Tag: Nigerian

  • FUNKE  AKINDELE  IS 2016  MOST INFLUENTIAL  YOUNG  NIGERIAN

    FUNKE AKINDELE IS 2016 MOST INFLUENTIAL YOUNG NIGERIAN

    CROSS-OVER actress Funke Akindele, one of the strong faces for endometriosis campaign in Nigeria, has been voted as the 2016 Most Influential Young Nigerian in a public ranking poll by reputable rating establishment; Avance Media.

    The actress who is known for her lead role in the TV series ‘Jenifa’s Diary’, was stated to have made lots of waves in the entertainment industry in 2016.

    The actress is reported to have gotten more accolades as she also got voted as the 2016 Most Influential Young Nigerian in the Entertainment Industry.

    The ranking which features 100 young Nigerians between the ages of 15 to 40 was launched by Avance Media in 2016 and drew participation from over 80 countries across the world who voted for the 100 nominees to make up the final selections.

  • Aflatoxins in Nigerian foods, cancer, HIV…antidotes

    Despite the searing heat, Nigeria farmers are back to the land, preparing their farms for the cultivation of this season’s crops. As I suggested in this column last Thursday, under the title AGRO-DOLLAR RAIN ABOUT TO FALL IN NIGERIA, more rice and maize, in particular, should be produced on the farms this year. This assumption is based on the fact that hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of more farmers will swell the population of farmers as more land is released for farming upcountry and, this time, land clearance, crop cultivation and harvesting will be mechanised. These are all features of the Anchor Borrowers Project mentioned last week.

     

    Aflatoxin

    But as we jubilate that there should be more food on the dining-table at cheaper prices, so should we worry about the risk of eating poisons with these foods, a risk many governments and food researchers in Nigeria have downplayed over the years or deliberately not sufficiently informed Nigerians about. This risk is the AFLATOXIN risk. If we do not care about what we eat or drink here, other people elsewhere in the world do. And that was why, a few years ago, the European Union (EU) banned importation of foods from Nigeria after it was discovered that their aflatoxin and mycotoxin load was too high for the safety of the health of Europeans.

    The website https//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aflatoxin says of aflatoxins:

    “Aflatoxins are poisonous and cancer-causing chemicals that are produced by certain molds (Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus) which grow in soil, decaying vegetation, hay and greens. They are regularly found in improperly stored staple commodities such as cassava, chili peppers, corn, cotton seed, millet, peanuts, rice, sesame seeds, sorghum, sunflower seeds, tree nuts, wheat, and a variety of spices. When contaminated food is processed, aflatoxins enter the general food supply where they have been found in both pet and human food as well as in feedstocks for agricultural animals. Animals fed with contaminated food can pass aflatoxin transformation products into eggs, milk products and meat. For example, contaminated poultry feed is suspected in the findings of high percentages of samples of aflatoxin-contaminated chicken meat and eggs in Pakistan. Children are particularly affected by aflatoxin exposure, which leads to stunted growth, delayed development, liver damaged and liver cancer. Adults have a higher tolerance to exposure but are also at risk. No animal specie is immune. Aflatoxins are among the most carcinogenic substances known. After entering the body, aflatoxins may be metabolised by the liver to a reactive epoxide intermediate or hydroxylated to become the less harmful aflatoxin M1.

    “Aflatoxins are most commonly ingested, but the most toxic form of Aflatoxin B1 can permeate through the skin.

    “The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) action level for aflatoxin present in food or feed is 20-300ppb. The FDA has had occasion to declare both human and pet food recalls as a precautionary measure to prevent exposure.

    “The term “Aflatoxin” is derived from the names of one of the molds that produce it, Aspergillus flavus. It was coined around 1960 after its discovery as the source of “Turkey X disease”. Aflatoxins form one of the major groupings of mycotoxins.

