Tag: lesson

  • Lesson new SGF should learn

    SIR: The emergence of Boss Gida Mustapha as the new Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) is a product of providence and due to former SGF Babachir David Lawan’s avoidable blunders. The new SGF, Boss should learn from his predecessor’s mistakes and successes. Successes?  Well, Buhari’s adversaries will argue Babachir recorded no successes as SGF. The truth is, Babachir made some remarkable contributions to the Buhari administration- unfortunately, his political blunders overshadowed them.

    The ousted SGF is an experienced man in his own right as well as long-time confidante and loyalist of President Muhammadu Buhari. A man who stood with Buhari through thick and thin and has overtime earned the president’s trust. But Babachir committed cheap surprising blunders. Babachir, as SGF pettily allowed his personal ‘business’ to mingle with government business.

    Babachir second blunder is attitudinal – he is a poor politician who only sticks to people from his clan and hardly stretches his handshake to other people; he also lacks efficient image managers, furthermore Babachir was arrogant and talks more than he works.

    Public office in Nigeria comes with some privileges, authority and huge funds to spend, so if one does not apply measured restraint and discipline he/she can easily fall into the trap of corruption without even knowing.

    Boss Mustapha says he will work to ensure more cooperation between government ministries and departments.  This is good. Babachir was arrogant and undiplomatic in his relationship with other arms of government and his style of politics was pathetic that he failed to get any meaningful public sympathy or concrete defence from the political class. Even his primary constituency- the north, north-east and Adamawa State, gave him no backing. This is a big lesson for Boss; one cannot be the Secretary to the Government of the Federation of Nigeria and behave like the secretary of a hamlet’s cultural association.

    Boss should bring his political and administrative experiences, simplicity and humour to the SGF office. We do not want the SGF to always be in the news for the wrong reasons. However, one cannot isolate the SGF’s office from politics.  Boss is a politician that has gone through the mill. So he must expect political punches from different angles.

    He understands the expectation of young Nigerians as well as what leadership needs to do, so Boss will bring simplicity and new approach in the relationship between the executive and the other arms of government. Over his political sojourn, Boss has been a product of friendship and consensus- he will bring that to the SGF office; the Buhari/Osinbajo government needs it now more than any time.

     

    • Zayyad I. Muhammad,

     Jimeta, Adamawa State

  • Ambodeism: Lesson in leadership

    I seek the indulgence of readers in my coinage of the word Ambodeism, but one cannot completely explain the phenomenon called Akinwunmi Ambode, the Governor of Lagos State, until one examines him as a central theme or perspective, projected as strong feeling, combining a mix of economic, political, social, moral and spiritual principles. The concept brings inspiration to the public who, having received adequate communication of its values and empowered to participate effectively in governance, readily subscribed to the possibility of SMART City destiny of Lagos, through expression of determination, dedication, discipline and duty.

    The Governor Ambode, that I know, is a man of big dreams, with immense ambition, great characters and matching astuteness to achieve unprecedented milestones in all things he sets out to do. Lagosians have witnessed many of such seemingly impossible targets that were set and were met over the two-year period of Ambode’s administration. Internally-Generated Revenue (IGR) is over N30 billion a month; he has proposed N50 billion! Governor Ambode I know will realize this target soon!!

    From a big vision, Ambode pursues big plans, reduces and interprets in big pictures; but pursues the objectives in bits and pieces to produce fantastic and delightful impressions that create lasting images in the mind of the people. Little actions he takes bring appropriate results in multiplicity of beneficial impacts, culminating in fantastic rewards.  He does the right things for the right reasons. He follows carefully-prepared template for all his programmes and projects and monitors them to completion. Though sometimes he takes risk in practical ways, he does not believe in chances, but that you can create chances. He religiously mentors his followers.

    Here is a man who is not comfortable with failure; he puts his heart, health and soul into projects; he eats, sleeps and breaths work; he goes the extra mile to get results. He pushes you to persevere in assigned tasks. “One on the driver seat does not sleep”, he says, “Sacrifice and successes are Siamese twins.”  At the State House, every hour of the day, year round, is working hour. Ambode pursues details with fervour and with enviable transparency; and believes that if there is a will, a right passion, a right plan and right persons to drive your policies, there will always be a path to unprecedented accomplishments. To the governor, “attitude is king of character.” Probability of failure or probability of successes should not be the key to achieving programme objective, but having correct keys or plans always, will unlock the doors to successes. And when passion results in big triumph, he does not rush to the airwaves.

    Often he says: “succeeding or failing is what you choose. Create your own chances; if you wait for chances, you may have to wait for eternity. Leadership is about adding something, every minute, every hour, every day, every month and every year. If you cannot add to what you met, be better person than who you are and change the people for good at the end of each programme or project or tenure, you have betrayed the electorates who freely gave you their mandate. Confront challenges headlong; do not falter, do not fail, do not fall, and if you do, do not be frustrated by your failure; do not stay down, but stand firm in faith and continue to pursue your dream. “

    Ambode actually believes that a follower is capable of surmounting mountains (and should surmount) obstacles, if he can exert himself to bring out hidden strength and ability hitherto unexplored. He constantly searches for something good and strong in his followers and subjects. According to him, “a chain is as good as its weakest link”; he is a fantastic team player.

