Tag: Japa

  • Japa: Six winter survival tips for Nigerians in the UK

    Japa: Six winter survival tips for Nigerians in the UK

    Over the year, more than 150,000 Nigerians have relocated to the UK in search of a greener pasture, and one of the things that makes the transition difficult is the weather.

    The weather in Nigeria is usually very warm, even in cold seasons, going from this to a part of the world where it snows and weather during winter can be very harsh.

    Here’s a list of tips Nigerians abroad could use to survive during winter:

    1. Wear warm clothing

    It is advised that one should dress in warm clothes during the cold weather, and wear several layers of thin, loose-fitting clothing underneath a thick one. Good-fitting socks and gloves are also advisable to avoid frostbite.

    The most important thing to have during winter in England is a reliable winter coat.

    2. Avoid taking cold meals or drinks

    It is a must to make sure the foods and drinks consumed during the cold weather are warm enough for the body.

    3. Eat well

    A balanced diet will help keep one warm and healthy in the cold weather medical experts advise that intake of at least one hot meal daily aids body warmth.

    4. Wear waterproof shoes and boots

    Properly fitted shoes or boots are also important.

    You will need waterproof boots for wintertime. Your boots need to feel warm, as well.

    Read Also: UK announces stricter visa measures to cut migration

    5. Exercise, stay active

    Exercises like walking and jogging are recommended for warmth but If the weather prevents you from going outside, stay active indoors by catching up on all the household tasks you have been putting off and doing indoor exercises as well.

    6. Get a heater if you can

    Heating systems provide warmth, safety, and comfort for those who don’t have them already.

    Heaters help people feel warmer and more comfortable in their own homes

  • Japa is voluntary slavery, Ex-NLC chief Aremu tells youth

    Japa is voluntary slavery, Ex-NLC chief Aremu tells youth

    Former national vice president of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Issa Aremu, has described the mass exodus (Japa syndrome) of Nigerian youth abroad for greener pastures as ‘voluntary slavery.’

    Aremu, who is the Director General of Michael Imoudu National Institute for Labour Studies (MINILS) likened the syndrome to the slave trader era where “our forefathers were used for hard labour to develop Europe and the Americas.”

    The former labour activist said this in Ilorin, Kwara state at this year’s Global Entrepreneurship Week (GEW) organised by Lifefount Foundation and its partners.

    He said: “Japa is voluntary slavery. It is uncalled for. I thank the foundation and its partners for changing the narrative of Africa from voluntary slavery to voluntary prosperity. I want to say that MINILS is available for future partnership with the foundation.”

    Read Also; Singer Rema speaks on satanic allegations by concert attendees

    Meanwhile, no fewer than 200 youths, women and persons living with disability (PLWD) have been trained by the consortium of organizations concerned with youth and women’s development on digital entrepreneurship skills and graduated at the event.

    The training is aimed at encouraging self-employment, creating job opportunities and reducing poverty.

    Themed, “Entrepreneur Thrives Here”, the programme also witnessed an exhibition of various entrepreneurial skills, a business conference and the graduation ceremony of the beneficiaries.

    Speaking at the event, the Managing Director and Co-Founder of the Foundation, Dr (Mrs) Yemisi Adeyeye, said the beneficiaries of the programme were trained on digital technology and entrepreneurship skills; both online and physical.

    Adeyeye, who said that the organization trained about 100 participants in partnership with a US agency during last year’s edition of the programme held in Oyo state, added that over 200 beneficiaries of this year’s edition were trained on web development, machines, web designing, fashion, digital marketing, products designing, graphic designing.

    Previous activities of the foundation included the provision of free breast mammography, free breast cancer tests, scanning among over 1,000 women, provision of boreholes, etc.

    She said that the drive for the project came from the need to find out what could be done to make people’s lives better, “Especially, with the present economic challenges, we think there’s a need to empower women with digital empowerment skills and make them have structured business to improve and grow their businesses.

