Tag: Nigeria

  • UK’s richest man battles Obasanjo’s associate over Nigeria oil blocs

    UK’s richest man battles Obasanjo’s associate over Nigeria oil blocs

    • To explain relationship with ex-president

    Lakshmi Mittal, Britain’s richest man, is expected to be cross-examined over his business practices and relationships with politicians in a court case that could offer a rare glimpse into his empire.

    The steel magnate, worth an estimated £12.7bn, is being sued at the high court for allegedly reneging on an agreement to pay fees to a former friend for helping to secure an oil deal.

    The case, which begins on Tuesday, is the culmination of a seven-year battle with the rice importer Moni Varma. Both men will be asked to discuss their relationships with Olusegun Obasanjo, the former president who granted Mittal access to two unexplored oil fields in the Niger Delta.

    Mittal, 63, has previously dismissed the claim, saying the case would be defended vigorously.

    Since moving to Britain with his family in 1995, the “steel maharajah” has become well known for his expensive tastes and his involvement in public life. He has donated more than £5m to the Labour Party and has imported marble from the quarry used for the Taj Mahal to decorate his £60m home. The ArcelorMittal Orbit – 1,500 tonnes of steel twisted into a sculpture by the artist Anish Kapoor – dominates the Olympic park in Stratford, East London.

    In documents put before the court, Varma claims to have facilitated a deal in 2006 for Mittal to access two unexplored oil fields in the Niger Delta, and to have arranged a meeting with Obasanjo.

    Varma, 64, from Northwood, Middlesex, whose company Veetee Rice is one of Britain’s biggest rice traders, declined to comment on the case on Friday, saying: “Let the courts decide if my claim is legitimate or not. My intention is not to malign anybody.”

    The writ details how Varma and Mittal have known each other socially since 1997 and regularly discussed business opportunities at social events in London.

    Varma, who was born in India but educated in Malawi, has longstanding connections with Nigeria and had known Obasanjo since 2001, the documents claim.

    In July 2005, Mittal Investments Sarl, a company owned by Mittal, launched a joint adventure with OVL, a subsidiary of ONGC India, India’s leading oil and gas exploration company. A month later Mittal and Varma met for dinner at an Indian restaurant in Knightsbridge and discussed possible deals in Nigeria, the writ claims.

    In September 2005, Varma claims, the pair had a conversation that is at the heart of the case: how much Varma would be paid if the deal came through. Varma claims Mittal said he could expect 5%-15% of the defendant’s investment.

    According to the writ, Mittal responded: “I will cover you” or “you will be covered … The reward could be even bigger than 15%, depending on the size of the deal.”

    Varma claims that over the following six months he was cut out of the deal.

    Mittal’s joint venture with the Indian government was successful in its bids for two licences for 10 years in downstream projects in Nigeria. The anticipated combined yield of the “blocks”, or areas of oil, was 650,000 barrels a day and the value of the downstream projects is $6bn (£4bn).

    Mittal’s lawyers are expected to argue that Varma was a social acquaintance of their client, and that Varma offered to arrange a meeting with Obasanjo, but dispute Varma’s recollection of the conversation in September 2005. The lawyers have also dismissed as fanciful Varma’s claims of introducing Mittal to Nigeria.

    The commercial court has put aside 21 days to hear the case.

    A spokesman for Mittal said: “Mr Varma’s claim is an opportunistic and speculative piece of litigation brought on a conditional fee agreement, which Mr Mittal denies in its entirety and intends to vigorously defend.”

    Source: Guardian of London

  • Nigeria’s stolen trillions

    Nigeria’s stolen trillions

    It is sad that the country’s leaders are the ones looting the treasury

    In its most recent release, a Washington-based research and advocacy organisation, the Global Financial Integrity (GFI), reported that out of the 20 biggest exporters of illicit financial flows for the past 10 years, Nigeria stands at an incredible 7th position, with $10.66bn or N3.047trillion stolen money. Also, between 2000 and 2010, Nigeria, as the 7th biggest money laundering country in the world, had N3trillion exported to foreign lands by its leaders. The report, as co-authored by GFI’s Lead Economist, Dev Kar and GFI’s economist, Sarah Freitas, is said to be “the first by the organisation incorporating a new, more conservative estimate of illicit financial flows”.

