Tag: Christmas

  • Yuletide: Osun offers free train service

    Osun Government is to offer free train service during the Christmas and the New Year for its citizens who will be coming home from Lagos.

    Mr Semiu Okanlawon, Media Aide to Gov. Rauf Aregbesola said this in a statement on Wednesday in Osogbo.

    Okanlawon said that the train would leave Lagos to Osogbo by 11 a.m. on Dec. 24 for the Christmas celebration and return to Lagos on Dec. 27 by 11 a.m. respectively.

    For the New Year celebration, Okanlawon said the train would leave Lagos for Osogbo on Dec. 31 by 11 a.m. and return to Osogbo on Jan. 2, 2017 by 11 a.m.

    He said the essence of the free train ride was to lessen the financial burden of Osun indigenes in the area of transportation during the yuletide.

    “The free train ride is in line with the Rauf Aregbesola administration’s tradition of facilitating convenient movement of its citizen in and out of the state during festive seasons.

    “Government is extending this welfare gesture to residents in spite of financial hardship being faced by different governments of the federation, ‘’the media aide said.

    He enjoined indigenes of the state to maximise the opportunity of the free train.

  • FG declares Monday, Tuesday, Jan 2 public holiday

    The Federal Government has declared Monday 26th, Tuesday 27th December, 2016 and Monday 2nd January, 2017 as Public Holidays to mark the Christmas, Boxing Day and New Year 2017 Celebrations respectively.

    The Minister of Interior, Lt Gen Abdulrahman Dambazau (rtd) who made the declaration on behalf of the Federal Government enjoined all Christian faithful and Nigerians in general to remain committed and supportive of the Government of President Muhammadu Buhari, in his sustained efforts towards building a peaceful, united and prosperous nation.

    According to a statement issued by the Permanent Secretary Ministry of Interior, Alhaji Muhammadu Maccido, the minister also urged Nigerians to use the occasion to pray for peace, unity and peaceful co-existence across the country.

    The minister wished all Nigerians at home and abroad, a Merry Christmas and prosperous New Year 2017.

  • Ibori won’t celebrate Christmas at home, say kinsmen

    Ibori won’t celebrate Christmas at home, say kinsmen

    Hopes that former Delta State Governor James Ibori will celebrate this year’s Christmas with his kinsmen at Oghara in Ethiope West Local Government Area may have been dashed.
    There have been frantic preparations in anticipation of his return, leading to several repairs and clearing at Oghara in the last few days.
    But it was learnt last night, that the former governor had shelved his return.
    Ibori is expected to regain his freedom this month after a 13-year term in a British prison.
    A source told our reporter in Warri that the former governor would leave the British jail at 11 p.m Nigerian time yesterday.
    But a close associate of his, who was also the Commissioner for Transportation in the last administration, Ben Igbakpa, said Ibori had said he would not celebrate Christmas at home.
    Igbakpa said: “He has issued a statement to the fact that he’s not coming for Christmas. His media aide, Mr Tony Eluemunor, issued a statement to that effect, since Tuesday, that he’s not coming home for Christmas. He’s been away and everybody is enthusiastic to receive him back. But he’s not going to be around for Christmas as he has said.”
    Also, in anticipation of Ibori’s return, his kinsmen have begun preparations and celebration of arguably their most illustrious son.
    While the state government and Ethiope West Local Government Area have started series of repairs in Oghara, family and associates of the former governor are said to be cleaning his home.
    Hopes were high that Ibori would return to his home town yesterday.
    But some sources said this was not realisable because he was still in London.