    “GEW week is dedicated to celebrating entrepreneurship as well as people doing entrepreneurship all over the world. Lifefount Foundation has hosted the programme in Kwara state since 2018.

    “This year’s edition is dedicated to beneficiaries in Kwara state. The training, which was held for three months, had every participant being trained on digital entrepreneurial skills aimed to make them be on their own and be self-employed. With the required technology, beneficiaries can work in remote areas, make progress, benefit communities and make more money.

    “Participants, who are mostly women, included men as well as people with disabilities and the training was done online and physically.

  • Japa: Don’t plan to relocate abroad if you have N20million, Aremu Afolayan tells Nigerians

    Japa: Don’t plan to relocate abroad if you have N20million, Aremu Afolayan tells Nigerians

    Famous Nollywood actors, Aremu Afolayan and his colleague, Baba Tee have called out Nigerians with the ‘Japa’ mentality to a rethink.

    This followed a video they shared of a family who were spotted sleeping in a car park abroad.

    The video captured the unfavourable conditions of a family who sought shelter in the car park of a building.

    Baba Tee, who was accompanied by his friend Aremu Afolayan urged on the importance of proper planning before relocating abroad.

    Read Also: Actor Aremu Afolayan cries over love life

    While sharing the video, Baba Tee emphasised that the family is not homeless because of drug-related issues, but rather because of financial constraints.

    Aremu on the other hand insisted that anyone with the sum of N20M doesn’t need to relocate abroad, let alone sell their property to achieve such an amount for Japa.

    Baba Tee wrote: “JAPAJAPA or not pls do a proper Arrangement before relocating.”

  • Things to note when you japa

    Things to note when you japa

    They say she is tenacious. But the tenacity of Dr. Sophia Abiri-Franklin, a managing partner of Georgetown Solicitors, is beyond the courtroom. Her passion for women and advocacy on business sustainability and individual legacies earned her the prestigious 2023 Queen Elizabeth Scholar alumnus from Carleton University, Canada. In this interview with EVELYN OSAGIE, Dr. Abiri-Franklin, who is a guest speaker today at the Association of Professional Bodies of Nigeria, Lagos Branch, speaks on migration, her practice and more.

    Being a woman

    Being a woman is being me – self-care. It’s being able to look after myself and family – body, soul and spirit. Being confident in all my God given endowment and abilities and seeing my uniqueness as a woman as a gift and not a curse. Knowing that I matter, I have a voice and a role to play, that I can thrive in every space I find myself, from the home front, to the office, to the society, in Nigeria and the global community.

    My roots and its impacts

    Growing up for me was interesting. I grew up in a close-knit family. My dad, who is a mechanical engineer was a civil servant with the then Delta Steel Company (DSC) Ovwian Aladja and my mum who in the beginning was a teacher, later became a business woman who I saw undertaking various contracts and business ventures in male dominated spaces at the time. I recall attending a court hearing for the first time when I was about 12 years old, during one of my mum’s court cases when a customer sued her to court for demanding for her rightful fees when she was only trying to recover a debt being owed by the company. She won the case several years later and the customer’s assets were auctioned in the court premises and my mum was paid her money. Indeed I am proud to say that being raised by a tenacious woman like my mother prepared me for the woman I have become.

    My law practice journey

    Being in law practice for 18 years has been an eventful journey. It has been a learning curve for me from one season to another. From the beginning, as a single lady where I started my practice in Ilorin and Lagos; later, after I got married and started having children and in the course of these seasons, investing in my personal development from seating for various professional exams to studying for my masters and later PhD. Every woman needs a good support system to be able to manage the home front amid ones busy schedules. I have been able to navigate these seasons victoriously thankfully as a result of a great support system from my husband and family.