    While he agrees that it is more difficult to build on success than failure, he believes success becomes sustainable as you become stronger after surmounting blocks of gigantic proportion. He smiles, praises and pats you in the back, and says affectionately: “brother, you could have the ability do much more; next time let me know how you can accomplish more.” His Excellency is a man who builds on your strong points, making your weak points irrelevant.

    Goals, Results, Impacts and Outcomes achieved with Excellence and transparency, are central in Ambodeism.  Excellence, whatever it costs, must be pursued in the realization of strategic targets, for here is a man of habitual integrity. Ambode is motivated by outcomes that will bring the greatest joy to the greatest number of Lagosians; he fervently pursued lay down strategies with passionate love, expressed in such infectious ways that followers begin to believe that they can move mountain.

    Bringing me to the ban on sponsorship of pilgrims to the holy lands; occasionally some would express concern that many Lagosians would not be able to visit the holy lands henceforth. To this my answer, which was always well received, is that enough pilgrims from Lagos would always go to the holy lands at more affordable cost that only Lagos could offer, but many that had no reason to be there would not be there; moreover, money saved by the administration is adding better values in critical sectors, bringing benefits to many Lagosians.”

    Yes, the governor can be very firm.  When he is focusing on result, he puts his foot firmly on the ground. Yet, he is warm, loving, kind and considerate. He looks down on no one. He says: “If our practices do not favour the masses, we must find courage to voice them and abandon such practices.” He is humble enough to say, despite his numerous achievements, people owe him nothing, as he only serves them by the privilege they have conferred through the ballots, and will never take them for granted.

    Indeed Ambode is among the few leaders past or present, who command loyalty, obedience, love and respect of his cabinet and other arms of government. He is a fantastic role model, providing direction and inspiration, always pushing you to realize a potential you did not think you have and celebrating your fantastic success in the end. To Ambode, every man has a hidden gift to annex and exploit to benefit individual and society. He challenges you for more, and you are surprised that you can transmit all of his noble values to others in your workplace, and achieve so much more than you think possible to the benefit of the society at large.

    Over time, since the beginning of the Ambode’s administration, landmark results have been recorded, this is clear evidence that there is something right with the Ambodeism. Of recent, my ministry won seven out of eight awards for the state, in respect of 2016 Hajj pilgrimage, this unprecedented record in Nigeria, occurred during Ambode’s administration, a Christian.  I pray to Allah to achieve much more in this year pilgrimage, hoping on greater inspiration from Ambodeism.

    Strive constantly for the good purposes, and Allah will join in your effort. Your success is not measured by the amount of wealth you have, but by what you have bequeathed in advancement of humanity. That is your legacy. Ambodeism is a legacy that will endure.

     

    • Dr. AbdulLateef is Lagos State Commissioner for Home Affairs.
  • Donald Trump: For Better or worse, a lesson for Nigeria

    Donald Trump: For Better or worse, a lesson for Nigeria

    Founder of Afe Babalola University, Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Aare Afe Babalola in this piece, highlights what the world stands to gain in the United States’ (U.S’) Donald Trump presidency. 

    Donald Trump, who was inaugurated as the 45th President of the United States of America last Friday, is undoubtedly a very outspoken man who does not bother about how anyone receives his comment. Indeed, why this trait in Trump offends the establishment, it appeals to the vast majority of the “forgotten Americans” who voted him into power.

    During the 18-month campaign, I was the only one in my family and among all my friends and associates that saw victory coming the way of Trump because I believed in his campaign strategy. So, when the news filtered out that he won, I immediately issued a press statement to celebrate the man of the moment and the new policeman of the world.

    I must say for the umpteenth time that Trump’s victory did not come to me as a surprise bearing in mind the thrust of his campaign to make America great again, that he disagrees with the Nuclear Treaty signed by United Nations (UN) with Iran and that he will change America’s immigration policy to ensure that only those who have genuine business in America are allowed into America, which angered and infuriated many.

    Others are that he would address the situation whereby America funds the UN so heavily and yet has become a toothless bull dog, a voiceless entity because some people enjoy the power of Veto and that he would raise the living standard of workers.

    In all, Trump’s unexpected victory was the result of his appeal to nationalism and patriotism and I acknowledge his courage, doggedness and audacity to take on the drug barons, illegal immigrants and minorities, even when some of his party leaders developed cold feet and vowed not to campaign for him.

    To those of us who believe in him, the victory is for the better while to those who do not believe in him, his victory is for the worse. Those who do not believe in him see him as a racist; a showman with little substance; a sexist; uneducated; a man lacking in experience; judgment and temperament and therefore unfit to rule America.

    I hold the firm belief that he will make an extra-ordinary change. What is happening reminds me of the prophetic statement of UK Prime Minister, Harold Macmillan, in South Africa Parliament in February 1960, when he said: “The wind of change is blowing through this continent, and whether we like it or not, this growth of national consciousness is a political fact. We must all accept it as a fact and our national policies must take account of it”. Those remarks were the harbinger of African Nationalism sweeping irresistibly from the North. The wind of change started in Britain in 2015 and has had dramatic effect in France, Philippines, USA and The Gambia.

    Contrary to expectation, the pattern of voting shows that almost two to one voters cared most about who could change the status quo in the United States of America (U.S.A.) in the November 8, last year election. His major focus was the “forgotten millions of American workers” who get paid by the hour. Unlike the previous Presidents and his opponent, Hillary Clinton, he did not paint a bright vision for the future. What he did was to emphasize the divisions of the present, arouse anger and fears within the country and promise opportunities for the millions of “forgotten Americans” who he has now promised to reintegrate.