     

    Nigeria’s Problems

    Nigeria produces bumper harvests in the farms, but loses a quantum of them during storage or transportation. Yam and potatoes, for example, are thereby fungi-infected and loaded with aflatoxins in the cooking pot and dining table. In many road-side eating places, soups and stews are made from rotten pepper which the Yorubas call ata esa. Many people buy and eat “injured” or “wounded” banana, unknown to them that the rot areas on the banana are the handiwork of a fungus or fungi. Fungi denature oils. For this reason, care should be taken in consuming oil-rich foods. Groundnuts (peanuts) are oil-rich. In a region of the United States (US)celebrated as the biggest peanut grower in that country, cancer of the pancreas is reported to be a common occurrence. So, when peanut is off colour or off-taste, I do not touch it. I have learned to also avoid peanut butter for this reason. Melon is another stuff to be careful about. To make a delicious pot of melon soup, our mothers peeled melon from the shell, roasted it and then ground it. In other words, the soup was made with fresh melon just removed from its protective shell. These days, melon is sold to the lazy woman already ground and wrapped in cellophane. Not only would the acids in melon have reacted with the cellophane, picking petroleum residue for the pot of soup it is intended for, the melon may have over time become oxidised by oxygen, thereby stocking free radicals for the soup, and, additionally, bring along aflatoxins, being a ready prey for fungi attack.

    Even maize is not free from fungi infection because of its oil and high moisture content. Vegetables are worse. They get rotten easily. I have learned, too, that onions and limes are not safe from fungi infection. If you watch a pack of ripening limes carefully, you may notice some that are becoming rotten. The market woman does not wish to lose money by throwing them away. So, she developed the idea of squeezing such limes in a bottle and selling them off to her careless or unsuspecting customer as lime juice. Back home in the kitchen, the lime is used to cure snails, fish, wash vegetables et.c. Unknown to the chef, aflatoxins have been introduced into a delicious meal. When I notice that onions are getting rotten,  I do not remove the affected peels and use the remainder. I throw away the bulb. During the mango season many people eat mangoes with spots on the skin.

    Dr J.H. Williams of the University of Georgia, United States, carried out a study of local African markets and reported that about 40 per cent of the commodities found the “exceeded permissible aflatoxin levels (in excess of the international standards of 10-20ppb) and that an estimated 4.5billion people in developing countries are at risk of uncontrolled or poorly controlled exposure to aflatoxins, and up to 40 percent of commodities in local African markets exceed allowable levels of aflatoxins in foods.”

    In the website www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/705839, he reports:

    “It is known that high aflatoxin levels in the bloodstream depresses the immune system, thereby facilitating cancer, HIV, and stunting the growth of children. A cross-sectional study conducted in Ghana and cited by Dr. Williams shows that immune systems of recently HIV-infected people are significantly modified even they have above median levels of natural exposure to aflatoxin.

    Referring to another study, Dr. Williams notes:

    “People with a high aflatoxin biomarker status in The Gambia and Ghana were more likely to have active malaria.”

    The website quotes Dr Oladele Dokun, a veterinary doctor at Nigeria’s Animal Care Laboratory as saying:

    “Research has shown aflatoxin causes infertility, abortions and delayed onset of egg production in birds as well as sudden losses in egg production in actively laying birds. Furthermore, loss of appetite, skin discoloration or even yellowish pigmentation on skin can be observed in fish.”

     

    The Euro ban

    A few years ago the EU banned the importation of Nigerian cocoa after a high Gamalin-20 (a pesticide) was found in chocolates and ovaltine. Later, another import ban covered beans, sesame seeds, melon seeds, dried fish and meat, peanut chips and palm oil. If you wonder what palm oil is doing on the list, as we say here, I would share my experience. I was told I could obtain fresh and pure palm kernel oil from a particular region of the country. So, I paid for 20 liters of palm oil which I hope to enjoy for months. But I was shocked one day to find a white film over the oil right inside the plastic keg. It was fungi! So, I threw the keg and, its contents away and proceeded with the detoxification of my system. This sort of thing can make one ill, and an inexperienced doctor would merely provide drugs to suppress symptoms he observes and not uproot the cause(s). If you shrug your shoulders in disbelief, saying our grandparents ate this things and live to ripe, old age, you may not have looked at the other side of the equation. That other side was their diet. Did they consume sugar the way we do today? Did they eat junk foods? Were they stressed up the way we are? Did they not sleep longer and more restfuly than we do? Their bodies were not as weaken as ours, and probably didn’t collapse as easily as our do under aflatoxin bombardment.

    The European Food Safety Authority said the Nigerian food crops were banned because their pesticide levels were too high. The pesticide level of the banned Nigeria beans was between 0.03mg per kg to 4.6mg per kg of Dichlorvos pesticide against an acceptable residue limit 0.01mg/kg.

