Tag: final

  • Full and final

    Full and final

    • Speedier dispensation of justice expected from Supreme Court now with full complement of justices

    For the first time in history, the Supreme Court of Nigeria has the full complement of 21 justices, as provided by section 230(2) of the 1999 constitution (as amended). It provides: “The Supreme Court of Nigeria shall consist of such number of justices not exceeding 21 as may be prescribed by an Act of the National Assembly.” To attain that feat, 11 new justices were sworn in last week, by the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Olukayode Ariwoola (CJN), after their confirmation by the senate and approval by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, as provided for, in the constitution.

    We commend the CJN, the senate and the president for this laudable milestone. The new justices are Haruna Tsammani, Stephen Jonah Adah, Jummai Sankey, Chidiebere Nwaoma Uwa, Chioma Egondu Nwosu-Iheme, Moore Aseimo A. Adumein, and Obande Festus Ogbuinya. Others are Justices Habeeb Adewale O. Abiru, Jamilu Yammama Tukur, Abubakar Sadiq Umar and Mohammed Baba Idris, all formerly of the Court of Appeal. We congratulate the learned justices on their elevation and hope that they would live up to the expectations of occupying the highest judicial offices in the country.

    We urge the new justices to heed the admonition of CJN Ariwoola, who said: “Your moral uprightness, integrity and respect for the constitution and other extant laws in operation, must be unwavering and unassailable.” He went on: “any judgment given at this level can only be upturned in heaven.” He added: “Once your judgment is in consonance with what God expects from you, and is also in accordance with the constitution, you should consider yourself the happiest and freest person on earth.”

    Before the elevation of the justices to the Supreme Court, the apex court had only 10 members, which was the lowest in history. And, despite appeals from well-meaning Nigerians, the appointment of new justices to the court was fraught with unnecessary delays and politicking. From the list of the appointees, the advice that academicians and legal practitioners be appointed to the Supreme Court was rebuffed. We urge for necessary changes in the qualification for appointment, to allow for cross- fertilisation of ideas such mixture of backgrounds would bring to the apex court.

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    With the full complement of 21 members, we hope the undue delays experienced in the determination of cases at the apex court would come to an end. Generally, the Nigerian judicial process drags unnecessarily, with cases lasting 20 to 30 years from the high court to the Supreme Court. In many instances, the litigants die while the matter is lingering in court. Also, businesses suffer, and in many instances don’t recover from the delays in determining commercial disputes that have stayed too long in court.

    The health of the learned justices is also affected by the untoward workloads they are exposed to, when the number of justices diminish. One of the reasons for the unprecedented depreciation in the number of justices of the apex court was the death of its members. The most recent death was that of Justice Chima Centus Nweze, in July, last year. There is also the likelihood that the quality of judgments may be affected as the justices try to cover more grounds, especially during an election year, when other cases suffer neglect.

    With the attainment of the full complement of the justices of the Supreme Court, we hope the funding will also increase. We recall the diatribe amongst the members of the apex court over allegations of misuse of funds due to the justices by the former CJN Tanko Mohammed, which he denied. The crux of the dispute was the neglect of the welfare of the justices. Such ugly experience must be avoided, in the interest of the integrity of the court and the Nigerian judicial system.

  • A wayward year on the final approach

    A wayward year on the final approach

    As this year eases itself out of contention in a matter of hours, many Nigerians will breathe a sigh of relief. It was a year that delivered much more than it promised. A year full of awkward surprises and telling political ambushes, it even managed to collect some significant political scalps on the homeward stretch.

     It was the year of magical paradoxes. The person who won the presidential election was not the person who won the most votes. But he was widely seen as the person with the least political baggage, the one with the best capacity transcend the yawning chasm and ever widening geyre thrown up by the unresolved aspects of the National Question. 

    It was the year when the brittle pact among the elite which held the country precariously together for twenty five years since military departure finally collapsed. For the first time since 1966, a significant fraction of the political elite opted for political disruption as a way of resolving the political logjam.

      A former head of state took to the tube urging for an immediate cancellation of the election on the ground of widespread irregularities. But the midnight black market intervention felt more like a signal for the termination of democracy rather than its protection. Political discontent simmers in some quarters.

