Tag: disorder

  • Africa and World (Dis)order

    It is a universe out of sync indeed. Not since the height of the Cold War has the civilized world witnessed such an evil distemper abroad and a nasty disquiet at home. Something strange and inexplicable is beginning to happen to the post-Cold War order, hinting at a possible reconfiguration of the global order and international relations.

    A year after the assassination of Kim Jong Nam, the exiled and estranged half-brother of Kim Jong11, the maximum ruler of North Korea, in a bizarre incident at the Kuala Lumpur Airport in Malaysia, an even more surreal drama played out in the quiet suburb of Salisbury in England this past weekend.

    Sergei Skripal, a former Russian double agent and Yulia, his daughter, were discovered on a bench outside a restaurant in the somnolent rural paradise barely conscious after a sumptuous meal. In all likelihood, they had succumbed to an attack from a deadly nerve-agent called Novichok principally traceable to Russia.

    It will be recalled that Skripal, a former colonel in the Russian spy system, was found to have compromised over three hundred Russian agents and was sentenced to thirteen years in jail. It is a measure of his importance to his new masters that he was exchanged in a spy-swap and taken to Britain to begin a new life. But the Russian bear may hibernate. It does not forget, and neither does it forgive for that matter.

    Taken together, the two incidents, and in particular the Salisbury demarche, look like scenes out of a notable spy thriller, something like a James Bond film—From Russia with Novichok— or a horror political movie. Theresa May, the British Prime-minister, is hopping mad with the Russians. Britain had slammed a twenty-three diplomats’ expulsion on the Russian mission in London. Vladmir Putin has promised to reciprocate in kind, setting off a diplomatic spat which speaks to a new world disorder.

    Whoever fells an elephant must be ready for a rumble in the jungle. The Russians have a beef with the west, particularly the US and Britain, for their role in the collapse of the old Soviet Empire. Without firing a shot, Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan combined brilliantly to fracture the Soviet Union and the so called Second World of actually existing Socialist states.

    In a saturation bombardment of enemy target, the western media began beaming images of paradisiacal existence in western societies to the increasingly restive Russian middle class who eventually came to the conclusion that there was no sense or point in sacrificing their comfort and prosperity to prop up some peripheral satellites states in the name of some bogus brotherhood of socialist humanity.

    Once this right-wing re-engineering of the human psyche took hold of the popular imagination in Soviet Russia, it was only a question of time before the Russians wanted out of what they began to see as a misbegotten Socialist unitarism which has sentenced them to a life of misery and penury. With help from a naïve and deluded Mikhail Gorbachev, the Socialist Empire briskly dissolved into its component parts.

    The direct result of this implosion has been a resurgence of Slavic nationalism on a scale that has not been witnessed since the virus of extreme nationalism led to the First World War. Putin is the direct heir and manipulator of this neo-Slavic ascendancy. It has led Russian into strategic duelling in Ukraine and the Black Sea as well as in Syria which has been reduced to a vast rubble of the dead and the dying. Russia has been fingered directly in the electoral shenanigan that brought Donald Trump in America and is now poised to destabilise a United Kingdom that is still struggling to find a way out of the Brexit conundrum.

    If the Russians were truly involved in the rise of Donald Trump, it was a direct hit. The ascendancy of the rogue huckster has seen the rise of a native tribalism in America and governmental incompetence on a hair-raising scale that has dwarfed the most extreme manifestation of state delinquency since the advent of the nation-state.

    The omens are very dire indeed and America is a-hollering with the commotion of hiring and firing which has not been seen since Thomas Jefferson and his iconic colleagues laid out a new template of governance. Only this past week, Trump fired Rex Tillerson, his Secretary of State, even before the plane bringing him from Africa has fully taxied to a halt.

    As if on cue, Europe has played host to a resurgence of xenophobia and extreme native nationalism which have led to much national unease and dark foreboding in Germany, Austria, Holland, France, Britain, Belgium and Italy. In these civilized and advanced countries, the fear of immigrants and people of colour has become the cornerstone of nascent national wisdom. The world has never been more polarized and bitterly divided by race, colour and creed.

    In China, they have just removed the restricting clause to pave the way for life rule for their wily president. Rather than rising prosperity leading to political liberalisation and the growth of democratic culture according to western truism, it has led to a tightening of the democratic noose and the rolling back of the political empowerment of the people.

