Tag: ignorance

  • Doctors blame ignorance for medical tourism

    Doctors blame ignorance for medical tourism

    Some Nigerians travel abroad for treatment out of ignorance, some doctors have said.

    According to them, people do so not because of lack of well-equipped medical centres or indigenous expertise.

    Led by Dr Austin Okogun, Chief Executive Officer of Lily Hospital in Warri, Delta State, they said many of the delicate cases that Nigerians go abroad for can be handled in the country.

    The medics explained what they are doing to convince Nigerians and other West Africans that many of the medical needs that have cost them so much in terms of travelling long distances to Asia, Middle East, Europe and the Americas are available at comparatively lower costs.

    The services, according to the professionals, are qualitative as they could be obtained from any of the ‘strong’ health nations. Lily Hospital, because of the huge investment into technology and engagement of internationally reputed medical partners, has been granted teaching hospitals’status, they added.

    The hospital has become a centre for house officers and family medicine residents training, accredited by the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria and the National Post Graduate Medical College of Nigeria.

    Its Consultant Urologist, Dr. Achour, an Egyptian said: “We are able to remove kidney stones, stones of the ureter and all kinds of urinary tract stones, and treat renal complications, to sanitise human kidneys, liver or gall bladder conditions using minimally invasive or non-invasive (cut-less) methods of treatment where patients can be discharged within, as prompt as 24 hours of the procedure, and they return to work within a shorter period than if traditional surgery is performed.

    He added: “We are getting encouraging feedbacks. A patient from Bayelsa State, who had gone for an operation in India was due for another one recently but he got it done right here (Lily Hospital, Warri), at just a fraction of what it would have cost him to return to India. He regretted going to India for the first treatment.’’

    The hospital’s Pediatrics unit once  treated a 26-week-old baby. He weighed 0.59kg and had spent 16 days in one of the incubators, supported by ventilators and CPAPs.

    The consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist, Dr. Louis Alekwe said: “Nursing a 0.59kg to survive is a classic record. It means people do not have to get scared and think of distances to travel to save extreme premature babies. There are solutions so near.”

    Alekwe added that the hospital  offers embryo freezing services, adding that a couple can come for IVF and that it has up to four fertilised embryos or eggs. You do not want to put all in the woman, so the experts put one or two in her to grow and be delivered as babies and keep the remaining two in the freezer, he added.

    “In two or three years if the couple  has need for more babies, the stored eggs are implanted into the woman and we nurse the pregnancy to delivery again. An embryo, for the period frozen, experiences arrested development.We have an ongoing case,” Okogun said.

    ‘’At the Orthopaedic unit,’’ Okogun said, ‘’patients get joints replacement, such as the hip joint, and spine surgery, including delicate cases having to do with the neck. The hips can be removed and artificial joints. The eye centre is equipped for laser surgery for people with glaucoma, and so is cataract and retinal treatment.’’

    On the hospital’s target, the CEO said: “We are trying to achieve a reversed medical tourism where, instead of people travelling out at huge cost to seek medical treatment, our operating environment should be the medical tourism destination in-country. Ultimately, we are reshaping the story of Warri. There is strong impression among outsiders that the place is volatile and nothing good can come out of it. In the long run, we are helping to build confidence in prospective investors in diverse sectors to come in and assist development of the state.”

     

  • EX-AIG urges FG to tackle injustice, ignorance

    A retired Assistant Inspector General of Police (AIG), Alhaji Bashir Albasu, has called on the Federal Government to address growing level of injustice, ignorance, poverty and corruption at the grassroots.

    Albasu made the appeal an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on the sideline of 2nd Edition of the 2015 Nigeria Security Exhibition and Conference (NISEC) in Abuja yesterday.

    Albasu said in addition to what the Federal Government was doing to fight insurgency, government should go to the grassroots to make sure that it prevent injustice and other factors that fuel terrorism.

    “These are what fuel terrorism, going to Sambisa Forest to completely wipe out the terrorists is a very good and excellent effort.

    “But what do you do with what breed terrorism because if you wipe out the Boko Haram terrorists today without addressing the root causes of it the situation might resurface.

    “I remember 30 years ago, when President Shehu Shagari was in power, we had Maitatsine uprising in Kano which led to the death of over 10,000 innocent citizens.

    “The military was used to subdue the Maitatsine uprising and peace was restored in Kano.

    “Similarly, in Maiduguri before the present security challenge there was another one but I have forgotten the name they were calling themselves, it was also knocked down by the military.

    “And now we are fighting the Boko Haram. This shows that what we are doing is to allow the tree to grow and then cut the top of the tree and the branches.

    “That means the root is still intact in the ground and the tree will still grow again,” Albasu said.

  • DNA Testing: Ignorance in bliss or peace of mind in knowing

    DNA Testing: Ignorance in bliss or peace of mind in knowing

    Before we begin this topic, you must assure me that you will not divorce your spouse and you will not fight, curse, punish, hurt, shame, poison, humiliate, ridicule, deny, diminish, accuse, report, or ostracizeyour spouse or flee from him or her.  Do not even pinch him/her or step on his/her toes on purpose or refuse to make eye contact because of any new knowledge you come to gain.  Do not stop paying school fees and housekeeping allowances.   Do not stop giving pocket money. Do not stop cooking and cleaning and serving.  Do not become allergic to your marital bed.  DNA testing can lead to someone rightly “putting away“his/her spouse because of infidelity. Do not do DNA testing if you are not brave enough and humble enough for reality.

    Common moral waywardness of our sexy world of today, fed by all kinds of otherwise good modern inventions of science, technology, and social media does indeed need a check-and-balance to help us keep the world in order and ourselves healthy in body, mind, and spirit and enjoying our best lives.  John Paul II may not be my hero but I will always remember him for saying: “as the family goes, so goes the nation”. Providentially, the same science, technology, and social media give us means to wade out of our troubled waters.  DNA testing is a blessing of our times.

    If you ask a Nigerian, “Is that your brother?” He may tell you, “Yes, same mother, same father”.  The emphasis comes naturally in an environment where polygamy is cultural or religious.  Your brother may be same-father-different-mother or same-mother-different-father or same-mother-same-father. Such homo-siblings and hetero-siblings are continually produced in our sexy world of today within and beyond the boundaries of respected marriages.

    Many spouses live with the fear of discovering.  Many spouses live with the anxiety to discover.  Generally: if you are still in love, you may not want to know, seemingly already forgiving anything that may be; if you have become hateful, you may need to now, wanting to use it against him or her.

    DNA testing is now accessible to all.  You can find out who fathered your child or who fathered you.  You can find out if two siblings really have same-mother-same-father, as Nigerians would say.  You can find out if you are related to Nelson Mandela or Idi Amin.

    You can find out if you are completely black or white or you just look like one or the other.  You may be 2% Zulu, 6% Arab, 7% Eskimo, 1% Chinese, 0.5% white, and 83.5% Fulani.

    You can find out if you are predisposed to getting some diseases or predictably going to get some diseases, and some of them are such evil diseases that knowing about the possibility of having them can incapacitate your mind or break your spirit.

    As with all the new powers we have gained through technology and science, we must practice restraint.  For example, do not go DNA testing to see if you are related to that man who just won the$600 million lottery.

    Do not rush into DNA testing.  It may do you more harm than good.  It may rock your boat devastatingly.  It may change your life forever.  The Americans say: “If it ain’t broke, why fix it?” It is good to walk by faith.  Be discerning about whether being ignorant gives you bliss or knowing gives you peace of mind.

