Tag: agonies

  • Agonies of a party at war with itself

    Less that fifty days to the next general elections, the Ogun state chapter of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) is still battling a serious intra-party crisis that pundits say is capable of affecting its chances of doing well at the polls. Dare Odufowokan, Assistant Editor, examines the issues and the personalities involved in the furore.

    OGUN State Governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, last Thursday officially flagged off his campaign for the Ogun Central Senatorial seat at a massive rally in Abeokuta, the state capital. Aside being a gathering of politicians loyal to the governor, the rally also exposed the agonies of the ruling party in the state whose chieftains have been at war with one another since the emergence of Prince Dapo Abiodun as its gubernatorial candidate.

    Present at the Abeokuta rally were APC members loyal to Amosun as well as thousands of supporters of Hon. Adejunle Akinlade, the governorship candidate of the Allies Peoples Movement (APM). Conspicuously absent at the event were Ogun central APC chieftains supporting Abiodun’s gubernatorial ambition. Observers of happenings within the ruling party the state say the lingering face off among the gladiators is capable of hurting the chances of the party if not checked.

    Amosun has been consistent in saying he will not work for Abiodun’s election. He says Akinlade remains his preferred choice of successor and he will do everything possible to see him take over from him later this year. Many chieftains of the APC are of the opinion that Akinlade cannot emerge governor on the platform of little known APM, but analysts say the governor’s anti-party activities, if not curtailed by the national leadership of APC, can change the tide on election day.

    Co-ordinator of the APC Youth Mandate Group in the state, Comrade Bola Oba, while speaking to The Nation in Ijebu Ode on new year day, says the party is currently very troubled by the activities of Governor Amosun. He said many prominent chieftains of the party across the state are unsure of what role to play as the election approaches largely due to the unfavourable body language of the governor.

    “APC must do something about the governor’s anti-party activities. While thousands of our members across the state are being encouraged to disregard the directives of the party and engage in similar anti-party activities, a good number of our prominent leaders too are currently seating on the fence, unsure of what to do as the election approaches. Many of them are hoping the governor will have a rethink.

    “Sadly, the camp of Prince Dapo Abiodun is not helping matters. It is either his handlers don’t have the right ideas about what to do in the current situation or they are just being politically incorrect. Many of those they need to move close to and cajole to remain with them are being ignored. What I see each time around our gubernatorial candidate is band of inexperienced politicians and some social media noise makers.

    “Somebody needs to urgently tell him and the national leadership of the party that we need to find a way of moving ahead of Amosun and his people if we truly intend to win this election. We are today a party at war with itself and we must go extra miles to retain the confidence of our supporters and win news ones,’ the APC chieftain, who was also a House of Representatives aspirant, said.

    Angry at the difficulties with which the APC is now carrying out its campaigns in places where the party should be enjoying open support, Oba lamented that the governor and his people are playing spoiler roles ahead of the next general elections. “The governor knows that Akinlade and the APM cannot win the next election. Both the candidate and the party are unknown to the people of Ogun State.

    “But they are just doing all these to ensure the APC also loses in Ogun State. Forget their professed love and support for President Muhammadu Buhari. They don’t care if he loses too. Amosun and his people are bad losers. It is now left for the national leadership of our great party and the presidency to do something drastic to end all these anti-party charades that are now embarrassing our party and confusing our people,” he said.

    Similarly, a chieftan of the APC in the state, Dr. Femi Majekodunmi, had appealed to Governor Amosun to play the role of a statesman in resolving the controversy that trailed the party’s governorship primary in the state, urging him not to make the mistake of taking a political decision that will consign his name into political oblivion.

    “Nobody would dispute the fact that Governor Ibikunle Amosun has become the architect of modern day Ogun State with many landmark achievements scattered all over the state. Indeed, whenever the history of the state would be written, his name cannot but be in gold. And as the sitting governor, he is a major stakeholder whose views and interest must be important and paramount.

    “But as a politician who has always been committed to the APC, I want to sincerely appeal to the governor to see the present issue concerning the gubernatorial candidate of the party as a test of his statesmanship in which the interest of the party must be supreme, not only because of the entire members of the party in the state but of President Muhammadu Buhari, whom the governor always holds in high esteem,” he said.