    The report is designed to facilitate comparisons from GFI, update and identify crime, corruption and tax evasion as the biggest channels from where nearly $6trillion was stolen from some countries. According to the report, China is leading the group with $274billion, with cumulative average of $2.74trillion, followed by Mexico $476billion, Malaysia $285billion, Saudi Arabia $210billion, Russia $152billion and The Philippines, $138bilion. Nigeria happens to be the only African country cited among the countries where astronomical amounts had been siphoned and is still being siphoned out of the developing world to the banks of developed countries. Indeed, it has even been suggested that the estimate provided by these harmful outflows of stolen money in which Nigerian leaders are alleged to be active participants is likely to be extremely conservative, as they do not include trade mispricing services, invoice trade mispricing, secret transactions and dealings concluded in bulk cash.

    This mindboggling report should act as a wake-up call to Nigerian leaders, past and present, and to all Nigerians, especially the labour unions, civil society groups, the media, men and women of God in the churches and mosques, academic unions, students and the masses, to stand up in unison against these criminal activities of the country’s shameless leaders. Such a mass action is inevitable because the criminal looting of the treasury has very big consequence on the Nigerian economy and development. What it means is that Nigeria lost N3trillion that could have been invested on education, healthcare, electricity and potable water supply and other infrastructural facilities just because of the greed of a few leaders who are supposed to serve but have kept Nigerians under perpetual economic bondage.

    Surely, what we have read about our leaders is an indication of massive corruption in the country. Unfortunately, there seems to be no hope that this almost incurable disease will soon be wiped out in Nigeria. Our anti-corruption agencies have become docile; they merely bark, but cannot bite. They operate under the apron of the same leaders who stole and are stealing our money with reckless abandon. No wonder these anti-corruption agencies cannot function where and when they should. How are we to calculate the huge amount of money regularly stolen through monumental fraud and illicit self allocation of funds going on in the National Assembly, the states and local governments which we hardly remember, as if it is only at the centre that money is furiously stolen?

    A colossal sum of money is stolen every year from the national budget through criminal inflation of contract awards; money is stolen through pensions and gratuities that are never paid. Apart from deepening underdevelopment, this deep-rooted corruption in high places explains the widespread poverty, inhuman standard of living and the consequent low life expectancy in Nigeria.

    In China, corrupt people like our corrupt leaders are summarily executed. But in Nigeria, very few people, if any at all, are punished for corruption. Even when some are reluctantly apprehended, they seek refuge under our porous and corrupt judicial system, preferring to be tried at home than abroad where there is no hiding place for corrupt leaders and government officials.

    It’s high time the government went tough on corruption before corruption kills the country. Things definitely cannot continue like this.

  • Nigeria, others fulfil 70 per cent of troops pledged for Mali

    Nigeria, others fulfil 70 per cent of troops pledged for Mali

    •French in tough fight in northern Mali

    •Evidence of Boko Haram’s link with al-Qaeda found 

     

    About 70 percent of troops pledged by Nigeria and others to the African-led International Support Mission in Mali (AFISMA) have been deployed, it was learnt yesterday.

    Foreign Minister of Côte d’Ivoire Charles Koffi Diby made the disclosure at the opening of an extraordinary meeting of the Mediation and Security Council of ECOWAS Ministers in charge of foreign affairs and defence, in Abidjan on Monday.

    The minister said the priority was to expedite the deployment of the force to progressively take over from the 3,500 French forces who spearheaded the effort to flush out terrorists occupying the north of Mali.

    The minister, who is also the chair of the Council, stressed the need to protect Mali’s Tuareg population from reprisals by elements who accused them of affiliation with Islamists who briefly occupied the north of the country and terrorised the local population.

    He noted that it was also important to prevent northern Mali from becoming a sanctuary for terrorists.

    Minister Diby, who also hailed the adoption of a road map by Mali’s National Assembly for return to constitutional government, said it was a landmark development in the country’s political evolution to normalcy.

    The President of the ECOWAS Commission, Kadré Désiré Ouédraogo, warned against complacency in the wake of the recovery of major towns previously occupied by the terrorists.

    He said:”We must not rest on our oars in the light of this positive development as the Council seeks to confront the multifarious challenges that require appropriate responses.

    “Indeed, the many issues we must turn our attention to are the definitive stability and security of the recovered areas, the long term conditions for maintaining the troops in the field, respect for international humanitarian law and human rights as well as preparing the concept of operations based on the realities on the ground.”