    If you rush into DNA testing, you may fall prey to Big Business.  The British Daily Mail of 20th January, 2014 discusses the“soaring sales of ‘dangerous’ do-it-yourself DNA test kits”(http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2542956/Soaring-sales-dangerous-DNA-test-kits-Number-websites-selling-products-doubles-two-years.html):

    • “Number of websites selling products doubles in two years

    •38 British websites now offer home testing kits – which can cost up to £300

    •Paternity and genetic ancestry tests are the most popular

    •Tests which claim to reveal vulnerability to diseases are also up”.

    Next we will take a closer look at DNA testing and the kits and services being sold.

     

    Dr. ‘Bola John is a biomedical scientist based in Nigeria and in the USA.   For any comments or questions on this column, please email bolajohnwritings@yahoo.com or call 0816094463

  • The pursuit of ignorance and mediocrity

    Have you taken a closer look at our society lately? If you did, like I always do, have you noticed and pondered on the high level of ignorance and mediocrity that is the order of the day? This ignorance is more glaring and pervasive when it comes to the issue of education and choosing leaders to lead us. I have entered into discussions with supposed intellectuals and have been shocked at their level of reasoning when it comes to leadership selection in Nigeria. I’ve often left with the impression that if such individuals, with their level of education, reason the way they do, how would the man on the street reason?

    So how did we arrive at this place where some Master’s degree holders and even PhD holders are bereft of ideas or peddle ‘beer parlour’ discussions as theories? There is no need discussing our first degree graduates for what most of them are is plain to all.

    As I ponder this I’ve come to the conclusion that there is no doubt that much of Nigeria’s socio-economic challenges today stems from our lopsided system of education where standards are perverted alongside other values. One recurring decimal about us as a people is our misinterpretation and misrepresentation of things, concepts and situations which, in other places where sanity reigns, would have one rational meaning and significance.

    One of such areas is the quality of education. Over the years, a subtle debate has been a raging whether education should be free, subsidised or privatised. Some of us passed through a regime of free to subsidised education. But I must stress that what we learnt during this era is far removed from what is being taught in this era of unbridled privatisation of education. Some have argued that the ‘cheap,’ education in Nigeria is perhaps the bane of our development.

    I would rather see it the other way round. Beyond cost however, our education, especially in the public schools, is cheap in content. This cuts across board and applies to primary and secondary schools as well as the universities and polytechnics.

    The way Nigerian education is presently structured, it has become an easy means to ignorance and the celebration of mediocrity, rather than a means to individual and social freedom, which are the germs great societies are made of. In such societies, credible and functional public education system that builds the total man are encouraged and massively supported by the government. And in such societies, it has been at the forefront of jump starting their economies. Three examples would suffice here.

    South Korea, Japan and Singapore are countries with conditions similar to ours yet they were able to rise above their circumstances. After the twin atomic bomb exploded over Hiroshima and Nagasaki which promptly ended the Second World War, no one can doubt what education and social commitment can do in the transformation of communities and societies. The magic of post-war Japan has, indeed, been a function of a sound educational system and an inspiring commitment to the collective heritage and common aspirations of the people.

    South Korea which only six decades ago was classified alongside Nigeria as an underdeveloped society is now a global economic engine room with its products competing with the best in the world. The same goes for Singapore which rose from being a third world to a first world nation in almost the same time as South Korea.

    This goes to drive home the point that in no sane society can affordable and quality education be divorced from a holistic and sustainable concept of development. Not only that, education is also one of the major arbiters of socialisation. When it is reduced to mere ability to obtain a certificate by fair or foul means, – like is done in Nigeria – it becomes a tool for underdevelopment that glorifies ignorance and mediocrity.

    For qualitative education to be achieved and sustained, critical value must be placed on it so that those who receive it can see beyond carrying worthless certificates around which we see here as a passport to securing elusive jobs. Rather we need to refocus on the imperative to apply the gains of education to the needs of society. In other words, education, especially at the university level needs to be properly valued, if international standards can be attained.

    Painful as it may sound, I think we have arrived at a position where we have to review our public education system and see whether they conform with current realities, both internally and globally. I passed through the university system when tuition was free. But I often ask myself if this is feasible presently. The answer is a painful no as I come to the hard reality that the almost free nature of university education (especially in the federal universities) is part of the bane of education in Nigeria and the purveyor of ignorance and mediocrity.

    Looking at the obverse side however, one may say that state universities where higher fees are paid have not fared better. But I think that the fundamental index for determining the justifiability or otherwise of fees is the average income of those from whose pockets the payment is to be made. If Nigerian workers earned adequate income, the argument for fees increase would be much better justified.

    But all the same, it remains laughable that in today’s Nigeria children in day-care, kindergarten and primary schools pay several times higher than most university students in terms of school fees. I recollect an incident in the university when our dean of student affairs pointed this out to us during a demonstration for a slight increase in library fees; he had to hurriedly leave when the students threatened to stone him. This, coupled with lack of adequate funding, has left the university system in a very sorry state.

    The fact that education is ‘cheap’ remains the major problem in the sector. By the word ‘cheap,’ I am looking beyond cost now and directing attention to course contents. As the world develops right before our eyes and seeks new challenges, curricula in the Nigerian education system seem to be stale and shrinking. Lecture notes that were used decades ago are still being peddled by some lectures in some courses at our varsities. Much of what passes for the curricula of some major courses in Nigerian institutions of learning have not been reviewed for decades.

    Before now, only the best brains and outstanding scholars were employed in the schools, especially the universities. But today teaching, scholarship, and academics are all-comers affairs as the best brains go to other sectors where they may not be needed or may not have anything to offer.

    Much of the ignorance that encircles us certainly stems from the education industry. It is easy to point to government’s lackluster attitude as the major problem, but that cannot be the whole truth. The education industry is also an adversary unto itself. I watched a spectacle on television recently where secondary school teachers in a northern state could not read primary four English textbooks! If they can’t read how would their students fare then?

    At the higher level, there are instances of lecturers who are bereft of ideas and cannot write correct sentences; yet they are there teaching and supervising students. Given the role of education in human societies, Nigeria’s future remains very bleak unless something is done urgently. I say so because the educational system is a mirror of the society. This is especially true of the universities which should be centres of excellence, but which have become a pitiable extension of the decadent political system in Nigeria. This perhaps explains why some are never run with any defined budget and why some vice-chancellors operate like lords of the manor and cannot encourage true freedom which is germane to academic excellence.

    If the universities – indeed the entire educational system – must be the vanguard of excellence and development, they have to operate at a level higher than the not too pleasant realities that define contemporary Nigeria. They should serve as the arrowheads to tame the high level of ignorance and mediocrity that pervade our society. This is the crux of the matter: morality and education must go hand in hand in the moulding of the total man. The ultimate purpose of education is divinely central to the pursuit of a modern society, and that in this regard, most have fallen short of expectation in Nigeria.

  • America: A convergence of the politics of ignorance and hatred

    America: A convergence of the politics of ignorance and hatred

    Anyone who looks at present course of American politics as a model for modern governance engages in the rather quixotic exercise of searching for a tiny pearl among a herd of chortling swine and those who, for whatever reason, pretend to be swine. Perhaps because America has enjoyed such a protracted run of relative safety and prosperity, its current politicians suffer two degenerative illusions.

    First, they believe their nation invulnerable to challenge in the global order. They harangue about terrorism but do not really see it as other than a costly nuisance. It will beget expenditure of trillions of dollars to enlarge the already behemoth military corporate network just for the sake of fighting an amorphous, minor foe. Money and profit are to be had from portraying this sometimes lethal sideshow as a major war when it is not.