      In many other African countries where this collapse of elite conciliation has occurred, it has led to civil war or unusually violent political commotion. Sudan has not had a functioning state in the last eighteen months. But Nigeria’s legendary luck has kept it staggering about like a badly wounded elephant and with its capacity to function as a normal state seriously impaired.

      In more than one  respect, this outgoing year will be remembered as the most significant and consequential since the military returned to the barracks. This is the year Nigeria’s traditional power merchants finally lost the plot. Emerging political contradictions surprised them and rendered them combat-ineffective. Political proxies and satraps they have always relied upon to fight their battle for them developed ideas of their own. The power baron is dead, long live the power baron.

     Unfortunately but not unexpectedly, this was also the year the Nigerian economy finally tanked after decades of serial abuse and horrendous mismanagement which qualifies for a new word in the history of state aggression against its own people and corporate larceny: econocide: the deliberate killing of a nation and its people through systematic plunder of its resources by a wayward political elite.

      Forget about Mobutu, Eyadema, Bongo, Mugabe, Mansa Musa, Bokassa and all of them put together. Nigeria is the most openly stolen and looted country in the history of humanity. If the reports of humongous stealing from the federal coffers and outlandish pilfering are anything to go by, it has been a bazaar of barracudas.

      No human society has ever survived this level of stealing without some significant consequences. Even the feudal mode of production in its classical formation was better organized and far more humane. Yet we claim to be a nation-state which is supposed to be a historical advance on the feudal vision of human society. But the fan has now hit the ceiling of putrescence.

       There is an organic connection between the collapse of elite amity and the virtual collapse of the Nigerian economy. Those who are organically incapable of self-development cannot be expected to organize and develop a nation’s economy. They are at the dead end of political economy. Much is consumed as if there is no tomorrow and little is produced.

      A feudal national elite that has developed a sweet tooth and the habit of cosmopolitan consumption without corresponding hard work cannot grow any economy. They are like a pack of gluttonous rodents who happened upon a sugarcane plantation. They will feed themselves into a state of drunken stupor until reprieve comes from the cutlass of the bemused hunter.

     This last Friday, one had wandered into an upmarket Bureau de Change in Canary Wharf in London just to have an inkling of how the transactions in international currencies were proceeding. Of course, Nigeria and its naira had long been expelled from this global currency community because the naira had lost its viability as a convertible currency.

    To our shame, all the African currencies on display, particularly the Uganda shilling and its Kenyan counterpart, were holding out very well with the Kenyan currency trading at 217 to the pound sterling. At that point in time, the black market rate of the naira was 1650 to the pound sterling and still counting.  The question is what is Kenya producing and exporting that we are not? Are we not dealing with the same prototype of fractious political elite?

       The key to unlocking the question lies in firm, committed and disciplined leadership. If the massive anger and discontent were not to tip over, if Nigeria were to avoid the terrible fate of the sugarcane plantation rodents, it will require a stern lawgiver; a brutally self-disciplined leader who will show by example that it is no longer business as usual and that he is not hostage to any corrupt elite formation with a feudal sense of entitlement. This is what has brought Nigeria to the gate of economic and political ruination.

     It has been said that President Tinubu’s civilized approach and his behind the door arm twisting, cajoling and entreaties may be bearing huge fruits beyond the glare of public klieg lights. There are unsubstantiated reports that stolen money and huge repatriations from criminal looting of the exchequer may be finding their way back to the federal coffer.

      This is just as it should be. But it is not nearly enough. Private deal for public looting is a vision of human society which lacks the basic components of social justice and compassion for the economically abused and dehumanized.

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    Even if the lesser crooks are allowed to go with a slap on the wrist, such benign dismissals must never be contemplated for the major scoundrels who have brought this country to the nadir of its fortunes. Examples will have to be made of the major crooks whose thieving shenanigans have contributed greatly to the economic adversity of the nation. 

     At this juncture in our nation’s history, it is important to lay down the cult of integrity and propriety in public office to serve as an example to coming generations. In the whirlpool of irrational stealing, nothing much can be achieved until we lay the foundation of bureaucratic rigour and modern rationality in this country. As the English put it: men are hanged not because horses are stolen but so that horses may not be stolen.

       As a student of the dialectics of history and a believer in the immanent rationality that drives the conduct of human affairs despite the wayward twists and turns of actual events, one cannot but ease off this year on a note of optimism.

