Tag: Nigerian

  • Nigerian banks’ credit report poorest worldwide

    Nigerian banks’ credit report poorest worldwide

    The entire 22 deposit money banks in the country process a paltry 1, 500 credit report on a daily basis, The Nation has learnt.

    Making this disclosure recently was Mr. Miguel Llenas, who sits atop Dun and Bradstreet Credit Bureau Limited, a world acclaimed credit reporting agency with headquarters at the Dominican Republic.

    Mr. Llenas, who was the lead speaker at a public forum organised by CRC Credit Bureau Limited in Lagos, noted that most banks in the country today were technically in distress because they chose to jettison core banking regulations.

    Specifically, he said most businesses in the country were experiencing stagnant growth because they lacked access to finance from banks, who favour conglomerates and corporates with better loan facilities at the detriment of hundreds of businesses that can actually drive the economy.

    “South Africa records over 60, 000 credit report on a daily basis alone. Argentina does about 160, 000. Sri Lanka does over 25, 000, Egypt processes over 50, 000, Dominican Republic does 40, 000. But sadly, Nigeria with a population of over 170million people process a ridiculous 1, 500 credit report. This may account for the slow economic growth witnessed across the sectors,” he said.

    “Most Nigerian banks are not involved in serious lending, especially to the retail market,” he said.

    Raising some posers, Llenas, who boost of over three decades experience as a credit expert said: “Do banks really need a credit bureau? How do you extend credit to customers if you don’t use credit report?”

    Most of the banks in the country today, he insisted, “Have swift from lending to survival mode. Most of the banks are risk averse. This is partly why the economy is not moving forward.”

    According to him, Nigeria with 22 banks only process just about 1, 500 credit reports, which are prerequisite to loan requests.

    Most deposit money banks in the country today are still smarting from the losses incurred over the years as a result of toxic debts.

    Llenas who leads the over 170 year old credit bureau firm, said Nigeria’s credit reporting was very poor for a size of the country when compared to countries within Africa and globally.

    Speaking further, Llenas, who has traverse over 40 countries as part of his commitment to help grow the capacity of credit bureaus, stressed that Nigerian banks have the potential to drive the economy by lending to the critical sectors, especially the retail market rather than the high end market in order to enable them better manage risks when they occur.

    “With credit monitoring, and a credit score, banks and lenders alike can easily predict the future. The use of credit report has to be a powerful tool if well harnessed,” he maintained.

    Speaking earlier, Tunde Popoola, Managing Director/CEO, CRC Credit Bureau Limited, observed that most of the banks were exposed to a lot of risks, especially oil and gas, whose revenue projections have been badly affected by the economic crunch.

    According to him, the challenges confronting most of the banks is how to reduce their risk portfolio given the bad debts they incurred these past years, especially at a time they are have more risk assets.

    Thankfully, he said, the CRC Credit Bureau has been able to develop fool-proof measures that can help the banks contain the incidence of bad debts.

    At the risk of sounding immodest, Popoola said what banks need to do to reduce the incidence of bad debts is to be more circumspect in the way they spread risks.

    “Most of the toxic debts within the banking sector happened because they were done without proper due diligence analysis as it were. But that can be taken care of with our products and services like I-CON Plus, which can help to build a good credit industry.”

    Echoing similar sentiment, Mrs. Peggy Chukwuma-Nwosu, Haed of Sales and Marketing at CRC Credit Bureau Limited, who gave a presentation on CRC Credit Monitors: Useful Tools to better manage Customer Loans, disclosed that the different products developed by her organisation rsets on the wing of technology.

    Specifically, she said, the CRC Prospector, which is one of her company’s offerings, “Provides alternative contact information of customers you can no longer reach.”

  • ‘Basira in London’ comes to Nigerian

    ‘Basira in London’ comes to Nigerian

    A new comedy movie, ‘Basira in London’ is set to hit Nigerian cinemas from March 24, 2017.

    The movie which was produced and directed by London-based Philippa Abraham, was first premiered in the United Kingdom in August, 2015 to a sold out crowd in all of its six showings at the Odeon Cinemas.

    ‘Basira in London’ is a comedy-drama that tells the story of an African woman (Eniola Badmus) who relocates to London with great expectations. She is struck by the culture clash and her efforts in trying to fit in makes the movie hilarious.

    Other actors that starred in the movie include Jason Adedeji-Abraham, Destinee Anthony, Tolu Yesufu, and Theodora Ibekwe-Oyebade.

    “It’s been a long time coming,” Abraham said, concerning the Nigerian premiere of ‘Basira in London’.

    “This movie was first premiered in 2015 at the Odeon Cinemas, UK and since then the Nigerian audience have been waiting. I am so excited that finally, everyone in Nigeria will also get to see the beautiful film.”

    Since ‘Basira in London’ premiered in the UK, the movie has won several awards including the Best Producer, African Film Awards UK, Best Movie, BEEFTA UK Awards, Best Actress, BEEFTA UK Awards and Best Producer, BEEFTA UK Awards.