  • Peak Milk celebrates Christmas with orphans, pupils

    Peak Milk celebrates Christmas with orphans, pupils

    Nigeria’s leading diary brand, Peak Milk, has donated products and branded item to Classic FM’s Toy Ride, a charitable project initiated by the broadcast outfit in support of motherless babies’ homes.
    The gesture is said to be in line with the brand’s desire to impact lives during the Yuletide.
    The initiative, which is in its fourth year, is an humanitarian gesture that provides a platform for individuals and corporate organisations, like Peak Milk, to identify with the less privileged by offering them comfort and hope as well as donating products that are later passed on to children in various charity homes.
    Peak Milk’s donation, which included cartons of different dairy products and branded items, was received by Classic FM’s On-Air-Personality (OAP) Shola Mogaji.
    The broadcaster hailed the company for heeding the call for donation.
    She noted that by the gesture, FrieslandCampina WAMCO, makers of Nigeria’s most popular milk, demonstrated a rare sense of friendship and companionship with a segment of the society that is often overlooked.
    Also, Peak Milk visited schools in Lagos with nourishing FrieslandCampina WAMCO products, which were distributed to the pupils.
    Over 80 schools, including Lagos Preparatory School in Ikoyi and Brainsfield Montessori School at Akowonjo, benefitted from the gesture.
    It is an initiative designed to encourage Nigerians to embrace a healthy lifestyle and keep them fully motivated and inspired for future challenges.
    In each of the schools, the items, which included cartons of Peak Milk powder and other branded items, were received with joy and hilarity by officials and pupils amidst praises and commendations for Peak.
    One of the teachers, who spoke on behalf of her school, noted that the gesture was a proof that Peak was a caring brand.
    She added that the brand, which is over 60 years in Nigeria, does not just nourish people but also inspire and motivate them.
    “We are really not surprised by this gesture because every Nigerian knows about Peak Milk and the good things they are capable of doing.
    “So, with this donation, we are certainly going to have a more exciting and nourishing Christmas. We are grateful to Peak for that,” the teacher said.

  • Ortom to pay two months’ salary before Christmas

    Ortom to pay two months’ salary before Christmas

    •Ortom to probe $24m refund expenditure

    •Gov. vows to arrest abductors of journalist

     Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom has promised that workers will get two months’ salary before Christmas.

    Ortom, who spoke at the Benue Peoples House yesterday, said the government would use the N12.7 billion debt refund for that purpose.

    He said although the fund would not offset the two months, the government will source funds to fulfil its promise.

    “We will ensure that workers get two months salary before Christmas. Though the Paris and London clubs refund is not enough for the two months, we will make up what is left.”

    The government owes its workers and pensioners about four months.

    The governor has said his administration would probe the $24 million expenditure, which the previous administration made from Paris and London clubs refund, which it received.

    Ortom spoke yesterday at a thanksgiving mass and bazaar at Saint Rita’s Quasi Mission, Agber, Makurdi.

    He said the previous administration received the amount as part of funds refunded by Paris and London clubs, for deductions without informing the people.

    The governor explained that the money, which has not been accounted for, was, however, traced to a United Bank for Africa (UBA) account and assured the people of a probe to find out what happened.

    While reiterating his commitment to providing critical infrastructure despite economic challenges, Ortom said the road linking Agber village to rest of the metropolis would be captured in next year’s budget.

    The governor added that culverts and drainage channels would be built to solve  perennial flooding.

    Parish Priest Rev.  Anthony Akaatenger appealed to Ortom to build two major drainage channels before next rainy season to save the people from flooding.

    Rev. Akaatenger lauded the governor’s stance to partner President Muhammadu Buhari to fight corruption and prayed God to grant them the grace to succeed.

    Retired Permanent Secretary and former governorship aspirant, Chief Akange Audu, who is a resident of the area and a parishioner, thanked the governor for worshipping with the community and urged him to remain resolute in the face of economic hardship.

    Ortom vowed that abductors of Mrs. Iyuadoo Tor-Agbidye will be arrested.

    He said although the abductors were on the run, security agencies have identified them and would soon be arrested for prosecution.

  • Robbers write Lagos residents to pay Christmas dues

    Robbers write Lagos residents to pay Christmas dues

    Some suspected armed robbers have written some Lagos residents urging them to prepare to pay season’s dues to them on a date not mentioned.