    Although he is now the President of the most powerful nation in the world, Trump has to appreciate that the world is now a global village where nations complement one another. I agree that he should cure the problems of the American nation, but then, he cannot be an isolationist or a protectionist as any of these concepts will do severe damage to American interests generally.

    Although during his 18-month campaign, he looked like an unpredictable person, but now that he is at the driver’s seat, his perception and appreciation of the situation is bound to be different and perhaps he will find out that it will be pretty difficult for him to carry out some of his tough election talks as governance is a different ball game from election campaign rhetorics. And that may already have started, for soon after his victory, he travelled to Indiana to announce that United Technologies, the 45th largest company in the country had agreed to his demands and would retain 800 career manufacturing jobs in Indiana.

    And in any case, Trump seems to have back-pedalled on some of his statements since his victory. For instance, during the campaign, he was hostile to Mexicans. Now he said “I am for everybody”.  He also appointed a Nigerian as one of his Advisers.

    But, can Trump do without Nigeria like he boasted during his election campaigns and can Nigeria do without America? The answer is obvious: America can do without Nigeria, but Nigeria cannot do without America. Neither can he carry out his threat to drive away Nigerians and Muslims, many of whom are already American citizens, or barricade Mexico away from America. Indeed, the institutional framework of America will not allow him to carry out those threats.

    In any case, Trump’s unpredictability may turn out to be an advantage to Nigeria because peradventure Trump carries out his threat to withdraw from Nigeria; Nigeria will have no choice than to turn to countries like China, the emerging economic lord of the world. Besides, America’s withdrawal from Nigeria will teach the latter a lesson in self-reliance and turn it from a country of mere consumers to start thinking of being producers of what it had hitherto been relying on others for.

    Again, if Trumps makes good his threat of driving away Nigerians, highly qualified Nigerians will come home with their expertise and relocate their investment back home, thereby boosting the Nigeria’s economy. Besides, such a move will prevent people from investing stolen money in America while such already invested money will be returned home. Another bright side of the threat is that it will address the issue of brain drain and get our best brains to return home and boost our education sector. After all, the Yorubas say “Adaniloro fi agbara koni” meaning the one who denies the other assistance or help teaches the latter to work harder.

    On the whole, Trump is a man who has the benefit of practical and business approach to issues. He is a man who has distanced himself from national establishment ways of doing things, a man who has never held any public office before emerging the President of the U.S. The world, including Nigeria, will benefit from these qualities inherent in the new occupant of the White House. The change he has promised may begin from himself without the support of anybody. He has done it before when he courageously and doggedly took on the drug barons, illegal immigrants and minorities even when some of his Party Leaders developed cold feet and vowed not to campaign for him.  His audacity shows that he is a man who can really show the way. I wish him well.

     

  • ‘Corruption allegations in judiciary a lesson’

    Former Secretary General, Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Rafiu A.L. Rabana has said the allegations of corruption charges against the judiciary are great lessons for both the judges and lawyers.

    He added that the crisis in the judiciary has shown that the era of impunity by judges and judicial workers is over.

    Rabana spoke at the weekend in Offa, Offa Local Government Area of Kwara State at a royal award in his recognition organised by the Offa monarch, Oba Mohammed O. Gbadamosi.

    Rabana, who is an erstwhile Ilorin branch chairman of NBA, said the “crisis rocking the judiciary is an unfortunate development, but they came with a lot of lessons”.

    “If we have been doing things in a wrong way or we have been doing things that nobody will ask us any question or nobody ever thought anybody can arrest judges and put them to trial, the lesson out of it is that we are not immune to impunity.

    “We must operate within the constitutional limits of our judicial powers; we must operate within the judicial code of conduct and ethics and if there is a proven violation, then the law will take its course.

    “So, the lesson in the ongoing judiciary crisis has shown clearly that the era of immunity and the era of the feelings that nobody can do anything are going.

    “It is also a lesson to us lawyers, because, by virtue of the manner in which we all evolve going through the same law faculty; going through the same law school; meeting at conferences and seminars; lawyers and judges have become interwoven. There is element of cordiality between lawyers and judges, but where the cordiality ends is when there are attempts to compromise justice or to abuse that cordiality,” Rabana said.

    He added: “I am one of those people who stand for cordiality with judges. There is absolutely nothing wrong in being cordial with a judge, but there must be a line of demarcation.

    “And you will enjoy that cordiality if as a lawyer you don’t put pressure on judges that are your friends. You don’t make them undermine their judicial oath of office. You don’t do things that will damage their integrity. Judges are my friends and I love to be in their company, but I will not compromise.

  • Life’s lessons for Omorede Osifo

    Life’s lessons for Omorede Osifo

    THE only way to go after reaching the top of the mountain is downwards, Edo-born Omorede Osifo has learnt the hard way. Ever since the elegant former commissioner for youth sports and social mobilisation in Edo was shown the door by the governor, Adams Oshiomhole, she has walked down and away from the heights of social and political stardom she hitherto enjoyed.

    In her day, she enjoyed immense power and much attention as one of the star names in the governor’s cabinet. That was before she was brought low by powerful machinations in the state.