    With the recovery of previously occupied territory in the north of Mali, the ECOWAS Commission President said “we are now on the verge of a consolidation phase which is vital if we must contain the risks of a somewhat unbalanced war and thus safeguard the sustainability and credibility of our action, he said the support of the UN and international community was vital, not only in the prompt release of funds to AFISMA, but also in view of the need to increase resources and ensure the embrace of operations by the United Nations.”

    The one-day extraordinary meeting was convened to discuss the evolving situations in Mali and Guinea-Bissau and proposals for addressing them.

    France’s defense minister says French troops are involved in “very violent fighting” in the mountains of northern Mali, and that it’s too early to talk about a quick pullout from the West African country despite the growing cost of the intervention.

    Jean-Yves Le Drian said on France’s RTL radio Tuesday that the French intervention in Mali has cost more than €100 million ($133 million). French troops moved in Jan. 11 to help Mali’s weak military push back Islamist extremists.

    Le Drian said: “We are now at the heart of the conflict,” in protracted fighting in the Adrar des Ifoghas mountains. While some have suggested starting a pullout of the 4,000-strong French force next month, Le Drian said he couldn’t talk about a quick withdrawal while the mountain fighting goes on.

    More evidence piles up that Boko Haram has been communicating with al Qaeda, particularly the branch in Mali. There were apparently Boko Haram members in Mali before French troops began clearing the Islamic terrorists out of northern Mali five weeks ago.

    The sources for this (captured documents and interrogations) also revealed a rift within Boko Haram. Many members are angry that the terror tactics have not produced much beyond a lot of mayhem and more Nigerians, particularly Moslems, who hate Boko Haram. That is why calls for peace talks since last November have created public disputes between Boko Haram leaders and factions.

    While Boko Haram has been able to carry out hundreds of attacks in the last few years, some of them quite spectacular bombings or gun battles, the group is no closer to its goal of ruling the north, much less all of Nigeria. While quite violent and militant, Boko Haram is still a small group, with a few thousand members (of varying skill and dedication) and a few hundred thousand northerners who offer support. Judging from the number of tips the police get and the subsequent raids on Boko Haram hideouts, many northerners are not fans of the ultra violence.

     

  • Nigeria not better than countries at war, says Ajibola

    Nigeria not better than countries at war, says Ajibola

    Ex-Justice Minister speaks at Metropolitan Club lecture

    Nigeria has not fared better than a country at war, former Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Prince Bola Ajibola (SAN) said yesterday.

    He said corruption, with insecurity and backwardness as its side effects, is “the singular most cancerous malaise affecting the body-politic of our nation”.

    He spoke while delivering a lecture at a luncheon organised by the Metropolitan Club in Lagos.

    According to him, graft has permeated lives and made it impossible for the government to fix anything.

    “Sometimes, one is forced to wonder how much better we have fared than countries in a state of war,” Ajibola, also a former Judge of the International Court of Justice, said.

    He said Nigeria’s brand of corruption transcended stealing of public funds.

    Threats to national peace, Ajibola said, are fallouts of a festering tradition of greed and “galloping corruption with reckless impunity in high places”.

    Criticising the judiciary, he said plea bargaining encourages massive public funds pilfering.

    He said: “Our pains as a nation are without doubt, self inflicted.

    “It beats my imagination to think that this is the same country where I served as Attorney-General and Minister of Justice for more than six years without taking any salary and even employed two legal practitioners to work for the government in my office as minister and paid them from my pocket.”

    Ajibola said Nigeria has sadly remained a net importer of petroleum products despite huge deposits of crude oil.

    “One is sad to see us carrying on as a nation that is bereft of any sense of shame. Indeed, what we are currently experiencing is corruption in absolute terms, and by that I mean the glaring deficit in enviable national character and general moral rectitude,” he said.

    On the way out, Ajibola believes the government should provide for all and be fair to all and ensure that the educational system is made more functional and guided to address national needs and aspirations.

    He said:“We should be done with impunity and government arrogance. No section of the populace should be made to enjoy undue advantage over the others.”

    Among guests were Ambassador Dapo Fafowora, who anchored the event, President of the Metropolitan Club Chief Olu Akinkugbe, former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Joseph Sanusi and former Federal Minister of Works Alhaji Femi Okunnu (SAN).