    Residents of Joseph Harrison Estate, Yaba  area of Lagos State got the letter from the bandits on Wednesday notifying them of their impending attack to collect their “dues” for the festive season.

    NAN gathered that the letter was placed on the vehicle of one of the residents and was discovered in the morning when he was about to wash his car.

    ”We are coming this week to collect our dues and to visit you tenants and landlords of Joseph Harrison Street in the week. If you like go and bring police or soldiers, we are coming to perform our duties.

    ”If you cooperate, we will not kill, but if you fail to cooperate, blood will flow,” the letter said.

    NAN check at the estate on Tuesday revealed that sterner security measures have been put in place to protect lives and properties in the community.

    Mr Bolanle  Akinyemi, Chairman,  Community Development  Association said the estate had enjoyed some peace for a long while as it was protected by guards and the police from Sabo Police Post.

    ”We are also mindful of the slum that surrounds us and we have been conscious of suspected criminals,” he said.

    ”No one has received such letter before, but there was a case in 2013 when a company in the estate was robbed,” he said.

    The chairman said they have reported the threat to Sabo Police Division and more guards have been engaged at the estate.

    Concerned residents urged the commissioner of police, Fatai Owoseni to deploy more men to patrol the estate regularly.

  • Recession or Not, Upgrade your properties this Christmas with Emilinks premium quality doors at unbeatable prices!

    Recession or Not, Upgrade your properties this Christmas with Emilinks premium quality doors at unbeatable prices!

    Sponsored Post

    In Nigeria of today, the prices of virtually everything has increased, but thanks to Emilinks Limited (global), Nigeria’s leading manufacturers of premium quality doors, the prices of doors have been falling. Back in June this year, the company launched a never seen before N1 billion worth of discounts promo significantly crashing the prices of her premium quality doors.

    A 900mm x 2.1m hand-finished solid wooden door previously sold for N350,000 was crashed to N150,000 and N120,000. Also, the bestselling solid wood flush doors that is used in thousands of new homes across the country was crashed from N110,000 to only N50,000. The economic versions which previously sold for N60,000 was crashed to N30,000. Many Nigerians as a result of these massive discounts were able to complete their abandoned building projects.

    In the same patriotic spirit, to help raise the awareness of the importance of doors in the society, the chairman of Emilinks Limited, Mr. Solomon E. Nwadiogbu gave away the sum of N3 million to 300 creative Nigerian youths in August during the #MyDoorStory creative writing competition. Below is one of such true life bad door experiences as recounted by Anyi Abraham during his undergraduate days in school.

    “Safety, Protection and shield to me are the core importance of doors. In my life, the significance of doors cannot be overemphasized. There was an experience that exacerbated my love for doors. Back then in school I used to live in a room apartment with a roommate who cares less about safety. On this very night 30th of December 2009 while at sleep, thieves broke into our room and took away my “first ever loving laptop” and injured my roommate with a cutlass. It was a very easy operation aided by our wretched nail-padded wooden door. My guy lost lots of blood and I was so afraid ever since that day. The truth is if our door was solid, it would have been an exercise in futility for those nightwalkers… Since then, doors become my priority and a prerequisite for any livable apartment am to live in.”

    Now that the year is gradually winding up, to ensure that many Nigerians don’t fall victims to such bad door experiences due to substandard doors, the chairman of Emilinks Limited has decided once again to further crash the prices of the company’s exotic pure solid wooden doors. From the already discounted price of N150,000 since June, Nigerians can now get the same doors with the same premium quality for N130,000 to N80,000 and the flush doors formerly N50,000  for N45,000!