    Older and wiser, Lady Omorede Osifo seems to have accepted the fact that life is a journey that cannot be entirely spent in the limelight. She is rarely seen in public gatherings now, to the consternation of many who recall her glory days at social functions.

    At least she has decided not to take life’s lessons alone. She quietly basks in the companionship of Edo businessman, Ken Marshall, to whom she got married a year ago.

  • The lesson our youths are not learning (1 ¾)

    Character does one thing special for us: it prevents us from demeaning ourselves to the level of brigandage, common thievery or deception. These are very common with our adults and our youths should run from them

    Reader, today’s essay is a pseudo-continuation of last week’s essay in a sense; hence the peculiar title. On the one hand, it represents a reaction to commentaries on the topic, you know, the reaction to a reaction; and on the other, what we can do to counteract this stifling culture of waste. ‘Waste’ here does not refer to the non-use of material resources but to the attitude and perspective that says ego and vanity should be pampered and adored – a characteristic of the present generation of adults and parents. For them, vanity rules, OK!
    So, I would like to thank all those who reacted through text or e-mail messages to last week’s column on the lessons our Nigerian youths are not learning. The compliments were very kind. I would have reproduced them here today but for the fact that there is not enough space for all of us to cohabit this tiny pinhead I have been given. I tell you, sometimes it’s all I can do not to go rent my own crowd to protest to the editor to give me the entire newspaper.
    I also sincerely thank all who read the commentary but refrained from passing their comments, mostly because they disagreed violently with me but they did not want to be accused of doing violence to a harmless newspaper. I assure you that your emotions are duly noted. Most especially, I really thank those who read me regularly every week and laugh at my stale jokes. They are obliged to: they have become family. Thank you indeed for not giving me up to the police for ruining your week’s ration of laughter. One commentator once told me he/she laughed so hard at my column his/her cheeks still hurt. Now, if I can just discover what caused the laughter…
    The comment I found most touching was the one where the writer declared that he was ‘worried for the Nigerian youth’ owing to their ‘…half education’ and ‘…even the schooled among them are thoroughly misinformed.’ How right you are sir; I am worried too about the direction or lack of direction of growth of our youths. Believe me, there is no education like the one that thoroughly misses the mark, such as cooking lessons. Have you tried those? I tell you, missing the mark is what makes Pompom Bread to come out looking like fish with chicken pox.
    No doubt, our youths have missed the mark. Don’t get me wrong, I love them. I have worked with them nearly all my life so I know how they think. Although to be honest, I cannot say I can predict all the things they do. For instance I could not have predicted that a youth would set his mattress ablaze just to see how it burns and the colours it would bring out. I quite confess I didn’t see that one coming.
    I am deeply concerned though that most of our youths have been taught to grow up so… so… so… dependent on parents who unfortunately have missed their own way. Truth is that many parents these days have arrived at their own career ports by slithering like snakes before their bosses, done some voodoo to their predecessors, killed and scratched the eyes out of their rivals, betrayed their enemies and friends, used human beings to make rituals, drank human blood, ate dead bodies… to get to their posts. (So sorry, reader, to have been so indelicate but these are things I have heard). So, they see nothing wrong in breaking or bending the law for their young ‘uns. Unfortunately, they power and direct these youths down Failure Lane.
    The signs of youth failure are all around us. They are not in the message passed round sometime ago about how Gowon was Head of State at thirty; this was that at twenty, and so on. Actually, I believe that the people listed in that message are the very reasons for the politico-economic retardation the young country suffered under them and has experienced since their era. The signs of youth failure can be found in the doctrines that youths have since imbibed: get-rich-quick, do little work and practice religions of hatred. Enough has been said on these here to require any further jaw-jaw.
    What worries me most is the fact that youths do not seem to have much patience with integrity any more. Integrity lives, but only in the dictionary! Previously, it used to mean something close to moving steadily in a wholesome direction in all manner of things: thoughts, words and deeds. These days, however, I find that youths seem to think that integrity means having a wholesome social image. A youth’s social image has since toppled other considerations like character, selflessness and humility.
    You know what character is, don’t you? It is that thing that is intrinsic to you which enables you to face any lion in the world and he would bow to you. Your character would not allow you to do anything demeaning to the lion and if you had to kill it, you would do so like one with good breeding. You would not tear it up and make some messy glue out of the poor thing because you would think it is just probably looking for something to eat. Character does one thing special for us: it prevents us from demeaning ourselves to the level of brigandage, common thievery or deception. These are very common with our adults and our youths should run from them. One day, I sure hope to grow some character.
    Selflessness is a rare commodity around here but is actually not expensive to get. You know what that one is, surely. It is the attribute that enables you not to think twice before you dive into a lion’s den to rescue a child’s doll or a snake’s pit to rescue a stray cat. That attribute helps you to close your eyes to your own safety, comfort and the integrity of your face. When you emerge from that den or pit victorious with the prized item, believe me, the feeling of achievement that will engulf you is better imagined than said. True, many will call you an idiot but never mind, your integrity will be intact.
    Seriously though, it is selflessness that made people like Yuri Gagarin take the giant stride to become the first cosmonaut to orbit the earth in the 1960s. It is on record that he inspired others to reach for the moon and aim for the construction of the space shuttle and space stations. The present group of adults have failed to do this. They have rather reached for the pockets of the nation and are even still shamelessly scraping the bottom of the government’s purse, as I hear, but the youths must develop this selflessness and reach for the stars.
    Youths must build, not tear down. They must build structures, institutions, and people. Once, I visited Munich in Germany and our tour guide told us about a king they had some time back who constructed a good deal of that city. They called him the Eager Builder. Many of his constructions are not only still standing; they are proudly maintained by the state. It takes a lot of bending down to build anything higher than oneself anyway. That is humility.
    I just read that the federal government has signed a $5.1b railway contract with a Chinese firm. Why should that be, I ask myself? What are our youths doing that they cannot study prototypes and replicate them? It is so because the present crop of adults failed their character test in their youth; this present crop must not fail theirs anymore.