    Director-General Paul Orhyi, of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) blamed the ban on the “failure” of exporters to comply with regulatory requirements. I wondered them if it would not have been better to admit that NAFDAC’s hands were too full and that it required more men and funds to enforce compliance, as Nigerians were beginning to show interest in food exports as a way of diversifying their country’s revenue base. Or, if NAFDAC had enough policing capacity, did its officers look the other way while the food cargoes were loaded in ships? It is embarrassing, to say the least, to find ship loads of exported foodstuff returned to the country. Fearsome is the thought that we all at home may be consuming poisons whenever we eat beans in any form, fish and peanuts. To be fair to NAFDAC, it has embarked on a national campaign to enlighten the public about the contamination of Nigerian foods. But many Nigerians are not paying enough attention.

    In the website www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov we are advised:

    “Aflatoxin, one of the most widespread of the known carcinogens, is present at a high level in most common foods stored poorly for long periods in Nigeria. It may work synergistically with other carcinogens to produce the high incidence of primary liver cancer seen in young men at the age of 40. In the northern Nigeria Savannah areas, cereals, especially sorghum and millet, as well as groundnut products are the high risk foods. In the Southern forest areas, dried fish, groundnut and all palm products often carry unwholesome quantities of aflatoxin.”

     

    Symptoms

    Aflatoxic poisoning is also known as aflatoxicosis. It may present as nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, convulsion, collection of fluid in the lungs (pulmonary edema), collection of fluid in the brain (cerebral edema), abnormalities of the blood, including blood cancer even in children, bleeding, liver damage and cancer,  kidney and heart damage and even death.

    Consumption of a large dosage of aflatoxin may produce the symptoms described above. Accumulations over a long period of time may not hurt severely immediately, but may ultimately result in, say liver damage or cancer. Lung cancer may come from the inhalation of mold dust, especially in the cases of people who inhale mold dust from affected crops.

     

    Natural aflatoxin remedies

    Since mold and aflatoxins are known to cause all sorts of cancer, the first line of defence against them would seem to be (1) immune boosting (2) detoxification (3) anti-cancer foods and herbs (4) oxygenation (5) anti-inflammatories (6) anti-fungal herbs. Some of the well known anti-mold herbs are (a) Garlic, (b) Pau d’Arco (c) Thyme and (d) Cloves. To this group belongs, also, Golden Seal Root.

    When it comes to immune boosting, attention has to be paid to the liver. It breaks down poisons into simpler, non-poisonous ones or into less toxic toxins. Where the liver is healthy and functioning optimally, no cancer can erupt in any part of the body, as science is now discovering through autopsy reports which implicate liver weakness in the evolution and development of cancers.

    To prevent the liver itself from becoming cancerous, not only is it necessary to equip it to detoxify all toxins which the bloodstream brings to it to pulverise, it is important as well to prevent it from being overloaded with more poisons than it can get rid of and to protect it against them. Accordingly, liver-clearance herbs such as Carqueja are important as decongestants while herbs such as Milk thistle, Jerusalem artichoke and False Daisy (eclipta alba) are hepaprotectives. An hepaprotective is a liver protecting agent. Hepaprotectives obtain their recognition as such from their protection of the liver against carbontetrachloride. This is a chemical which easily damages and destroys the liver. When animals were fed carbontetrachloride, they died of liver damage. Only a few of them died when they ate Milk thistle, for example, simultaneously with the poison. Hardly did any die when fed Milk thistle a few days before ingestions of Carbontetrachloride. Protecting the liver enables it produce enough bile salts to mop toxins for excretion. One teaspoonful of Tumeric powder enables the gall bladder to empty half of its bile contents at once. But such a dosage is contraindicated in people with gall bladder stones or kidney stones, as a gall bladder stone blockage of the bile ducts may block bile passage and cause congestion in the bladder and liver, and, in the kidneys of susceptible people, the oxalic acid in Tumeric may combine with free or excess calcium salts to form calcium-oxalate stones.

    Liver health boosts immunity. We can boost immunity further by consuming herbs, which help to lower bacterial, viral and fungi load so that the immune system, freed of a heavy load of combatants against it, can act with more vigour. Echinacea, which sometimes is sold along with Golden Seal Root, is an immune booster. A product named Echinacea Supreme combines Echinacea, Golden Seal Root and Grape Seed Extract, another great name in the immune supporting therapy. Here is one secret I will share later: pawpaw leaf juice.