    To launch the Emilinks Unbeatable Price Christmas Promo, Mr. Solomon E. Nwadiogbu said;

    “In Nigeria, our mission is to eliminate sub-standard products from the market system and one of the obstacles we are facing due to the current economic situation is low purchasing power. From our market research, we realized price is the major reason why Nigerians buy substandard products and that’s why we’ve decided to further bring down our prices to enable them enjoy the best quality doors at unbeatable market prices.”

    He further went ahead to outline 10 core attributes Emilinks stands for;

    • Value: we sell superior products that add value to the Nigerian society.
    • Quality: we offer quality products that give our customers value for their money.
    • Durability: our products have the capacity to last up to 50 years and above.
    • Affordability: we believe in making exclusive products affordable for Nigerians.
    • Style: our products are trendy, modern and stylishly made to enhance your property.
    • Elegance: we create sophisticated products that portray our customer’s good taste.
    • Class: we are passionate about helping Nigerians add a touch of class to their properties.
    • Exclusive Designs: our products are uniquely designed to stand out in the market.
    • Humidity Friendly: our products help to calm the atmosphere of your interiors.
    • Safety: our security doors are not only durable but are the most secured for lives and properties (guaranteed)

    Starting from the 1st of November, 2016 till the end of January 2017, Nigerians are guaranteed of buying premium quality doors from Emilinks at unbeatable market prices with frame, handles and hinges. Also available are 100% Italian most secured security doors classified, kitchens and wardrobes at the best quality and prices ever, nobody globally can match our prices.

    All Emilinks products come with money back guarantees; delivery and installation services are also available after purchase. This promo is exclusive to only the loyal and esteemed customers of Emilinks, lovers of good things.

     

  • NAFDAC to Nigerians: Be wary of gin, wines

    NAFDAC to Nigerians: Be wary of gin, wines

    As Christmas approaches, the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) wants Nigerians to be wary of the spirits, gins and wines they consume to avoid adulteration.

    NAFDAC’s Ports Head in Enugu State, Mr. John Okwori, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Enugu that the agency recently found out that beverage fakers were focusing on these drinks.

    NAN reports that the agency recently seized 11 large cartoons of fake Chelsea Dry Gin labels which could be used to package gins worth N64.76 million.

    NAFDAC also tracked down and confiscated a large number of fake labels of Amarula drinks.

    Okwori, a deputy director in NAFDAC, said that the agency had commenced a nationwide massive mop-up of these products.

    “Apart from the tracking of fake labels imported into the country, the agency is currently doing a mop-up of substandard, expired and fake spirits, gins and wines in the market.

    “But we need the co-operation of every Nigeria on this issue.

    “Our people should be wary of spirits, gins and wines they buy; they should securitise them to see that NAFDAC numbers, production dates, manufacturers and countries of origin are well spelt out.

    “There should be a closer look at the labels to see that they are the normal and regular labels.

    “They should also watch out for the colour of the drink through its container, whether it conforms to the original colour.

    “If there is anything wrong in all these I have mentioned, do not buy the drink.

    “Your safety and that of your loved ones, who you are giving or sharing the drink with, should come first,’’ he said.

    The director urged Nigerians to promptly report to the nearest NAFDAC office, about any drink they might suspect to be fake.

    “NAFDAC offices are open for public complaints, enquiries and advice every working day,’’ he said.

    Okwori warned that consuming adulterated drinks could damage vital organs.

    “It can lead to kidney, liver or heart complications as well as diseases, especially when such injurious drinks are consumed in large quantities due to the euphoria of the yuletide season,’’ he said.

     

  • Ahmadu Bello’s Christmas message

    Preamble

    This article was scheduled for Friday, January 15, 2016 to coincide with the 50th year remembrance of Alhaji Sir Ahmadu Bello’s assassination in Nigeria’s first military coup d’etat. However, since man only proposes while Allah disposes, the plan to publish it that day had to change due to an exigency that required an urgent attention. Nevertheless, despite the two weeks delay, it is hoped that the respected regular readers of this column will still find it as fresh as it would have been a fortnight ago. This is one of the memorable stories of life that often leave a sour taste in the mouth but never get stale in history. We are still in January and the story of Nigeria’s first coup remains inexhaustible.