     

    Raging war

    But it appears the pieces of advice are not being heeded just yet even as the 2019 general elections draw closer. The gladiators, rather than sheathe their swords, seem to be sharpening the blades in preparation for more onslaughts. At the Abeokuta rally, Amosun threw caution to the winds and openly boasted that Akinlade of the APM, and not Abiodun of the APC, will win this year’s governorship election in the state.

    He also, for the first time, took on President Buhari in public, when he warned the federal government against deploying soldiers to the state for the polls, while speaking at the New Year cross-over fanfare held at Oke-Ilewo in Abeokuta, a few days later. He repeated his boast that his protege, Akinlade, will beat Abiodun and other contestants and emerge as the next governor to take over from him in May.

    “Let us prove to the world that Ogun State is known for peace and a state which has produced a number of eminent personalities in the country. Let us tell them that we don’t need the service of the military and police for the conduct of election because we are going to comport ourselves as peaceful people. And for the youths, don’t allow yourself to be used as political thugs. Anybody who approaches you for such, tell them to bring out their children to join in the thuggery,” he said.

    At the rally, Amosun stated that regardless of the crisis, the APM members in the state still remained true members of APC. “We know that this (APM) is a child of necessity. They are APC, everybody knows and I am happy that they’ve adopted President Muhammadu Buhari. Even I’ve been told that they’ve adopted me as well (for Senate), which is good news. But you know what I know that has happened.

    “If they remove those that are the mainstream of APC from APC, of course, you don’t even have 10 percent left. If they say APC, it is APC that we are pushing. It is APC that belongs to us. So, for me, APC is APC and that is what we want. For me, this is not what we prayed for. If anybody had told me that it is going to be like this, I would say no. But clearly as human, God will show his way at any time to all we ordinary mortals,” he explained.

    But the Ogun State chapter of the APC, responding, said Governor Amosun deserves to be pitied and prayed for. The party said the governor’s recent comments against its governorship candidate, Prince Dapo Abiodun, borders on “outgoing syndrome, emanating from political amnesia and loss of touch with reality.” This was contained in a statement issued in Abeokuta and signed by the party’s Publicity Secretary in the State, Comrade Tunde Oladunjoye.

    The statement said, “But for the fact that the reported outbursts of the governor was reported by a credible online medium, we would not have taken him serious; and for the fact that friends in the media have been asking for response, we would not have reacted. However, rather than exchange words with the governor, we would call on members of the public to please sympathise with the governor and pray for him, as he is obviously manifesting outgoing syndrome resulting from political amnesia, loss of touch with reality and fear of life after office.

    “For an individual to attempt to play God, and assault the collective intelligence of the well informed people of Ogun State by telling them who the next governor of Ogun State will be, as if he has already written the results, shows that such person deserves our pity; we don’t need to exchange words with him, but to actually sympathise with him on his present state of paranoia on Prince Dapo Abiodun.

    “The constant, unceasing and monotonous attacks on Dapo Abiodun by the governor and his minions show that our candidate is the leading contestant and his imminent victory is only a matter of weeks. We challenge the governor to publish the recent survey he commissioned and which he read to some leaders in his house last week, wherein it was revealed that his preferred governorship candidate will not only lose the election, but also lose in the governor’s hitherto strongholds of Ifo, Ewekoro and Ado Odo Ota local governments.”

     

    One party, two leaderships

    And while it is battling with alleged anti-party activities of Governor Amosun and his supporters, the Ogun APC is also currently struggling to extricate itself from an obvious leadership tussle. Two groups are laying claims to being the authentic state leadership of the party following last month’s dissolution of the Chief Derin Adebiyi-led state executive committee by its National Working Committee (NWC).

    The ruling party had based its decision to dissolve state executives in Ogun and Imo states on the alleged anti-party activities involving Amosun and Rochas Okorocha (Imo State governor). A caretaker committee was appointed to run the affairs of the party in the state with Chief Yemi Sanusi while Ayobami Olubori is to serve as Secretary. Tunde Oladunjoye emerged as the spokesperson of the party.