    So far, all is quiet on the Beijing front. There is no rumbling of a human earthquake on the scale of Tiananmen Square. In the event, the Chinese Emperor is once again retreating behind the forbidding walls of the Forbidden City. China is cocking a snook at liberal democracy telling anybody who cares to listen that it is peopled by a different race and that as an ancient civilization China is not expected to set much store by the values of recent civilizations no matter their condescending arrogance and pretentious self-righteousness.

    When the inscrutable and unflappable Chinese behave in this manner, they are telling the world that the struggle for a new global order has entered a critical phase and they are not prepared to trade their natural advantages for kudos and subversive endorsement from the west. The heedless Russians did just that and are struggling with the nuclear fallout even as their new Czar is battling to impress it on the west that Russia is not a western country. The Chinese are chuckling with poker-faced delight.

    Elsewhere in North Korea, the roly-poly fellow with the bouffant hair-do may not be as mad as they think. Believe it or not, he has already worsted the Americans in a nuclear face-off thus insinuating a timely equilibrium into a unipolar global order. He has already achieved the parity and deterrence of Mutually Assured Destruction. The world is already learning new lessons. The main one being that in the brave new world of nuclear offensive, it is not the size of a country that matters but its capacity to inflict maximum nuclear damage.

    The Americans, through their overwhelming technological advantages, may yet figure out how to deal with the jowly terror of the Korean Peninsula and his threat to their uni-polar supremacy. Kim Jong 11 is like a fly perched on the most delicate part of the anatomy. But for now, it is obvious that the hardy North Koreans are not about to allow themselves to be dragooned to Washington.

    What are the implications of these global concussions and unfolding world disorder so soon after the west thought they got it right with the end of the Cold War?  The errant eccentricities of certain nations and historical individuals notwithstanding, they speak to the fact that there is a fundamental rationality embedded in human history which makes periodic restructuring inevitable for the global order and nation-states alike if they are to face new realities. Just as no nation can rule the world in perpetuity, no national ruling bloc can also hold sway forever.

    At the turn of the nineties and with the Cold War sprinting to an impossible conclusion aided principally by the implosion of the Soviet Empire, Francis Fukuyama, an American scholar of Japanese extraction, wrote a famous book triumphantly proclaiming the unchallengeable dominion of liberal democracy and the irreversible ascendancy of America as the global law-giver. But with subsequent developments, it is now obvious that Fukuyama might have spoken too soon. What he saw was not the end of history but history at a particular ending.

    Fukuyama could not have foreseen the advent of Donald Trump, the human fireball setting ablaze the most brilliant political institutions the modern world has seen, or the rise of primitive tribalism in America for that matter. Donald Trump is a nightmare for America and the rest of the world. It is possible that after four years, America will figure out what to do with this nasty glitch on their system. But the damage to American power and global prestige will be there for a long time.

    If internal fissures can be mended, external afflictions are not so amenable. With the Iranians still chafing in ethno-theocratic distemper, with the Koreans threatening a nuclear holocaust, with China confronting the world with a new prototype of the Yellow Peril, with the rise of anti-Western Slavic nationalism in Russia, with Europe gripped by illiberal fear and xenophobia and with Syria reduced by carnage to a vast field of vultures, the combined population of societies under the hammer of anti-democratic hybrids far outweighs the dominion of liberal democracy.

    What are the implications of these global ruptures for Africa? Unfortunately, the cradle of human civilization remains rooted in civilizational infancy. As it has been famously noted, although humankind first developed in Africa, it has not continued to do so there. This is a drama of giants and a poor man’s mouth is a cutlass fit only for bush-clearing.

    African nations do not expect to be taken seriously as long as they remain a net exporter of misery and human afflictions to other nations; as long as the flowers of their youth are absconding and voting with their feet ; as long as its children are openly sold into slavery in the stateless anomie of Libya and as long as they are wantonly butchered by homicidal militias. A demented hen that sucks her best eggs cannot expect global approbation.

    Unfortunately, African nations that could make the difference are weighed down by a combination of internal and external factors arising from their historical circumstances. The progressive nations of Ghana, Senegal, Tanzania and Botswana lack the world-scale economy and strategic population that could propel them into continental and global reckoning.