    Inspiration behind my passion for business sustainability and individual legacies

    It’s a fall out of my PhD thesis. I decided to research on ‘Corporate Sustainability, Succession Planning and Women inclusion in West Africa’ as a result of the many cases I was involved in during the course of my legal and governance practice. As legal adviser and company secretary to some companies, I witnessed situations that prompted me to see the gap in knowledge in the area and I embarked on the quest which has turned out to be an interesting area for me; and earned me a prestigious spot as an alumnus of 2023 Queen Elizabeth Scholarship Advanced Scholars West African (QES-AS-WA) Programme hosted by the Institute of African Studies, Carleton University, Canada, under a special programme tagged, “Her own room to write’. The programme is sponsored by the Rideau Foundation, IDRC, and Universities Canada.

    Incidentally, I am also speaking on ‘Corporate Sustainability’ in Nigeria at a workshop of the Association of Professional Bodies of Nigeria, Lagos Branch, today.

    Why women and entrepreneurs should take business sustainability and individual sustainability/legacies serious

    There are many reasons why women and entrepreneurs should take business sustainability and individual sustainability/legacies serious. These two concepts are relevant in business and for individuals as it also applies to state government and institutions. When businesses and individuals carry out their plans and activities with the knowledge that the outcomes would outlive them, it would inspire a deeper consideration of their decisions which would result in sustainable economies.  There is still more work to be done in the area of business/corporate sustainability in Africa, especially in the small and medium enterprises. Many are yet to come to grasp with what the concept is. On the other hand, Africans, particularly women need to be given an orientation of what intentionally planning individual legacies could mean to them and their families. An individual plans his/her legacy by putting his house in order by a proper planning of his estate, writing a will and or establishing trusts over their assets and family legacies. In many situations, where the patriarch of a family passes on without such plan, it invariably affects the business enterprises.

    Read Also: Japa and challenge of brain drain

    Memorable moments in my Canadian experience

    I had a lot of memorable moments during my visit to Canada. The weather was quite right and the people were really accommodating. Among those moments was the warm reception and audience in an interactive session given to us Nigerian QES delegate by the Nigerian High Commission, Canada when we visited. We had the privilege of meeting with the High Commissioner to Canada, His Excellency Adeyinka Asekun and other diplomats. Also, being a QES broadened my horizon. The global platform enhanced my research experience to be eligible for a career as a consultant and professor of business sustainability and individual legacies to impact local economies and development in West Africa and diaspora. It afforded me the opportunity of working with mentors, professors and other academic staff from Carleton University. I am in the process of publishing a Tool kit for Business Sustainability and two articles in the Nokoko journal of the Institute of African Studies. The programme also gave me the opportunity to share my knowledge with other Africans and nationals from other races by volunteering my services as a consultant/researcher and working with the Newlife Projects Incorporated, a non-profit women-based organisation in Ottawa.

    The dinner at the residence of Prof. Nduka Otiono, the Principal Investigator of the QES programme and Director of IAS, Carleton University in celebration of Canada Day this year, where all the scholars and some key staff were treated to a sumptuous local African was an equally memorable event. The love and patriotism of Canadians was truly inspirational.

    My advice to the young desiring to Japa

    My advice to the youths is to invest more in their personal development (professionally and skills acquisition) as the world is a global village. When you invest in yourself, you become relevant from Nigeria or any part of the world. If you choose to ‘Japa’, you must be prepared to ‘work out your salvation’ 10 times more than what is obtained in Nigeria for you to gain relevance. But should you consider your purpose in life and invest in Nigeria, you might find a space to thrive more. There are a lot of global opportunities available for research collaborations, fellowships and related opportunities for career academics, professionals and even the average business person or youth in the communities, especially for women. But you can begin to research the opportunities and check the eligibility criteria.

    My next project

    I am currently carrying out a series of activities in four categories as part of my community engagement programme. I am organising seminars and mentorship series in secondary/high schools and universities on leadership, mentorship, research collaborations, fellowships and related opportunities. I also intend to extend the enlightenment drive business men/women and local communities on the importance of the two concepts in the course of my programme this season. I want people, particularly women to know that their dreams are valid! They can get the required support if only they reach out.

