on the 2014 World Cup and has flown to Austria with his French club AS Monaco for pre-season training.

    Last month, Elderson suffered a muscle injury during a World Cup warm-up against Greece in the United States of America, which effectively ruled him out of Brazil 2014.

    “I am very happy that I’m fit again after my injury before the World Cup,” the Nigeria star told his official website www.elderson3.com

    “I would have loved to be at the World Cup, but it was not meant to be.

    “I have put behind me the disappointment of missing out on the World Cup and my focus is now on establishing myself at my club.

    “All the same, the Super Eagles did well without me to reach the last 16 in Brazil. It was an encouraging performance.”

    The left back is part of the Monaco squad who flew into Austria at the weekend to begin preparations for the new French Ligue 1 season.

    “We are now in Austria to train till July 12 after which we will return to Monaco,” he said.

    Last season, Elderson made six appearances for Monaco on his arrival in January from Portuguese club Sporting Braga.

    He is expected to enjoy a better run with the big-spending French club in the new season following the arrival of his former coach at Braga, Leonardo Jardim.

  • Again, this Doctrine of Mischief

    You do not require any especial intellectual facility to discern that there is a straight line between the quality of our leaders and the overall progression of our country. Taken a step further, it will not be far-fetched to conclude that since Independence in 1960, leadership acuity in Nigeria has continued to depreciate with successive governments. Hardball can actually predict and with alarming accuracy the political behavior of the government of the day in the next 18 months. Government has been terribly watered-down and set in a mired template and since nobody seems to be thinking anew, the same methods and approaches are applied by every new government.

    For instance, we can safely wager that in the next six months we shall begin to witness a rash of supporters and endorsers of the Goodluck Jonathan’s second term project. Rallies will be organised in major cities by all sorts of groups – ranging from students, market women and Nollywood stars. Of course, “Jonathan-for-second-term” posters will flood Abuja as if they are but cocoyam leaves and not expensive printed matter. Then you will see traditional rulers from different parts of the country queuing up to visit the President in Aso Rock; it is usually done with so much fanfare and ceremony for effect.

    Worn political chicanery which are dredged up and re-used often in a most noxious manner are too numerous to count. Almost every move of government is tailor-made for the singular purpose of giving the incumbent another life and another day in the sunshine of Aso Rock. We witnessed this as (military) President Ibrahim Babangida twisted and turned in his spirited attempt to remain perpetually in office. The goggled one General Sani Abacha did the same. Remember Abacha badge, Abacha, television and Abacha rice. And of course, the mother of all political subterfuge – the one-million-man march in Abuja; it could be described as the whirlwind that sucked in most of Nigeria’s elite politicians.

    President Olusegun Obasanjo after tasting eight years of sweet power did not hand over without trying not to hand over. He employed a horde of marabout, pushed out a pot of cash, worked the military (third term cars) the media, the National Assembly and party’s axe men. He organised a quick (fake) National Conference and he tried to change the constitution by a sleight of hand using some thug who strutted as a Senator of the Federal Republic.

    Sadly dear reader, we are at that grave juncture of our political lives once again. Why is it that nobody wants to leave power, especially in black Africa? Why do we still suffer the sit-tight disease; why do we covet office so much that we convert it to our personal property and sometimes transmute to a god unto the people? The current man of the moment, Hardball can announce, is hard at work now beating all these worn tracks listed above.

    The Deputy President of the Senate, who is also Chairman of the Committee on the Review of the 1999 Constitution, Ike Ekweremadu, is obviously hard at work on one of the plots to prolong the shelf life of President Goodluck Jonathan in Aso Rock. Recently, he has been harping on the discarded six-year single term proposition. “It could be a win-win situation for everybody. And I believe that the way it could work is, now, people have been elected for four years; let everybody complete the four-year tenure for which he or she is elected. And then through the doctrine of necessity or a kind of jurisprudential approach, do some kind of transition of two years. In which case, those present occupiers like president and state governors, who are completing their tenures, maybe, will do another two years that would end in 2017.”

    Hardball would just dismiss this as self-seeking, low-level thinking that has no basis anywhere. We are not in a crisis; our constitution stipulates an election every four years and an election it shall be. No doctrine of mischief please.

  • Apom strikes again for Gunners

    Apom strikes again for Gunners

    Nigerian-born Arsenal starlet, Chuba Akpom continued to prove himself as an invaluable asset to the Gunners with a goal in Tuesday’s 4-4 draw against League one club, Leyton Orient.