    If the brain has been affected, because some molds cause cerebral allergy and nervous system damage, brain-health herbs are called for. Ginkgo biloba is well known. It promotes blood circulation to, and in the brain, enhances memory and cognition. Lion’s mane mushroom repairs damaged nerves and supports their regeneration. Omega-3 fatty acids prevents inflammation of brain cells and is a mood enhancer and anti-depressant. Some sources of Omega-3 oil are flax seed oil and evening primerose oil. But fish oil is the best. Noni juice is also good. If behaviour and mood are disturbed, a proprietary product named BEHAVIOUR BALANCE or MOOD SUPPORT are suggested.

    For general well-being in a state of aflatoxin overload, orange peel powder can be terrific. It is anti-toxin, anti-inflammatory, a lung decongestant and blood purifier.

    Adaptogenics, too, are indispensable. From low gear or high gear, they bring the body to normal gear. One of the most well-known among their ranks is Siberian Ginseng. We should not forget about greens…Wheatgrass, Chlorella, Kale, Spirulina and Liquid Chlorophyll taken alone or together. They detoxify the blood and lymph. They also recompose and oxygenate the blood. We should not relegate Stinging Nettle as well.

    The new farmers are pouring into the farms in hundreds of thousands, if not millions nationwide to ignite Nigeria’s real green revolution. IITA (international institute for tropical Agriculture) and NAFDAC are helping out with aflasafe on the farms and in storages. But they may not capture all the mold and aflatoxin in the net. So, when we eat, we should be reminded that aflatoxins may be present in the food. Therefore, our meals should not be without protection. You may have been reading in this column that I sometimes eat groundnuts and banana with pawpaw leaves (papaya). This leaf is an antioxidant and offers digestive protection. So are Bitter leaf and Basil leaf (Efinrin in Yoruba). Ditto garlic and tumeric.

  • Change should begin with every Nigerian

    SIR: When President Muhammadu Buhari launched the “Change begins with me” campaign, critics saw it as a deceptive policy from a government that had promised change. Some even went as far as saying that they regretted voting for President Muhammad Buhari because they felt they had not seen the expected changes the APC-led administration promised its followers. Only a few Nigerians have reasoned that a lot of damages were done to the socio-political and economy of this country by previous administrations.

    Individual citizens have been socially and politically corrupted, and for government to realize its change plans, change must first be effected in individual characters. We ought to change our negative perceptions that have long divided us, if we must progress.  I believe Nigeria can get change only if they give that change. Change is within us, the citizens of this great country and not the country itself.

    Nigeria will be a great country if only we keep away our selfish interest and focus on how to make our nation great. America, England, Japan did not develop in a day; sacrifices were made, some died just to take their country where it is today. We keep on shouting change, but the question is, are we really ready for the change? Are we ready to face the consequences that come with it? There is a saying that “nothing good comes easy”; why not join hands with the President to change this country because, I believe that this change we are clamouring for starts with me and you. Have we ever sat down to think who needs to change in this country? Is it the country itself or the attitudes of its citizens?

    Nigeria can only change if we see ourselves as one nation and remove all forms of ethnic and religious differences and also our selfish interest and promote the general interest of our dear country. Let us change from individual levels before asking for change from the government.

     

    • Zainab Adamu Kaka,

    IBB University Lapai, Niger State.

  • Nigerian killed, another abducted in South Africa

    The Nigerian community in South Africa yesterday confirmed the death of a Nigerian and the abduction of another member in the country.

    Mr. Ikechukwu Anyene, the President of Nigeria Union, South Africa, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on telephone from Pretoria that both incidents had been reported to the Nigerian Mission in that country.

    He alleged that one Victor Nnadi, a native of Orlu in Imo, was suffocated to death on Thursday by the Metropolitan Police in Cape Town.

    Anyene claimed that witnesses saw the police handcuff the victim and suffocated him to death.

    “When the people saw what happened, they raised an alarm and confronted the police.

    “The union’s chapter in Cape Town is already on top of the situation and trying its best to facilitate the release of   the detained brother of the deceased,” he said.

    Anyene, however,   urged the Federal Government to persuade the South African government to put measures in place to stop the killing of Nigerians.

    The union, he said, also got information on December 24, that one Austin Agunwa, a native of  Umuawulu, in Awka South Local Government Area of  Anambra, was abducted by unidentified persons  at Rustenburg, North West Province.