    Abraham began her creative journey in 2008 after bagging her BA (Hons) in Digital Film Making from Middlesex University, and garnered experience in making short films, documentaries, music videos and feature films. Currently, she’s in pre-production for her next feature film.

  • Diagnosing the Nigerian malady (2)

    Diagnosing the Nigerian malady (2)

    Last week, we focused on the supernaturalistic account of the affliction that imperils Nigeria’s movement to greatness and found it inadequate as an explanatory model. Today, we will examine the humanistic account which pins our national malaise on human factor. There are at least three variants of the theory.

    First, it is argued that even if we grant that Nigeria had a divine beginning and a destined end, we must also admit that the God of Nigeria’s beginning granted her citizens the free will to determine the course of their nation with adequate provision of resources to last many lifetimes. If they make that determination without much thought and they miss the road, it is their responsibility to change course. That they have failed for more than 50 years is not the fault of God. I believe that this is the position of former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

    The former President admonished us recently to “stop troubling God because God has done all we need for us. We only need to play our part…” As he might add, as humans placed in this part of God’s creative genius, we have failed woefully to our detriment.

    Whether as clerics, mullahs, priests, priestesses and sheikhs or as congregants, devotees and Ummah we know the ways in which we fail to play our part. Whereas the prophets of old did not shy away from confronting the corrupt practices of their era, with our trust in the gospel of prosperity, we aid and abet corruption in various ways. When we choose to accept the proceeds of graft as thanksgiving offering without asking pertinent questions, we thereby frustrate the development goal of the nation.

    As business professionals, we play an ignoble part when we cheat on tax payment or collude with international frauds. This is the case with oil subsidy scandals. As contractors, we ruin the future of the nation when we abandon our contractual responsibility for road construction and abscond with contract mobilisation fees. Is God responsible for these acts?

    As politicians, when we are motivated just by pure self-interest whether in our legislative priorities or in budget approval, we intentionally risk the future of the country. And when we allow our wants, whether material, mental, or spiritual, to overshadow the long-term interest of the nation, we fail to play our part in setting the nation in the path of development.

    Of course, we can pray to God to help us know what is right and do it. But we cannot blame God for the weakness of our will. This is the essence of the humanistic theory.

    Second, and following from the first, there is the account of leadership deficit and it is straightforward. The reason that Nigeria has not made it; the reason that it has missed the road often and has not been able to change course is that it suffers from a deficit of leadership. Of course, the theory does not deny that Nigeria has either elected leaders or has had leaders imposed on her since independence. The point is that those leaders have lacked the qualities that a leader needs to move a nation forward. Therefore, per this variant of the humanistic account, Nigeria has a leadership crisis, and until this crisis is resolved, it cannot move forward. Again, former President Obasanjo has recently doubled down on this position.

    It is important to tease out the claims of this variant, especially in the former president’s most recent presentation. While some may rightly blame leadership from the beginning of the republic, Obasanjo gave credit to his generation, which fought for the unity of the country, and the generation before his, which fought for independence. His beef, therefore, is with generation after his, which, according to him, lacks “focus, commitment, continuity and sometimes proper knowledge about economic and development issues.”

    Not a few may find this positing of the issue self-serving or more uncharitably, self-glorifying. But I want to cut the former president a little slack. Each generation of leaders faces a unique challenge. The first generation that faced the colonisers had no choice but to focus on independence. But the germs of later problems were clearly discernible even at the time of their struggle for freedom. Leading the country after independence, they failed woefully in the matter of unity and progress. As the military struck and leadership changed hands, that challenge of unity became insurmountable. Trained as fighters, the military leaders met the challenge the only way they knew. But while the rebellion was stopped, no one can deny that the war of unity was not won. Instead, there was an escalation of ethno-nationalistic mistrust. The leadership crisis that we have now is traceable to that juncture in our history.

    What Obasanjo’s generation, and he, in particular, needs to come to terms with is that the matter of leadership cannot be resolved in isolation from our historical trajectory. Leaders are not plucked from trees. They are the products of particular cultures, histories and philosophies. In our case, the diversity of such cultures, histories and philosophies, which, should normally be an additional advantage, have been adversely impacted by the politics of uniformity.

    The third variant of the humanistic theory of Nigerian malady chooses to give leadership a break while focusing on followership. The rationale for this is simply that followers either choose leaders or can reject them once they determine that those leaders lack the necessary qualities to lead. However, in the case of Nigeria, leaders and followers have been engaged in a game of mutual deception with followers yielding to the manipulative abilities of leaders for the satisfaction of short term wants at the expense of long term needs. If developmental goals are left unfulfilled because followers seek immediate consumption, they have themselves to blame.

    There is no doubt that each of the foregoing variants of the humanistic theory is an improvement over the supernaturalistic theory. For one thing, they place emphasis on human agency and, therefore, on our human capacity to change the course of the nation.

    Yet, as important as it is to recognise the significance of human agency, it is also crucial to understand its limitation, especially when the condition for the effectiveness of human agency to play its part is missing. Consider the fact that despite our lamentations regarding good leadership, we have had at least a few in our history that everyone, including sworn adversaries, attest to.