    Because, most American politicians do not see any serious foreign threat, they view domestic political opponents as their most ardent foes. When borders seem inviolate from external threat, internal opposition becomes the wretched bogey. This is because most politicians are irrational bundles of hopes and hatreds. Hatred rarely dissipates. It usually gets redirected at another target. Such is the human condition. Some people feed on anger as if a choice buffet. For them, to live is to hate.

    Second, because they have personally been successful, these politicians believe their peculiar notions and actions contributed to national greatness. They dub themselves architects of the national order. Thus, they acquire a sense of personal superiority that may have a most tenuous link to reality. Never do they contemplate that national progress may have come despite their ideas and actions.

    Every nation is an imperfect mixture of fitness and indirection, of wise action and embarrassing folly. Great nations tip the balance toward the positives. Yet, every nation holds the sublime and ridiculous within. Thus,

    not every well-heeled citizen is great. Princes are to be found in the gutter and buffoons walk the most princely courts and tony boardrooms. Many American politicians are not javelins of achievement. So many are but polished mud — the incidental beneficiaries of a national greatness to which they contributed little but of which they have tasted much.

    To study their nostrums is to engage in a fool’s inquest akin to listening to a lottery winner give counsel on how to build a complex financial empire. Anything these folks hold of worth, they did not create and anything they create is of little worth. These people cannot advance a nation any more than a toothpick can prod uphill a massive boulder.

    What this sanctimonious group of men with ambitions and appetites far exceeding their abilities does best is cling to position. They thwart change and reform whenever possible so that people occupying lower aspects of the economic ladder do not invade their club. Often the rich man is not concerned he will lose his fortune. He is often more concerned the poor will become rich, thus revealing him for what he is: nothing more than a poor man in disguise.

    Unfortunately, American politics is densely populated by these baser characters. Politics does not function to make things better. It is now a game of tricking the people to see one political group’s pursuit of its elite interests is better for the nation than another group’s dash toward its own narrow desires. All tricks are to be employed in this contest for this is no longer about reality. The game is one of deception; prestidigitation is the field upon which it is played.

    Thus, the Democratic Party has adopted traditional Republican Party economic doctrine only to falsely retag it “liberal or progressive.” Democrats engage in this false flag operation not because the adopted notions are condign. Democrats embrace these notions because they are so simplistic that they average person can easily understand them; most people more readily believe to be true that which is easier to comprehend. More importantly, these notions also benefit corporate donors upon whom the party relies.

    The Democrats speak of the people but that is the craft of a cunning ventriloquist. The master puppeteers have the party dancing a jig that conflicts with the tune of their rhetoric.

    Meanwhile, the Republican Party has not been satisfied with winning the important battle over nation’s political ideology. The national political economy bears the Republican stamp even if the one doing the stamping is a Democratic President. But that President is Black and this fact has accelerated the Republican descent into an orgy of bias.

    Republicans seek to redraw a national tableau so estranged from reality that it courts danger. Anything that does not accord with rule by conservative White men, Republicans reject as foreign and subversive. However, the Republicans fight the tide of demographic inevitability. Soon, the White majority will become a minority as the growth of the Latino community and, to a lesser extent, the Black community outpaces that of White America.

    The Republicans cannot escape this fact. Because this process is inescapable, they fight it with greater vigor than reason. Like the pro-slavery confederates during the American Civil War, the Republican Party believes it fights to save a noble way of life from assault by lesser humans. In effect, today’s Republican Party is the cultural equivalent of the confederate leadership that sparked gruesome civil insurrection. Like those rebels, Republicans fight with desperate courage, knowing that fate runs against them. Like the rebels, they proclaim they would rather die than surrender. Again, like rebels of lore, they will eventually break and surrender to the inevitable. Until that moment, they will engage in political guerilla warfare against the Democratic Party establishment that now holds the White House.

    Thus, American politics has become a battleground between the sophisticated corporate establishment and Money Power allied with the economically conservative/socially centrist Democratic Party and the arch-conservative White cultural alliance represented by the Tea Party faction of the Republican grouping.

    Despite their growing numbers, other political constituencies and ethic groups are mere platoons and expendable foot soldiers in this historic encounter. Because they have been convinced that their fate rests upon joining one or the other of these competing power nodes, these other groups are lesser than they should be.

    The evolution of and political contest over health insurance reform (Obamacare) must be viewed in this context. Having outflanked Republican attempts to shutter government, President Obama should now face sunny days and moonlit nights ahead. Instead, he walked into an ambush over the rollout of his landmark measure.

    The current major trouble is with the website created for people to enlist in Obamacare. People cannot access the site. If not enough people register, then the entire system will collapse because it was built on an unnecessarily risky economic model. It was built on such a model because the Democrats who constructed it had as their overriding priority the interests of the corporate world instead of the people’s health.

    Roughly 50 million of 300 million Americans are uninsured. This is the highest percentage among developed nations. For the richest nation on earth, it is a travesty. Ostensibly, the basic benefit of Obamacare was to provide insurance to people heretofore uninsurable because they had pre-existing illnesses or could not afford then existing insurance plans. (Yes in America, insurance companies could refuse to insure someone if seriously ill before. They could also terminate a person’s insurance if medical costs exceeded a certain amount.) The plan would insure to this prohibited group by forcing uninsured but healthy people to purchase insurance.

    Expanding the number of healthy people who purchased would increase revenues of the private insurers. This revenue would allow for them to incur the costs of medical payments for people with extant medical conditions. In essence, Obamacare is an indirect government tax or redistribution scheme wherein one set of private citizens are to help fund the health care of another set. If it works, then the number of uninsured will be reduced by 20-25 million people.

    Unfortunately, for the plan, not enough healthy people can access the website to purchase the insurance. If the site’s technological problems are not timely cured, the entire plan might collapse because there will be an insufficient number of healthy new insurance buyers to pay for the influx of people with preexisting conditions. If this happens, the system might implode or government will be forced to subsidize it.

    Now we come to the real fault in the system. All other developed nations have health care systems funded by government. In fact, America funds health care for senior citizens under the Medicare program. This program works well. If the nation would merely expand the principles of Medicare to the rest of the population, America would be in line with the rest of the developed world. Its citizens would be much the better. However, big insurance companies would no longer occupy the enriched position they now hold. Some highly paid executives would be cast from the penthouse into the unemployment lines. This could not be allowed to happen.

    The plan to reform health care hit a detour. Instead of reforming health care, it merely reforms how citizens procured health insurance. The plan was devised not so much to help people but guarantee insurance companies a certain level of profit.

    This overly complex plan was developed because mainstream Democrats dared not look at the most effective and straightforward solution. Government should operate the health care system as in other nations. Democrats flinched not due to Republican opposition but because their corporate donors threatened to pull the plug if the Democrats placed public interest over those of the corporate structure.

    Consequently, Democrats inaugurated this heavily bureaucratic scheme. To work, the multiple parts of this plan must move in complete synchronicity. However, the first portal – website access – now fails, placing the entire edifice in jeopardy. The situation is like inviting guests to a party at a faraway mansion only to find, after travelling the long distance, that no one can open the entry gate.

    Ironically, President Obama unnecessarily exposed his flank to mortal danger through an abundance of misplaced caution. Not wanting to offend the corporate network, he agreed to serial tactical compromises when drafting the health reform law. One layer of bureaucratic complexity was laid upon another in an attempt to assuage the insurance firms. However, the President’s team did a poor job assessing the overall impact of this patchwork, piecemeal aggregation. The tactical compromises, when amassed, constitute a risk to the operation of the law and thus the man’s political legacy. This is a classis instance of starting with so much that the person believes he can eagerly give away half of what he has yet still retain all of what he needs. Before too long, he has yield so often that he winds up with half of almost nothing.