    Ever since its liberation from the claws of a monstrous racist regimen, South Africa has projected a curious combination of international coyness and lack of self-assertion. The psychological impairment of the past still haunts and hurts. The ascendancy of Cyril Ramaphosa, a former iconic revolutionary turned sedate billionaire businessman, is unlikely to threaten the extant status quo. In retrospect, the wily ANC old guard who passed him over for promotion and sure presidential ascendancy knew just why they had to do that. They were not about to commit class suicide.

    Ironically, Nigeria, despite its current difficulties, remains in the eyes of dispassionate observers the best hope for continental renaissance. Nigeria has the best national advantages in terms of sheer biodiversity, natural riches, human resources and quality population to drive a continental revival. But Nigeria is so hobbled by internal problems that it is a miracle it has continued to survive.

    Stone Age leadership, ethnic fundamentalism, regional divisions, religious polarities, ancestral feuding leading to bloodshed on an industrial scale and state larceny have prevented till date the rise of an alternative elite formation that will drag the country by the scruff of the neck to the portals of modernity and modernization.

    A new internally driven Berlin Conference is in order for Africa. African nations must set in motion the mechanism for the convoking of a pan-African congregation to deliberate on the fate of the continent. Without this, the unfolding global disordering of the old order is likely to consume most of its nations.

     

  • Kogi raises the alarm over plans by Melaye -sponsored group to cause public disorder

    The Kogi State government has called on the security operatives to hold Senator Dino Melaye who represents Kogi West at the National Assembly, responsible for any breakdown of law and order in the state.

    The government raised the alarm over alleged plans by pro- Melaye elements to destabilize the state. The government said it was crying out “in view of the fact that the arranged pro-Melaye protest sponsored by the senator and scheduled for today (Saturday) in the state will be hijacked, and result to political hostilities and security chaos”.

    Special Adviser to the Governor on Security, Commander Jerry Omodara (retd.) who said this in Lokoja urged the senator to call his supporters to order, over their planned protest over last week’s reported assassination attempt on the senator.

    He stated that: “It has become imperative to address the nagging political hostilities from certain quarters which is fast snowballing into a serious challenge in the our state. You are all aware of the allegation raised by Senator Dino Melaye representing Kogi West Senatorial district that there was an attempt on his life and how the whole incident was almost politicised.

    “The state government welcomes the process of investigation by the Nigeria Police, which is ongoing, to unravel the mystery behind the allegation and ensure the security of all the citizens of the state.

    “However, intelligence report at my disposal indicates plans by some supporters of Senator Dino Melaye to stage a protest at Aiyetoro-Gbedde, in support of the senator on Saturday.

    I am equally aware that some hoodlums and thugs are being recruited within and outside the state to join in the protest. “As much as we do not want the rights of the protesters inhibited, the implications of such a protest in the middle of investigations into the senator’s allegations may be grave, as some hoodlums may hijack the process to foment trouble and disturb public peace”.

    The security adviser said he was equally not unaware that some anti-Melaye group were also drumming up a counter protest of theirs on same day, stressing that these will likely lead to chaos, He said that he had already briefed the commissioner of police and other security agencies on the need to stop any form of protest for or against in Aiyetoro- Gbedde, where Senator Malaya hails from.

    “To this end, we put security agencies and Nigerians on the alert that if there is a protest on Saturday (today) and the peace of the public is disturbed, Senator Dino Melaye should be held responsible and accountable”, he said. Omodara who questioned failure by the senator’s security details to respond during the alleged attack on their principal, took a swipe on the latter for contemplating sponsorship of a protest, when the matter is still being investigated by the police.

    He said, “He reported the case to law enforcement agencies who are currently investigating the incident. Does the senator no longer have faith in the security agencies by urging or supporting some youth to take to the streets in gestapo manner and create an image of insecurity? This is not what the state need now.

    “The people of the state are yearning for development, which the current government of Alhaji Yahaya Bello is providing, and has severally solicited from all stakeholders to join hands and give our people the dividend of democracy.