    As I prepare this piece, a friend dropped in my WhatsApp message box an excerpt of a statement on Chief Obafemi Awolowo attributed to Ikemba Odumegwu Ojukwu: “As a leader of the modern cast, he (Awolowo) has left Nigeria standards which are indelible, standards beside which future aspirants to public leadership can be eternally measured. He was, for a long time, the only Nigerian leader that enunciated principles and played down personalities… Awo was a leader of great stature…That he did not fulfil a presidential ambition cannot detract from his leadership… and us, poor us, who were not his people, must continue to regret that our own leaders had not led us as he did his people or achieved for us as he did for his people.”

    The crux of our challenge is in the last part of Ikemba’s statement. Do we see ourselves as one people or as different peoples with different agendas? If the latter, we do not have a leadership crisis. We have an identity crisis.

    Therefore, a further refining of the humanistic theory is needed. If we insist, as we should, that humans are the architects of their own fortune, it stands to reason that they should also be the builders of their national greatness. This entails the responsibility for ascertaining the right kind of institutions and structures that are essential for the management of their affairs and the progressive development of their nation. It requires active thinking and selfless abandonment of short-term gains for self or group in favour of the general good of the nation. The challenge for leaders is to set their minds wholly to this structural task.

     

    (To be continued)

     

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  • Nigerian, South African unions to meet on Xenophobic attacks

    The United Labour Congress (ULC) has said plans are underway for talks with the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) over attacks on foreigners in South Africa.

    COSATU is the largest of South Africa’s three labour unions, with 1.8 million members from 21 affiliated trade unions.

    ULC National President Joe Ajaero spoke in Lagos during a meeting of ULC’s inaugural Central Working Committee (CWC).

    Ajaero, who condemned the xenophobic attacks, urged the South African trade unions to speak out, saying the action was an evidence of “misplaced aggression.”

    “COSATU should speak out, though the ULC is putting in place modalities to reach our comrades in that country to build better relations between our citizens,” he said.

    Ajaero lamented the “looming crisis of hunger and hardship” in the country, but hailed the Federal Government’s “efforts at protecting the naira”. He advocated a “more sustainable action to sanitise the foreign exchange market.

    Ajaero also advised the government to revive or build new, especially modular refineries, and to consider legalising illegal refining in the Niger Delta as a way out of the foreign exchange-sapping petroleum products importation.

  • Towards a re-envisioning of the Nigerian Nation: National Security and its Discontents

    Towards a re-envisioning of the Nigerian Nation: National Security and its Discontents

    When views hitherto considered to belong to the margins begin to find mainstream acceptance and accommodation, it simply means that rigid positions are shifting and there is a convergence between the margins and the centre.

    This is a welcome development which ought to be applauded by all well-meaning patriots who wish Nigeria well. Binary divisions often dissolve and evaporate as we gain new realities of our true condition in the push and pull of conflicts and national contradictions. To this end, I must applaud the driving spirit behind this centre: Professor Ibrahim Agboola Gambari, an international civil servant of repute and a Nigerian statesman of tireless vision and boundless energy.

    The problems of Nigeria are not insurmountable.  What appear insurmountable are ego-driven fixations on old ideas of the modern nation and the collective hubris of political elites who insist that it is either their way or the highway. In a multi-ethnic and multi-religious nation willed into existence by an outside power, opinions and notions of the nation are bound to differ and occasionally mutually incompatible. What is important is to find the will and humility to distil and aggregate these divergent opinions into coherent core values which will drive the nation in its commonalities and diversities.

    The current crisis and its origins

    Please permit me to come to the section of this paper which deals with the current crisis and its origins. Nigeria faces centrifugal forces on many fronts: political, economic, cultural, religious and intellectual. Yet it is remarkable that only two of these armed conflicts, the Nigerian civil war and the Boko Haram insurgency, have led to a direct challenge to the primacy, authority and supremacy of the Nigerian state, that is discounting the 1966 Isaac Adaka Boro uprising which was swiftly and summarily put down by the new military regime of General Thomas Aguiyi-Ironsi.

    However, it is obvious that the collective cost of these armed conflicts to national cohesion, stability, progress and prosperity has become quite prohibitive. The civil war led to the loss of at least two million people. The Boko Haram rebellion has devastated the northernmost eastern fringes of the nation, leading to massive displacement of citizens, refugee camps, forcible demographic shifts and a virtual collapse of the local economy.

    It should worry all of us that these violent confrontations of nationalities against nationalities and groups against the state have intensified since the advent of the Fourth Republic and the formal end of military rule. Beginning with the Kaduna mayhem of 2001, the bloody and protracted confrontation in Plateau State between “nationals” and “expatriates”,  the Ijaw versus Itsekiri feud dovetailing  into the Niger Delta insurgency, the violent restiveness in the South East as epitomized by the rise of IPOB/ MASSOB, BOKO HARAM, the Agatu crisis and the growing confrontation between nomadic herdsmen and sedentary farmers in several parts of the country and the current return of the barely repressed and unfinished business in Kaduna State, it has been a harvest of death and destruction.