     

    Death of an icon

    One of the foremost political icons in Nigeria’s first republic and the patriarch of the political party called Northern People’s Congress (NPC), was Alhaji Sir Ahmadu Bello, the first and only Premier of Northern Nigeria. He became Premier of Northern Nigeria in 1954 through a popular election and was killed as Premier in January 1966 in a tribal/religious military coup plotted mainly by soldiers of Igbo extraction and led by one Major Patrick Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu. The plotters had killed this icon in cold blood before looking for reasons to justify their heinous crime. The three reasons they later gave were corruption, tribalism and religious bigotry. It was a matter of calling a dog a bad name in order to hang it.

    Among the four Premiers in Nigeria at that time, only Ahmadu Bello could not in any way be evidently linked to corruption. Unlike others who lived opulently, Ahmadu Bello was an ascetic personality who served his people as patriotically. He left only a small residential bungalow in Sokoto at the time of his death. He could also not be singularly accused of tribalism because tribalism was the basis of all the existing political parties of the time. No Premier from 1954 to 1966 could be exonerated from tribalism. They were all guilty of it.

    It can be recalled that such organisations as Ibiobio State Union, Ibo Federal Union, Egbe Omo Oduduwa and ‘Jam’iyyar Al-Ummar Nigeriya ta Arewa’ which translated to Northern Elements Progressive Association which later transformed into Northern Elements Progressive Union (NEPU) were all socio-cultural organisations that metamorphosed into political parties. All those parties preceded ‘jamiyyar Mutane Arewa’ meaning Northern People’s Congress (NPC) to which Ahmadu Bello belonged. Many other ethnic-based political parties later emerged to broaden tribalism in Nigerian politics.

     

    His 1959 Christmas Message

    Of the four Premiers in Nigeria’s first republic, only Ahmadu Bello was bold and sincere enough to allay the fear of the minority groups in Northern Nigeria by making a public policy statement about his government’s stand concerning tribalism and religious bigotry. Here is what he said:

    “We are people of many different races, tribes and religions, who are knit together by common history, common interests and common ideals. Our diversity may be great but the things that unite us are stronger than the things that divide us. On an occasion like this, I always remind people about our firmly rooted policy on religious tolerance. Families of all creeds and colour can rely on these assurances. We have no intention of favouring one religion at the expense of another. Subject to overriding need to preserve law and order, it is our determination that everyone should have absolute liberty to practice his belief. It is befitting on this momentous day, on behalf of my ministers and myself, to send a special word of gratitude to all Christian missions.

    Let me conclude this with a personal message. I extend my greetings to all our people who are Christians on this great feast day. Let us forget the difference in our religion and remember the common brotherhood before God, by dedicating ourselves afresh to the great tasks which lie before us.”

    Thus, to accuse such a person of tribalism and religious bigotry is like searching for a new crescent in a deep well.

     

     His Fabricated ‘Speech’

    However, years after Ahmadu Bello’s unjustifiable assassination, some evil elements in the media, in collaboration with certain political demagogues went to fabricate another statement attributed to the Premier as a justification for his killing. The concocted statement was credited to a publication in an unknown newspaper called ‘The Parrot’. Here is the fabricated statement:

    “The new nation called Nigeria should be an estate of our great grandfather Othman Dan Fodio. We must ruthlessly prevent a change of power. We use the minorities in the north as willing tools and the south as a conquered territory and never allow them to rule over us and never allow them to have control over their future.” The statement was said to have been made on October 12, 1960.