  • Lesson from Israel

    Lesson from Israel

    • Jailing its former PM testifies to the power of the rule of law

    The primacy of the rule of law as against the rule of man is quite sobering, in its fundamental import. The attribute that all men are equal before the law, without the George Orwell’s epitaph in his book, the Animal Farm, to boot: ‘but some are more equal than others’, seems to have played out in Israel last week, when former Prime Minister Ehmud Olmert was jailed for eight months, on charges of receiving bribe, fraudulent conduct and breach of trust. The possibility of jailing such a political stalwart, is a testimony to enduring democracy in Israel, and we commend it.

    The former prime minister was also jailed for six years, last year, for receiving bribe over a Jerusalem real estate scandal. In both instances, the disgraced former prime minister, who was ousted in 2009, following bribery allegations, has appealed the sentences. To get at Mr Olmert, his former office manager and confidant, Shula Zaken, became a state witness, after his earlier acquittal, for lack of evidence. At his trial, it was discovered that Olmert got about 600,000dollars from a United States business man, Moris Talansky.

    For us, punishment for malfeasance must be blind to political or other privileges, in any nation that lays claim to egalitarian democracy. The current practice in Nigeria where the rule of law is prejudiced by such privileges is unfortunate, and that may explain our state of underdevelopment. In our country for now, it is perhaps far-fetched to expect a former head of government to be called to account, not to talk of being sent to jail. As our experience shows, the trial of several political office holders in the courts has remained more of a circus show, than a sobering encounter with the law.

    The Israeli experience of equality of all citizens before the law is common in several other prosperous nations, and it is fundamental to their national success. The primary benefit as can be gleaned is that those who are privileged to preside over the affairs of such states, particularly its resources, understand that they are exercising positions of public trust. Thus, when prudence is the hallmark of public service, the people are the primary beneficiaries, as that translates to improvement in the quality of service. Evidence clearly shows that nations that disregard the rule of law, lack improvement in infrastructure and standard of living.

    So, we commend to the new administration in our country, insistence on treating all men equally. As President Muhammadu Buhari stated in his inaugural speech, our courts must wake up to their onerous responsibilities, especially when dealing with cases of corruption and abuse of office. Perhaps as a mark of such re-awakening, all cases of corruption across the country, especially those that have lasted for years, need to be justly brought to a close, within the shortest possible time. With the assistance of the National Judicial Council, all cases of corruption should be given priority by the judges in our courts.

    Again, it is heartening that the president in his address laid emphasis on treating all Nigerians equally, without fear or favour, when he said that he belongs to all, but none in particular. We therefore expect that every Nigerian, regardless of social status, will thus be accorded the same privileges and liabilities under the law. One thing the new administration must ensure we do away with is expeditious trial for common criminals and prolonged circus show, in the name of trial, for privileged Nigerians. Once Nigerians are put on the same page before the laws of the land, many of our current challenges would be resolved.

     

  • Leadership lesson from Buhari

    SIR: Students of management and leadership across the world must be surprised at the criticism against the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate in the 2015 general election, Muhammadu Buhari, by the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) that the leading opposition candidate shared leadership when he was Nigeria’s military head of state from 1983 to 1985 and chairman of the Petroleum (Special)  Trust Fund (PTF) from 1994 to 1999. Admittedly, Buhari’s deputy, Tunde Idiagbon, was in those days perceived to be so powerful that the military regime  was known in the popular media as the Buhari-Idiagbon regime. Almost all major government policies and decisions were announced by Idiagbon, who was chief of staff at the supreme headquarters.

    The world must be intrigued by the criticism against Buhari because contemporary leadership scholars, researchers and practitioners  are agreed that the notion that leadership is about one man bestriding the stage like a colossus is old fashioned and discredited. The notion is known as the messiah syndrome, according to Peter Guy Northouse, author of the famous book, Leadership: Theory and Practice. In place of the one-man hero idea of leadership which is referred to as personality and trait leadership, scholars now canvass what is called distributed or shared leadership. It seeks to bring on board as many people as possible. You can call it democracy in action.

    I have in a recent essay shown that Buhari has a reputation of empowering subordinates, stating that this is a good leadership practice. I cited the instance of Tam David-West, his minister of petroleum resources, who has on occasion stated that Buhari never for once interfered with his work by asking him to employ a particular individual or promote another or assign any a person to certain responsibilities or even to consider a firm for a contract award. He trusted his ministers and other aides, and so gave them a free hand to discharge their responsibilities. Interestingly researchers in management science, especially those involved in human resource development, now make a strong case for what is called employee empowerment. This is a concept which supports  granting employees a free hand to do their work but also assigning higher responsibilities to them, which will see them develop and grow in their career paths.