    We must worry. Even a modern sophisticated state does not have an elastic capacity to contain such multiple and simultaneous threats to its existence, not to talk of a post-colonial state in its embryonic infancy. It should be recalled that the Roman Empire did not die of a single fatal wound but from a thousand injuries.

    Superficially, it is often advanced that these eruptions can be traced to the formal cessation of military rule and the fact that military rule brooked no nonsense. Hence, these crises owe much to the paradoxical liberation from military rule and the opportunity for self-expression which has given free rein to national contradictions forcibly suppressed and bottled up by authoritarian rule.

    Others have fingered the polarizing and divisive nature of the Nigerian political class who often exploit the national fault lines for political advantages and whose nationalistic zeal and commitment do not seem to match or even approach the ardent patriotism of the military faction who have been institutionally drilled to see the whole nation as their constituency, for good or bad.

    Yet not a few analysts have cited the worsening economic circumstances of the nation as being responsible for this upsurge in communal violence and inter-ethnic conflict. According to this narrative, since humankind is principally homo economicus, adverse developments in the political spheres are nothing but a dialectical reflection of worsening developments at the economic base.

    Thus the phenomenon of desertification which has laid waste vast swathes of hitherto arable land in the north of the country, the fierce struggle for dwindling resources and the imperative of modernizing both farming and grazing methodology have led to bloody confrontations among the nation’s diverse nationalities with the state often powerless to act decisively.

    In the light of these upheavals, the central thesis of this paper is the need to re-envision the nation in all its current messy and chaotic amalgam. To re-envision is to re-imagine. We cannot even talk of restructuring or reconfiguring the country without first having an imaginative or conceptual image of what is to be reworked. The political visionary must dream first before attempting to turn his dream into reality.

    All nations are artificial entities or what Benedict Anderson has famously called imagined communities willed into existence by sheer power of human will and creativity. From disparate and even conflicting strands, nations cohere and congeal into an organic community of shared values.

    But in order to forge a true nation from a commonwealth of disparate communities, certain things must be in place. First, the state itself must reflect the collective will and aspiration of the people and the nation, of which it is an organic extension despite the dialectical tension between the two.

    Second, even where and when it is modulated and moderated by unfolding historical events it is important for the state to keep the National Question in permanent perspective and constant review. This is because no nation is made once and for all. Any nation that freezes at the advance of fresh historical developments is bound to dissolve into its historic components. All nations, as the framers of the American constitution presciently put it, must strive towards a “more perfect union.”

    It is our contention in this paper that the Nigerian post-colonial state, like virtually all its counterparts in contemporary Africa, has so far proved itself incapable of handling the erupting contents of a nation in a state of flux not to talk of firmly adjudicating in unfolding dimensions of the nation in question. This is why it is important at this point to beam our searchlight on the related concepts of statehood and nationhood.

    The state in question

    When is a state?  The state is critical to the emergence of human society. Although it can be argued that the society created the state, it is also obvious that there can be no society without the state. From its rudimentary beginnings of providing protection for farmers and securing their products, the state has evolved as the ultimate guarantor of security and safety in any society no matter the territorial rationalization, be it fiefdom, kingdom, empire or the modern nation.

    In its modern incarnation, the state is often seen as the theatre of elite arbitration and the management of conflicts and disagreements among various factions and factions of the ruling class. When it fails in this role, as it is usually the case in Africa, the state is premordialised and becomes a principal source of insecurity and instability in the nation.

    Moreover, certain types of states (e.g., neo-authoritarian states characterized by “crisis of leadership”) can actually be the source of threats, rather than protector of individuals, just as traditional security agents of the state are often inadequate for dealing with security problems affecting the people of that state. The following observation by Robert S. McNamara is germane to the issue at hand.

    Any society that seeks to achieve adequate security against the background of acute food shortage, population explosion, low level of productivity and per capita income, low technological development, inadequate and insufficient public utilities and chronic problems of unemployment has a false sense of security. Security is not military force though it may involve it; security is not traditional military activity though it encompasses it; security is not military hardware though it may include it; security is development and without development there is no security.

    The Nigerian state has proved remarkably incapable of providing the basic economic needs of the people. The struggle for these basic needs among and across various communities and nationalities when it can no longer be regulated or controlled by a weak state hobbled by an endemic crisis of leadership can have dire consequences for inter-ethnic harmony and cohesion in a multi-ethnic nation.

    In the absence of state-driven economic buoyancy, government and politics become big business. Consequently, the scramble for office and its spoils particularly in multi-ethnic local states such as we have in Nigeria can lead to ethnic scapegoating and profiling. This mutual loathing, driven by mindless propaganda, finds easy outlet for violence and bloodletting.

    Often politicized memory of ancestral feuds compounded by the state impairment in economic matters comes in the aid of political delinquency.  Early In the Fourth Republic, a governor being hunted and harassed by the EFCC told his people to give his Fulani tormentors the same “dog treatment” his ancestors had given their ancestors in a memorably savage encounter on the plateau. It was a short step to ethnic confrontation.

