Tag: Cameron

  • Again, Cameron hits Nigeria

    Again, Cameron hits Nigeria

    British Prime Minister David Cameron has hit Nigeria again. He was reported saying Nigerians entering the United Kingdom would deposit £3,000 (about N750,000) before they are let in. The money, it was said, would be returned if the immigrant did not stay longer than his visa stipulated. The report has had Nigerians fuming, from the Presidency to the National Assembly to the streets. Some have called for a retaliatory response, judging that Cameron’s planned move is unfair, uncalled-for, punitive and disrespectful. In other words, it is a hit below the belt.

    I share Nigerians’ sense of collective offence caused by the UK PM’s disposition. But not our apparent eagerness to draw out the 47-year-old British leader for battle beginning with a well-aimed counter-punch. Cameron hardly speaks for himself. He conveys the mood of his people, and that mood is generally not pro-Nigeria or Africa, whose citizens die to live in the white man’s country. Britain does not pretend to respect Nigeria from which it gets only raw materials, not finished products. Our old colonial and neo-colonial lords do not see us as equals when our people do everything to settle in their land to struggle for space and facilities with them. And even cause them grief.

    After the killing in London of officer Drummer Lee Rigby on May 22 and the arrest of two men, Michael Adebolajo and Michael Adebowale, both of Nigerian descent, some British people started a campaign to restrict the entry of our people into their country.

    The planned £3,000 visa bond did not surprise me. It was a blow, alright, but Cameron has since developed a fondness for blowing us. In November, 2011, he tried to bully us on gay and lesbian relationships. Back then, I wrote an article entitled “Don’t blame Cameron”.

    I reprint some of that article here:

    “Meeting with former colonies of imperial Great Britain in Australia, Cameron told the world that African nations that were not gay-friendly would not get any aids from his country. In other words, if your country’s laws are not favourable to people in same sex relationships, then you get nothing from Britain. If your country does not allow homosexuals to marry one another, British aid is not for you. No gays, no aids. That, in a nutshell, is Cameron’s law.

    You probably sensed the Prime Minister’s imperial confidence. But can you blame him? At 45, he is the youngest PM Britain would have in two years short of two centuries. He is well educated, coming away with a first class from Oxford. The fact that he presides over the affairs of a country which once reigned over a good portion of the world looks like something to crow about.

    So why shouldn’t Cameron be cocky? Why shouldn’t he strut around with a swagger?

    But, really, was that why he demanded that African countries must embrace gays and same sex union in order to get any assistance? No!

    Was that why he practically insisted that we must swallow what we spat out? Was that why the British PM wanted age-old taboos and abominations to become present-day delicacies? No! Cameron could not have slighted Africans simply because he heads the great Great Britain of colonial fame. No. Britain’s imperial profile is not necessarily a bullying tool. The United States and Canada, for instance, were once British colonies but I cannot imagine Britain slighting them over aids the way Cameron did Africa. I cannot imagine him or anyone else asking Americans or Canadians to embrace the very things they abhor as a people or change the things that sum them up as distinct nations simply because they need help.

    God detests sodomy, and wiped out the biblical city that gave the word to the world because of that satanic indulgence. African communities also detest it, and do not approve of gay marriage of any gender.

    Should we now embrace sodomy and allow men to marry their kind, and women to tie the nuptial knots with women just because we want British aid? By what strand of logic should that be allowed to stand? Even in Britain an anti-gay pastor of Nigerian parentage has just been voted the most inspirational African, beating Obama and Mandela.

    The reason Cameron is harassing us with his curious advocacy is because we are a very poor, borrower continent. It is because we have failed to grow up and fend for ourselves. Africa is a notorious receptacle of other people’s products of all types. We are a deficit continent, importing almost everything under the sun. What we manage to export is in crude form, and is often shipped back to us at prohibitive costs. It robs us of economic power. Take Nigeria’s crude oil as an example. Then take Ivory Coast’s cocoa, too. The world’s biggest supply of cocoa comes from that West African country where it is produced so crudely and so cheaply, sometimes by child labour. But cocoa feeds the chocolate factories of Europe and boosts their economies. Even in colonial times, our raw products were shipped overseas to grow their economies while we remained impoverished.

    Nothing has changed. We are still impoverished. We beg and borrow, beg and borrow again. Our creditors know this. Cameron knows this, too. My folks in Delta State say your barber reserves the right to twist your neck. So when we want to look good, we turn to our barbers in the West and, trust them, they sure know how to twist our necks. Beggarly people beget donor insult. That is what Cameron has done with the gay insult. We should not blame him.

  • Of Anambra gay community and David Cameron

    There is an Igbo proverb which insists that an unthinkable occurrence is to find a lion feasting on yam. So was it peculiarly strange to read in national newspapers last week that, “ members of the gay community in Anambra State on June 12 disrupted court proceedings at the Atani Magistrate’s Court, while protesting the arraignment of two of them for allegedly having same-sex relationship.” This protest is stranger still because, Anambra, the foremost Southeast state, is not a place known for protesting any official policy or cause. It will be difficult to remember the last time the good people of Anambra carried placards in public show of umbrage. Not when their erstwhile governor was locked up in a toilet by a certain rascal politician who proceeded to torch public properties in the state when he could not have his way; not even during the fuel subsidy nationwide protests January last year did we get any inkling that so many people could shout in unison in Anambra.