    Chaos with the website has rejuvenated Republican atavists. They should have been contrite after fumbling the government shutdown. They have quickly returned to the attack. They rant that the website fiasco demonstrates government can’t operate complex systems and should not attempt big things. This is pure sewage but people tend to be duped by enthusiastic repetition of categorical statements regardless of the inaccuracy thereof. War is the most complex venture known to man and the American government is singularly adept at that enterprise. Had government funded and treated the website like it does the Pentagon, things would not be as they now are. Additionally, the government managed the space race and the construction of the very internet for which the website was built. One transient technical failure does not mean the government is inherently capable of such efforts any more than the bankruptcy of one firm peal the demise of the private sector.

    Hard-line Republicans have exploited the initial troubles with the new program to revive calls for President Obama’s impeachment. The man has done nothing remotely illegal or impeachable but most Tea Party members believe he must be impeached. Their goal is not to allow the Black man to finish his term in office. They seek to impeach him not for what he has done but for what or who he is. They will cite Obamacare as the battle cry for this rude and foolish gesture.

    Their racial hatred is so intense that some Republicans can barely contain their anger. During a meeting between Republican Congressmen and President Obama, one Republican reportedly told the President he “could barely stand to look at him.” No other president in recent history has tasted such disrespect, particularly when the substance of his policies is not far off the Republican compass. Something else is at work.

    Recently, a Republican Party official in North Carolina gave a television interview wherein he described Black people as lazy and wanting government to given them everything. That the vast majority of Blacks work for a living and get paid less for doing equal work did not seem to discomfort the man.

    Worst, the Republicans have again trooped out a Black man to cover their own racism. During last year’s presidential campaign, the buffoonish Herman Cain served as the prop. This year, the Republicans selected a person with a better intellectual pedigree and no skeletons in his personal closet, Dr. Ben Carson, the globally renowned surgeon. Speaking before an eager Republican cohort, Carson described Obamacare as “the worst thing since slavery.” With that, he legitimized every extremist claim against Obama. If Carson were as unskilled at medicine as he is unacquainted with the history of his own race, the man would be barred from coming within twenty miles of the nearest hospital. His statement was abject. What ambition or motive drove Carson to say such a shameless, false thing is unclear. Hopefully, it was for something valuable; otherwise, it is difficult to understand why he would so publicly sell his integrity.

    To criticize Obamacare for its failings is appropriate; to equate it to slavery is the cheapest slander a Black man could do. The moment Carson uttered his remark, he estranged himself the majority of Black Americans. For his efforts to please the conservative throng he will find his reward a bitter one. He will find himself on the growing heap of black opportunists discarded by the Republicans upon finding their latest Black marionette had little traction with most Black people.

    All in all, American politics is a dismal mess. President Obama’s victory on the government shutdown thrust straight into an intense fusillade over the actual rollout of his signature health law. His penchant to compromise principle at the drop of a hat placed himself in this awkward position. Last week, he was on the offensive and hopefully prepared to move a bit more boldly and a bit more to the left of his usual cautious stance. Now that he has been again bitten, he will likely return to his haltering way.

    Obama’s self restraint will encourage the Republicans not to curb themselves. They will highlight the trouble surrounding Obamacare, hoping their attention adds to its woes and sends it to an early demise due to lack of sufficient public participation. In the meantime, they will also use it as leverage to push the President on other issues, particularly further trimming the federal budget which has already sunk too low to sustain the current level of economic activity. If he takes their bait, he will agree to measures capable of deflating the American economy as will has sabotaging his health measure.

    Already, he has presided over the contraction of the number of federal government employees and a reduction in food assistance for poor people, both firsts for any American president. This conservatism is not the legacy he should strive for because it is more malignant than helpful. But it will be legacy that he writes for himself should he persist in trying to befriend people who will be consoled only if he were to make an ungracious and quick exit from office.

     

    08060340825 (sms only)

     

  • Governance by ignorance

    Wonder in Nigeria shall never end. One of the things the Nigerian media enjoy is that it always has something new or strange to report. They are never devoid of odd issues to report on. Little wonder, they believe bad news is good news.

    Before I proceed, please permit me to doff my hat and salute the Christians, particularly the Catholics in Imo State, who stood by unborn children whose death warrant Governor Rochas Okorocha and his cohorts assented to.

    It amazed me some days ago when I heard that a governor who is adjudged to be a man of the people, somebody that claimed to love children and a man with special interest in children could sign such a dastard bill into law. It is disheartening to see one of the most revered governors owing to his unprecedented antecedents, legalise abortion in the state.

    Looking at it from the religious angle, Christianity frowns at it. This is because, when ever abortion is committed, life is terminated which God forbids. As the omniscient God, He knows everything even before they happen, and more so, nothing happens without his approval.

    This might raise eyebrows as regards why they relegated their faith to the background. But thank God the Christians made him see reasons to have a rethink.

    Although, legalising abortion in Nigeria is contestable as regards the incessant rape cases threatening womanhood. These days, seldom a day passes without a report on rape. Minors, young girls are now vulnerable to sexual assault. The worst is that even old women are not left out. What an unfortunate generation! This consequently leads to untold future agony and trauma, as it will degenerate into stigmatization, unwanted pregnancy and the likes.

    While considering the foregoing, a responsible government should investigate what precipitates rape, molestation among others and find remedy to address the menace. For example, the raping of old women, minors and even insane women have spiritual undertones. I expected the government to cut the roots and not the branches.

    While I was brooding on the issue, I could not fathom the kind of leaders we have in Nigeria. This is because our so- called leaders just wake up in the morning to take any decision they think is good for the people without making due consultation. Is this what the electorates bargained for?

    I was a bit relieved when l saw a headline recently-Governor Rochas: I signed bill ignorantly. While I expressed my displeasure over that ignorance which is not an excuse, I am equally giving him a half standing ovation for not only admitting his flaws but also apologizing.

    The other time, a Senator who claims to be representing his people sponsored a bill of child marriage, how unreasonable! This raise the question as to whether there are no pressing needs other than girl- child marriage? Or better still, why prioritising that when there are one thousand and one problems bedevilling the country that needs urgent intervention. Does that suggest we are being governed by ignorant folks who parade themselves as presidents, governors, law makers and the like? This is just a handful out of many.

    I suppose it is high time religious and other well meaning bodies took giant strides in scrutinizing public policies and proposed bills with the intent of pointing out loop holes, just like the Christians in Imo State rather than being their puppets used for widening ethnic, political and religious cleavages whose consequences are better imagined than experienced as it is the joy of unscrupulous politicians and a sweet story for the media.

    By Emmanuel Onoja,

    Ibadan.

  • Oil theft: Weird ignorance

    Finally, this government admits that it has failed woefully but even in that admission, it still denies that fact and chooses to exhibit what someone has described as “weird ignorance” (an act of pretending to be confusedly stupid or vice-versa). In this merry state, you play at being perfectly dumb, you simply roll with all the punches and allow all the barbs to fall at your side as if you are wearing odighi eshi bullet proof. This is the only meaning Hardball could read from Finance Minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala’s outcry last week that Nigeria loses 400,000 barrels of crude oil to thieves every waking day!

    By this supposedly arm-wringing confession and prostrate admittance of failure, one expected her to throw in her resignation letter in the circumstance that her boss is politically forbidden from resignation. Okonjo-Iweala ought to resign and others like the Oil Minister, and all the heads of the oil parastatals ought to be cleared out for abysmal failure. How could a country lose N6 billion everyday under their watch yet they still enjoy the pleasure of clinging to their seats? Unless there is something else to the story, how could a country be haemorrhaging to the tune of about N2.2 trillion per annum yet nobody is taking responsibility and none getting fired? Are we going to be moved to act only when we lose our entire oil revenues to ‘thieves’?