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Nigeria, Trinidad strengthen cultural relations at carnival

    Nigeria, Trinidad strengthen cultural relations at carnival

    Carnival experts from Nigeria were at the Trinidad and Tobago carnival where they serve as adjudicators, reports Dr.TaIWO Oledekun

    The active participation of a large contingent of Trinidad and Tobago (T&T) at last edition of the Abuja Carnival was a demonstration of the fact that relations between the Caribbean country and Nigeria are growing fast. Known for their carnival tradition, which spans centuries, the interest of T&T in the Nigerian carnivals points to the huge potentials this cultural product holds for Nigeria and her people.

    Determined to consolidate on the gains of the relations, which have risen in profile in the last two years, the Minister of Tourism, Culture and National Orientation, Chief Edem Duke, led a Nigerian delegation to the T&T capital, Port of Spain, to participate in the 2013 Carnival. And participation in this sense refers not only to joining in the revelry and ambience of celebration and culture showcase, it was also an avenue to discuss serious issues relating to the organisation and growth of carnivals globally and the specifics of the ongoing collaboration between Nigeria and Trinidad and Tobago in that area. Thus, the Nigerian delegation engaged officials of the Culture Division of the Ministry of the Arts and Multiculturalism and stakeholders in carnival business and organisations with a view to gaining deeper insights into carnivals and their socio-economic impacts around the world.

    Interestingly, Nigeria is not alone in this pursuit as government officials from Kenya and Uganda were also in Trinidad and Tobago for the same purpose. Kenya for instance, is planning her 50th Independence anniversary and has decided to hold a big carnival as part of the celebrations with the intention of holding an annual national carnival afterwards. The same goes for Uganda whose artiste and singer, Angela Katatumba, (also at the meeting) was invited to participate in the carnival and even sing the national anthem of Trinidad and Tobago. Such is the importance that some African countries now attach to carnivals which, apart from the huge economic prospects they offer, are also a platform for cultural showcase and propagation of national unity.

    At the meeting chaired by the Trinidadian Minister of the Arts and Multiculturalism Dr Lincoln Douglas, issues such as content, packaging, ownership, sponsorship, technical collaboration and cooperation were dominant. It was observed that any cultural product or feature that ignites the passion of the people should determine the contents of any carnival. For instance, calypso music has been used as the engine room of the T&T carnival for ages because that is what the people are passionate about. At every corner and any time during the carnival, this brand of music, which has become the identity of the Caribbean around the world, is blared on huge sound systems with old and young Trinidadians swinging and jumping to the sounds. Carnival officials in Trinidad who have witnessed the Abuja, Calabar and Port Harcourt carnivals identified cultural staples such as the Durbar and the Boat Regatta as items that can be used to drive carnivals in Nigeria.

    On the issue of ownership, participants agreed that carnivals are owned by the people and called for concerted efforts to ensure the active participation of all categories of citizens in the process. One way of achieving this is to propagate the idea of using carnivals as a means of preservation of cultural identities and not a mere cultural activity. This approach has been a huge success in Trinidad and Tobago as all regions of the country as well as every neighborhood in the regions participate actively in the carnival with activities peculiar to these regions. For example, the Nigerian delegation witnessed spectacular display of Traditional Mas (Masquerades) on Cipero Street in San Fernando and on Waterloo Main Road in Carapichaima as well as a vivacious display of energetic dances and colours at the Paramin Blue Devil Festival on the hilly neighborhood of Paramin. At every turn during the carnival, the participation of the people is total as the whole country is connected to that moment of national unity in an atmosphere of flamboyant cultural expression.

    Sponsorship is a challenge to sustainability of carnivals all over the world but the meeting observed while this may be slow in coming, sponsors will eventually buy into the process as the carnival grows and mass participation improves. According to the Chairman of National Carnival Development Foundation T&T, the carnival did not attract private sponsorship immediately but merchants started to fund it in the 19th century when they noticed that sales went up during the event.

    The meeting also agreed that Nigeria and Trinidad and Tobago have been benefiting from technical cooperation and collaborations between the two countries. The exchange of carnival experts from both countries has continued as carnival officials from Cross Rivers State were on ground to serve as adjudicators on the invitation of the National Carnival Commission of Trinidad and Tobago. This is an indication that the synergy initiated by the Minister of Tourism, Culture and National Orientation, Edem Duke, is yielding encouraging results not only for the Federal Government but also for states where carnival is gaining popularity and contributing to the economy.