     

    Truth and Falsehood

    Now, looking at both statements very carefully, any sensible person should be able to see clearly, a distinction between truth and falsehood. The Premier’s Christmas message quoted above was made on Thursday, December 24, 1959 through a radio broadcast which was published by all newspapers in the country including the vociferous ‘West African Pilot’ owned by Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, the boisterous ‘Tribune’ owned by Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the clamorous ‘Daily Times’ jointly owned privately by certain prominent individuals at that time as well as many other smaller newspapers in Nigeria. All those newspapers are identifiable in the Nigeria’s media history even though most of them are now defunct. On the other hand, the place and occasion of the second statement attributed to Ahmadu Bello was neither indicated nor can be traced in Nigeria’s newspaper history.

    The first time any genuinely existing newspaper ever made reference to that second statement was on November 13, 2002 (42 years after it was purportedly made. And the reference by ‘The Tribune’ newspaper that published it was to an article published online a few weeks earlier (October 24, 2002) by a Yoruba journalist and columnist (name withheld) and entitled ‘the northern Agenda’. It can therefore be deduced that the statement was actually fabricated not in the 1960s but in October 2002, by the columnist who credited it to a newspaper that never existed, to give it undeserving credibility. What a country! What a people! This is a typical case of an obvious mischief by heartless mischief makers just to fetch ephemeral fame and illegal income.

    The belief was that once such a fabricated article appears on the internet and is   ignorantly quoted by some inconsequential writers, it would automatically become a document of facts. That is Nigeria for you.

     

    The Coup Episode

    January 15, 1966 was a Saturday like no other one in the history of Nigeria. That day laid the bitter seed which germinated and grew into the thorny tree that now feeds Nigerians with unpalatable political fruits of today. It marked the beginning of an agonising voyage of destiny on which Nigerians embarked without a compass. Coming up in the sacred month of Ramadan, the day actually came to confirm the axiomatic thought of an Arab poet who once asserted in a couplet that: “Nights are heavily pregnant; they give birth to wonders in the days….”

     

    The preceding Friday

    The preceding Friday (January 14, 1966) had been quite eventful for the then Premier of Northern Nigeria, Alhaji Sir Ahmadu Bello who was extraordinarily busy from morning to night. He had planned to travel to Sokoto with the then Ghana High Commissioner, Mr. Yakubu Tally, who had come to spend the weekend with him in appreciation of his role in ensuring the formation of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) through the merger of the Monrovia and Casablanca groups that had been mutually antagonistic on certain ideological grounds.

    On that Friday, Sir Ahmadu Bello, as usual, observed the Jum’at Prayer in company of a retinue of his Ministers and government officials. He hosted the Premier of Western Nigeria, Chief Samuael Ladoke Akintola, (his political ally) in the newly formed Nigerian National Alliance (NNA). The latter had come to alert his colleague of a premonition hovering over Nigeria through an impending bloody coup d’etat that could clear the existing political stable wheat and chaff. His alert was not however strange to Sir Ahmadu Bello who had earlier got the same security report.

    The duo jointly reviewed the then volatile political situation in the country but failed to reach a conclusion on how to forestall the impending calamity.

     

    Akintola’s Effort

    Chief S. L. Akintola, pleaded with his host to persuade the then Prime Minister, Alhaji Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, to act promptly to curb the impending disaster that was swinging restlessly like a pendulum over Nigeria before it could devour them all. But Sir Ahmadu Bello was reluctant. He believed that only the will of Allah could prevail in any given circumstance. His fear was that in the sacred month of Ramadan, it would be better to be martyred than to be an assassin. To him, any attempt to foil such a virtually mature coup would be so bloody that even the country would have nothing left to bleed with. By that belief, hardly did Sir Ahmadu Bello realise the implications of paving the way for a ruinous destiny to take its course.

    The whole scenario was like a valedictory drama of fate in which the actors were blind to the denouement which the viewers had vividly perceived. And when it was time for the two Premiers to part, it became apparent that they were meeting perhaps for the last time alive. In a sobre but sorrowful tone, the host bided his guest “buy for now,” and the guest, whose feet were already on the staircase of his aircraft on his way back to Ibadan replied: “if we ever get to see again”.