    Government’s admittance that it does not know how to protect the country’s most important asset is to admit that it is no longer fit to run the economy and manage the country. They are simply admitting that the so-called oil thieves have out-smarted and grown bigger than the government, the entire military and security agencies of state; the simple import of Okonjo-Iweala’s outcry is that our sovereign state is in retreat if not surrender. If our government cannot protect what is most important to us, the implication is that the rest of us citizens are doomed.

    If President Goodluck Jonathan and members of his cabinet care, if they wish to know the truth and if they wish to escape the perdition of history, they must accept that the rampaging oil theft phenomenon if not contrived and orchestrated, is the result of unbridled corruption. When the other day the president told us that he didn’t give a damn about showing good personal examples in the fight against corruption, he never realised this singular canker could utterly overwhelm him and torpedo his government. Corruption is like the thief you come upon harvesting in your farm, if you hesitate immediately holler and chase him, he will sooner begin to holler and chase you. The day Jonathan begins to show that he no longer co-habits with corruption and starts to deal decisively and openly with the corrupt people around him most of our national challenges will begin to abate.

    We have been told that the National Economic Council (NEC) has approved a task force to tackle the problem. This is merely tunneling down the grimy paths of corruption. The legal task force, to be headed by the Attorney–General of the Federation, Mohammed Adoke and to be populated by all sorts will begin by trying about 500 alleged thieves. So we actually have 500 oil thieves locked up somewhere awaiting prosecution? Who are they? Are they little pilferers or the powerful rogues?

    Finally, let’s not kid ourselves that the NNPC does not know what to do to protect our oil pipes; that the DPR does not know what metres to install to capture production figures; that the navy is supine and incapable of manning our waterways and that the judiciary could not prosecute and jail nary one oil thief of note all these years? One more point: Hardball insists that the Federal Government is up to its usual tricks again, especially with a major election around the corner. If they do not have any shame up there, we are still quite bashful down here. It will actually require an invisible sub-marine to steal this quantum of oil daily; and they forget that this is not the only oil producing country in the world. Do we need lessons from Ghana?

     

     

  • Re : Curing Doyin Okupe’s ignorance

    Re : Curing Doyin Okupe’s ignorance

    •‘Curing Doyin Okupe’s ignorance’ is highly refreshing and really illuminating. However, it will be an exercise in futility, because no matter the genuine attempts to cure him, he will not be ready for the cure. The Yoruba elders says ‘eniti o ba sun l’anji, ki se eniti o bapiroro’. Needless to say more,

    Alhaji Adey Corsim, Oshodi, Lagos, 07057631041

    •On ‘Curing Doyin Okupe’s ignorance’ – a bold writer you are Mr. Segun Ayobolu. Keep it up, 08064121216

    •Your views in your column are insulting and have tribal undertone. Be a bit respectful to constituted authority, 08057126766

    •Uncle Segun, if not that somebody like Doyin Okupe is being paid with the tax payers’ money, I would have suggested that he should be totally ignored,

    Seye, Akure, 08033894418

    •My brother, on curing Okupe’s ignorance, you have stated the obvious and I think we will recommend APC to cure him. More grease to your elbow! May your ink never dry! Austin, 08037235843

    •Since the appointment of Dr.Doyin Okupe, we have been diametrically opposed to his style of engagement. If Okupe is discerning enough, he would have known that there is no hatchet job in President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration. If Okupe is logical in his reasoning, he should know that democracy is so called because it provides for dissenting views and virile opposition is the salt that garnishes the system. If Dr. Okupe wants a one party state, he should head for the Gambia and not where a true democrat like President Goodluck Jonathan presides. The likes of Doyin Okupe and Godsday Orubebe whose stock in trade is antediluvian style of sycophancy – grovelling servitude – has no business being close to a decent man like Dr.Goodluck Jonathan,

    T.S. Zimugan, CEO, Goodluck Jonathan Forum for Global Peace, 07030130419

    •Good job Segun. Your ‘Curing Doyin Okupe’s ignorance’ was a masterpiece and also a masterstroke sufficient enough to make this professional bootlicker and the other intellectual sycophants like Reuben Abati and Ahmed Gulak to better direct their energies to helping their benefactor find a more potent channel to address the stupendous problems that bedevil the nation rather than serving as ‘biting dogs’ to this colourless and bland regime, Nasir Umar, 07032524200

    •Segun, when did you become a megaphone of these frustrated leaders of the opposition? Why weeping more than the bereaved? Calling Mr President ‘a liability’! Your days are numbered, 07056844211

    •Ah Ah Segun! Why insulting an elder like that? Why not copy Simon Kolawole’s style? Remember you are working for your political Godfather. Ah Ah, too much, Mrs G. Etti, 08180202393

    •Okupe’s damnable propaganda ought not make anybody pass sleepless nights. From the nature of the administration he represents, we need no extra sensory perception to know that most of what he would often want to feed us with about the government are mere framed stories of doubtful veracity which lack every merit of conviction. Of course, I think the country still needs his likes to make the democracy what it ought to be for the common good of us all. The opposition sometimes go beyond bound to fire their own missile at the government if only to make it sit up and be accountable to the people. So too the government needs an attack dog like Okupe to keep the opposition on their feet for the much needed viable alternative to the huge disappointment the ruling PDP has become. In other words, disturbing though his mendacious reflex might be, it can still be of positive effect in strengthening our democracy if logically followed,

    Emmanuel Egwu, Enugu, 08037921541

    •Kudos to you on your write up or better still, reply to Doyin Okupe’s unguided remarks on two great leaders of the nation. You have spoken well. God will guide and protect all your family as you want to liberate us from the tyrants in our midst, H. F. A, Akure, 07061194600

    •Segun, let Doyin Okupe be. If you were in his shoes, you would do the same. Who would have ever thought that Dr. Reuben Abati would be defending actions of government? I beg let Okupe be!, Mike Onugha, 08036998738

    •Thank you oh Segun. I beg help me tell Okupe that I live in Kaduna and I am still waiting for the buses they promised us after the fuel subsidy riots, Mrs Josephine Adam, 0803587483

    •Hi Segun, Please correct me if I am wrong. I could remember that this same Okupe served in Obasanjo’s government in the same capacity and he was hurriedly kicked out due to his misguided utterances on sensitive national issues at that time. His appointment by Jonathan was another shocker among others to me and many other Nigerians. Segun, it is in this kind of God-forsaken government people like Okupe can serve. Are you surprised?, MJ, Abuja, 08059615499

    •Are you a journalist or an ACN member? Your write up on curing Doyin Okupe’s ignorance shows you also need cure as a one sided journalist. I am not a politician but you were unfair in this write up in my opinion, 08023727952

    •Your article on Okupe was a masterpiece and educative. I doff my hat for you, 08065070202

    •Segun, you are highly unfair to Dr. Okupe. Do you remember how many times he was jobless before GEJ gave him one? You need to remember how the Ota farmer dumped him. Once bitten…He needs to bark more more than this to keep the job since he cannot practice medicine anywhere across the globe without sitting for medical exam afresh. He could be arrested if found with a syringe, Akinlayo A. State of Osun, 08055679465

    •Your illuminations on Doyin Okupe’s ignorance is a real yap and only the bitter truth. We all know that Okupe hasn’t been a truthful man. What a beautiful piece on the person of Dr.Doyin Okupe. Segun, you are too much. May God bless you, Dave, Rivers State, 07031923255