    My thoughts on beauty

    To me, beauty starts first with the state of the mind. I ensure that I am okay, mentally, emotionally, physically and spiritually. Then when I have completed my secret place regime- meditation and study internally, I can now consider what happens to my outward appearance as beauty without character is vain. I just prepare to look simply great for any occasion.

    My fashion style

    My fashion style is Afrocentric. I figure that as Africans, we have a great culture and fashion sense but over the years we have abandoned our uniqueness to follow what obtains in the west. I most comfortable, when I am styled in African outfits and I look for creative ways to express this in my fashion style from dresses to accessories.

    Fashion item I cannot do without

    My wristwatch and scarves – you would always see me with these.

    My escape place

    I enjoy my fitness programme. I visit the gym and swim often. I also love to take long walks in the early mornings and feel the sun rise on my skin. When I have the time, I like to visit the cinema and see a nice movie.

  • Filling the gap

    Filling the gap

    • Government’s plan to engage retired doctors is laudable

    At last, the Federal Government has dropped the denial mode to accept that the ‘Japa’ syndrome is taking a toll on the nation’s healthcare system. ‘Japa’ syndrome is “used to describe the act of escaping, fleeing, or disappearing quickly from a situation, often in a hasty and urgent manner.” With specific reference to Nigeria, it is used to describe the exodus of Nigerians for greener pastures abroad.

     Former Minister of Labour and Employment,  Dr. Chris Ngige, a medical doctor, had embarrassingly claimed in April 2019 that Nigeria had surplus doctors, and government was not bothered that they were leaving the country in droves for greener pastures abroad. Failure to attend to the situation then accounts for its degeneration. 

    In that year, right under Ngige’s nose, Saudi Arabia was in Abuja to recruit doctors, with young and old physicians reporting at the recruitment centre. 

    The number of Nigerian doctors in the United Kingdom is estimated at 11, 000, while the United States, by 2020, had about 3,895. Canada and Australia have also thrown their doors wide open to Nigerian-trained doctors. 

    It has assumed such a disturbing dimension that even West African countries are now destinations for our healthcare specialists.

    Speaking at a public hearing organised by the House of Representatives (HoR) probing into the trend, Professor Emem Bassey, who is chairman of the Chief Medical Directors of Federal Tertiary Hospitals,  said: “Some African countries are beginning to poach from Nigeria. The West Coast is looking for our specialists. So many people are now going to places like Sierra Leone and Gambia, and the wage they earn is about $3,000, $4,000. It is about three to four times what they earn back home.”

    So, one obvious reason for the emigration is remuneration. The National Association of Resident Doctors  (NARD) and the Nigerian Medical Association  (NMA) have consistently cried out about their poor wages. At a point when the Coronavirus-19 pandemic was raging, the hazard allowance paid the caregivers of various categories was a paltry N5,000. Governments in the country have a duty to urgently check this trend. This is not a task for the federal executive alone, the legislature that has power of appropriation, and agencies charged with wage allocation, have to cooperate to ensure that the system does not collapse.

    At the sub-national level, too, healthcare professionals have to be given special attention in the interest of the sick. Doctors and nurses had embarked on industrial action in many states, thus leaving poor patients at the mercy of quacks. Many people have died prematurely as a result of this.

    But enhanced remuneration may not be enough to stop the drift, as the facilities in most of our hospitals, including the so-called centres of excellence, are grossly inadequate. As Yusuf Gagdi, chairman of the HoR Committee on Health said at the public hearing, “I admit there is a lack of advanced medical facilities in our health sector. This is a fact, and we must, as a government, pay attention to that.”

    Read Also: Japa syndrome: Stakeholders seek action on rehabilitation, reformation, mental health

    The reported plan to re-engage retired doctors may be one way to repair the damage in the sector. In recruiting the retired doctors, though, care must be taken to leave out the aged and tired. Those who retired long ago, and may not be familiar with recent developments and technology in medicine should be left out, except a refresher course is organised for them. It should however be realised that this is only a short term measure. It is an opportunity to revamp the system, turn our moribund tertiary health institutions to genuine centres of excellence and make our secondary hospitals attractive to doctors, including consultants.