    But Amosun, while addressing members of the APC at the party’s secretariat in Abeokuta recently, declared that nothing would happen to the state executive body. The governor, who was with the embattled exco members led by Adebiyi, said the body was created by God through the efforts of the members of the party. He insisted that the state executive members would spend four years in office despite the purported inauguration of a caretaker committee by the NWC.

    “You know me by now. For me, I fear God and I respect people. So, it won’t be because we are afraid or we don’t want to talk. Where we are now, what we should concentrate on is to let them know that Ogun State is the home of President Buhari and we must vote massively for him. I want to assure you that this executive that God has used you to put together will be there for the next four years. They will serve their term,” he said.

    Reacting swiftly to Amosun’s threat against his own party, Oladunjoye in a statement said the APC remains one big family, noting that they would work on bringing all aggrieved members together. He urged the governor and others in his camp to promptly respect the decisions of the national leadership of the party.

    “There is only one party according to the electoral law and in line with the party constitution; that party is the national headquarters of any political party. Our committee was set up by the APC National Working Committee (NWC), an organ of the party vested with the constitutional power to do so. We are not going to join issues with anyone, including the governor, but to breathe new life into the party, promote peace and cohesion and renew the hope of our members in all the nooks and crannies of the state.

    “We are on the same page with the national body. Our mandate is to bring everybody together and reenergise their commitment to the party and its electoral victory at all levels. We will be fair and equitable to all. We are all members of the same house under the leadership of President Muhammadu Buhari, we will renew, realign, and rebuild our party for total victory at the 2019 polls, by God’s grace,” he said.

    But the dissolved Derin Adebiyi-led exec described members of the Care Taker Committee of Ogun APC as interlopers and confusionists. A press release issued by the Wole Elegbede said: “Tunde Oladunjoye lacks the integrity and does not possess the pedigree to castigate the governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun. If he is truly a member of APC in Ogun State as he wants us to believe, then he should not have spoken thoughtlessly to the leader of our party in Ogun State the way he did.

    “It could be recalled that Oladunjoye was recently disgraced out of Ogun APC after which he wrote an epilogue that he was quitting politics for good. How such an ingrate now turns around to speak for Ogun APC should baffle the understanding of every reasonable men. For the avoidance of doubt, the State Executive Committee of Ogun APC is currently and effectively discharging its responsibilities under the constitution of our great party, hence the supreme law of Nigeria.

    “Any other body which pretends to carry out those functions is a contrived body unknown to the constitution, the Ecxo of our party and the generality of our dedicated members across the state. Some people came to join or rejoin the party through the back door, so they may not appreciate what it takes for Senator Amosun to build the party and make it strong. These are the elements that are painting the governor in bad light and bent on destroying the party in Ogun State.”

  • Agonies of Nigerian women trafficked to Saudi Arabia

    Precious Igbonwelundu recently met with girls who were lured abroad with promises of El Dorado, now back with hopes shattered, they tell their harrowing stories.

    When Peace Chima, 25, was shipped to Saudi Arabia in March, she never knew the life that awaited her. She was told by a supposed agent, Deborah Adejumo, that she would have a better life in the Arab country, where she’s supposed to work as house maid for about five hours daily and then have the rest of the day to herself.

    It was until she arrived in Saudi Arabia that it dawned on her she was trafficked to become a domestic slave for her Arabian masters, who, she later understood, footed her travel expenses by paying $5,000 to the agent.

    With that amount paid the trafficker and the monthly salaries she receives from her masters, Chima has been reduced to a slave to the point that she was beaten with wire connected to electric vibrator for quarrelling with her boss’ 20-year-old daughter who allegedly stole her money.

    Hell has no other name

    Like Chima, Onyinye U, Favour T, Mercy A, Ruth D, Chinonso A, Serena J, Tracy Morgan, Lydia I, Blessing John, Peace C, Motunrayo A and Monsurat O are currently experiencing ‘hell’ in the hands of their various masters, with a lot of them subjected to sexual abuse.

    Several complaints to Madam Adejumo who took them to that country had been met with threats of arrest, harassments with their international passports seized.

    Already, Tracy Morgan is said to have gone missing after allegedly being sexually abused by her masters. Another victim Motunrayo, it was gathered, was sent to another family three weeks into her serving her master because she complained of sexual harassment.