    •Good morning Mr. Segun. I read your article of yesterday. I really loved the way you put him and his Oga at the top to where they belong. More grease to your elbow, 07039044634

    •As far as a lot of Nigerians are concerned, Jonathan and Okupe are the real political liabilities,

    Tayo Agbaje, Abuja, 08067039566

    •Thank you for putting Dr. Okupe where he belongs. Uncle Segun, seems he has a very poor vision and can’t see his boss is the non-performer and the liability, 07033588160

    •Humm…Do you mean Doyin is over 60 years? Yet…!, 08033770486

    •Okupe should remember that major money meant for Lagos was withheld by OBJ even against court order. All effort was made to stop Tinubu from Abuja. Nigerians have such a short memory – pity, Ugwuoke, 08038928948

    •Mr Segun, remind Mr. President’s attack dog that the Asiwaju achieved all that you enumerated despite the unconstitutional, illegal and criminal withholding of revenue allocation to Lagos State Local Government Areas for close to three years! All these were achieved when daily newspapers were awash with nude pictures of legislators taking oath with their governor in Dr. Okupe’s home state, 08036492504

    •Me as a truck driver am better informed than this toothless ‘bull dog’, Okupe. Please never waste this page for such a man; there are better illuminations,

    Joe, Kaduna, 08032478812

    •Segun, the problem with you and your colleagues in your highly partisan newspaper is that you want Nigerians to see you and your paymasters as the best in everything you do and swallow all you write or say about others, including the brazen lies and insults on the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as the gospel truth but you don’t want others to air their views. Why are you crying wolf over Dr.Okupe’s statement about Buhari and Tinubu? Nigerians can’t continue to be deceived by pen politicians like you, 08083393134

    •You are not much better than Okupe in your sarcastic views. We want a balanced view not outright abuse,

    Martins Akpan, 08052305643

    •Yes, a thousand of anti-progress elements personified by the Okupes of this world can never cover the good deeds of truly patriotic progressives, 08020882416

    •Sege! You forgot to inform Okupe that Jagaban did those projects while the PDP government of OBJ withheld Lagos State Local Government funds in disregard of the Supreme Court Judgement, Johnny Edah, Lagos, 08023102195

    •I love the traditional way The Nation reports issues. Lately you guys have got yourselves entangled in politics. Now, all I read is Tambuwal versus Jonathan and the Presidency, 08054509110

    •My brother, I dole out my heart for your today’s article about DoyinOkupe’s ignorance. I am from the North but without you guys from the West, Nigeria could have been finished, 07038744339

    •Hello Segun, you will be doing yourself a great disservice if you think that Dr.Doyin Okupe was actually appointed to provide genuine information about the Jonathan administration. Personally I think what GEJ perceived Reuben Abati incapable of doing because of his media background, he appointed Doyin Okupe to do – lash out in reply to all the opposition’s comments about the administration; take on them person for person not issue for issue. Okupe is Jonathan’s ‘Mr information fix it’, Olumide Soyemi, Bariga, 08171704442

    •Engaging Doyin was a good judgenment, if for nothing to counter The Nation’s unobjective report on GEJ. Tinubu ruled for eight years; let GEJ do eight years before we compare notes, 08079519911

    •S-e-g-e! Just why did you desecrate Saturday’s must read back page with the dim wit called Okupe? You even added his photo. Aah!!! Don’t you think a man a man that even OBJ fired as a ‘reject’ should be found in a refuse dump? Are you surprised the ‘mugus’ in Abuja chose him to rubbish their non-existent image? As they say: ‘birds of the same feather’…PDP people have a peculiar ailment. They don’t see too good. So, how can people who can’t see good do good? That’s our cross in Nigeria presently. Someone even told me their over-hyped ‘SURE-P’ actually means ‘SURE-Poverty’. What else can one say for a ruling party that added a meagre 2000 MW to the national grid in 13 years after billions of dollars went the wrong directions? Nothing!,Olu, 08033013597

    •Hi Segun Ayobolu, I see you as an ignorant writer who has no sympathy for the likes of Doyi nOkupe who perhaps might be suffering from senility. How can he have the sense of objectivity and maturity you expect from him? Ha haa! 08035288185

    •Omo Sege, Fire on. Help me cure Doyin Okupe of this disease called ignorance once more. Thank you very much for that beautiful piece of work, Benjamin Albert, 08065623287

    •Mr Segun, you have said it all. Dr. Okupe is in urgent need of intensive medication for wilful ignorance in discharging his duty and you have helped him out by highlighting the numerous achievements of Tinubu. Keep the flag flying bro, Niyi Ogunmade, 08028437558

    Mr Ayo, keep on firing them. Crooks! 08037036314

    •Ayobolu, do I hear you say our dear Dr. Okupe is a loose cannon? Well, I imply he is a bull in a China shop, My regards, Osita, Owerri, 08064938959

    •I am an avid reader of The Nation newspaper, especially Saturday, Sunday and Monday editions. Having read today’s edition, I wish to appreciate you for your unwavering courage, boldness, diplomacy and educative write ups. Please keep on educating the likes of Dr. Okupe, Dr. Abati and Elder Orubebe to be sincere in their dealings, S. Fikara, Port Harcourt, 08061331045

    •Okupe who is eternally endowed with sabre rattlings and misconceptions can’t do better. His chicken will soon come home to roost. The party will soon be over in Abuja, Oladele Oseni, Ikorodu, 08038240713

    •Uncle Sege, I love your statement “I think I have said enough to cure Okupe of his wilful ignorance”. Do you really think Okupe is ignorant of Tinubu’s giant strides in Lagos? He is just a sponsored blackmailer using Federal Government funds to tarnish the image of opposition leaders. He told those blatant lies out of jealousy because he can never be Tinubu. He wants to become popular by blackmailing him. He has failed. My brother, don’t mind him, we are not blind and can never be deceived with their propaganda. How I wish Tinubuwere a Deltan; we could have been competing with Lagos. Cheers, Moses Efe, 08134745871

  • Alams’ pardon and ‘sophisticated ignorance’

    The once-friendly international community is frowning at Nigeria. Even the faithful members of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party are not convinced to defend the decision of the National Council of State to pardon some convicted personalities of corruption and other offences.

    More of the anger has been on the former Governor of Bayelsa State, Chief Dipreye Alamieyeseigha (popularly dubbed Alams to save pronunciation or spelling error) who was among the beneficiaries of an ill-timed presidential pardon. He was convicted of corruption after undergoing prosecution by the Economic and Financial Crime Commission under of its former chairman, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu.

    President Goodluck Jonathan was Alams’ deputy when the latter was governor of Bayelsa State. Apart from the former governor, other people who were listed as beneficiaries of the pardon were Gen. Oladipo Diya, who was the Chief of General Staff during the reign of military dictator, Gen Sani Abacha, former Managing Director of the Bank of the North, Shettima Bulama, who was also found guilty of fraud and former Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarters, the late Gen Musa Yar’Adua. Also said to have received the pardon was the former Works Minister, the late Maj.-Gen Abdulkareem Adisa, who was found blameworthy in the alleged coup d’état that landed Diya in prison.

    The rationale used by Jonathan in presenting the list of the convicts to the council for pardon is being queried beyond the land. Alams jumped bail in Britain, such that if he goes there today, he might be arrested and prosecuted for the corruption he perpetrated in Bayelsa State.