    The Minister did not stop at expressing his happiness with the gains of the collaboration and the level of talks on the issue of carnivals in the last one year, he also praised the progress being made with the establishment of the Nigeria- Trinidad Joint Commission which as an offshoot of the cultural relations between the two countries. The purpose of the Joint Commission is to widen relations and explore other areas of partnership and collaboration for the benefit of citizens of both countries. The inaugural roundtable of the Joint Commission was held in Port of Spain in 2012 while the second edition is scheduled to hold in Abuja about the second quarter of 2013. The Nigerian High Commission in Trinidad and Tobago indicated that preparations were in progress towards the meeting.

    In addition to the participation of citizens in the carnival process, the patronage of international tourists is also important. And armed with flyers and other promotional materials of Abuja Carnival, Artistic Director of Abuja Carnival, Prof Rasaki Ojo-Bakare seized the opportunity of every event during the visit to distribute the materials inviting the world to the 2013 edition. The Calabar and Port Harcourt Carnivals were also promoted.

    In all, it was a fruitful outing for Nigeria with useful policy guidelines coming from officials of the Ministry of Tourism, Culture and National Orientation and its parastatals including the Director of Culture, Mr George Uffot , Deputy Director (External ) Mrs Dayo Keshi and Senior Special Assistant( Technical and Special Duties) to the Minister, Mrs Chika Balogun. Also on the Nigerian delegation were Special Assistant to Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr Ferdinand Agu, DG CBAAC, Prof. Tunde Babawale, DG NCAC, Mr M.M Maidugu, DG NCMM, Yusuf Abdalah, DG NGA, Abdulahi Muku, Executive Secretary NICO, Dr. Barclays Ayakoroma DG NIHOTOUR, Dr Munzali Dantata and Artistic Director, National Troupe of Nigeria, Martin Adaji. Others are DG Rivers State Carnival, Sam Dede and the state Commissioner for Culture and Tourism as well as carnival officials from Cross River State.

  • Why is life so cheap in Nigeria?

    Why is life so cheap in Nigeria?

    SIR: There is no faith that does not recognise the sanctity of human life. The two great religions of the world, Christianity and Islam- for sure, certainly do. A mutual refrain in the two great books is: You shall not kill. It is therefore sacrilegious to take human life. This is on the side of morals.

    In our case, the contrary seems to hold sway. Our actions and inactions reflect the antithesis of the sanctity of human life. It seems praxis to flout God’s order of ‘You shall not kill’.

    A group of people are busy throwing bombs all around and attacking all places including places of worship in the name of religion. It is sheer delirium touting the reason of religion given that both Christians, Muslims, atheists and anybody are their targets.

    It will also be foolhardy to believe the economic angle. How will the death of hundreds of people on the streets of Kano, Zaria, Bauchi bring about a positive turn-around in Nigeria’s economy?

    Arguably, road mishaps remain the cause of the highest number of Nigerians. Statistics by the highly reliable Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) showed that most road accidents were caused by each or a combination of these factors: bad roads, reckless driving, over-speeding, over-loading, drunkenness et al.

    Why it took successive governments so long to find a solution to the slaughter slab that Lagos-Ibadan road was, is difficult to fathom considering the enormous resources at the disposal of the Federal Government.

    But, if government is intent in killing as many citizens as possible, why should we also be a willing accomplice? It is sad that the drivers themselves are ready and willing tools in the hands of the ‘devil’ to reduce the population of Nigeria. You need only a cursory attention at activities at our various parks and garages and you will be confounded by the assemblage of hawkers of an assortment of alcoholic drinks of various names and makes some under the guise of herbs.

    Same goes for cops who, under the influence of alcohol, pull the trigger. Only God knows how many lives have been lost due to ‘accidental discharge’.

    Can we count the number of Nigerians who have lost their lives in the hands of armed robbers, kidnappers, rapists, assassins and the likes? How can we describe robbers who forced hapless victims to lie on highways for them to be mauled by approaching vehicles? What do we call armed robbers who after dispossessing their victims of their hard-earned valuables still went ahead to wipe out the family?

    Nigerians’ proclivity to cheapen human life is inexorably tied to the incredibly high level of insecurity in the country. Any flimsy, mundane, even stupid, reason can draw cudgels, machetes, guns and other deadly weapons from any group of people against the other in a cult, gang, religious or tribal feud and before you know it, many heads would have rolled. Mere Street squabbles, beer parlour arguments, bus banter among others easily degenerate into violence, blood and deaths.

    Amidst all this grand madness, Nigerians descend on places of worship almost 24 hours every day to call on the same God that they have refused His simple injunction not to kill. If we attach a modicum out of the prodigious respect we attach to religion to regard to life, Nigeria will be a better place to live in.