    The women, who are crying out to the federal government to bring them back home, said they have been subjected to various dehumanising treatments and worst still, the agents were ripping them off their wages.

    In a chat with The Nation, Chima said all complaints to the agent fell on deaf ears, adding that their passports were seized at the point of entry into the country.

    When she couldn’t take the suffering anymore she told her master she was quitting but she was threatened with arrest and accused of theft, an offence that could attract death sentence for her.

    She said: “What we are going through here is unbelievable. We are referred to as Kadama, that’s slaves. I have complained to the agent several times but she does not care. She is only interested in the money she makes off us.

    “Some of us are facing sexual harassment with their madam’s son and husband. Some are missing now. I also have some friends who are working here but with different company and facing the same thing.

    “Some have fled the homes they were posted to and are on the streets trying to survive without their passports. That is dangerous but they do not have another option.

    “Right now, Tracy is missing and her sister, who is also in Saudi Arabia, has not been able to locate her. She reported to the agent in Nigeria and nothing has been done about it. We cannot say if she’s alive or not.”

    The victim, who is currently having a running battle with her trafficker for refusing to pay her $750 each month for eight months, said she paid the first four months until she realised that their masters had paid $5,000 before they were brought in.

    “My employer paid her $5,000 for our documents and flight but she told us back in Nigeria that she was footing the bills and that we will pay her our salaries for eight months to cover the expenses.

    “I used to pay her the money until one day I got tired and said I wanted to go but was told by my master that they paid the agent $5,000 to bring me. Can you imagine that kind of wickedness? The money was collected upfront and she was still collecting our monthly salaries not minding the demeaning treatments were are subjected to here.

    “Since I knew about it, I have refused to give her any kobo. Let her do her worst. I am just tired of all the suffering. Imagine that my boss’ daughter stole my money and I caught her. We started arguing over it and her mother put electric on my body for quarrelling with her daughter. Yes, they plugged me to electric and I was shaking. They flogged me too.

    “They use us like animals here. That wicked woman told me in Nigeria that I was coming to do housemaid job and that we will be three to five maids in a house, with each doing specific jobs. She said once I was done with my work, I can go and do other things with my time but all those turned out to be false.

    “I work round the clock. There are days I do not sleep and I do not have right to complain when I am tired. I have been working with a family of 16. They have 20 rooms en-suite. The visitor’s room is like three rooms in one and the parlour like five.

    “Sometimes I cook more than six times a day and most times I do not share of the meal; I clean all these rooms and toilets daily, wash clothes. I go to bed by 3am and wake up by 5am. These people do not care whether I am well or not. They do not care if I eat or not. All they want is to get their job done.

    “The agent told me that once we arrived Saudi Arabia, our employer will provide everything we need like clothes, food, cream, soap, shoes, room, medicine and freedom.

    “I have being the one buying my personal needs including the slave uniform which we wear here as maids. Most times, I am not allowed to eat food despite the fact that I cook between three to six times a day. I work from morning till the next morning without food. When I am sick and tell them, they say it is none of their business because they have paid for me,” she said.

    Explaining her face-off with Adejumo, Chima said some of the trafficked women even paid the agent over N500,000 back in Nigeria, adding that she was still taxing those ones.

    “Myself and my friends have resolved to pay her no kobo even if we are killed. What kind of exploitation is this? Every month the woman ships people to Saudi Arabia and makes money from their masters. Yet, she still collects eight months of their salaries, despite all these suffering we go through? She should do her worst.”

    Ibukun James (not her real names) also told The Nation how she was made to mix cement with her bare hands in order to repair a broken oven.

    While her master and his wife respect her dignity as a human being, John said their adult children were basically slave drivers. Aside being over laboured with domestic chores, John said they usually make her climb ladder and wash the outside of the house as well as the walls.

    Asked what her employers did after seeing what the cement did to her hands, James said “nothing. They just told me to apply Vaseline on it.”

    Another woman Chidinma, who was trafficked to the country last December, claimed some of the women in her batch were asked to burn themselves for refusing to work.

    They were also made to drink water from toilet by an Egyptian member of staff of the company that trafficked her because they refused his inordinate sexual advances, she said.