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    Benign (nonmalignant) enlargement of the prostate gland is known medically as benign prostatic hyperplasia, or BPH for short. Because an enlarged prostate can pinch off the flow of urine, BPH is characterized by symptoms of bladder obstruction, such as
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  • Law and disorder

    Law and disorder

    Something new always comes out of Nigeria. For a country that has turned ethical brinksmanship and flirtation with suicide into higher art, the current mass arrest and detention of judges from the uppermost echelons of the judiciary must be all in a day’s work. But the international world is aghast.  There is no comparative experience in the history of the civilized world.

    How can things turn to this sorry and sad pass in a country that has produced some of the most prodigiously endowed lawyers of the past century, a country that often farms out its judicial excellence to other countries? Where else in the world are judges, including Supreme Court justices, subjected to this kind of public humiliation and opprobrium?  Is this the country of Sapara-Williams and that long line of legal avatars stretching back to the mid-nineteenth century?

    Often, the international community sees farther than the local community. It sees what we don’t see and knows what we don’t know. It knows when a country is on the brink of anomie and when it has crossed the threshold of legal and judicial sanity and radical anarchy beckons. Like a wise elder, it knows how and where the tree would fall and the earth shaking nature of the impact when youths are engaged in tree-felling.

    But let us get legal niceties out of the way. The nocturnal visitation to the sacred domains of their Lordships may be regrettable but so far there has been no legal authority to challenge the powers of the DSS to arrest anybody threatening or undermining national security in all its ramifications. The interpretation of these ramifications, be it political sabotage, economic adversity, spiritual aggression, armed intimidation and even judicial terrorism in aid of the electoral subversion of the will of the nation as expressed by the electorate, is the sole responsibility of the security agencies.

    To be sure, it could not have been the intendment of the framers of the constitution that the law would one day go after its most sacred protectors in such a shabby manner. Nobody could have imagined a situation in which state functionaries would hurl top judges and lawyers into detention on the suspicion of engaging in manifest and manifold acts of illegality bordering on state subversion.

    If the international community is alarmed by the state assault on the judiciary, many Nigerians are also traumatized by the astonishing revelations and the scale of judicial sleaze. Many citizens are horrified by the outlandish nature of judicial thievery and the in your face nature of the acquisitions. No constitution could have foreseen this judicial obscenity from the leading lights of the bench. By aiding the law to abet social disorder, our lordships have thrown up an intriguing dimension of social justice as part of the National Question. This is institutional suicide by any other name.

    But since it is merely an accessory after the notorious fact, the judiciary will not go down alone. In every human society, the ruling law is the law of the ruling class. The law is expected to uphold and valorize social order as seen and as conceptualized by the ruling class for the benefit of the entire society. But when and where the law and its enforcing agents act in a way that undermines and subverts social order, it is an invitation to social anomie  which often compels a drastic retribution from forces acting—or thinking they are acting—on behalf of the old status quo.

    Like gluttonous rodents set upon a sugarcane plantation, the Nigerian judiciary is too far gone to save or redeem itself through internal reform. In the past thirty years or so, every attempt to reform the judiciary either through external intervention or internal purge has been spurned or treated with abrasive contempt or met with outright stonewalling.

    The confrontation with Buhari’s Law and Order administration is inevitable. For law to thrive there must be order. For order to be sustained there must be law. It may well turn out that by stepping in with force and drama, the Buhari government may yet save the Nigerian judiciary from itself or from more ruinous consequences.

    The law loses its badge of authority and force of legitimacy when nobody believes in it, when the public holds every judicial pronouncement in contempt and when its leading lights are subject of public ridicule and open disdain. It will take radical surgery within the context of revolutionary stirring in the society to redeem both legal system and public order.

    But in a situation where essentially conservative social forces are locked in contention, it may be naïve and simplistic to expect a radical emancipation of the nation from the clutches of a medieval social order as the immediate outcome. Despite his heroic probity and open abhorrence for injustice, there is no evidence that General Buhari fancies a structured and programmatic approach to the crisis of the Nigerian state and its judiciary.

    Indeed it may well be that what is playing out is a convergence of private animosity and public misgiving. General Buhari himself has been a serial victim of judicial delinquency and is known to have the memory of an elephant. If his private anger and indignation are allowed to shape public developments, if his personal sentiments and preferences are allowed to determine the fate of the judiciary, the outcome may not be as altruistic and patriotic as one might be led to expect.