    In a haunting allegory of looming genocide, Franz Kafka, a German speaking Czechoslovakian Jew, has given us a story of a man who wakes up only to find that he has become an insect. When you de-humanize fellow human beings, it is easy to complete the rest of the job. The German supremacists did not believe the Jews were human. In Rwanda, the cries of kill the cockroaches or Uyensi presaged savage genocide.

    Examples also abound in the Fourth Republic of how the hallowed arena of the modern Nigerian state is turned into an ethnic coliseum in order to secure maximum political advantage. Between 2002 and 2003 General Obasanjo was driven into the warm embrace of his Yoruba compatriots in a bid to forestall a determined attempt by the opposition to oust him.

    Between 2009 and 2010, there were rumours that a cabal was in active operation at Aso Rock to prevent the presidency from falling into the wrong hands. Despite the pan-Nigerian coalition that brought him to power, it was obvious that Mr Goodluck Jonathan spent his last days in power in the stultifying embrace of some ethnic hegemonists.

    Now, there are rumours of another cabal operating inside the presidential villa. With the presidency thus perpetually ethnicised, it is virtually impossible for the state to act as a neutral and objective arbiter when ethnic conflagrations flare up. Indeed in some instances, the state itself is often fingered as the instigator of ethnic uprising.

    An ethnicised state and presidency must be a source of concern to all and anxiety among all. In a sustained and clinical analysis which has since become a classic of its genre, Mahmood Mamdani, the noted historian, has located the origin of the Rwandan genocide in the ethnicisation of elite politics which was to have dire consequences for the nation.

    Before colonisation, Rwanda was evolving into an organic pan-ethnic society of shared national values. The king, or Mwami, was seen as a symbol of national unity.  There were much inter-marriages and mixing of disparate cultures. Racial categories were being transformed into a class category. Indeed there was a ritual ceremony known as Kwahutura, or the shedding of Hutu identity,  in which a Hutu notable, having acquired enough cattle and means, publicly abjures his former identity, to become a member of the ruling caste.

    It took the intervention of middle class dissident Belgian colonial officials profoundly disaffected with the class hierarchy in their own native country who began to insinuate into Hutu politicians the fact that they had the number and the mass solidity to determine their own destiny and consequently the fate of the country.  The result was a rise in rabid ethnic revanchism and resurgence of Hutu nationalism which was to eventuate in genocide.

    To be sure, in a world convulsed by political and technological modernity all feudal systems have their appointed dates with destiny. But the traumatic transition could have been better managed in a spirit of give and take supported by political institutions already in place without the Belgian shock and awe therapy. It is worthy of note that since 1994, Rwanda has been ruled by the descendants of Tutsi people sent into exile. But the psychic horror remains with the people.

    Nigeria must avoid what this writer once described as the road to Kigali. To do this, we must take a more sober and serious look at the National Question. A brief excursion into the sociology and history of this elusive phenomenon is now in order before we conclude.

  • Nigerian cinematographer makes waves in Hollywood

    Nigerian cinematographer makes waves in Hollywood

    He may not be known in his home country Nigeria but 24 years old, Olamide Oladimeji is making exploits in the popular Hollywood.

    Today, Oladimeji is better known as a US-based cinematographer who is etching his name in the Hollywood scene.

    To his credit, he has worked with some of the A-list artistes in Hollywood, including Kevin Hart, Nick Cannon, Boris Kodje, Robin Thicke and was part of the crew that shot the 2016 BET Awards.

    Although he has worked on many projects in the US, Oladimeji holds dear to his heart, his experience working with Hollywood comedian and actor, Kevin Hart on the set of ‘The Real Husbands of Hollywood’ Season 5.

    “I would say working with Kevin Hart, Nelly, Nick Cannon and other top Hollywood stars on that set for me was an encouragement and motivation. It was a crazy experience but I’m glad I worked on that production,” Oladimeji recounts.

    He explained further, “On several occasions as the tape rolled, Kevin would go off script and the script supervisors would be scrambling to find where he might have made the error in his lines but they couldn’t as Kevin would have improvised and 10 out of the 10 time, the directors would preferred the scene where he had improvised. That’s a great eye opener for me as a cinematographer.”

    According to the young Nigerian, Kevin made him see as a witness what a mix of creativity and hard work can do in a production.

    “The Real Husbands of Hollywood shoot was a very good learning ground for me. I was able to ask pertinent questions from Tommy Maddox-Upshaw (Iron Man 2, Straight Outta Compton), my mentor and former cinematography instructor, who is the series’ Director of Photography.”

    It was part of this experience and his delivery that fetched him a job as a member of the select crew that worked on the production of the last BET Awards held at the Microsoft Theatre in Los Angeles.

    The young Oladimeji is a graduate of Psychology from the University of Lagos.

  • When will Nigerian lives begin to matter?