     

    • Laitan Akinwunmi

    Ifako-Ijaiye

    Lagos State

     

  • Tension in Kaduna over rumoured crisis

    There was confusion in Kaduna metropolis on Sunday following a rumoured crisis in Sabo Tasha area of the metropolis.
    Residents of the state capital  scampered for safety while heavily armed security men were immediately dispatched across the metropolis.
    The Government however warned that  those trying to cause problem within the state should  desist from doing so and appealed to residents of the state to go about their normal business.
    The rumour of the crisis spread round the city  at about 12.45 pm when church worshipers were returning from  sunday service.
    Heavily armed soldiers and police were immediately drafted to major roads, while most streets and highways were  deserted  as few vehicles were seen plying the roads, while residents remained  in-doors.

    In a statement signed by the Director General, Media and Publicity, Ahmed Maiyaki, the government said “the entire people of Kaduna State have been urged to remain calm and go about their normal businesses as government has taken steps to forestall any break of law and order in any part of the state.”

     “Governor Yero has however warned that government will deal decisively with any persons or group found disrupting peace and order in the state and therefore call on people to remain law abiding and peaceful”.
    Yero also directed security agencies to maintain law and order in the area and the state in general as well as protect lives and properties of the people”.
  • A Moment to Reflect on the Talakawa Condition in Nigeria and Our World

    A Moment to Reflect on the Talakawa Condition in Nigeria and Our World

    Talakawa: Hausa, noun: Of or pertaining to the poor. The poor as a social category, as a community of the desperately needy deserving of the solicitude of the wealthy and powerful

     Herald: English, noun. 1. A person, event or thing that precedes or comes before; forerunner, harbinger. 2. A person, event or thing that proclaims or announces: A good newspaper should be a herald for truth.

                Dictionary.com (online)

    This Sunday, February 24, 2013, I begin this weekly column in The Nation. Readers accustomed to reading my column, Talakawa Liberation Courier, in The Sunday Guardian, will immediately recognize that there is an echo of that column’s title in the title of this new column in another newspaper: Talakawa Liberation Herald. I could have retained the former title in this new discursive context, this new journalistic space. But since my “migration” from The Guardian, so to speak, represents for me a momentous event in my journalistic work of more than forty years in the Nigerian press, I decided that it was necessary for me to also change the title of the column.

    Perhaps some months or maybe even a year or two from now, I shall write fully on why I left The Guardian for which I have written continuously since it was founded in 1983, perhaps the only one left among the old or aging writers, academics and commentators that were there at the beginning of the Guardian group. For now, all I will allow myself to say is that I left without rancour or bitterness but with a great deal of sadness and anger. In the meantime, my “migration” to The Nation, I feel, is an occasion that provides a unique opportunity to reflect on the column itself, hoping in the process to clarify both for myself and for my readers what it is I have tried to do – and continue hoping to do – with and through the column. In a nutshell, this exercise entails the question of the informing perspectives, ideas and values on which the column is based. And of course, with regard to these perspectives, ideas and values, the central concept is the term “Talakawa”. Concerning this concept, I wish to address two central propositions, two cardinal theses that the readers of this piece will be as startling and as confounding as I find them. What are these two theses or propositions?

    In our country, Nigeria and in many regions and nations of the world, age-old cultural definitions and social meanings attached to the poor as a definite, recognizable demographic category are changing beyond recognition to include social groups and strata that would never have been remotely close to the actual and potential ranks of the desperately poor or needy. That is the first of our two propositions. Permit me to expatiate on it carefully.

    Now, I do not speak Hausa and neither can I claim to have deep ethnographic knowledge of Hausa culture and society. What I do know about the meanings attached to the term “Talakawa” comes mostly from information I have gleaned over the decades from colleagues and comrades who both speak the language and have insiders’ ethnographic knowledge of its culture and traditions. From these colleagues and comrades, I have learnt that with the addition of the suffix “wa” to any ethnic or social group, a distinct collective identity is inscribed on the designated group. Examples are “Hausawa” or “Yarubawa” for the Hausa and the Yoruba ethnic groups respectively. I have learnt also from these “native informants” that in the wake of the oil-boom and the rise of a class of arriviste nouveau riches whose special symbol of new-found, lavishly spent wealth was the Mercedes Benz, the term “Benzawa” was coined on this same principle of adding that suffix, “wa” to identify and draw attention to a particular social group. [Incidentally, in Kiswahili, we have “Wa-Benzi” for the Hausa “Benzawa”, the same word serving reverse roles as suffix in Hausa and prefix in Kiswahili!]