    Having learnt to lower one’s sights about the ideological and political direction of the Buhari administration, having learnt not to raise the bar of hope higher than the limits and limitations of its principal actors, perhaps the most scientific way to look at the judicial palaver is to see it as the dialectical interplay of hostile and antagonistic forces which may result in the mutual ruination of contending forces. The judiciary cannot hope to win this, but neither will anybody trying to rework the nation away from the modernist template of a true nation-state.

    As usual with a country at the mercy of bitterly centrifugal forces, Nigerians have been split down the line over this one as well. Class, ethnic and regional solidarities have rent the elite asunder while the masses are braying for blood. Where you expect solidarity along the lines of superior national interest, you have what can only be described as competing tribalismsor the ethnicizationof equity with justice viewed from the prism of primordial interest.

    For example, those who watched quietly when top judges were receiving humongous gratification for perverting the course of justice and for delivering judgement in conflict with common sense are now charging the government with highhandedness and a descent into tyranny; those who kept quiet when Jonathan stoutly and stubbornly refused to reinstate Justice Ayo Salami based on the recommendation of the NJC have now found their voice, screaming from the rooftop that General Buhari has turned the nation into a Banana Republic.Some banana indeed.

    What can one say about a country in which the political elite find it difficult to unite behind a common cause or coalesce behind a pan-Nigerian conception of justice based on equity and fair play for all? What does the future portend for such a country with an irredeemably fractured ruling class?

    The Nigerian judiciary has had it coming for a long time. Something was bound to give eventually. Like an old nemesis, it has taken the return of General Buhari to earn it divine retribution. But by a tragic irony, the unravelling of the law may also trigger the second comeuppance of the man from Daura himself, if the counter-accusations coming from the judicial council are to be believed. History is a cruel task master indeed.

    At the end of Buhari’s first tenure, the Nigerian political class was so bitterly divided and so badly polarized by what appeared to be the lopsided nature of justice meted out to the political offenders of the Second Republic and what was widely considered to be the religious, regional and primordial prejudices of the Buhari administration that a section of the political elite were openly mooting the idea of secession. Two civil war heroes from the west gave interviews where they canvassed a con-federal arrangement for the federation.

    After Buhari’s ouster, his successor and former Chief of Army Staff, Ibrahim Babangida, was forced to shop for willing and compliant judges to reverse most of the draconian convictions of the military tribunals in order to placate some sections of the political class. It was from that moment on that majoritysectors of the judiciary became willing tools of the executive as long as the price is right.

    Thirty years after his dethronement, Buhari has come back to confront the Aegean stable with the same contradictions and his own personal failings obviously in place. The nation is back to unfinished business. If General Buhari continues to leave his political flanks exposed just as he did the first time around, if an important segment of the political class feels badly bruised and alienated by the looming confrontation, if he is unable to summon the Nigerian masses to his ensign, the outcome may not be different.

    General Buhari should count himself lucky. It is very rare and unusual for history to set the same exam for the same historical personage thirty years apart and in seemingly dissimilar circumstances. If he flunks it this time around, it is all but certain that neither the general nor the country will have a third chance doing the same thing and repeating the same error all over again. Nigeria is suffering from failure fatigue. That is the surest symptom of social disorder.

  • ‘Early treatment ’ll check hearing, speech disorder’

    ‘Early treatment ’ll check hearing, speech disorder’

    Experts have called for early detection and treatment of hearing and speech disorders in children.

    They spoke at this year’s Speech Pathologists and Audiologists Association of Nigeria (SPAAN) International Conference with the theme Communication disorders in children: Assessment and intentions.

    SPAAN President Prof Julius Ademokoya said prompt treatment would help nip disorders in the bud and  avert the consequences of untreated childhood communication disorders.

    ‘’Moreover, the consequences for failing to identify and treat various communication disorders in early years are that they become more intractable with age,’’ he said.

    The don said the onset of childhood communication disorders and prompt commencement of rehabilitation was very important to make a meaningful change.

    “Early years of an organism is very crucial as its biological make ups are more responsive to hearing and language interventions than in later years,” he said.

    He said poor hearing and cognitive skills can affect a child’s placement in an education programme, such that the child may be unable to develop appropriate social and psychological skills.