      It is time for honourable dreaming. Just as historical developments and the reality of a multi-ethnic nation rumbling with volcanic possibilities made continued military rule an unprofitable venture for its most ardent champions, and just as political contradictions have weakened the vice grip of the old ruling class on the nation, the prevalent political gangsterism will also become a thing of the past as its ethical and political toll becomes very prohibitive. Welcome 2024.

  • 17 days to the final call

    17 days to the final call

    Early next month, the nation will, legally speaking, finally know where it stands on the February 25 presidential poll. By the time the Supreme Court decides the pending appeals before it on the election, the issue will be buried for all time. But will the two major appellants allow the nation breath?

        There is nothing the apex court says that will sit well with the duo of Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Peter Obi of the Labour Party (LP), except it favours them. Any ruling contrary to the notion that they won the election will, to them, be nothing but miscarriage of justice.

         Interestingly, the duo have never sat down to think deeply over the matter. How can there be two winners in an election? And an election already won fair and square by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), for that matter. They have done and are still doing everything possible to pull the President down.

      Atiku and Obi are bitter and their bitterness has turned them to sore losers. Atiku in particular cannot stand the Tinubu Presidency. To him, anybody but Tinubu can occupy the high executive office. Why this much hatred for a colleague, friend, associate and confidant with whom he fought many political battles in the past? Should politics become war because of electoral loss?

      The kind of bitterness being exhibited by Atiku and Obi has never been seen in the history of elections in the country. For all they care, the country can go up in flames. They do not care if lives and properties are lost. All they care about is their own selfish interest and that is to be declared winner of the election. I ask again, how can two persons win an election?

       Elections have always been won by one person and in case two contestants emerge with equal votes, the outcome is called a tie, meaning there is no winner or loser. This was not the case in the February 25 poll. A clear winner emerged and he was so declared by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). The losers, in line with electoral requirements, went to the Presidential Election Petitions Court (PEPC) to challenge the President’s victory.

       It was within their right to do so and it is still within their right to appeal to the Supreme Court, but it is not within their right to adopt extra-judicial means to achieve their aim. These sore losers and their supporters have left the ball to go for the legs of not only Tinubu, their nemesis, but also of the Justices who are only performing their duties. The PEPC Justices went through hell in their hands. Their Lordships of the Supreme Court may experience the same thing.

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      But these are people who have developed thick skin in the course of their jobs while handling cases of this nature. So, they know what to do. Come rain, come shine, whether they are called names or not, they have sworn to do justice to all manner of man without fear or favour, affection or illwill. No amount of blackmail will make them to do otherwise. So, it is all in the line of duty for them. They will not be moved by fake video and audio clips meant to destroy their image and integrity.

      May their final decision which is likely to come up in the next 17 days help to finally end the unnecessary acrimony over the presidential poll. Atiku and Obi should bear in mind that Nigeria is greater than any of us. Nigerians  are equal stakeholders in the Nigerian Project, irrespective of Atiku’s and Obi’s status as presidential candidates.

  • Dalung, Pinnick, Ogba grace Skoolimpics final

    It was an exciting final at the weekend when the curtain was finally drawn at the first edition of Heritage Bank – Lagos State Skoolimpics at the Teslim Balogun Stadium, Surulere.

    The Minister for Youths and Sports, Solomon Dalung, led some other top dignitaries to the final among which was the president of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF), Amaju Pinnick, even though the  event was not a football competition.

    The Athletic Federation of Nigeria, Solomon Ogba, was not left out likewise former Commissioner for Sports in Ogun State, Bukola Olopade.

    The fun was unlimited as the children were treated to the best of entertainment within and outside the main bowl.

    Apart from the normal finals in the boys and girls 100m and 400m, there were races involving staff of some of the branches of the bank while the entertainers presents were not left out of the race.

    Top comedians like Ali Baba, Omo Baba, and others raced against each other with Super Sports presenter, Mosez Praiz, deciding to run with his back adding to the fun already exhibited by others.

    Speaking during the final, the minister applauded the ingenuity of Heritage Bank for organising the event as he appealed to other corporate bodies to emulate the bank.

    “This is what we are talking about, this is the way to go in order to develop sports in the country,” he said.

    “Heritage Bank and their other partners have started it, let others join them to make sports great again in Nigeria.”