    He said Nigerians in the province raised a search team, which later found the victim’s car abandoned, after a crash near a bridge.

    Anyene, however, said the vehicle had no blood stain.

    “As we speak, we don’t know his whereabouts  and nobody has claimed responsibility for his abduction.

    “We have directed the union’s chapter in the area to report the incident to the police and open a case on the missing Nigerian,” he said.

    Anyene also said the union’s national body would liaise with Nigeria’s High Commission to visit Rustenburg over the incident.

    “We have also advised our people to be calm and remain law-abiding as the union and the Nigerian Mission are handling the situation,” he said.

  • AU committee chair: Buhari raises five lobbying committees for Nigerian candidate

    AU committee chair: Buhari raises five lobbying committees for Nigerian candidate

    •Gambari, Kingibe, Amina, Onyeama, Fayemi head teams

    President Muhammadu Buhari has raised five lobbying committees for a Nigerian contesting for the post of Commissioner for Peace and Security of the African Union (AU) Commission, Fatima Kyari Mohammed.

    Mrs. Mohammed is the official candidate of ECOWAS for the coveted post, which will be contested for by other blocs in Africa during the Heads of State Summit on January 30 and 31.

    According to investigation by The Nation, Nigeria is interested in the slot in view of the strategic role it has been playing in conflict resolution in Africa.

    A top source, who spoke in confidence, said ECOWAS Heads of State have unanimously endorsed Mrs. Mohammed.

    The source said: “The President has decided to reach out to all African Heads of State and Government to support the candidature of Fatima, who has done a lot to promote peace and development in West Africa.

    “Five campaign teams led by three ministers have been set up by the President. The ministers leading the teams are the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Geoffrey Onyeama, the Minister of Environment, Amina Mohammed, and the Minister of Solid Minerals Development, Dr. Kayode Fayemi.

    “Others involved in the lobbying are two special envoys, who are former Ministers of Foreign Affairs, Amb. Baba Kingibe, Prof. Ibrahim Gambari, Ambassador Ayo Oke, Enuma Okoro, Ambassador Jacden and others. All of them will embark on trips to different parts of the continent in January.

    “Two events have already been held in Addis Ababa to introduce the Nigeria’s candidate to the diplomatic community. Election holds at Heads of State Summit holding between January 30th and 31st.”

    When The Nation visited  fatimakyarimohammed.org  yesterday, she said her vision is to ensure “a prosperous Africa, where its citizens can live in security and dignity in an inclusive environment where collective responsibility and accountable institutions foster peace and stability”.

    One of the qualities, which endeared her to ECOWAS leaders, was her passion for the care of the vulnerable.

    She runs the Like-Minds Project, which has executed several projects for those displaced by Boko Haram insurgency in the Northeast.

    Her pet project has assisted more than 50,000 families in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states.

  • Nigerian killed, another abducted in South Africa–Union

    The Nigerian community in South Africa on Sunday confirmed the death of a Nigerian and the abduction of another member in that country.

    Mr Ikechukwu Anyene, the President of Nigeria Union, South Africa, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on telephone from Pretoria that both incidents had been reported to the Nigerian Mission in that country.

    He alleged that one Victor Nnadi, a native of Orlu in Imo , was suffocated to death on Thursday by the Metropolitan Police in Cape Town.

    Anyene claimed that eye witnesses saw the police handcuff the victim and suffocated him to death.

    “ When the people saw what happened, they raised an alarm and confronted the police.

    “ The union`s chapter in Cape Town is already on top of the situation and trying its best to facilitate the release of the detained brother of the deceased,” he said.

    Anyene, however, urged the Federal Government to persuade the South African government to put measures in place to stop the killing of Nigerians.

    The union , he said, also got information on Dec. 24 that one Austin Agunwa, a native of Umuawulu, in Awka South Local Government Area of Anambra, was abducted by unidentified persons at Rustenburg, North West Province.

    He said Nigerians in the province raised a search team which later found the victim`s car abandoned, after a crash near a bridge.

    Anyene, however, said the vehicle had no blood stain.

    “ As we speak, we don’t know his whereabouts and nobody has claimed responsibility for his abduction.

    “ We have directed the union`s chapter in the area to report the incident to the police and open a case on the missing Nigerian,” he said.

    Anyene also said that the union`s national body would liaise with Nigeria’s High Commission to visit Rustenburg over the incident.