    Ademokoya decried Nigeria’s lack of universal newborn hearing screening and management of attendant speech consequences.

    “Many children in Africa continue to suffer from undetected and unmanaged hearing and speech disorders. When their disorders are diagnosed, particularly after their second birthdays, therapeutic interventions are likely to yield less result than if administered earlier. There can be irreversible consequences, which such children live with throughout their life,” he said.

    Ademokoya said there was the need for stakeholders in communication disorders, education and management disciplines to urge early identification and treatment of children’s hearing and speech disorders.

    Professor of Otorhinolaryngology, College of Medicine, University of Lagos, Dr. Abayomi Somefun, said many people with communication disorders do not know who to consult and cannot afford the cost of care.

    Besides, many government or private health institutions lack diagnostic and rehabilitative equipment, with inadequate or lack of manpower and training facilities.

    He said despite these challenges, experts render audiological and speech therapy services to Nigerians with communication disorders.

    Communication disorder, he said, is an impairment in the ability to receive, send, process and comprehend concepts or verbal, non-verbal and graphic symbol systems.

    He listed communication disorders as hearing, speech, language and central auditory processing.

    Children, he said, may demonstrate one or a combination of any of the aforementioned subtypes or even suffer from another sensory disorder, blindness.

    He called for cooperation among audiologists, speech-language-pathologist and otolaryngologist for the holistic care of the child with          communication disorder.

    This, he said, will go a long way in fostering continued language learning and enhanced communicative interactions in children.

    Causes of communication disorder, he said, might be genetic or acquired, adding that the disorders in early childhood are more often related to congenital or early onset hearing impairment.

  • ‘Better nutrition panacea for childhood brain disorder’

    ‘Better nutrition panacea for childhood brain disorder’

    Children, whose diets lack vital fatty acids, such as docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), are at risk of hyperactivity disorder, uni-polar depression and aggressive resentment, experts have said.

    The experts, which include President, Paediatrics Association of Nigeria, Prof Adebiyi Olowu and Senior Scientist, Global Nutrition Development, FrieslandCampina Innovation Centre, the Netherlands, Dr Anne Schaafsma, said the problem could be tackled with appropriate fatty acids.

    They spoke at the FrieslandCampina WAMCO Nigeria Plc 10th Annual Nutrition Seminar in Lagos tagged: “Physical growth and brain development of the Nigerian child: The challenge of our time”.

    The solution, the experts said, is appropriate nutrition, adding that when infants are fed with appropriate essential food, they become smarter, faster and happier.

    Conversely, improved health and nutrition will lead to enhanced economic development.

    The speakers presented papers on the importance of nutrition in optimum brain development in a child.

    Brain development and mental health of a child, according to them, are vital and should not be neglected.

    Moreover, the first five years of development of a child is crucial and it represents the period the child needs essential nutrients that support overall brain development, especially docosahexaenoic acid (DHA). DHA is an omega-3 fatty acid that is a primary structural component of the human brain, cerebral cortex, skin, sperm, testicles and retina.

    Wife of Lagos State Governor, Mrs. Bolanle Ambode, identified lack of awareness by mothers on what adequate nutrition should be as one major problem to be tackled because the significance of nutrition in the first five years of a child’s life cannot be over-emphasised.

    Mrs Ambode called on healthcare practitioners to “take opportunity of the Nutrition Seminar organised by FrieslandCampina WAMCO Nigeria to dialogue on new strategies, and new perspectives alongside sharing of current knowledge on ways to improve the nutritional well-begin of the Nigerian child.”

    Managing Director, FrieslandCampina WAMCO Nigeria PLC, Rahul Colaco, reiterated his company’s commitment to nourishing Nigeria with quality dairy nutrition; part of which includes providing adequate up to date researched information on child nutrition.

    According to Colaco, “FrieslandCampina has invested huge funds into research and development of quality and affordable products to cater for the needs of the consumer. So, we are confident of our support to healthcare practitioners in ensuring proper child nutrition.”

    The seminar, which had held in Ibadan, Abuja, Port Harcourt and, reinforced the importance of public-private partnership (PPP) in responding to key national issues, particularly in the nutritional development of the child.

    FrieslandCampina WAMCO Nigeria said it will continue to partner key stakeholders to help reduce incidences of malnutrition among women and children.