    Primary health institutions are also  comatose. Most people, even in cosmopolitan cities avoid them, rather, flocking the general hospitals. The trend must be reversed if more Nigerians are to have access to health care.

    As Professor Bassey pointed out, government would be acting in error if attention is paid to doctors only. Emoluments of all categories of professionals in our hospitals should be reviewed. And, in doing so, it must be comparable at least to what is applicable in the West Coast of Africa that has suddenly become attractive to our health personnel. To achieve this, government must live up to the promise to earmark 25 per cent of the budget to the health sector. It is important, too, that medical colleges be expanded and fully equipped to admit more qualified students. At the moment, they are too restrictive. 

    It is only when these measures are taken that the resolution of the House of Representatives that a state of emergency be declared in the sector would be meaningful.  

    ‘Health is wealth’ is an axiom. But, life has become so short that life expectancy in the country by 2020 was put at 52.89 years. The figure has probably dropped with the worsening employment situation, inflationary trend and the unenviable attainment of the status of the world’s poverty capital.

    A health summit comprising all stakeholders in the industry should be summoned to draw up the plan for progress. Professor Alli Pate who is the Minister of Health has a duty to ensure that the sector is saved in this his second sojourn in the ministry.

    Indeed, to save the country’s health system is a task that must be done. Recruiting retired doctors is only the first step in that direction. 

  • From Japa to Japada: Greening the Nigerian pasture (4)

    From Japa to Japada: Greening the Nigerian pasture (4)

    There is no wisdom in appointing Nigerians who have Japa to man sensitive public offices in Nigeria. This is akin to luring the proverbial skunk from its forest grove into our royal bed chamber, if it doesn’t sully the quilted sheet with its faeces, it will ruin the palace with its stench.

    Those who would Japa to escape the hell Nigeria has become should never  be allowed to superintend our healing, ultimately because they lack the character and competence, native intelligence and maturity, selflessness and integrity, patience and sense of responsibility required to manage our healing process.

    It was disheartening to see a Governor’s recent appointee scoff at his fortune, stressing that he never needed the appointment – even though he barely survived as a canned fruit hawker and cab driver who squatted with friends in the United Kingdom.

    If we must invite a Nigerian from the Diaspora to serve as the country’s Petroleum Minister, for instance, one primary requirement should be his previous employment in a similar capacity. The same logic requires that only a seasoned General can become Nigeria’s Chief of Army Staff (COAS)

    That said, it is often ill-advised to appoint an overseas cab driver, who is contemptuous of Nigeria, as a federal minister or director of a public agency. When Nigeria needs cab drivers with international experience, we may recruit such individuals. Our public offices are best reserved for patriots who keep faith in the Nigerian enterprise. It’s about time we stopped appointing leeches into public office. When the going gets tough, they simply pack up and leave. Nigeria’s public office is not a rehabilitation camp for fair-weather patriots.

    This is not to forestall, however, the likely benefits of appointing Nigerian expatriates, who have a lot to contribute to the rejuvenation of public governance and accountability. But where do we draw the line?

    We have seen governors appoint internet fraudsters and human traffickers as cabinet commissioners. We have also seen supposedly first-rate technocrats flaunting Ivy-League certificates earned abroad, sully our public offices. So, it’s not by the class of degree or the school that produced them, an individual’s academic or professional honours hardly translate to excellence in public governance if he is corrupted by arrogance and greed.

    Yet we have Nigerians doing well back home, despite the odds. They are the type that stay the course when the going gets tough. They do not bend and sway to every favourable draft neither do they pack up and leave at the onset of a storm. They stay back and withstand its flurry, surviving with tact, perseverance, faith, goodwill and native intelligence. They understand that only by salvaging what we have and who we are can we achieve our Nigerian dream. These are the ones deserving of public office.