    Nigeria is essentially a traditional society, so a number of even professionals and intellectuals are still very conservative, if not out of touch with modern ideas and practice. This is why some of them are in this day and age still critical of Buhari’s shared leadership style, instead of praising it for being superior to some other leadership styles. These are elements still enamoured of the big man concept, the very leadership disease which has paralysed Africa for several decades. Rather than make our leaders feel that they are truly the servants of the people, these elements make  them feel like lords and conquerors of their own people.

    By seeking to paint him as an ineffective leader because he empowered competent subordinates and practised shared leadership as military head of state at a time distributed leadership had not become a popular concept, especially on a continent notorious for absolute dictatorship,  the PDP and its operatives have unwittingly  portrayed Buhari as a man ahead of his generation. Students, researchers and authors  will find Buhari a rewarding study in leadership even in a military regime. He does provide useful management and leadership lessons.

    • C. Don Adinuba

    Lagos

  • Lesson from Akwa Ibom

    In the immortal words of Bill Newman, “a leader is one who knows the way, goes the way and shows the way.” This assertion aptly captures the visionary leadership of Godswill Akpabio, governor of Akwa Ibom state. His name has come to be synonymous with performance and service delivery. The reasons, of course, are not far-fetched.

    On the 7th day of November, 2014, all roads  led to Uyo, the capital city of Akwa Ibom state, for the official commissioning of the newly constructed ultra-modern  international stadia built by Akpabio. The presence of the Ghanian president, John Darami Mahama and president Goodluck Jonathan, who used the event as a subtle campaign ground, affirmed the value proposition of the project. And following the jibes thrown at the governor by critics who pooh-poohed his leadership style,  Akpabio will go down in history as a rejected stone which eventually became the chief cornerstone.

    A friend, Inibehe Effiong, had personally took it upon himself to criticise Akpapio’s “deceptive strategy.” Such criticisms have shaped my perception of the governor over the years. I recalled arguing with a friend and concludd by labelling Akpabio as nothing other than a political stooge, doing the biddings of GEJ.

    Aristotle once cautioned that both the good and the right should be known but the good should be done. I believe the right thing for an average activist who envisages a transformed Nigeria is to agitate for the total extermination of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) from the power equation.

    For those who will try to judge me as being biased, I urge you to sheathe your sword and ponder the following observations. What is there to be desired in a political dispensation led by the self-acclaimed largest political party in sub-Saharan African, with the Otueke shoeless gaffer at the helms of affairs? But it would be fallacious to assume that all governors under the auspices of the PDP are clueless. We are just unfortunate to have a staggering ratio of non-performers, loathers and looters.

    Even before Governor Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi of Rivers State and Rabiu Kwankwaso of Kano State defected to the All Progressive Congress last year, they have been able to present impressive scorecards in the form of infrastructural development, eduction, job creation and so on. Akpabio also belongs to that class of functional leaders who take cover in a party that lacks a clear ideology.

    And when you weigh Akpabio on the same moral scale with the likes of Abia State governor, Chief Theodore Orji, Gabriel Suswam of Benue state, the difference stares right in your face.

    Chief Godswill Akpabio has distinguished himself from the mammoth crowd of dubious and egocentric people consumed by the hunger for power. Akpabio’s detractors should be humble enough to accept their folly and support the development efforts of the Akwa Ibom man. He is a man who has the interest of his people at heart at all times and makes efforts to proffer solutions to them.  This is clearly not in consonance with the PDP philosophy defined by extreme egoism and a certain fiefdom.

    We are reminded in the Holy Writ that “a good man out of the good in his heart produces good and an evil man out of the evil in his heart produces evil, for out of the abundance of the mind the mouth speaks.” Akpabio has shown us a better way to understand that biblical declaration.

    History is replete with leaders who were derided by their followers despite steering the ship of change. Recall the case of the famous member of the Albanian contingent, Mohammad Ali, who ruled Egypt between 1805 and1848?  Despites Ali’s domestic and foreign policies and transformational leadership which earned him the name founder of modern Egypt, many still criticise him till date.

    It becomes obvious that criticism is not only channelled to non-performing leaders but also to performing but misunderstood ones like Governor Akpabio. All empiricists will attest to Akpabio’s performance in Akwa-Ibom State.

    We should always take cognisance of the fact that politics has gone beyond judging from the angle of political parties to personal good and managerial competence of an individual. 2015 is here again. It is left to us to vote wisely or suffer foolishly for a blunder we would  struggle forever to reverse. Then it will be too late. I stand to say politics is no longer about the party but the personality in question. It is not so much a question of APC and PDP but that of Jonathan and Buhari. Their competence and leadership antecedents should form the compass for assessing their suitability.

    We should be able to ask th4e right questions before being lured with bags of rice and dirty money as bait. What shall it profit an average Nigeria to be bought with a bag of rice and sell the entire future of his unborn generation?

    We must accept the fact that politics should never be about religious and ethnic affiliations but the quality and character of the personalities involved. Akpabio has set himself apart from the maddening PDP crowd. I just hope others follow his example.

     

    Sunny, 200-Level History, UNIBEN

     

  • Lesson from history

    Lesson from history

    Preamble

    Let me start today with a Qur’anic admonition which I have frequently quoted in this column but which has consistently meant nothing to the rulers of Nigeria. It goes thus: “…Beware of a calamity that may descend not only on the perpetrators of injustice amongst you; and be warned that Allah’s retribution can be very severe on the unjust…”

    Q. 8:25.

    History is an invisible teacher. It teaches the experience of the past to the inexperienced people of the present with a view to guarding them towards a safe future. Some people perceive history as the best teacher because it warns against the vanity of human wishes as much as it encourages the emulation of impeccable exemplariness of the past.