  • FEDERATION CUP FINAL: Nasarawa United arrive Ibadan with 26-man squad

    • To leave for Lagos on Thursday

    Players and technical crew of Nasarawa United arrived in Ibadan City on Sunday for three days camping ahead of Sunday’s Federation Cup final against FC Ifeanyi Ubah.

    The team left Lafia on Sunday morning with 23 players and a three-man technical crew.

    The club’s media officer, Musa Elayo disclosed to SportingLife that the team would be in Ibadan from Sunday till Thursday where they will be departing to Lagos for final preparation for the all-important final.

    Elayo added that the State Government has mobilized support for the team as he confirmed that the Deputy Governor Silas Agara delivered the state government’s message to the team before they departed Lafia.

    “The preparation is on top gear and we are set for the final showdown against FC Ifeanyi Ubah. We will have all the registered 35 players for the final on Sunday. Although, 23 players are in Ibadan for preparation but the remaining players will join them on Sunday. The team will start their training on Monday morning. The Government has mobilised fans from all local governments in the State to cheer the team on Sunday. The State Government has also provided everything needed for the team and has assured them of tangible reward if they win the trophy but no official promise for now,” said Elayo to SportingLife.

  • Bashir gutted not on NPFL All-Stars final squad

    Bashir gutted not on NPFL All-Stars final squad

    The hottest striker in the Nigeria league on current form, Abdulrahman Bashir has admitted he was disappointed he did not make the final cut for the NPFL All-Stars squad to Spain next month.

    On Saturday, Abdulrahman fired his seventh goal in as many games for Nasarawa United against El Kanemi Warriors and now has 13 goals, just one short of the league’s leading scorer, Godwin Obaje.

    “I give thanks to God that I was called up by the NPFL All-Stars in the first place, but I was disappointed I did not eventually make the final squad to travel to Spain,” the former Enyimba and ABS FC striker told AfricanFootball.com.

    “My attention is now shifted to finishing as top scorer in the league and also helping my club to win the Federation Cup.”

  • Six for Goldberg Fuji t’o Bam final

    The battle for this year’s Wura 1 crown of Goldberg Fuji t’o Bam took a more dramatic and entertaining turn in the city of Ado Ekiti, Ekiti State, last Friday — six of the 20 semi-finalists emerged for the final scheduled for Ibadan today.

    The finalists are Shina Akanni; Saheed Ishola; Temitope Ajanni; Kuteyi Sikiru; Alausa Olalekan and Muftau Alabi. They displayed creativity, stage craft, vocalisation, appearance and originality, which are the criteria for assessing all contestants from the audition stages of the competition.

    The night was a gathering of the best of Fuji celebrities and respected Yoruba movie actors such as Odunlade Adekola, who acted as compare for the show; SK Sensation leading the judges in company of Adebayo Faleke (aka Kakaki Olodumare) and Baby Barrister, who made powerful appearances which gave the guests and fans the best that Fuji music had to offer.

    The event started with performances from a troupe of Traditional Ekiti-State dancers who entertained the audience and then Antenna, the winner of the first edition in the Fuji t’o Bam competition ‘watered the ground’ with a scintillating performance ahead of the contestants who later came on stage in succession.

    Meanwhile, the Goldberg team was given warm reception to the city of Ado-Ekiti by Oba (Dr.) Rufus Adeyemo Adejugbe Aladesanmi III, the Ewi of Ado-Ekiti, who threw its gates open to welcome them.

    The Public Affairs Manager, West and Mid-West, Nigerian Breweries Plc, Tayo Adelaja, expressed his heartfelt gratitude and appreciation for the monarch’s display of affection and hospitality accorded them in the palace.

    Senior Brand Manager, Mainstream brands, Nigerian Breweries Plc, Funso Ayeni, said Goldberg is a brand that respects the culture and tradition of Yorubas.