    Thus, both spoke in coded language in the presence of their entourages who could not decode their language. By the time when cities started to return to life, in the wee hours of the following morning, the die had been cast as the picture had become clear that the night had tragically discharged the contents of its cargo to the amazement of the entire world. A bloody coup in Nigeria had swept the country’s democracy away with the rulers as casualties. It confirmed the maxim of the above quoted poem and the rest has since become history.

     

    The major Casualties

    The heartless rascals in Nigerian military who struck in the January 1966 coup to terminate a democratically elected government must have foreclosed the consequences of their criminal action. They had killed virtually all the major key players in the then Nigerian politics except those of Igbo extraction and of course, some non-Igbo people who were then in prisons. The Prime Minister, Alhaji Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa and the Minister of Finance, Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh were killed in Lagos. The Premier of Northern Nigeria, Sir Ahmadu Bello, was killed with his wife and some other people in Kaduna, the then Headquarters of Northern Nigeria. The Premier of Western Nigeria, Chief Samuel Akintola was killed in Ibadan, the then Headquarters of the South Western Nigeria while some military top brass of non-Igbo extraction were killed in different military barracks across the country.

    Except for Lt. Col. Arthur Unegbe who was killed for being too close to Maimalari and could not be trusted, no other Igbo man of note, politician or military, was killed in that coup. As a matter of fact, if there was any feeling of the coup in the Eastern Nigeria at all, it was that of victory and heroism. The top military officers who were killed included: Brig. S. A. Ademulegun (South West); Brig. Zakari Maimalari (North); Col. Kur Mohammed (North); Lt. Col. J. Y. Pam (North); Col. S. A. Shodeinde (South West); Lt. Col. Largema (North); Lt. Col. A. G. Unegbe (North); S/Ltd. James Odu (South West) and a host of others.

     

    The Allegations

    It became evident that virtually all the leaders of that coup as well as its executioners were of Igbo extraction. Thus, the other ethnic groups who were severely affected saw the coup as a tribal one. But much more than that, the Muslims in the country saw it as a religious coup that could not be justified in any way, the killing of Chiefs Akintola and Okotie-Eboh notwithstanding. This was because the then Governor of Eastern Nigeria, Sir Francis Akanu Ibiam was as deeply religious as Sir Ahmadu Bello. The one was a Vice-President of the World Council of Churches. The other was the Vice-President of the Muslim World League. If religion was therefore the reason for the coup, the two of them ought to have been killed. But history entails a variety of interpretations.

    Overwhelming majority of the ring leaders of that coup as well as the executioners were of Igbo extraction. The chief beneficiary of the coup (Major-General Johnson Aguiyi Ironsi) was of Igbo extraction. Almost all the military appointments after the coup were for men of Igbo extraction and none of these, except Hassan Katsina and Muhammadu Shuwa was a Muslim. How else could a coup be tribal and religious in nature?

     

    Nigeria’s Founding Fathers

    In semblance of the above, the great fathers of Nigeria’s independence left a legacy that can be called a footprint on the sands of time. By whatever standard they are measured today, the late Sardauna of Sokoto, Alhaji Ahmadu Bello; Nigeria’s first and only Prime Minister, Alhaji Abubakar Tafawa Balewa; the first Premier of Western Region, Chief Obafemi Awolowo and his counterpart of the Eastern Region, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe as well as Mallam Aminu Kano and Chief SL Akintola and Chief Denis Osadebay were all exemplary in their styles of life given the circumstances of their governance, their personal weaknesses notwithstanding.

    Their legacy is a fortune which amazingly turned into misfortune in the hands of their successors. Thus, the great hope which those fathers had embedded into our destiny became colonised and turned into personal property by their political heirs. Were those great fathers to wake up from their graves today and see what has become of their sweat, they would just shake their heads in sorrow and return quietly into their graves without comments.