    Still, it’s everyone’s prerogative to either stay or flee from perceived hostility in our homeland. But hostile politics and economies aren’t caused by phantoms or poltergeists. They are the result of our lack of humaneness and frantic avarice.

    Read Also: Six feared killed as bandits storm Southern Kaduna village

    The looters prowling our streets and corridors of power did not fall from outer space. They are the fruits of our mother’s wombs, sired with seeds from our fathers’ loins. They are the monsters we raised in our families.

    Modern Nigeria is a product of the joint efforts and inactions of our families, schools, worship houses, the streets and the media.

    Japa nomads taking the education or scholarship route, eventually find that their admission into elite schools overseas was purely a business decision by the schools and their host countries. The benefits are ploughed back into their host society.

    By the time they graduate, they are superbly conditioned for the drudgery of second or third-rate employment overseas. Some occasionally secure first-rate employment. But the very smart ones among them relocate back home to seek employment with Nigerian or multinational firms who prefer their foreign certificates.

    Many return to Nigeria as agents of metacolonialism. Hence the preponderance of journalists, writers, teachers, economists, social workers, engineers, and health workers, to mention a few, who function as glorified stooges of the so-called developed nations of the world.

    The faithlessness and moral corruption that makes Japa possible is similar to the one that drove African enablers of the transatlantic slave trade. This degeneracy remains largely unchallenged.

    To prevent its recurrence, we must hinder the social mechanisms that render people capable of such. And this can only be achieved through education. The Nigerian school must begin to impart more than money-making soundbites and status-conferring skills.

    Our schools must begin to teach values and history with a didactic bent. If they do not, another transatlantic slave trade is possible; we have seen it happen in Libya, where Europe-bound Nigerian youths were bound and gagged, raped and murdered by African slave drivers cum human traffickers; it happens every day to thousands of Nigerians crossing to Europe through irregular migration routes from Agadez through Tripoli to the Mediterranean bight.

    President Bola Tinubu must understand that it is not enough to seek foreign investment and cooperation from abroad; such initiative, while appreciable, could be doomed by a lack of quality personnel and citizenship required to nourish whatever benefits accrue from his nation-building enterprise.

    If Nigeria truly seeks sustainable socio-economic growth in the long run, we must groom generations of men and women capable of nourishing and preserving the Greater Nigeria enterprise.

    Nigeria needs patriots amply groomed to understand that the most important achievements aren’t measurable by a title or figures. The true purpose of education is to make minds, not careers, and as Deresiewicz writes, only a small minority have seen their education as part of a larger intellectual journey or have approached the work of the mind with a pilgrim soul. 

    Nigeria must furnish an educational system driven by the sweat and exploits of such pilgrim souls. The country’s education curricula must be overhauled to impart a Nigeria-centred educational experience that could resonate with the progressive social re-engineering of the country.

    It doesn’t matter what quality of degrees are acquired if the recipients are furnished to operate like mindless robots, praise junkies, fortune hunters and crowd pleasers.

    William Hazlitt noted at the beginning of the 19th century that men do not become what by nature they are meant to be, but what society makes them. European society, according to Hazlitt, violently wrenches and amputates her citizenry thus making them unfit for intercourse with the world, something in the manner that beggars maim and mutilate their children, to make them fit for their future pigeonhole in life.

    This imagery of beggars maiming and mutilating children is discernible in the fate of the Nigerian kids birthed abroad; some are shipped overseas as regular or illegitimate migrants purportedly to grant them access to a better life.

    The lure of Japa validates Bulhan’s theory of metacolonism. The Japa syndrome has taken so much away from us, including our loyalty, language, history, and the cultural values that bound our community together.

    All that is left is our sense of attachment and moral responsibility borne of nostalgia. Yet Japa has corrupted even that.

    These days, I look at my children and wonder how much of Nigeria and their culture they will get to keep. How much of their Nigerianness will matter in the long run?