    At any rate, the most important thing that I wish to draw attention to in the term “Talakawa” is implied in the first of the two epigraphs to this piece. This is the idea of the poor as a community of the destitute and the needy deserving of the benevolence of the wealthy and the powerful. Behind this idea is the historic fact that in many traditional and strongly hierarchical societies of the world, most of the poor remain poor generation after generation. Through unexpected good fortune, a few individuals in a particular generation might escape the scourge of desperate poverty but for the most part, most don’t and do not even expect to. To repeat: that is what the term “Talakawa”, in its traditional or received historical and cultural meanings, basically implies: a social identity, a worldview in which life circumstances and chances are more or less permanently fixed. I may be wrong, but I strongly suspect that this is what many readers of this column will instinctively think about when they see the term “Talakawa” in the title of this column.

    But capitalism in all parts of the world has changed that profile forever, giving new twists to what is involved in being within the ranks of the very poor, thereby opening up the range of experiences attached to being a member of the “Talakawa”. Abstractly, theoretically, there is no single modern capitalist country or economy in the world in which moving out of age-old, generation-to-generation poverty is completely or effectively blocked from anybody. People move from rural farming communities to the cities, they move from one job to another, and they move from one trade or profession to new ones perpetually, all in the hope, the promise that they stand a chance of having better lives than their parents and grandparents. But except in the richest countries in the world with high-income economies, most people in our country and our world in fact remain poor and only a sprinkling among their offspring will have better lives than they had.

    “Talakawa” has historically become a broad, inclusive term that includes millions of factory workers and wage labourers who earn significantly less than the national, regional or local minimum wage; hundreds of thousands of vendors and hawkers whose daily and monthly trade turnovers are unbelievably paltry; uncountable numbers of grossly underpaid teachers and junior clerical staff; multitudes of pensioners and old people without solvent children to act as their social safety net in their last years. As I have repeatedly tirelessly in my column in The Guardian, 7 out of every 10 Nigerians live below the absolute poverty level; in some parts of the country, the figure is close to 8 out of ten in rural areas. In other words, and to use an analogy to drive home the point, like the group of animals that when molting completely shed their old skins, the term “Talakawa” has taken on new meanings, new expressions that were unthinkable in the traditional meanings attached to it. This is why unlike the “Talakawa” of old, the new “Talakawa” cannot expect – and at any rate will never get – the consistent, regular paternalistic benevolence of the wealthy and the powerful; they must fight it out by themselves, with the non-paternalistic help and solidarity of members of the elite who take up their cause. This leads logically to the second of our two propositions which, in my opinion, is far more confounding than the first proposition.

    In the new millennium, the demographic constituencies of the “Talakawa” have been massively expanded by new patterns in which the young and the highly educated are significantly represented. Two years ago, the Central Bank Governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, gave the figure of over 20 million as the statistic for unemployed high school and university graduates with no prospects of employment anywhere in sight. This alarming figure is further compounded by the fact that the median age for Nigeria is 19. For those unfamiliar with the concept of the national median age, what it basically means is that 50% of Nigerians are below the age of 19 while 50% is above that age. If you raise the computational age to 30, then you get more than 65% of the Nigerian population below 30. In other words, there is a vast demographic bulge at the younger age strata of our population and this bulge feeds right into present and future specters of being and/or becoming “Talakawa” among considerable numbers of our the young of our society.

    We might choose to take some comfort in the fact that this phenomenon of great numbers of young and educated people falling into joblessness and poverty is indeed a global phenomenon, the effect – and resultant cause – of spirals of global crises in world capitalism. As the saying goes, misery loves company! In some European countries like Greece, Spain, Italy and Ireland, the figures for unemployed, educated and restless youths are close to 40%. And drawing from a personal experience, I have simply been stunned by the number of my undergraduate students at Harvard University who, in the last half a decade or so, have been expressing to me grave, terrified misgivings concerning what the future holds in stock for them.