    “Our agents don’t care about what people go through here. All they care about is their payments. When you complain to them, they either block you or ask you to keep enduring.

    “I volunteered to speak out to Nigerian authorities so they can look into this issue because our women are suffering. We were sold into slavery without our knowledge, or consent.

    “Many face hard labour, sexual harassment. Many have been killed, starved and even stopped from communicating with their families back home.

    “They seize our phones and passports to cut us off from the rest of the world and ensure we cannot runaway. There’s so much maltreatment here. Many of us work 19 hours daily without food and with beatings.

    “God! Some will be raped and when their madams catch their husbands in such act, they cover up for them and punish the maids without mercy. When you tell them you want to go back to your country, your passport will be seized. We are dying in this country. We are crying out to our government to safe us. These pains and sufferings are unbearable. They call us slaves and that is how we are treated.

    “Even the companies that take us there do not treat us well. They are majorly the cause of this problem. When an Arab family pays over N2million for a housemaid and keeps paying the company monthly salary, what do you expect? They will overwork the maid. In some homes when you finish your job, they will take you to a neighbour’s or a sister’s house to still work. If you refuse to do so, you are punished.

    “There’s an Egyptian guy who works as a supervisor for the company that brought me. This guy will be sleeping with anyone he fancies and you dare not say no when he makes his intentions known to you. If you decline, you will be in that company for months without work, salary nor steady food and water.”

    Victim’s relatives cry out

    Lamenting the inhuman treatment meted the women, a relative to one of the victims, Philip Nwagbo said he had contacted the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) and reported the matter but nothing had been done.

    He said that he also sent a message to Presidential Adviser on Diaspora Affairs, Mrs. Abike Dabiri-Erewa but received no reply.

    According to him, “I called NAPTIP and gave them all available information. I even gave them the telephone numbers and address of the agent who trafficked 12 of these women to Saudi Arabia.

    “I first called them over three weeks ago and since then; I have called not less than three times. Even yesterday (Thursday), I called again but the guy who picked the phone said they were busy and will call me when it is my turn.

    “I do not know what he means by that statement. Is it when the women are killed that it will get to my turn? If they cannot bring them back, they should at least get the agents to produce their passports so that the women who can come back on their own will.”

    Traffickers’ modus operandi and government’s failure

    The change in tactics by human traffickers did not start today. It has been happening unabated for years now. They present themselves as agencies that help unemployed persons secure jobs within and outside the country; invite their victims for interviews.

    Afterwards, they shortlist those they desire and tell them they have jobs for them abroad, with promises of fat salaries and liberties. These women are made to belief they just have to pay back some months of their earnings to the company to defray their travel expenses only to realise they have been sold as slaves on arrival at the designated countries.

    Their passports are collected at the airport and most times, they are moved to a camp on the outskirts of the city. They are subsequently handed over to their masters at whose residence they are branded with the slave’s uniform and identity cards.

    In the course of investigating a similar case in April, The Nation found out there were insiders at the Saudi Embassy in Nigeria that aided this illicit trade, said to be a legal practice in that country.

    The victim, Bello, became unwell and collapsed intermittently without care from her masters and was constantly being threatened by her agent, a certain Olori Omolara, whose details including telephone numbers as well as the contact of her Saudi Arabian accomplice, our Correspondent provided NAPTIP.

    Despite the above, Omolara, who told our Correspondent then that she was not afraid of anyone, was yet to be arrested.

    Although Bello was brought back in July through the personal intervention of the Director-General, NAPTIP, Madam Juli Donli, the nonchalance exhibited by the Nigerian Embassy in Saudi Arabia on that case left much to be desired.

    Contacted on the allegation by Nwagbo, Donli expressed shock over the comment, adding that he should write a detailed letter addressed to the Director-General NAPTIP.

    She said: “I do not know what the persons mean by when they get to his turn. Tell him to write a petition addressed to the Director-General. He should include details, addresses and evidence if he has them.

    “We need evidence to clampdown on those agents, agencies and seal their premises. Without evidence, we cannot do anything. We have been clamping down on some of them. The person who can give you the statistics at the moment is the Director of Investigations.