    It is becoming clearer that no one would take the dignity of the Nigerian seriously until such a time when we collectively stop rating ourselves from the prisms of tribe, religion and social class. We are too bigoted to these things to the point that our revulsion or otherwise to the decimation of our citizens is propelled by those factors. Is it not sad that you rarely get that feeling of general angst or spirit of communality in our reaction to issues that touch on the wellbeing of the collective? Take, for example, the xenophobic attacks unleashed on Nigerians and other settlers in South Africa by black indigenes. At a time when you expect a united front and one voice raised against a dangerous trend that could spell the doom for the African Union, it is a national shame that certain persons still feel unconcerned on the pretext that those that were affected come from a certain part of the country. Some even question why this set of Nigerians always travel to other lands to presumably, take over the local business ventures from the original indigenes. That is how frivolously tactless we have become as a people. It is this kind of attitude that oils the mutual feeling of suspicions and hatred in our land.

    We miss the point when we reduce the madness going on in South Africa to the banal mentality that defines our interpersonal relationship over here. We need to bond if we must conquer.  But we rarely do, Those suffering xenophobic attacks in South Africa and mind blowing discrimination in Libya and other places are not just Yoruba, Igbo or Hausa; they are Nigerians! It is when we stop this social and ethnic stereotyping of our humanity – an odious thing that our black tormentors in South Africa have taken a step further – that we can positively tackle the enemy within and without. We rarely pay serious attention to the vilest monstrosities visited on our fellow citizens if they had the misfortune of coming from a different socio-political zone. Worse still, we easily perceive that subjective enemy gene in those born outside our ethnic cum religious backgrounds such that it defines our adversarial temperament. And, if we must say the truth, the xenophobic attacks in faraway South Africa are merely a rehash of the local violence that has permeated our quotidian living as a people from time immemorial. That explains the revulsion we nurse against that Hausa Fulani, that Igbo man, that noisy Yoruba man or that Ijaw minority who is always asking for self-determination.

     

    The point is that the Nigerian nation has wasted too much time wringing its hands in submission and watching helplessly as its citizens get whacked with the wrong end of the stick even from countries with population that is not up to that of a local government in any of our states. Before we blame the leadership of those countries, we should first tell the truth to the powers that be in our own backyard. Perhaps, if we put the nation first in all that we do, our citizens wouldn’t be traveling from Sao Tome and Principe to the Gambia, from Kenya to Zambia, from Mozambique to the Congo in search of greener pastures. If we had provided the pastures in abundance here, there is that possibility that less Nigerians would have fallen victims to the misfortunes confronting them across the globe. Of course, we cannot rule out the greed and criminality that push many to the edge of idiocy. We cannot rule that out. But that does not in any way justify the condescending attitude the governments of most of these countries have shown in addressing the matter. Maybe they know we would do nothing other than lamely condemn the act, And then, life continues while relatives of the dead mourn their loss!

    Ordinarily, it should not take the affirmative action of the National Assembly to reawaken the consciousness of a sleeping executive to be decisive about the nonsense going on South Africa. By the way, what message was the Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Mrs. Khadijah Abba Ibrahim, attempting to pass when she told the lawmakers that no Nigerian was killed in the latest attacks by those hate vendors in South Africa? It is this kind of laid back foreign affairs policy and cocky patronizing messages that give venom to the kind of madness unveiling in that country. This is not helped by the statement credited to Jacob Zuma who offhandedly dismissed the allegations of xenophobia against his cudgel-wielding citizens unleashing terror on other nationals. Sometimes, you wonder if the Nigerian government is waiting for the mass killings of its citizens living in these countries before it would have believable evidence to roar back from its usual position of weakness.

    I may not support the rash decision by some persons calling for a mass boycott of investments linked to South African-owned firms in Nigeria. That is another sore point in our development as a nation. Those investors exploited our inadequacies as a nation to set up companies that have become monopolies. However, I really don’t understand why this government cannot, for once, take a firm position on the matter. As usual, the national assembly has resorted to the silly idea of sending a high-powered delegation to South Africa on a fact-finding mission. We always relish this kind of opportunity to make extra cash in the name official assignment. Do these guys thinks any member of the South African parliament would freely give out information that would damage the image of the country where xenophobia thrives? What other facts would they get when the country’s leader has made a veiled reference to the impossibility of such a tag on the mean faces of the attackers, who happen to be his people?

    In fact, the Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila-led fact-finding delegation to South Africa is nothing but another drainpipe to our economy. That also includes the ‘powerful’ delegation set up by the Senate to be led by Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu. To the best of my knowledge, Nigeria has a functional embassy in South Africa with professional staff that should furnish the home office with adequate information on the true state of things as they affect our citizens in that country. With this information, a serious-minded government should make public its next line of action instead of blowing cold water on a burning furnace. Well, that is if we take the lives of every citizen seriously rather than reducing it to just a number as we often do with that of thousands that had been lost here. If the lawmakers are interested in tourism, they could as well do that outside the context of this excuse that they were going on a fact-finding mission. I just don’t get it.