    Each region and nation of the world must of course seek its own answers, its own solutions to the specter of being and becoming “Talakawa” – without of course being indifferent to issues of great inequalities between the various regions of the world. In the case of Nigeria, I wish to give as much emphasis as I can muster in saying that poverty, or the “Talakawa” condition, is the one single factor that unites all our ethnic and regional communities. Show me any one single geo-political zone, any state or group of states in the country where the poverty rate is better than the 7 out of 10 absolute poverty level and I will eat my words. Show me any part of the country in which, no matter how well the elites are doing politically and economically compared to other regional, zonal and ethnic competitors in the political class, the masses of the people are faring better than ordinary folks in other parts of the country and I will mortify my spirit by attending an all-night vigil of one of our most fanatical evangelical sects!

    Indubitably, the “Talakawa “ question is the bottom line of all the crises bedeviling our country since it is both directly and indirectly linked to all the other crises and challenges. This, by the way, is why this column can never possibly exhaust the range of issues it can and will take up. Beyond this and more impersonally, I would argue that the “Talakawa” condition ought to be the first item of discussion in a sovereign national conference that will sooner or later have to be convened if Nigeria is to survive as one unified, egalitarian and democratic society. In the weeks, months and years ahead, I hope to join my voice to the voices of other members of the “commentariat” [this playfully ludic term is, I believe, Victor Ifijeh’s] in The Nation and other organs of popular and progressive national conversation in our country

     

     

  • Nigeria, Brazil trade volume hits $9 billion

    Nigeria, Brazil trade volume hits $9 billion

    Nigeria and Brazil yesterday in Abuja signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) covering agriculture and food security, petroleum, power, bio-fuel, trade and investment, mining, education, aviation, infrastructure management, finance and culture.

    It was the high-point of the visit of President Dilma Rousseff of Brazil to Nigeria.

    President Goodluck Jonathan said at the end of bilateral talks between the two countries that a bi-national commission will be set to implement the MoU.

    The MoU, according to him, will be used to “leverage on the economy of our people, improve the lot of unemployed young men and women and make sure Nigerians and Brazilians are happy people.”

    Also speaking, President Rousseff said: “Our exchanges have actually outgrown significantly between 2009 and 2012, years marked by crises. Our trade exchanges have grown and for 2012 the figures come to $9billion.”

    “We agreed that we must diversify and make it a more balanced trade.”

    Later in a communiqué, the two leaders directed their ministers of foreign affairs to commence the immediate implementation of the agreement.

    It said:”Both sides expressed their readiness and strong commitment to expand cooperation in various fields and promote the growth of the partnership between the two countries in line with the principles of mutual benefit, mutual respect and mutual interest.

    “The two leaders instructed that the joint Commission for Bilateral Cooperation between Nigeria and Brazil should convene the 7th meeting scheduled to hold in Abuja as soon as possible to follow up the outcomes of President Rousseff’s visit to Nigeria.

    “Both Presidents welcomed the positive trends in the development of their bilateral trade and pledged to work together towards attaining a more balanced, diverse and mutually beneficial trade relationship.

    “The two presidents noted the importance of implementing bilateral air services agreement (BASA) and agreed that the facility of direct air links between the two countries will encourage better people to people exchanges and enhance trade between Brazil and Nigeria. They therefore underscored the need to take appropriate measures to promote the re-establishment of direct air links between the two countries.

    “The two leaders noted the significant roles played by the two countries in the maintenance of peace and security in their respective regions and expressed readiness to work together to promote international peace and security, democracy as well as development.”

    In the area of Political and Security Cooperation, the Presidents agreed to “encourage exchange of visits by officials in the Defence and Security sectors with a view to boosting cooperation in these areas; to promote training cooperation involving military officers of both countries by encouraging participation of Brazilian and Nigerian military officers in training programmes at the staff colleges of both countries.”

    On the crisis in Guinea-Bissau and Mali, they pledged their support for “the global approach to the solution of the Malian crisis, as set out by the ECOWAS, African Union and the United Nations Security Council.

    “They commended the efforts of the international community, the ECOWAS and the neighbouring countries aimed at supporting the Malian people in restoring its national unity and territorial integrity, building democratic institutions and fighting the twin scourges of terrorism and organised crime.”

    They also expressed serious concern on the present political and institutional crisis in Guinea Bissau and the deterioration of the socio-economic and humanitarian situation of its people”.

    The leaders also discussed the importance of cultural and educational exchange programs in solidifying closer ties and friendship between Nigeria and Brazil as they instructed the Ministers of Education of both countries to work through existing MoU or establish a relevant one on cultural and education exchange cooperation.

    The Brazilian President was coming from Malabo, Equatorial Guinea, where she attended the just concluded Africa-South America Summit.

    President Jonathan also attended the Malabo summit.