  • From Japa to Japada: Greening the Nigerian pasture (3)

    From Japa to Japada: Greening the Nigerian pasture (3)

    Nigerians are a curious breed. Think of us as the  proverbial coastal  dwellers dying of thirst. We complain of parched tongues, but every day, we defecate in our fresh springs and slake our thirst with poisonous waters from abroad.

    Beyond metaphor, Nigeria must be rescued from cognitive dissonance; the mental racket that triggers the Nigerian lust for Japa and sustains it. 

    Ultimately, it poisons our wellsprings of civilisation and knowledge: culture, family and academia. This corruptive mentality pervades the country’s educational and cultural institutions, aggravating the brain drain that robs Nigeria of the allegiance and contributions of promising citizenry.

    The multiple failures that beset the country, from the bungled economy to our subversive partisanship, to our lack of universal health care, to protracted terrorism, and the neocolonialist afflictions of our politics and media, can be adduced to the institutions that produce and sustain our political elite.

    Our local schools and even the elite schools most Nigerians throng abroad, hardly teach students to question and think. They focus instead on creating legions of effective systems managers via standardised tests and passive submission to authority.

    Eventually, when the systems fail the managers, they scurry out of the country in search of greener pastures abroad. When the going gets tough, they simply pack up and leave.

    The responsibility for the collapse of the Nigerian economy runs from the corridors of power, through the media soapbox to the lecture theatres of the academia; it pervades our banking halls, the comatose industry and the random trade zones of municipal sidewalks.

    Scholarship is crucial to the rejuvenation of our comatose state thus Nigeria must furnish an educational system that facilitates fearless intellectual inquiry; one that is constructively critical of authority, fiercely independent, and selfless.

    We must quit organising learning around minutely specialised disciplines,

    tapered solutions, and rigid structures designed to produce predetermined answers. As the government fixate on science education, it must equally furnish our arts and humanities.

    Nigeria must rejig her cultural foundations and moral complex – and this is achievable through a partnership between the government and the arts/ humanities. The result of such an endeavour would excite a social re-engineering built on character mending and economic restoration in consonance with our peculiar strengths and weaknesses.

    Restoring our cultural dominance would facilitate easier salvage of our society, particularly the engine wheels of our industrial complex. China, Japan, Germany, Indonesia, Sweden, among others, attained progress by founding their governance on a cultural experience indigenous to them.

    The wild pursuit of materialism renders large segments of our business and political elite addicted to mindless acquisition of ill-gotten wealth. Thus the ceaseless cases of corruption in public office. The lives of several culprits are funded by stolen money and beastly monopolies facilitated by heinous social and political contracts.

    On the flip side of the equation, the working class diminishes and struggles to maintain membership in the informal social caste imposed upon it by a raptorial ruling class.

    The general run of the masses supposedly dissent but many do so without any real awareness of the actuality of forms that define their existence. Plato’s allegory of the cave was meant to explain this. In the allegory, he likens people untutored in the Theory of Forms to prisoners chained in a cave, unable to turn their heads. Plato’s allegory speaks to our individual and collective fate as a nation.

    Read Also: First Lady, governors’ wives move to address ‘Japa syndrome’

    For Socrates, all virtues were forms of knowledge thus to train someone to manage a business account for Price Water Cooper, for instance, is to educate him or her in skill. To train them to debate the ethics of a business venture is to educate them on values and morals. A culture that disregards the vital interplay between morality and power, writes Hedges, condemns itself to death.

    Such existential truths are scorned by the modern fortune hunter. And the disconnect subsists across professions, government, and academia. Nigerian economists, for instance, chant elaborate theoretical models yet know little of how their fancy, soulless economics impact rural poetry and suburban lives.

    Our educational and social systems must quit churning out such products of a cultural void, casualties of a system that produces graduates who have been taught to cheat the system and applaud theft as a shrewd corporate strategy.

    The true purpose of education must be to make minds, not social cannibals. Education must furnish us with patriots capable of leading Nigeria’s charge back to rebirth.