  • 9/11: FBI’s Final Report

    Osama is not a product of Pakistan or Afghanistan. He is a creation of America. Thanks to America, Osama is in every home (today). As a military man, I know you can never fight and win against someone who can shoot at you once and then run off and hide while you have to remain eternally on guard. You have to attack the source of your enemy’s strength. In America’s case, that’s not Osama or Saddam or anyone else. The enemy is ignorance. And the only way to defeat it is to build relationships with these people, to draw them into the modern world with education and business. Otherwise the fight will go on forever.”  ¯ Greg Mortenson (Three Cups of Tea: One Man’s Mission to Promote Peace … One School at a Time)

     

    Preamble

    In about two months time, most Nigerian Journalists will begin, as usual, to mimic and chorus the voices of their Western ‘superior’ counterparts on the tragic occurrence of 9/11, 2001. Precisely, on the 11th day of the coming September, that event will be 15 years old. Ever since, so many statements and counter statements, disclosures and revelations as well as analyses and interpretations, have been advanced by people who are directly or indirectly connected to the incident. The thoughts and views of different people from different parts of the world on that incident have remained as diverse as the interests they represent.

    Some (Nigerian non-Muslim) readers of ‘The Message’ column have queried the leaning of this columnist so much towards religion, particularly Islam. They have wondered why yours sincerely can hardly put pen to paper in this column without tilting towards Islam in one way or the other. That is like querying the snail on why it incessantly goes about with its inseparable shell.

    Perhaps, it may be necessary to make a clarification here that there is no columnist in the world without a particular interest that he or she represents. Let the doubting readers of this column endeavour to verify this assertion and they will discover that every newspaper columnist or radio broadcaster represents an interest about which he or she is reflectively passionate. What matters in such cases is the necessary application of professionalism. After all, while this Islamic column called ‘The Message’ occupies only one page weekly in ‘The Nation’ newspaper to educate Nigerians about Islam, many other newspapers allocate about five pages or at least three pages to the propagation of Christianity and the Muslims are not complaining. That clearly shows where religious tolerance or intolerance lies.

     

    Voice of the Voiceless

    As a veteran Journalist and a devout Muslim, yours sincerely chose to represent (in Nigerian media) the voice of the voiceless majority who happens to be the Nigerian Muslims. And that is without any prejudice to the media activities of a retinue of non-Muslim professional colleagues who also represent the voices of the various religious denominations to which they belong in their faith. For any or some of such colleagues to want to intimidate or blackmail this columnist therefore is the height of professional absurdity. A pot must not tag a kettle black.

     

    Nigerian Media’s Perception of Islam

    In Nigeria, Islam is seen in the media from the perception of the non-Muslim Journalists who dominate the pen-pushing profession. Thus such Journalists see everything about Islam from their own biased perception as they often accuse the Muslims of practicing their religion against the expectations of the non-Muslims.

    What most Nigerian Journalists refuse to understand is that Islam is neither a dogma like other religions nor a mundane ideology that can be manipulated at will. It is rather a divinely guided total way of life for all its committed adherents. Any misconduct of a Muslim therefore, does not equate Islam in any way. There are laws and there are law breakers everywhere in the world. To attribute the misconduct of certain Muslims to the fundamental norms of Islam is to deliberately exhibit mischief with impunity at its peak.

    As an informed Muslim, I do not query the use of anybody’s column to defend or protect his or her interest, whatever that interest may be. And in the same token, I do not expect any civilized reader or fellow journalist to query my choice of interest. Doing so may not only connote irritating ignorance, it may also amount to implacable provocation or unwarranted aggression which in itself is a euphemism for fanatical intolerance.

    You may not like my thoughts or views just as I may not like yours. But in as much as I do not accost you for holding your convinced views, you do not have any right to accost me for holding mine. That is the democratic norm to which every civilized modern person should adhere in a multi ethnic and multi religious society like Nigeria. It is the also the principle of fair play with which journalism should be practiced as a profession.

     

    FBI’s Disclosure on 9/11

    On Friday, June 10, 2016, the United States’ Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) released what can be termed as its concluding report on the 2001 disaster popularly known as 9/11. This can be found in Vol.52 Issue 22 of an American security journal called ‘The Onion’. Excerpts from the introduction to that report reads thus:

    “…..After 15 years of broadly targeting the 3.3-million-member community and extensively monitoring its activities, the American Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) declared an end Friday to its surveillance of Muslim Americans, saying its exhaustive study of their beautiful culture was finally complete”.