    Having expressed their dissatisfaction with how the Federal Government has handled the attacks on Nigerians, it would have been more ennobling if the lawmakers take the backseat and focus on the things that ‘kill’ us as a nation. By this, I mean those ignoble things they do at the top that push some of these hapless citizens to seek better life in far flung places. Has it ever occurred to them that they kill us by installment when we read about how they allocate millions of naira to themselves as salaries and emoluments when all they do is fight over constituency projects and use a large part of the legislative calendar year on endless recess, Do they know how we die silently when they connive with the executive to pad the budget and share the loot through the backdoors? Do they even know how we feel when all their huffing and puffing against the executive end up as another inconsequential fretting of legislative paper tigers?

    Back to the matter, we cannot forever play the ostrich while minnow countries take advantage of our seeming reluctance to defend our citizens with the clarity of purpose that is needed. We cannot pretend that we don’t know when and how to grab South Africa by the balls. No one is saying that the laws of that land should not be applied if some criminal elements who happen to be Nigerians are found wanting. For now, the footages we have seen on credible Nigerian news channels point to the herd mentality of painting every Nigerian living in that country as drug barons, fraudsters and evil-minded stealers of jobs meant for South African citizens. That picture is totally unacceptable and the mob mentality on display is abhorrent. The time for long speeches and cautious diplomatese ought to be over long before now. What ought to be today are strong, explicit messages coming from Nigeria to those South African officials offering silly excuses for a clear case of bloody xenophobia that has unjustifiably turned many of our citizens in Mandela’s country into walking corpses and rotten cadavers. Former President Olsegun Obasanjo has set the right tone by blaming the South African leadership for its crying incompetence in stemming the tide while calling on the government here to create an Eldorado at home so that the rush for Greener Pastures elsewhere will drastically reduce. Now, don’t ask me what Obasanjo did in his time, Is there someone out there in the corridors of power ready to truly change the narrative that Nigerian lives matter, no matter where they live?

     

     

  • Nigerian loses N240m to xenophobia

    Nigerian loses N240m to xenophobia

    •20 shops looted, say South Africa police

    A 42-year-old Nigerian automobile mechanic lost N240.650million (R10m) to the xenophobic attack on his workshop in South Africa last weekend.
    Mr. Simon Adeoye told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on telephone from Pretoria, South Africa, that he got a call on the day of the incident that his workshop had been set ablaze and rushed to the place.
    “By the time I got there, 29 cars of different make, some Nigerian passports, documents of the workshop, money and other personal effects had been destroyed by fire.
    “I was helpless and could not do anything,” he said.
    Adeoye said some of the cars belonged to South Africans; others were being repaired for sale.
    “I appeal to the Federal Government to assist me get back to business. Officials of the Nigerian mission have visited the workshop to do an assessment and we are yet to hear from them,” he said.
    According to him, the mission should replace the passports gutted by fire to enable affected Nigerians have documents.
    Adeoye said officials of Nigeria Union visited and commiserated with him on the incident.
    “At the moment, I have lost everything I have. I need urgent help to re-start my business. This will also assist me pay my workers who have families to cater for,” he said.
    The police said at least 20 shops, possibly belonging to immigrants, were looted in South Africa’s capital overnight, but they could not confirm if the attacks had deliberately targeted foreigners.
    Anti-immigrant violence has flared sporadically in South Africa against a background of near-record unemployment, with foreigners being accused of taking jobs from locals and getting involved in crime.
    Responding to similar incidents in Pretoria at the weekend, Nigeria’s foreign ministry said it would summon South Africa’s envoy to raise its concerns over “xenophobic attacks” on Nigerians, other Africans and Pakistanis.
    South African police said they did not yet know the motive for the latest attacks, and no deaths had been reported.
    Police spokeswoman Brig. Mathapelo Peters said: “There are allegations that these shops belong to foreign nationals.
    “It is alleged that the community members are saying that these shops were used for drug dealing but that is unconfirmed.
    “We will only be able to start a formal investigation once the shop owners come forward.”
    The Atteridgeville neighbourhood, where the looting took place, was calm on Tuesday as police cars drove through the streets.
    An unemployed man in his mid-twenties, who declined to be named, said: “We are sick and tired of foreigners who are coming to sell drugs and kill our people; we can’t let the community go down like this.”
    South Africa, with a population of about 50 million, is home to an estimated five million immigrants.
    In April 2015, Nigeria recalled its top diplomat in South Africa to discuss anti-immigrant attacks which killed at least seven people and sent hundreds of foreigners fleeing to safety camps, as authorities sent in soldiers to quell unrest in Johannesburg and Durban.
    In 2008, at least 67 people were killed in anti-immigrant violence, with thousands of people fleeing to refugee camps.

  • Nigerian, Ethopian teens win DStv Eutelsat Star Awards

    Nigerian, Ethopian teens win DStv Eutelsat Star Awards

    t was a day of victory for Nigeria last Tuesday when Emmanuel Ochenjele, a Benue-born teenager, was announced winner of the poster category of the 6th DSTV Eutelsat Star Awards.

    It was the first time in the history of the competition that a Nigerian would win one of the two categories of the competition which challenges students aged 14-19 to write essays and design posters on satellite- related themes.