    Akpom impressed in the thoroughly entertaining friendly game at the Matchroom stadium as he scored in the 53rd minute to help the London club claw back a two goal deficit to claim a share of the spoils.

    Tuesday’s game was the first game for Arsenal since their return from pre season in Asia.

    Akpom’s goal was a typically predatory finish as he latched on to a pass in the 53rd minute before sliding past the Orient keeper, Jamie Jones.

    The 17-year-old also had a hand in the second goal scored by Arsenal as his audacious interception and nifty pass freed Wellington Silva in the 51st minute.

    The attacker, who was substituted after 76 minutes subsequently took to Twitter after the game to discuss his performance against the side campaigning in the third tier of English football.

    “Drew 4-4 with Leyton Orient first team, was a great game, scored 1 , hungry as ever,” he tweeted via @cakpom9 to his 41,812 followers.

    Meanwhile, another Nigerian born youngster, Chuks Aneke also played in the game against Leyton Orient.

    Aneke was arguably Arsenal’s best performer on the night as he put in a composed and consistent display throughout. His ingenious reverse pass in the 34th minute put Eisfeld clean through, but the forward dragged his effort wide.

    Aneke who has been linked with a move to Crewe Alexandra in recent days also provided the assist for Akpom’s goal in the 53rd minute.

    Both players who have represented England at youth level and are still eligible to play for Nigeria at senior level will be keen to play a part in Wenger’s plans for the 2013/14 season.

     

  • Again, Nigerians say ‘No’

    Again, Nigerians say ‘No’

    WHAT on earth would make the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) seek to exhume the plan to redesign the naira so soon after Nigerians resoundingly rejected it? The pull of exigency or the lure of institutional hubris? Whichever it is, the attempt by the CBN to revisit the naira redesign issue at this time is both inexplicable and wrong.

    Ten months ago, precisely on September 20, 2012, President Goodluck Jonathan had, in the height of the opposition to the measure ordered the apex bank to halt its earlier announced currency restructuring to allow for further “enlightenment and consultation”. We consider it unimaginable that the CBN would, in less than one year, seek to upturn the order. Worse however is that the apex bank has remained far less convincing on a project expected to gulp billions of taxpayers’ funds now than it was 10 months ago.

    We consider it worrisome that Sanusi Lamido Sanusi’s CBN wants the naira redesign project so bad – so bad it would go against the grain of public opinion as it is wont to do. Clearly, this is the only way to make sense of the statement credited to him while appearing before members of the House of Representatives Committee on Banking and Currency last week that “one of the reasons we wanted to have a restructuring of the redesign of the currency a few months ago was because many of our notes had been in existence for upward of eight or even 10 years… the best practice is that within a period of five to eight years you redesign the currency, after which counterfeiters tend to catch up”. That was hubris at best.

    Why are Nigerians opposed to the idea of wholesale redesign of the naira? This, unfortunately, is where the CBN chooses to misrepresent the argument. Just as nobody questions the exercise as the prerogative of the CBN; the issue is the apex bank’s unconvincing statement on the relationship between the cost of the exercise and the benefits. Aside being a drain on the public till, it promises to be a major source of capital flight. We do not see anything of the so-called best practices argument as obviating these facts. Indeed, we suspect that the only reason the idea keeps popping up is because the CBN has inexhaustible funds to play with.

    Shouldn’t the nation by now have learnt enough from such costly experimentations? The lesson of the nation’s romance with Securency International, manufacturer of polymer notes scandal is still fresh. A bribe of N750 million was said to have been paid to some Nigerian officials by the Australian firm. Whereas their foreign counterparts have been convicted, their Nigerian accomplices are walking free. That is not even all; only recently it was revealed that the polymer was a far poorer alternative to what was previously in use.

    Is someone again attempting to lead the nation by the nose?

    The point is that the CBN admits that only a fraction of the processed notes in circulation is fake. It’s percentage of fake notes processed was given as 3.9 per cent in 2007, six percent in 2008, 8.4 percent in 2009, 7.4 per cent in 2010, 5.4 per cent in 2011 and 8.4 percent in 2012. If this is the case, why go the whole hog of redesign?

    Shouldn’t the addition of extra security features have sufficed if it is about curbing the menace of counterfeiting? Wouldn’t that be far less costly?

    At this time, Nigerians ought to worry about the apex bank’s fixation with currency restructuring. Redesigning the naira seems to us as the least of the problems that the CBN has to contend with; if the apex bank is in doubt of where to start, a good place is the current out-of-reach cost of funds.