    “The truth is that it is not so easy to bring back these women, that are why we keep begging them not to fall victims to traffickers. Let the relative send the petition, I will ensure we follow it up.”

    The Director, Investigations, Josiah Emerole, was contacted on the statistics of arrested agents or sealed agencies but he told our Correspondent to call again by noon on Saturday.

  • Agonies as traffic situation worsens on Lagos-Ibadan Expressway

    Agonies as traffic situation worsens on Lagos-Ibadan Expressway

    Travellers on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway yesterday had a hectic time moving out and entering Lagos. No thanks to the failed portions on both sides of the dual carriage highway at Warewa, a roadside community after the five-kilometre long Bridge.

    Motorists have for weeks, been enduring the gridlock caused by the gullies that narrow the multiple lanes to one on both sides.

    The impatience of some motorists, especially, commercial bus operators, who drive against traffic, worsens the situation, forcing passengers to trek several kilometres.

    Observers blamed the deteriorating conditions of the road on unregulated development on the corridor. They accused developers of channeling waste water into the road.

    It was learnt that the Federal Road Maintenance Agency (FERMA) could have carried out remedial work but could not because of the franchise given to Julius Berger Construction Nigeria to redevelop the Sagamu Interchange/Ojota Toll Gate end of the 126.5-kilometre highway.

    A FERMA official who spoke under anonymity said the agency could not rehabilitate the bad portions because of the subsisting contract between the government and the construction company.

    It was learnt last night that road users and residents of some of the communities in the area will today stage a peaceful protest to draw the authority’s attention to their plights.

  • Endless agonies of Women of Owu

    Endless agonies of Women of Owu

    Not only emotion, but also sympathy, outcry, agony and supplication for help that indeed surrounded the circumstances of the Women of Owu.  The play which is on now at the National Theatre, Lagos, is the re-enactment of part of the 19th Century Yoruba wars in which the city of Owu was besieged for several years by the combined forces of Ife, Ibadan, Ijebu and Oyo.  Owu people had been recalcitrant to the rest of Yoruba and this was not a welcome development.

    With the students of the Drama department of the Lagos State University, Ojo, Lagos, involved in the play this year, it was easy to notice the level of resilience and stage craft and mobility which the youthful artistes brought to bear on the play.  Watching them on stage showed that there is indeed hope for the stage theatre in Nigeria today.

    Their ability to raise the tempo of the play, their ability also to highlight and interpret the nuances in very emotional and sympathetic ways embedded in the play helped the scenes to register in the minds of the audience.  The play itself is a dirge.  It is a dirge anchored on the sorrows of women who had to face the humiliation of defeat.  After the city was razed and pillaged, the palace was despoiled, while some of the shrines were profaned and burnt to ashes.

    In this devastating scenario only women were left.  All the men of the city had been beheaded.  The idea, more or less, was never to let Owu people breed men any more.  It was to teach them an everlasting lesson not to dare the rest of the Yoruba nation in future.  And this worked because on and on the women wept, cursed and mourned and moaned.  Yet no help or intervention came from anywhere.

    The more the women wept, recounting how their woes and problems began and hoping upon hope to have some respite, the more the invading soldiers taunted and hounded them to submission.  It was such a harrowing and colossal situation that Professor Femi Osofisan, the playwright, was able to capture and embellish the play with surplus dances and songs.

    The dances and the songs were well handled by the student actors and actresses.  The total epitome and beauty of the play was found in the flexibility of the dancers whose sorrowful dirges indeed helped in defining the historical importance and sequence of the invasion.  The whole episode is the total manifestation of what historical issues can do to encourage people look back into time.  Osofisan was detailed in his presentation, he looked succinctly at the nuances of the people, even the stubbornness of an average Owu person in those days was replicated over time to make it a vivid historical play.

    In the end, the dramatic effects of what he did become a point of reference.  History is replete with such events that touched the society in various core areas of their social, political and economic lives.  The idea of staging the play is to help students who would offer English Literature in the next West African School Certification Examination, (WASCE).  It is part of the syllabus and so it is imperative that the play is staged now to help literature students master the techniques of the book better.  It is to show them practical theatre.