    “ We have also advised our people to be calm and remain law abiding as the union and the Nigerian Mission are handling the situation,” he said. (NAN)

  • Nigerian political lexicon: Reaching new heights

    Most English words and expressions endure for ages.  Only a few exist for specific climes and regimes.  The standard Oxford English Dictionary and other venerable publications give authenticity and meanings to words and expressions employed in books and used in daily communications.  Nigeria, being an extension of the English language sovereignty has by and large been part of this language heritage.  That is until recently, especially since 1960 when the country assumed political independence.  We have by our ingenuity created vast new political expressions which by their usage convey different meanings.  This literary stride has since gained ground making the Nigerian politician one of the most creative of our time.  Some familiar ones are mentioned here.

    “Well  gentlemen, my government  has an empty mind towards this conference”:   This was Nigeria’s Foreign Minister Jaja Nwachukwu who was attending a Disarmament Conference in Geneva, Switzerland, shortly after Nigeria’s independence.  Europe and the New World were divided into two spheres of influence – the West headed by the U.S and the East by the USSR.  Nigeria, the newest and biggest of the third world countries was invited as ‘observer’ to the conference.  It was an act of humor, but in those days most of the advanced world recognized and loved the gentle and soft diplomacy of Prime Minister Tafawa Balewa.  What our ubiquitous foreign minister wanted to say was ‘open mind’ not “empty mind”!

    “The come comes to become”:  This is from our respected Dr. K.O. Mbadiwe.  A colossal in his time, the politician was a words-worth whose mastery of the English Language especially when lambasting opponents in a formal debate was legendary.  He has been missed badly in the political space.

    Sit tight ministers: This was in early years of independence when parties and especially leaders who lost confidence of their leaders and were expected to step down refused to do so.  Early examples were A.C. Nwapa, S.L. Akintola etc.

    Akintola takuThis was the screening headline of the Daily Times when Chief S.L. Akintola refused to quit office as Premier of the Western Region even though he had lost the confidence of the party leadership and the governor could remove him.

    Wet e. Following the flagrant manipulation and rigging of the 1964 – 1965 elections in the West, voters went on a rampage, destroying and burning  human beings and houses.  It was a sorry picture throughout Western Nigeria where life was no more sacred.

    ‘Next level’ ordinarily means moving to higher space, but now it is almost exclusively used to connote advancement not into space but in progress.

    Moving Nigeria forward’ does not connote physical movement from one location to another, but attaining some national progress.

    “Inconclusive” now has no other meaning except it is tied to an election which is not completed or which does not throw up a winner.

    ‘Padding’: I bought a used Benz car in 2004, the most outstanding feature which made it more expensive than the others was that it was ‘padded’.  This involved adding a thick white metal to both sides of the car.  Today in Nigeria, cars are no more padded, but budget proposals sent    to the Nigeria Assembly are padded by chieftains of the hallowed chamber.

    ‘Sharing’ ordinarily means dividing some tangible objects between or among people.  Today in Nigeria, sharing connotes taking money from the national till and dividing it among rogue politicians or Civil Service mandarins.

    True federalism:  In Nigeria the term relates to those pundits who believe their part of the geographical space will benefit more if the country is constituted into units that allow them to control their national resources.  It does not denote equity, fairness and necessity, but an arrangement that will serve personal or group interest better.

    Restructuring’ is closely related to the above as regards its objective and perceived gains.  It is a political arrangement that would confer benefits on some people.

    Resource Control:  The advocates of resources control have in mind an arrangement where they will control all their natural endowments especially mineral resources, crude oil etc.  It is a self-serving political postulate.

    Ethnic nationality:  This is a euphemism for tribes or clans.  It is an attempt by political modernists to promote, enhance and modernize the term ‘tribe’ which the colonialists used to describe ‘natives’.

    Distinguished Senator: It is the warm affectionate acclamation which members of Nigeria’s upper legislature ascribe to themselves.  It does not matter whether the new member is just about to be sworn in, on entering the hallowed chamber he becomes distinguished.  In the ordinary world, the level of your performances in the job determines whether you are distinguished or not.  Not in Nigeria.

    Oversight functions:  This is an assignment which members of our legislative houses ascribe to themselves.  For it they share luxury cars, fat allowances and generous gifts from targets.

    Constituency projects: Ordinarily preparation of budgets especially items that will be included into the annual estimates is a job for the executive, but our smart and very considerate lawmakers usually include their own for their constituents.