    In past editions, DSTV Nigeria used to celebrate the best entries from the country which did not win on the continental stage.

    However last week, when the awards was holding in Nigeria for the first time, a Nigerian was named winner of the poster category.

    Leoul Mesfin of Ethiopia won the essay category.

    They were honoured at a star-studded dinner held at the Eko Hotel and Suites, Victoria Island after a seven-man panel of judges led by Claudie Haigneré, Europe’s first female astronaut, screened the entries that made it to the final stage.

    Mesfin’s essay on how new age satellite would benefit Africa’s development got praises from judges because of his treatment of continental and country specific needs.

    Ochenjele’s poster was adjudged the best for the way he depicted how satellites could help address problems like global warming, conservation, energy supply, while showing how all such advancements are made for the benefits of man.

    The pupil of Zamani College, Kaduna, will visit Eutelsat Satellite Company in Paris to understand how satellites are operated, as well as a satellite factory, while Mesfin will visit Paris to witness the launch of a rocket into space to place a satellite into orbit.

    Davids Bwana from Tanzania, runner-up in the essay category, won a trip for two to visit MultiChoice facilities and the South African National Space Agency near Johannesburg, while Aobakwe Letamo from Botswana was the runner up in the same category.

    The schools of the four winners got DStv installation, including dish, TV set, PVR decoder and free access to the DStv Education Bouquet.

    The competition attracted over 1,000 entries from 20 countries.

    Claudie Haigneré, who is also a special advisor to the Director General of the European Space Agency (ESA), said the judging process was transparent as the panel did not know who owned the works until the winners were decided.

    She expressed delight at judging the entries.

    She said: “Taking part in the DStv Eutelsat Star Awards for the first time has been quite simply a mind-changing experience, especially as this year’s topic was particularly challenging. The visionary ideas on Africa’s future satellite landscape developed in essays and posters underscore how Africa’s youth expect technology to drive positive change for their continent. The Jury engaged in intense discussions to award the most realistic and creative proposals that deserve to stand out on the African stage. Our congratulations go to all the finalists for their work and to the winners for their brilliant ideas.”

    Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Communication Technology, Mr. Sunny Echono, who announced the winners, praised the quality of entries.

    “To my mind, this sixth edition shows sustained interest from African youths, adding fresh impetus to the mission shared by MultiChoice and Eutelsat to encourage young minds to positively change their world via innovative thinking in science and technology. This can be attested to by the number of Ministries, Departments and Agencies present at this event.”

  • PwC: Nigerian firms lack capacity for oil, gas exploration

    PwC: Nigerian firms lack capacity for oil, gas exploration

    •More assets divestments coming

    PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), an auditing firm, has said Nigerian indigenous oil firms still lack capacity to carry out oiland gas exploration despite the push by the Content Act passed into law in 2010.

    Its Director, Tax and Regulatory Services, Kenneth Erikume, said since the passage of the Act, aside funding challenges, indigenous operators still lacked  sufficient capacity to explore for oil and gas.

    Given these challenges, the Federal Government needs to focus more on building capacity at the local level and getting the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) to drive the acquisition of technical know-how requisite for the industry.

    He said with necessary expertise, the country would be able to create entities that could help other African countries in their oil and gas sector. This is the direction a country such as Nigeria, that started oil and gas operations in the 1950s, should be taking, he added.

    Erikume told The Nation that the government needed to address uncertainty of investments in the petroleum industry, respect some of the agreements and concessions it has with operators. When this is sorted out, investors would be more comfortable to invest, he added.

    He also urged the government to ensure that the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) is passed into law as quickly as possible.

    According to him, when an investor puts his money into a system, he will be interested in making progress.

    Since oil prices have started rebounding, he expressed optimism that investors would returm to the oil fields abandoned in the wake of the slump in prices.

    Erikume said the worst was over, adding that things could only get better. He said if oil price gets to about $60 per barrel, the country would begin to see more investments in the industry.

    “From the national perspective, what most investors are looking forward to is the final decision on the PIB, which has taken too much time to complete. It has implications on the fiscal quality which will impact on how much dollar an investor would be able to recover if he embarked on crude oil exploration and production,” he explained.

    Erikume said there would be more divestments by traditional international oil companies (IOCs). According to him, the multinationals will be focusing more on offshore and deepwater exploration where there are fewer issues of vandalisation and militancy.

    IOCs will continue to seek for divestment from onshore and shallow water assets and indigenous companies can pick up the assets.

    Erikume agreed that the challenge in passing the PIB was around balancing the interest of various stakeholders, including payment to the communities.

    In addition, there are conflicting issues around the fiscal provisions, which also have to be balanced in the interest of all.

    But, to address the issue, he said,  the National Assembly, in consultation with stakeholders, has to expunge the portion of the bill that is related to corporate governance and administration from the fiscal and commercial aspects of the bill.

    He noted that the oil and gas industry governance bill was being proposed. “So the industry governance bill is being considered now, I think it has passed second reading, I am hopeful because it is not carrying the baggage of the fiscal provisions of the full bill, it will be easier to pass into law,” he added.