    Basically, this was why young undergraduate students were used to propel it on.  The age range is not too far from what the secondary students can easily identify with.  In fact, their deep involvement in the play on stage, showed that they too got infused into the story itself.  They were carried away by the emotional aspects of the story, swinging away on stage, attired in simple costumes with other dirty and local linens, just to totally depict the sorry situation of the women of Owu.

    As soon as you enter the cinema hall of the National Theatre where the play was staged, the first attraction is the splendour of the stage.  Built by Biodun Abe, the newly appointed Director of Abuja Carnival, the simple village setting embossed on the painting on stage made the whole exercise look real and convincing.  Known for his practical and daring attitude to stage décor and mesmerisation, Abe confessed that he did the stage to register a real village pattern of the time and to also situate the historical relevance of the story.  “The people have to see what the rural life of the people was like in those days.  This was a bush path, very narrow indeed, through which movements from place to place were made possible in those days.  This becomes your first point of contact as soon as you enter the cinema hall,” he said.

    The representation of mud houses and the thick bushes on both sides of the village settlement, the desolate nature of the village further defined that the people were at war.  The whole village was deserted and that in itself evoked profound pity.  Abe drew on people’s emotions with that stage design that you needn’t be told that a core professional was at work to give opulence to a play that still remains poignant in the annals of Yoruba history.  The play dissects love, it treats romance, intrigues, backbiting and it especially dwells on why most powerful men of history marry or fall in love with bitches.

    With total and bewitching beauties, most of the women were able to hoodwink powerful generals of the invading armies to evade punishment and possible death.  They all added to the import of the power of female anatomy, but also gave the play its proper place as an epic, a didactic expose of the norms of the people and their likes and dislikes.

  • Endless agonies over FRSC and NERC

    Restraining from writing this piece for quite sometime now has in itself amounted to enduring a niggling pain. For over two months, I had deliberately held down the urge to bare my mind on the troubling misgivings one has about these two federal agencies. One held back ‘fire’ perhaps in sympathy for the young, ebullient compatriots heading them who need encouragement to succeed instead of barbs of criticism. But the more one shied away from doing it, the more one is tormented by the need to render this apparent public service.

    The Federal Road Safety Commission, FRSC and the National Electricity Regulatory Commission, NERC both have their jobs well-defined and cut out for them. They are however imbued with a particular good fortune in the sense that aspects of their schedules have direct and immediate impact on the populace nationwide but even better still is the fact that these activities are monstrously revenue churning.

    First FRSC: apart from devising means of ensuring safety on federal highways, it has a much more lucrative task of issuing driver’s licences and number plates. These services which enjoy a sitting-duck customer base of no fewer than 70 million are in a torrid mess right now. There are few processing centres and even those are pock-marked by touting and racketeering mainly insider-induced. People pay for many months without being issued documents or getting service. The stories emanating from licensing offices are long and ugly but this bit will suffice.

    NERC on the other hand and as the name suggests ought to regulate electricity distribution, metering as well as oversight the new private operators. NERC is better known to Nigerians today as a ‘crazy’ government agency that only specializes in increasing electricity tariff especially at a time of blinding ‘blackout’ and near zero power supply. But if people could live down the ‘thrombosis’ of tariff increase in a time of ‘darkness’, how are Nigerians supposed to swallow the fact that they paid for meters for years and they never get them. Just like FRSC, NERC is so fortunate to have over 100 million Nigerian households begging to pay just any price for these meters that ought to be free in the first place. My personal experience is that a close friend paid about N50,000 and it took nearly four years to get the one-phase meter.

    At times like this, one remembers forlornly, a Dora Akunyili, Ifueko Omoigui and even Stella Oduah in this era of stupefying inertia. What the trio have in common is that they proved most convincingly that with the right leadership and drive, even government agencies will work in Nigeria. They showed us that you could cut through the fat of bureaucracy to get the results you want. No excuses. I want to wager that an Akunyili would have delivered meters house-to-house starting from Bonny Island upwards through katsina right up to the outer fringes of Chad and the Niger Republics. An Omoigui would have devised a 48-hour home delivery method for anyone who concluded his vehicle documentation process. Service, service, service; no excuses.