    Opposition political parties, civil rights groups, lawyers and the organised labour essentially condemned the pardon granted to Alams and also frown on the defensive statements credited to the Special Adviser to the President on Media, Dr. Reuben Abati and Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin Okupe. While Abati described those criticizing Jonathan over Alams as suffering from “sophisticated ignorance,” Okupe was quoted as saying the President had “no apologies” for exercising his constitutional powers of granting the pardon. Both positions are not helpful to our politically beleaguered President.

    Other defenders however had argued more sensibly by saying that it is not a question of whether the presidential pardon is proper or not; it is a matter of whether the President had exercised his powers in a lawful manner in granting pardon, not just to Alams, but to the other persons concerned. Some even contented that since granting pardon to a convicted criminal is a constitutional right of the president, he has discretion to use it as he likes.

    The pardon to Alams was another proof of one of the contradictions of the present administration. The decision was a setback to the nation’s battle against corruption. Granting state pardon to convicted felons who committed crimes against the state could not be in the interest of this administration and the country. In this kind of climate of cluelessness, such pardon would make sense if only given for political offenders – and not criminality.

    The decision to pardon a condemned corrupt leader has cast doubt over the sincerity and earnestness of the government’s purported anti-corruption campaign. It contradicted the spirit of the war against fraud. If presidential power is implemented in a rationale lawful manner that will renovate the nation’s unproductive awkward attitude, not many would question it.

    It remains the responsibility of the President to disclose the sequence he relied upon to grant presidential pardon to a man who was caught red-handed, not even in Nigeria but in UK and admitted to the charges. The issue of whether former President Olusegun Obasanjo used Ribadu to witch-hunt Alams is trivial and inconsequential. If he was witch-hunted, wasn’t he found guilty of the charges of corruption? Yes, he was and then he of his own accord pleaded guilty. Or are we now saying he never committed the offence? Are we also saying that the foreign security officers that met huge amount of money in his personal house in London were not saying the truth? It will become fruitless attempting to take the people on a ride on the platform of grammatical “sophisticated ignorance.”

    It’s factual Alams was a victim of Obasanjo’s political butchery; but he was a convict. It is also true that the problem with Nigeria is that virtually every politician is a thief, but the only difference between the likes of Alams and others is conviction. Alams deprived his people to enrich himself. If the much money found on him was spent on the state, he will be honoured by the people.

    Not that any Nigerian leader – from the military era down to the present crop – is better than Alams. Alams stole oil money from his backyard; others far and wide stole – and are still stealing the same oil money and continue to walk the terrain free. But was he repentant of what he did? Where has he openly admitted and confessed to the sins he committed? Although it’s God who can only judge, pardoning an unrepentant criminal will only send out wrong signal to would-be criminals.

    If Mr. President is granting pardon to the likes of Alams as part of his strategic plans to contest for second term, he might just be making things worse for himself. He cannot afford to be a motivator of corruption and expect people to honour him with their valuable votes. He should be more concerned with what history will say about his tenure when administrative mock-ups finish.

    Nigerians won’t forget that the N6 billion donated to build a church in the president’s Otuoke village was not because of the donors’ love for the work of God but just to please him so that they can take from him. Such colossal donations are with expectations of being rewarded with bigger contracts on which money will be obtained but the project will either not be executed or will be poorly implemented.

    At a time we want investors to come and help grow our devastating economy, we are discouraging them by propelling corruption in the same territory being pummeled by kidnappers and terrorists. To protract this poignant trend show we are still far behind as a country with viable potential to be great, but today is where there are no jobs, where graduates are roaming the streets selling pure water and where valuable lives are being wasted.

    This might be why there is wisdom in Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka’s response that he wouldn’t mind keying to the bandwagon of the ignorant persons as tagged by Abati. And like the global literary guru, I also will happily love to be counted among such Abati’s “sophisticated ignorant” whose supplication is to clean the nation of the filthiness that is not allowing it to move forward.

     

    Feedback

    Re-APC: Really, what’s in a name? The controversy generated over the registration of APC by INEC should not be a surprise to any right thinking man. The PDP-led Federal Government is composed of men/women of doubtful characters. The PDP has never won and will never win any good election in this country; hence it is jittery over the registration of the formidable opposition parties called APC. INEC and other agencies are under the control of PDP and this is why this country can not witness any good election. Only good political revolution will solve Nigeria’s political problems. To grant a convicted thief state pardon is the height of corruption and dishonesty in governance. What a shame?

    – Pastor Odunmbaku

    As It is Omotunde, what have those other parties coming together against PDP done differently in their states? After all, were (or are) they not part and parcel of PDP? Some of them are worse!

    – Owuna Coe, Akwanga.

    Dear Soji, the controversy beclouding the APC shouldn’t warrant the merger parties to seek for a new bearing, but rather than to ensure that the satanic arrangements of the sponsors of the proxies APCs die off, especially as PDP/INEC have a hidden agenda to hijack and manipulate the electorate again in 2015. Thus, it is the right time the progressives seek for the best. Without cynicism, the country’s masses are for APC being the alternative towards change and seemingly the mandamus mandate is on the side of APC. And it must prevail!

    – Comrade Sylvester Ukusare, Warri.

    Please tell leaders of APC that it is only a pair of Adams Oshiomhole and former Kano State Governor Shekarau as Vice President that can send PDP/Jonathan out of Aso Rock power.

    – Okon Edet, Oron, AKS.

  • Opium based on ignorance

    Opium based on ignorance

    History is an invisible object with two wings flying across generations in time and space. One wing is positive, the other is negative. With history, the present becomes the heritage of the past even as the future awaits the baton of continuity from the present. No living nation or tribe or even individual can dream of a realisable future without a viable present based on the experience of the past. The web of life is like a magnet which no iron element can bypass on its way to ornamental glory.

    Against what ought to be her heritage, Nigeria is, today, passing through a fabric of uncertainty as she rolls back the fibres of the future into those of the present and weaves both into the vestiges of the past. Such is a sign of a dead nation waiting to be buried. What war is not ravaging Nigeria today in spite of Allah’s abundant bounties? The forces of the present seem to have connived with those of the past in planning to wrestle the future aground thereby depriving the generations yet unborn of any hope of existence. From all indications, Nigerians live in a country where the ruled are evidently enslaved to their rulers.

    For decades, this country had been forced by her so-called rulers to fight wars ranging from political to economic to social and to ethnic without winning any. Now, a religious war with political ember is being added. Religion is likened to opium in human beings because of its seeming addictive effect on an average believer. Literally, opium means a brownish gummy extract from unripe seed of the opium poppy that contains highly addictive narcotic alkaloid substances like morphine and codeine. When such a substance is mixed with an unstable powdery matter, it turns it into a disadvantageous hardened substance.

    Thus, like a billow vigorously storming around at the instance of an invisible tempest, a melee of religious hullabaloo engendered by a vicious political Pandora has virtually turned Nigeria into a land of curses.

    Ordinarily, by its design and intent, religion is supposed to be not only a panacea for all human psychological ailments but also a soothing balm for any spiritual ache. But ironically, it has been turned into a poison in our society which seemingly has no provision for an antidote. And through our attitudes, we seem to be bent on swallowing the pill of that poison without minding its consequences.

    The factors that culminated in what we now variously call religious militancy, extremism, fanaticism and terrorism emanated only from the yoke of ignorance which bad governance has come to aid. And could anything have influenced bad governance as much as ignorance? Yet ignorance would not have had a role to play in our religious or political lives if we had demonstrated the will to genuinely follow the tenets of our religions and learned from the lessons of history without banking on mere assumption and rumour. History as a teacher always has a lesson to teach those who are ready to learn. But unfortunately, most human beings especially Nigerians refuse to learn any lesson from history and the price is what we are paying today.