    What forest gnome therefore pushed these full-bodied okorobias to dress up like women, come out in the public, on Igbo soil and insist that two men be allowed to co-habit. Eewoo, aru eme! Abomination stalks the land and our lion now eats yam and dog has grown a large horn. A rabbit has burst forth in broad daylight. Is it a daydream or how will the story be told that a full bodied man, onochie, isi obi, who holds the ofor, the totem of his family now plays woman, to be married off by another man? If that day had come when a man would cease to be a groom but a bride to a fellow man, did anyone think it would start from Anambra State?

    Anambra is still among the last bastions of Catholicism in Nigeria as well as the stronghold of Igbo culture and tradition. It is a place where the traditional marriage rite of igba nkwu nwanyi (wine carrying to take the hand of a woman in marriage) is still cherished in Igboland. Perhaps the time has come upon us sooner than we thought to rethink that idea and change it to igba nkwu nwoke (wine carrying to marry a man).

    It must be remarkable that this Atani protest is happening (shortly) after the demise of Chinua Achebe, the great Anambra son who wrote Things Fall Apart which was set in colonial Anambra. The great novel is about how things fell apart in Igboland as the new British masters over ran the primitive people of the lower Niger River and eventually pacified them through the force of arms.

    Incidentally, Atani is right at the bank of the River Niger. If Achebe had lived longer, would he have written Things Fall Apart, Again, with the advent of the Whiteman gay culture on his fatherland as young men seem eager to run off with fellow men in abominable co-habitation spree?

    But wait a minute, British Prime Minister David Cameron has been banging the table and threatening thunder if Nigeria passes the same-sex marriage Bill; these Anambra boys always have one ahead of the rest us. Do you see a chance that Mr. Cameron may ask all Nigerian gays over to Britain? Wow, what huge prospects lie ahead of you should you land at Heathrow announcing you are a gay exile fleeing from Nigerian government persecutors! Well Hardball’s advice is, better be truly gay before you try such stunt for you may well be subjected to unpalatable tests to prove your status.

     

  • Presidency cancels FEC meeting

    Presidency cancels FEC meeting

    The weekly meeting of the Federal Executive Council did not hold at the Presidential Villa, Abuja on Wednesday, the News Agency of Nigeria reports.

    FEC is the highest Federal Executive decision-making body presided over by the President with the Vice-President, Secretary to the Government of the Federation and all the ministers in attendance.

    The Head of Service of the Federation and some presidential aides are also members of the Council.

    NAN reports that there is no official reason given by the presidency on why Wednesday’s meeting did not hold.

    Some ministers who were not aware of the development arrived at the villa before 10am, the usual commencement time of the meeting, but were turned back by protocol officials.

    With the absence of President Goodluck Jonathan, Vice-President Namadi Sambo would have presided over the meeting.

    Jonathan left Abuja on Tuesday night for London and Paris to confer with the British Prime Minister, David Cameron and the President of France, Francois Hollande on matters of vital interests to Nigeria, Britain and France.

    The Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr Reuben Abati, had said in a statement on Tuesday that the president would, on his way to London, stop over in Cairo, Egypt.

    He said the President would participate in the conference of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) scheduled to open there on Wednesday.

    According to Abati, the President would also attend the launch of former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s Foundation in London on Friday.

    He said the president would be back in Abuja on Monday.

     

  • Terrorism: Jonathan to meet Cameron, Hollande

    Terrorism: Jonathan to meet Cameron, Hollande

    President Goodluck Jonathan is expected to jet out of Abuja on Tuesday night to meet with the British Prime Minister, Mr. David Cameron and French President, Mr. Francois Hollande over terrorism in West Africa.

    A statement issued by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, said that the President, who will be accompanied by the First Lady and other government officials, will also discuss trade and economic relations with the British prime minister.

    The President is also expected to stop over in Egypt to attend the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC).

    The statement reads: “President Goodluck Jonathan will leave Abuja tonight for London and Paris to confer with the British Prime Minister, Mr. David Cameron and the President of France, Mr. Francois Hollande on matters of vital interest to Nigeria, Britain and France.

    “The President’s talks with the British Prime Minister in London are expected to focus on the expansion of trade and economic relations between Nigeria and Britain as well as the enhancement of cooperation between both countries on the war against terrorism.

    “In Paris, President Jonathan will confer with President Hollande and French Government officials on the ongoing deployment of Nigerian and ECOWAS troops to Mali to support the current military action against insurgents and terrorists in Northern Mali.

    “On his way to London, President Jonathan will stop over in Cairo, Egypt to participate in the conference of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) scheduled to open there tomorrow. He is also scheduled to attend the launching of the Olusegun Obasanjo Foundation in London on Friday.

    “The President who will be accompanied by the First Lady and relevant government officials is due back in Abuja on Monday.”