    The pity is that the two helmsmen (Osita Chidoka, FRSC and Dr. Sam Mbah, NERC) are young, vibrant and well-regarded young people; how they succumbed so supinely to inertia and put Nigerians through such untold agonies is difficult to tell? (Perhaps they have insights the rest of us cannot fathom whereupon this space will be availed them for any article that would shed light on the issues raised above).

     

    Readers speak

    Below are a few of the SMS reactions to last week’s article: Kwankwaso, Haruna, Odimegwu and fictional censuses, published on this space:

    Ha Mr. Osuji, why did you write with such anger today? The truth is that we are all guilty of self preservation when the issues affect our tribes. See how ‘Baba Clark’ and Asari Dokubo gyrate over any criticism of President Jonathan. You have also ‘defended’ Igbo nationals when criticized e.g. minster of Aviation, among others. What of the recent accusations and counter accusations over Fani-Kayode’s article which was precipitated by an Igbo man’s claim that Lagos is no-man’s? In my view, these are all natural reactions because we belong to our tribes FIRST before we are Nigerians.. – 08034726625

    Most of the time, I find your comments disgusting. Your are not different from Haruna Mohammed in fanning the embers of tribal hatred. Odimegwu has spoken, let it be. – 07026802510

    God bless you my brother! Igbos are everywhere in this country giving credence to our false unity. Igbos should withdraw to the east like the Yourbas and Hausas have done and Nigeria will cease to exist. From Obinna, Aba, 08072175614

    You are an irritating pollutant, a disgusting opinionist whose mind is possessed by tribal misconceptions. The earlier you are shown the way out, the better for our dear newspaper. Don’t kill yourself while trying hard to tell and defend a tribal lie. Come to the north and take a census of at least one household and your tribal infection may be healed. – 08085536615

    Oga Osuji, thanks immensely for being very sensitive to national issues. Some people out there just think others are ‘mumu united’. That others don’t talk of the fraud called national census doesn’t mean they are fools and those committing the fraud will always have a field day. Thanks for calling Malam Haruna to order in his subjective feature. From Monday – 08033691236

    Dear Mr. Steve Osuji, your piece is a masterpiece, God bless you. – 08164483725

    I read your piece and I think your conclusions are wrong and mere sentiments. All indices supporting high population such as early/child marriage, polygamy and poverty are more prevalent in the north. That high figures are cooked up for the north as you insinuated cannot be correct. From A. Ojo, Lagos. – 08023535890

    Thank you Steve for your work on Odimegwu, Kwankwaso, etc. – 0803541017

    Opara-ukwu Igbo! That is what you are Steve Osuji. Thanks for your exceptional disquisition in EXPRESSO, 30.8.13. Your bold refreshing candor is re-enlivening to countless Ndigbo. Iwu akataka! From Ogbuehi M. – 08034868081.

    Honestly sir I am very much proud of you and I am happy to know that there is someone who can think and stand by the truth. I just want to encourage you to do more. – 08069265966

    I have just read the charade you submitted on Kwankwaso and Odimegwu your kinsman. For irrationally chasing Igbo sentiments and churning out the rubbish that the Igbo is better than every other human on earth, you are a disgrace and a curse to your pen profession and your so-called race. Shame on you and the tabloid that gave you the platform. Nigeria does not need your arrogance. From Salau@LKJ -08036001282

    For just firing a bullet into the air, those who are benefitting from the falsehood are developing heart attack. The only advise I have for Odimegwu is: let your strategies be coded before those beneficiaries of falsehood ambush you. From Effiong, Calabar – 08072003205

    Well done Steve! The judgment from the Census Tribunal which invalidated 2006 census results from 14 LGAs in Lagos (see Sun, Vanguard of 31.8.13) has validated your piece if it needed any. There will always be crisis in a country built on injustice, for instance Kano is touted to be in the same population bracket with Lagos yet old Kano had 44 LGAs. When Jigawa State was created from this same Kano, it was allotted 27 LGAs making old Kano to have 71 LGAs while Lagos remains at 20 LGAs. Can anyone quantify this singular injustice in terms of federal revenue allocation?! Please keep it up Steve, change will come someday, somehow. From Amaku, – 08151529021