    Officials confirmed that the program was started in the fall of 2001 when federal agents, captivated by Islam’s complex history and rich spiritual traditions, redirected the full force of the bureau’s intelligence-gathering apparatus toward developing a more thoughtful, nuanced appreciation of the Muslim-American way of life. The Director of FBI, James B. Comey had the following to say recently when the latest report of the Bureau was about to be released:

    “We’d always known Islam was one of the great world religions, but it wasn’t until we recruited a network of 15,000 informants and infiltrated mosques all over the country (US) that we came to understand just how magnificent and fascinating it truly is,” said FBI director James B. Comey, who noted that agents gained a valuable and eye-opening understanding of Islam—while also learning a lot about themselves and their own faith in the process—after entering the Muslim places of worship to collect as much information as they could on the intriguing personal beliefs of the religion’s followers. “After analyzing the transcripts of thousands of phone calls and intercepting the communications of prominent Muslim-American leaders and academics, we’ve really come to admire their vibrant culture.”

    “The considerable amount of intel we’ve gathered and carefully pored over for the past 15 years has shown us that their faith and customs are really quite inspiring,” Comey added. “If there’s one thing we’ve taken away from all our surveillance, it’s what a glorious and enriching part of our world Islam is.”

     

    Explanation

    “According to sources within the bureau, the harvesting of internet data, widespread racial profiling, and the nationwide mapping of Muslim communities have allowed agents to closely observe the followers of Islam on an extremely personal level, thereby allowing them to develop a deep respect for the amazing ethnic and cultural diversity of the faith’s 1.6 billion believers, as well as the striking distinctions between the religion’s various sects, which, they stressed, went far beyond just Sunni and Shiite.

    Remarking on all the information they had gathered, FBI officials emphasized that adherents of Islam speak dozens of beautiful languages—Arabic, but also Urdu, Pashto, Farsi, Bengali, Javanese, and many others—and noted that agents came to treasure this linguistic richness after installing recording devices throughout Muslim-American communities and then surreptitiously listening in on Qur’anic study groups, prayer sessions, and social events.

    “Thanks to advances in video surveillance, we’ve been able to look inside Muslims’ homes and view some breathtaking calligraphy prints and hand-woven tapestries,” said former agent Casey Hanna, who fondly recalled assignments that allowed him to overhear moving recitations of the Hadith, which he was fascinated to learn come from an oral tradition and are considered to be the direct word of the Prophet Muhammad. “I went undercover in hundreds of Muslim-owned businesses and residences across the nation and was lucky enough to sample many variations on the aromatic stews and delectable desserts that serve as staples of halal cuisine—Arabian, North African, Indonesian. They were all delicious, and unlike anything I’d ever tasted.”

    “I’ll never forget this one instance when I closely trailed a New York shop owner for three straight years—his coffee was just spectacular,” Hanna added. “Muslims were the first people to drink coffee, you know.”

     

     

     Advanced Curiosity

    “After realizing they could not fully nurture their curiosity by limiting their study to Muslims in the United States, the FBI reportedly enlisted the help of the NSA to find out more about the incredible religion. Between 2002 and 2008, the bureau is known to have monitored 7,485 email addresses around the globe in order to learn answers to their many questions about Muslims’ compelling lives and rituals, from why they don’t eat pork, to what Muslim holidays are like, to why some Muslim women wear garments that cover their heads while others don’t”.

     

    Camey’s Revelation

    The Director, J. B. Comey, told reporters that the FBI also received information from the CIA, whose enhanced interrogation techniques and clandestine intelligence-gathering methods yielded many interesting revelations from Muslim sources around the world, such as the fact that Arabs make up only 15 percent of the global Muslim population, and that through most of history, women in Islamic societies actually had more property rights than women in the West.

    He said they thoroughly enjoyed studying “such a lovely people and such a lovely faith,” Comey explained that agents would often remove a Muslim citizen from their community and keep them detained for days, weeks, or even months on end to learn everything they could from them about Islam”.

    “There’s no way I could remember the names of all the Muslim citizens that our agents brought in to discuss the beauty of Islam with one-on-one, but rest assured that with their help, the FBI has gained a deep and illuminating understanding of Islamic culture,” said Comey, who noted that by combing through thousands upon thousands of citizens’ banking records, agents discovered with astonishment how some observant Muslims set up special loan payment plans to avoid paying interest, as they consider it usury, which is forbidden under Sharia law”.