    Others call it a bad teacher because it does not practically prevent people from falling into the quagmire of life.

    From whatever angle it is observed, however, history remains the undisputable teacher of all teachers which can be described in any way by anybody depending on the side of the divide to which each observer belongs. Thus, for as long as human beings remain in existence, passing through the coast of history will never cease to serve a meal of lesson.

    In the past couple of years, Libya stood out as a bastion from where the smoke of history was oozing out into the firmament of Africa and the Middle East for some misguided African rulers to inhale some scents of experience from. Of all the Middle East countries so engulfed in political turmoil, perhaps the least expected to join the fray was Libya. And that assertion would have become an axiom if (Gaddafi) the then 69 year old despot of that country had heeded the warning of history by reacting sensibly to the premonition coming from the neighbouring Tunisia.

    Misconception

    There had been a general but erroneous belief about the trend of the foraging revolts in the Middle East which started in 1979 with the fall of the imperial monarch of Iran, Muhammad Pahlavi, who styled himself the Shah-n-Shah (King of King). But the truth is that the revolts actually began two years earlier (1977) in Egypt. It was called ‘Egyptian Bread Riots’.

    The two-day riots of January 18 and 19, 1977 were a spontaneous reaction by hundreds of thousands of peasants to the World Bank and IMF mandated removal of state subsidies on foodstuffs. The then President, Anwar Sadat, had, in response to IMF’s recommendation, increased the price of a loaf of bread by just one Piaster (an equivalence of one Nigerian Kobo). The policy was the height of insensitivity, on the part the government, to the murderous plight of the masses at that time.

    By the time the dust settled, about 79 people had been shrouded for burial while over 800 others became patients in the casualty sections of many hospitals in the country. The riots ended only after the reversal of that obnoxious policy and the restoration of the removed subsidies. That singular incident, added to the general discontent in the land hitherto caused by the evident class dichotomy, eventually led to the assassination of President Sadat three years later (1980).

    From thence, Egyptians became conscious that the only language understandable to their government was violent revolt. Thus, in 1986, barely six years after the death of Sadat and the assumption of office as President by Hosni Mubarak, another major riot broke out in Egypt.

    On February 25, 1986, about 17,000 Egyptian conscripts of the Central Security Forces (CSF), otherwise known as Egyptian Para-military Force staged a violent protest in and around Cairo city destroying two major hotels and targeting the properties of the upper and the middle classes. The riots caused by a rumour that the government had decided to increase the then two-year compulsory national service to three years without any commensurate remuneration lasted three days with official casualty figure put at 107 while over 2,000 people were said to be terribly injured.

    Unlike Sadat who quickly reversed his foodstuff subsidy policy, the only lesson that Hosni Mubarak could learn from that experience was the use of force against the protesters. Ever since, Egypt had become a delicate gun powder waiting to explode anytime. If there was any surprise about the recent Egyptian revolution that ended Mubarak’s 32-year regime ignominiously therefore, it was the delay of the time of that explosion.

    With the Iranian and the Egyptian experience, one would have expected other rulers in the region to learn a lesson but as a Yoruba adage goes,” a dog that would die in perdition will never respond to the whistle of the hunter”.

    Tunisian experience

    In Tunisia, the protests leading to the flight of the tyrannical President Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali to Saudi Arabia were instigated by the gruesomely symbolic suicide of one Mohammed Bouazizi on December 17, 2011. The 25-year-old College graduate had used his University certificate as a collateral to obtain a bank loan to venture into retailing some farm products having realised the futility of looking for job in a country where about 14 per cent of the populace was unemployed.

    But when his consignment of farm products were confiscated by government officials for not obtaining permit to sell farm products, the young man concluded that his country didn’t need him anymore and decided to commit suicide by setting himself ablaze. He died in a hospital a few days thereafter.

    The public reaction to his death was unimaginably spontaneous.

    Violence erupted across cities and towns as already aggrieved youths trooped to the streets burning whatever could be burnt and maiming whoever could be captured among government agents. The demand was no longer for reforms but for the removal of the President. By that time, the President tried to address some of the issues against which complaints were made. But then, it had become too late for such efforts to yield any sensible result. When the coming signals were no longer positive he knew that the die had been cast and decided to flee the country thereby ending his 24-year-old regime with historic ignominy.

    The case of Bouazizi who set himself ablaze and was nationally pronounced a martyr as well as the father of the revolution was just an atom in the complex story of longstanding discontent in Tunisia.

    There were many other cases of the like but three main factors can be said to be the immediate precipitates of the Tunisian revolution.

    These were corruption, unemployment and insensitive affluence publicly displayed by government officials.

    Gaddafi’s reaction

    While those revolts were going on in Tunisia and Egypt, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s impression was that the Presidents of both countries were mere jellies who could hardly manage their matrimonial homes. It was far from his imaginary dream that the surging political tsunami in the Arab world could come near Libya let alone consuming him. After 42 years of unbridled despotism, Gaddafi reopened the film of Pharaoh’s history for the world to behold. Like Saddam before him, he lost all that he lived for, including most of his children.