    A recourse to educational foundations, in the light of Arnold’s 1869 treatise, could be in Nigeria’s best interest. This is attainable by conscious endeavour. President Bola Tinubu could lay the foundation for such a monument by increasing Nigeria’s education budget to 18 per cent or thereabouts, from the disgraceful fraction – usually less than seven per cent – budgeted over the years.

    The foundations of scholarship and knowledge must be reconstructed to guarantee more progressive responses to internal problems of social advancement: problems of work and wages, of families and homes, of morals and the true value of life.

    Our quest for effective public governance can only be realised through the guidance of skilled thinkers, and a synergy between a public service that actually works and a humane corporate business sector.

    Nigeria could take a cue from Finland’s educational system. The transformation of the Finnish education system began some 40 years ago as the key propellent of the country’s economic recovery plan. Educators had little idea it was so successful until 2000, when the first results from the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), a standardised test given to 15-year-olds in more than 40 global venues, revealed Finnish youth to be the best young readers in the world.

    Three years later, they led in math. By 2006, Finland was first out of 57 countries (and a few cities) in science. In the 2009 PISA scores released last year, the nation came in second in science, third in reading and sixth in math among nearly half a million students worldwide.

    There are no mandated standardised tests in Finland, apart from one exam at the end of students’ senior year in high school. There are no rankings, no comparisons or competition between students, schools or regions. Finland’s schools are publicly funded. School managers at all levels are educators, not businessmen or politicians. Every school has the same national goals and draws from the same pool of university-trained educators.

    The result is that a Finnish child has a good shot at getting the same quality education irrespective of his or her descent. The differences between the weakest and strongest students in Finland are the smallest in the world, according to the most recent survey by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

    True knowledge essentially translates to being an emissary of truth, hope, superior culture and progress. It is never simply to teach bread-winning, furnish teachers for the public schools or vocation for the unemployed. It should above all, be an appendage of that fine adjustment between what Du Bois calls reality and the flourishing knowledge of life. An improvement of civilisation and solution to its seemingly intractable problems.

    The end product of such an educational process would be less likely to Japa because he or she must have learned to think for truth and progress astride pecuniary gains, not for vulgar repute or profit. 

  • Japa: Be wary of Western exploitative education as route to ‘japa’, Ex-VC warns youths

    Japa: Be wary of Western exploitative education as route to ‘japa’, Ex-VC warns youths

    The former vice-chancellor of Ajayi Crowther University, Abeokuta, Ogun state, Professor Dapo Asaju has advised Nigerian youths to be wary of Western exploitative education used to entice them to leave the country.

    Asaju, while delivering a convocation lecture at Redeemer’s University, Ede, Osun state on Wednesday, September 6, which was tagged ‘Transformative Economy and Japa Syndrome in Nigeria’ opined that japa is self-exportation which is synonymous with self-slavery.

    He said: “The first slavery of Africans was when they were forcefully shipped across the Atlantic by white slate traders who enslaved them like animals, the second wave of slavery was during the period of colonialism, following the Berlin conference of 1845 and the third is which is worst form is when African country has come of age to extent that they have started to train their indigenous professionals and educated elite but who are forced by unpleasant circumstances to willing and cheaply sell themselves to serve western countries; many, for pittance doing menial jobs.”

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    “On another hand are exploitative educational enticement of Africans who are encouraged to pay terribly high fees to obtain a Master’s Degree from British Universities just because they would have the opportunity to do some hours of menial jobs and stay as residents after some years. They pay N16 million per year to earn a Master’s Degree.”

    Asaju added that he resisted the pressure mounted on him to establish the College of Medicine during his tenure as VC because the majority of Colleges of Medicine in Nigeria heavily funded with taxpayers’ money ended up producing doctors and nurses for international societies.

    He advised that Nigerians should be wary of paying heavily to schools in the Western world, saying that certificates acquired outside Nigeria are not superior to certificates from Nigerian varsities