    “It’s crazy to think about, but until little more than a decade ago, I had no idea there were Five Pillars of Islam that guided all Muslims’ spiritual lives. I also didn’t know anything about the multitude of Muslim contributions to mathematics and science that have been absolutely vital to the world. But that’s not to say they don’t value art, though. Poets like Rumi and Hafez drew upon mystical Sufist interpretations of the Qur’an to write verse that is every bit as sublime as, say, Keats or Coleridge. And don’t even get me started on the architecture.”

     

    Comey’s Conclusion

    In concluding the report of his team’s research and findings, FBI’s Director, James B. Comey told the American Muslims as follows:

    “As this program sadly comes to an end, I just want to thank Muslim Americans from the bottom of my heart for teaching us all about your faith and your culture,” he continued. “We’ve learned so much about you over the years. More than you could possibly imagine.”

     

    Observation

    From the foregoing, it can be vividly deduced that contrary to general global belief, Muslim terrorism in the US is more hypothetical than real. In other words, it is more of media propaganda than physical disaster. Another vital report from an FBI data summarized the scenario as follows:

    “Terrorism Is a Real Threat … But the Threat to the U.S. from Muslim Terrorists Has Been Exaggerated”

    The above conclusion seems to have brought to an end the 20th century view of a British intellectual but deified poet, Rudyard Kipling who in one of his poems once stated as follows:

    “…OH, East is East, and West is West, and never the twain shall meet,“

    Till Earth and Sky stand presently at God’s great Judgment Seat;

    But there is neither East nor West, Border, nor Breed, nor Birth,  When two strong men stand face to face, tho’ they come from the ends of the earth!”  If that poem was sensible to the Europeans of the 20th century, it has surely become anachronistic to the Europeans of the 21st century. Today’s world is a global village in which no part can claim to be an island onto itself.

     

    Conclusion

    If it could take the well educated people of the United States a whole length of 15 years of rigorous research to understand Islam despite the involvement of experts in many areas of human endeavours, one can imagine the number of decades it will take half-educated Nigerians to even think of sitting down to study the divine religion called Islam. Nigerians are only good in copying from other countries either evil acts or satanic means of becoming rich as quickly as possible. The thought of emulating decency from other lands is alien to Nigerian so-called elite. But no matter how long it may take, reality will one day dawn on Nigerians about Islam as it is now beginning to dawn on Americans. Bitter as it may sound in the ears of Nigerian pessimistic bigots, America may soon become the voluntary haven of Islam with or without bigotry of the rest of the world, Nigeria inclusive.

  • Akwa United face Lobi in first-ever Federation Cup final

    Akwa United face Lobi in first-ever Federation Cup final

    Akwa United will face Lobi Stars in their first-ever Federation Cup final after they stopped Nasarawa United 1-0 on Wednesday in Abeokuta.

    Aniekpeno Udoh scored the only goal of the game in the 28th minute to book a place in the final of the Federation Cup for the first time in the club’s history.

    David Ukeme of Akwa United was sent off in the game, but all the same they were deserved winners of this tie.

    In the second semifinal, Lobi Stars defeated nine-man Rangers 1-0 in Katsina.

    The goal was scored by Eche Idakwo

    Rangers stars Razak Adegbite and Christian Madu were sent off during the encounter.

    Lobi Stars won the Federation Cup in 2003, when they beat Sharks 2-0.

    They also reached the cup final in 2005 and 2012, when they lost 6-5 to Enyimba after the game ended 1-1 and Heartland 2-1, respectively.

  • Lobi delighted with Federation Cup final ticket

    Lobi delighted with Federation Cup final ticket

    Lobi Stars have stated that they are delighted to make it to the final of the Federation Cup again this year after they defeated Enugu Rangers 1-0 at the Karkanda Stadium in Katsina yesterday to make it to their second final appearance in four years.

    The Pride of Benue survived the scare of the Flying Antelopes who completed the match with only nine players after they had two of their players sent off for unsporting conduct.

    Eche Idakwo scored the vital goal in the first half and the goal sealed the Makurdi Bomber’s place in the final of the competition.

    The Team Manager of the club, Barnabas Imenger told SportingLife that the club’s place in the final of the Federation Cup was for their effort to ensure that they mark the election of the new governor,  Samuel Ortom with a victory in the competition they narrowly lost to Heartland in 2012.

    He said Lobi would continue to work hard to ensure that they lift the trophy at the expense of Akwa United .