    The story of the Tunisian, the Egyptian and the Libyan revolutions, cannot be relayed in isolation. There seems to be more of the like to tell in the very near future. That story is not in any way dissimilar from that of Syria or Yemen. And if the hanged President Saddam Hussein of Iraq had not met his doom in the hands of his imperial friends turned enemies, he would have probably met a Waterloo in the hands of his own people.

    In virtually all the Arab countries, education is free from the primary school to the university. There is no problem of electricity, water, roads, rail system, food and housing. The only two areas in which the people of those countries have problem with their governments are unemployment and lack of freedom to partake in governance.  And for those two reasons, a political tsunami swept the length and breadth of what is called the Middle East like a hurricane.

    Morocco and Algeria

    The Moroccan monarch and Algerian President were only lucky to have heeded the warning tune of that tsunami in time thereby escaping its consequences. The lesson they learned from the experiences of their colleagues quickly served them in good stead. Otherwise, they would have ended up like Gaddafi or Mubarak.

    Here in Nigeria, where none of the above mentioned infrastructures is available despite the enormous material resources with which the country is naturally endowed the rulers’ stock in trade is to ferry the scarce resources of the country illegally to some other African countries under the guise of arms purchase. Rather than utilising those resources to boost the general standard of living and thereby uplift the status of the country, the priority of our government is to squeeze the citizenry dry through the removal of a non-existing subsidy on oil and callous imposition of frivolous increase on the tariff of electricity in even when it is evident that Nigeria has no stable electricity despite the so-called privatisation of the public power sector.

    While the Tunisians became restive over 14 per cent unemployment figure, Nigeria is proudly grappling with about 72per cent  of unemployment rate even as the government keeps drumming the tune of becoming one of the 20 most economically viable countries in the world. What a grand self-deception?

    The warning here is for the doubting ‘Thomases’ who are still in the dream land in Nigeria and the rest of Africa to open their eyes and clearly see the vanity of human wishes in the cited Arab nations. Such tendentious talks as: “IT CAN’T HAPPEN HERE IN NIGERIA” only belongs to parochial people who still live in the primordial time. To avoid becoming like flies dying in the bottle of wine, men of reason had better learn from the experiences of others before some others begin to learn from their own experiences.

    The role of justice

    Justice is fundamentally sacrosanct in the reckoning of Allah. It is the scale with which good governance and pious leaders are measured.

    An unjust nation ruled by an unjust leader is Hell in which just peasants are roasted. But where you have people who are educated enough to know their right; where you have people who are conscious of their common affinity; where you have people who believe in God and His capability to bring justice to an unjust nation, let no one think that such people can be exploited indefinitely. Those in power in Nigeria today who think they can live perpetually on injustice should remember that the likes of Saddam Hussein, Muammar Gaddafi and Hosni Mubarak never thought that nemesis could afflict them one day. Their episodes are now part of history. Prophet Nuhu (Noah) never prayed for the destruction of his nation and people even after many centuries of preaching to the deaf. His prayer only came when, one day, a small child carried on the shoulder of his father asked for a stone to be thrown at him (Nuhu) just as most people in the nation had been doing to him for several centuries.

    He then concluded that with the example of that little child it became evident that even the great grand children of that generation would continue atrocities in the land and remain hostile to God just like their parents. Thus, when he prayed to God for the change of the generation, it was divinely accepted with ‘automatic alacrity’.  The rest is history.

    In history, we also learn how the people of Prophet Lut (Lot) were destroyed by divine order for indulging in homosexuality and the people of Prophet Shu’ayb were subjected to ruins for commercial cheating. We are also told in the Qur’an about the plight of the people of ‘Ad and Thamud who transgressed in the land. Each of these people was punished for a particular crime following their refusal to repent and show remorse. Thus, they came to serve as a lesson for others after them. Unfortunately, all the crimes that led them into ruins are committed in Nigeria today and the so-called leaders are the champions of those crimes.

    Nigeria for instance

    The current situation in Nigeria is by far worse. Here is a country where corruption has graduated from a crime to a pride, and both conscience and shame have taken a permanent flight thereby decimating the future for the generations yet unborn. Here is a country where vices are tied to the aprons and ethnicity and religion while ministers and some criminal merchants (masquerading in the cloak of religion) are audaciously stealing public funds and ferrying them to other countries for keep with no regards for any consequences. Here is a country where well known unremorseful criminals are granted state pardon and rewarded with national honours at the expense of conscience and shame. Here is a country where the so-called privatisation policy is being formulated not for the growth of national economy but for the benefit of the formulators who see themselves as the inheritors of the nation’s wealth. Here is a country where pseudo-clerics serve as suppliers of arms and ammunition of crooks even brigands enjoy patronage of the government in the perpetration of atrocities. Here is a country where official insurgency against the citizenry is a political instrument for silencing the voices of dissent and for self-perpetration in public office.

    When such vices as mentioned above are perpetrated in a society, religion is often seen as the last bastion to which the populace look for solution. But when religion itself becomes the haven of crimes as in the case of Boko Haram and various forms of fraud in religious sanctuaries in the country what else remains as hope for the innocent few in that society?

    To think that such crime can be committed without nemesis is to live in a fool’s paradise. Therefore, let those in Nigeria who refuse to learn from ancient history try to learn from the recent one. To be forewarned is to be forearmed. A word is enough for the wise.