     

    Qualities of Leaders

    Looking at the phenomena of human life critically, one may conclude that human world is depreciating geometrically. The men of primordial years were greater by far than those of the contemporary time. Their lives were more qualitative. Their thoughts were richer. Their intentions were purer. Their gazes were more visionary. Their dispositions were more human. It is upon the foundation of their thoughts and deeds that today’s technological pyramid is firmly built. Yet, they did not allow their reasoning to be driven by the material life of their time.

     

    Exemplary Hadith

    Fearing for their hereafter, some companions of Prophet Muhammad (SAW) once asked him a probing question about the quality of their lifestyle saying in a quivering voice thus:

    “Dear Prophet! The wealthy ones amongst us seem to have gone to the world beyond with all the existing rewards. They worshiped Allah as we are worshiping Him. They fasted as we are fasting today. Yet they were giving in charity, huge amounts of resources to the poor and the needy according to the sizes of their wealth. What is then left for us, if the paradise will be determined by the amount of our rewards…….?” The similitude of the lesson in that Hadith is the situation of Nigeria yesterday and today in terms of leadership quality. Will any lesson be learnt?

  • Christmas blues

    Christmas blues

    •It’s immoral that many state governments did not pay workers’ salaries

    It is time to pay serious attention to management of state finances as workers writhe in the agony of non-payment of salaries.

    Once again workers in many states of the federation were thrown into agony and distress during the yuletide season. The season is noted as one of festivities when Nigerians put aside religious and ethnic division to relate, wine and dine together. In recognition of this, it is the tradition that workers in the public and private sectors are paid their December salary before Christmas every year.

    However, the news this year is that many states were unable to meet their primary obligation to civil servants. Thus, the workers were hungry and angry during the period. We sympathise with them. Every individual has the right to set his priorities. It is one of the reasons men and women take up employment – to realise the goals they set for themselves. In developed countries, workers cherish their vacation and make monthly contributions to meet the aspirations. In Calabar, Cross River State, the whole of December is set aside for street carnivals.

    One would have expected state chief executives to have taken this into consideration in planning finances towards the end of the year. It is immoral that governors who pleaded with and obtained bailout funds from the Federal Government could so soon have fallen back on their old ways. It is the height of wickedness that money obtained solely to pay workers’ salaries in order to put smiles on their faces could have been diverted so soon.

    We call on the Federal Government to refrain from giving further handouts or any form of financial assistance to any state that defaulted on the terms for which the previous bailout was allocated. Public finance is a serious responsibility borne by chief executives. We call on the states that defaulted to come up with explanation on how they spent the bailout funds. Workers unions, the civil society and the media should take the states up. While quite a number of them defaulted in payments for three months, others for two, one was said to have fallen back on the notorious formula of paying half salary since July. Another was said to have paid only workers on levels 01 to 07. These are unacceptable practices.

    Fortunately, this is not the season for partisan politics. It should therefore be easier for citizens to come together to make demands of their governments; any governor who is unable to pay salaries should be put on the spot now as a way of forcing his political party to drop him from the ballot in future elections. The court of public opinion should also take note of such persons.

    It has become imperative to call attention to financial engineering in the states as very few are viable; it is now obvious that relying on the federation account is a ruinous way to manage the business of government at state and local government levels. Anyone offering himself for election should be made to explain how to boost internally generated revenue sources. Obviously the days of feeding-bottle economics is over. We hope the state governments have taken note of the Federal government’s resolve to liberalise the solid mineral sector this year. As the Federal Ministry of Solid Minerals is releasing the blueprint for this, we expect the state governments to come up with their own blueprints on how to explore the opportunities. As all the states of the federation are blessed with solid minerals deposit, so is agricultural land a blessing to them all.

    While commending President Muhammadu Buhari for the bold step he took in bailing out 27 states soon after he took over the reins of government, he should make the states realise that the Federal Government cannot continue to bear this burden.