    In 1962, Nigeria’s Governor General, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe (who later became Nigeria’s first President), paid a three day official courtesy visit to the Premier of Northern Region, Sir Ahmadu Bello in Kaduna. He was accompanied by his wife, Flora. The host Premier mobilised all the paraphernalia of office in honour of his guests whom he gave an unprecedented, flamboyant hospitality. The visit enabled their wives to become so familiar with each other that Flora also invited the Bellos to the East on a similar visit. By the end of the visit, Dr. Azikiwe had become so much impressed that at the point of departure he held Ahmadu Bello’s hands and gently told him to “Let us forget our differences”.

    In response to that emotional but infatuating gesture however, Sir Ahmadu Bello said in an equally gentle but emotional baritone voice: “No sir! Rather than forgetting our differences, let us understand them. I am a Muslim and a Northerner. You are a Christian and a Southerner. It is only by identifying and understanding those differences that our friendliness can truly endure”. There and then, Dr. Azikiwe nodded in agreement with his host’s logic and accepted the fact that one could not forget what is not understood.

    The lesson to learn from this experience is that of mutual understanding without pretentiously sweeping anything under the carpet. That is the principle upon which the marriage of political strange fellows who find themselves in the same political party is often based in Nigeria. It is also the principle upon which the partnership of many Nigerian businessmen and women is based despite their cultural incompatibility.

    For thousands of years, peoples of all races and tribes across the world thrived vaingloriously on cultural ignorance attributing their calamities to mysterious forces and blaming such mysteries on what they called witchcraft. Here in Nigeria, millions of children were forced to die in infancy by their own parents out of sheer ignorance while the same parents turned round to blame what they called ‘ABIKU or OGBANJE’ for the mass infanticide. With time, however, education and knowledge of science brought about the invention of various vaccines with which children are now immunised against all diseases thereby giving them the opportunity to survive. And this has enabled us to know today that the mystery once called ‘ABIKU or OGBANJE’ was a euphemism for ignorance in the days of ignorance.

    And now that the days of cultural ignorance seem to be over, Nigerians have devised another means of restiveness by shifting to religious ignorance which enables them to replace the infanticide of the yore with modern day genocide in the name of religion. It is however hoped that one day, knowledge will also help us to overcome the spectre of religious ignorance and enable tomorrow’s generations to tell the story as we are doing today about ‘ABIKU or OGBANJE’.

    If it had pleased the Almighty Allah to make all human beings one single race with one colour, one tongue and one religion, He would have done so without receiving any query from anybody. But as the Omnipresent and Omnipotent, His decision to diversify His creatures cannot be faulted as it is from that diversity that all creatures have consistently derived benefits. In the world today, there are different races and tribes of human beings with different colours, languages and cultures each functioning as predestined and yet they all interact positively with one another to the benefit of all and sundry. This is in accordance with the words of Allah in Chapter 49 verse 13 of the Qur’an thus: “Oh mankind! We have created you from a male and a female and classified you into races and tribes that you may interact with one another (and thereby draw from the advantages therein). Verily, the most honourable of you before Allah is the most pious among you. Allah is All-knower and most acquainted with all things”.

    What is true of human beings here is equally true of other creatures. For instance we can all see that on a single arable plot of land, a variety of plants may grow to form an orchard but each with different foliages and fruits. Some of those fruits may be sweet, some may be bitter and some may be sour. Some plants may be fruitful and some may be fruitless. On that same plot of land some may grow to become trees of gargantuan posture while others may not grow beyond ordinary shrubs and legumes. Yet they are all fed by the same soil, watered by the same rain and photosynthesized by the same sun. Their different foliages, sizes, heights and tastes notwithstanding, they all function effectively and advantageously according to the purpose for which they are created.

    In the ecosystem, no tree in an orchard will ever accuse another of bearing fruits different from its own and no animal will blame another for carrying a different feature or wearing a different colour. Neither will a whale denigrate even a fingerling in the ocean for sharing the same water with it. Ditto the world of birds and that of insects. Even as plants, animals, aquatics, birds and insects they all know that for everything Allah creates there is a purpose which may not be known to them as creatures. It is only among human beings that discrimination and segregation exist based on ignorance.

    In Islam, all revealed religions are believed to be like an embassy established by a nation in another nation to strengthen her relationship with the host country. The Ambassadors appointed to manage such embassy, may be changed from time to time just like the foreign policy which guides those ambassadors but the embassy remains intact barring any unforeseen circumstances. So is the case with the Prophets of Allah. They might have come at different times, and from different lands and tribes. They might have brought different books and spoken different languages but their mission was one and the same.

    Muslims believe that all the Prophets and Messengers who have come into the world to guide mankind were from one and the same God who created the universe. Thus, Prophets Ibrahim (Abraham), Ismail (Ishmael) Ishaq (Isaac), Musa (Moses), Daud (David), Isa (Jesus) and Muhammad (SAW) as well as others who preceded them or came in-between them brought the same message of monotheism through which mankind was counselled to worship one God and be upright in conduct.

    As a Muslim, you cannot believe in one of those Apostles and disbelieve in others. Neither can you believe in one of the revealed Books while disbelieving in others. That is why no true adherent of Islam will ever express foul language against the person of Jesus. Though the modalities for worship may differ from faith to faith and from sanctuary to sanctuary this does not change the course of their faith in only one God. Thus, the rivalry between Muslims and Christians especially in Nigeria over who is spiritually right or wrong is a product of ignorance.

    As taught by Christianity and Islam through their respective revealed Books, the areas of life that need our cooperation are by far more comprehensive than those in which we differ. For instance, both the Bible and the Qur’an counsel humanity to worship one God. They preach good deeds to neighbours and other fellow human beings in public and in private irrespective of religious lineage. They advocate good care of our parents, our children, the aged ones amongst us and the handicapped. They urge kindness to our wives and leniency with our adversaries. They admonish us against cheating and any form of corruption. They forbid theft, adultery, fornication, homosexuality, lesbianism and above all the killing of fellow human beings extra-judicially for whatever reason. They also warn us against provocation, aggression, exploitation and transgression even as they emphasize the ephemerality of this world and the eventuality of the hereafter. In all these, we have a common affinity to jointly guard.

    The few areas in which we differ are abstract and quite personal. They are not areas in which human beings are given the power to pass judgment. Only the Almighty God can judge on them. Such are the areas which we believe will pave our ways towards the Paradise. But since paradise is for individuals and not for religious blocks why are we fighting each other? After all, the journey to Paradise or Hell is a matter of choice for every individual. And no one can tell with precision who will go to Paradise or go to Hell. Such is the prerogative of God which He has not assigned to any human being and which no human being can and should arrogate to himself or herself except one who wants to play God.

    As an adherent of a religion, you can only perceive your God according to your faith and that should not cause any rancour between you and adherents of any other religion. As Nigerians, we dwell in the same country, eat the same foods, drink the same water, wear similar dresses trade in the same markets and spend the same money. Our children attend the same schools, write the same examinations and obtain the same certificates. We intermarry across tribes and ethnicities as well as religions. All these form a stronger bond that ought to unite us much more than the abstract ones which often threaten to separate us. In a situation where the factors of life that unite us grossly surpass those that divide us will it not be stupid to sacrifice unity and cooperation?

    This is the time for change. We cannot wait any longer. Let the Christians in Nigeria engage in Crusade and the Muslims in Jihad against all vices in the society which their two revealed Books (Bible and Qur’an) abhor. Let all of us jointly work towards upholding the values of life as contained in the Bible and the Qur’an that we may find ourselves in a new world of peace and harmony in the very near future. As for how we became entangled in opium and terrorism in the first place, please, read this column next Friday in sha’Allah.