    Recession/depression: This is a worldwide economic situation when growth is stagnated and when the national currency is fighting a lost battle with accepted standard currency of other nations.  In Nigeria it means more.  The palm oil tapper, the gari seller, the vegetable grown around the farm house all have their market prices doubled because of recession, or simply because of the ‘scarcity of dollar’.

    Militant/terrorist:  Hoodlums who kill at will in Nigeria are called militants, not terrorists.  When does a militant graduate into a terrorist?  Perhaps when a whole community has been decimated.  In ordinary language, a militant is not necessarily a terrorist, he can be an activist, fighting or demonstrating for a course.  But a terrorist is a dangerous killer and destroyer.  In Nigeria, the two are not separated.

    Hit the ground running:  This expression became almost a household word during the last election.  It means that the new administration when it is inaugurated would move to establish itself and pursue its programme almost on inauguration day.  No such magic has been observed/even 24 months after inauguration.

    He was the best President Nigerian never had: This was the most dramatic statement made by the legendary Emeka Odumegwu -Ojukwu while paying homage to late Obafemi Awolowo. Throughout history, this expression will be crafted in ageless marble as it represents the totality of the history of Awolowo.  Abraham Lincoln, J.F. Kennedy, Winston Churchill could not have put it better.

    The Nigeria politician is very innovative as he responds to new political situation with appropriate catch-words, slogans and descriptions.

    • Chief Fasuan MON, JP, writes from Ado-Ekiti.
  • Why re-insurer will blacklist Nigerian airlines, by operators

    Why re-insurer will blacklist Nigerian airlines, by operators

    Nigerian airlines risk being blacklisted unless they pay the backlog of insurance premium owed global re-insurer, Lloyds of London, Airline Operators of Nigeria (AON) Chairman, Nogie Meggison, has said.

    Captain Meggison said Lloyds threatened to blacklist airline operators because of their inability to  pay premium on aircraft insurance, adding that some were in arrears by four months.

    He said besides blacklisting of operators, the re-insurer may also downgrade Nigeria  into a high risk region where premium on aircraft insurance is prohibitive.

    According to him, failure to pay the monthly premium by some operators was predicated on the difficulty in accessing foreign exchange through the official window of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    Meggison warned that blacklisting Nigeria would have a negative impact on the economy because operators might find it  difficult  to acquire aircraft from lessors without insurance cover.

    The Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) prescribed holding of valid insurance cover as a prerequisite for bringing in and operating any aircraft in the transport category in Nigeria.

    The regulatory requirement also includes valid insurance cover for aircraft, passengers and third party liabilities.

    Meggison said failure on the part of debtor-operators to meet their obligation  could lead to suspension of operations and job loss, adding that apart from scheduled and chartered aircraft operators, helicopters flying to oil rigs, vessels, high rise buildings, airport terminal buildings would also be affected.

    The AON chief said operators may find it difficult to lease aircraft from other countries not covered by Llyods re-insurance on account of the blacklist. He listed China and Russia as other markets where Nigerian operators could acquire aircraft with difficulties due to the Lloyds blacklist.

    He said: “If Nigeria is blacklisted, the premium will rise by 300 per cent due to high risk.

    “We are not keeping to payment dates. Domestic carriers have a four-month’ backlog on payment. It will be funny to wait until there is an incident before the airline tries to pay its premium.

    “We, therefore, use this medium to call on the Minister of State Aviation, Hadi Sirika, to as a matter of urgency come to the aid of domestic airlines operating in the country.

    “One of the ways to achieve this is to forge a joint working group with the Federal Ministry of Finance and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on how the nation can take exigent steps to avoid the downgrade/blacklist in the interest of safety and the economy.”

    Meggison said Nigerian market is grossly unable to effectively underwrite risks in aviation because of its high exposure, stating that airlines require an average of $500 million policy for an airplane to cover hull, war and third party liabilities.

    Meggison said: “When this figure is multiplied by the number of aircraft operating in the country, it becomes clear that Nigerian insurance companies can’t cope, considering the enormous volume of resources needed to cover all those aircraft of which the total coverage value will be in excess of $6 billion.

    “Virtually 100 per cent of the aircraft being operated in Nigeria are re-insured by Lloyd’s, hence, Nigeria can’t afford to be blacklisted as a nation because this will have very grave consequences, as the entire domestic airlines will shut down since airplanes can’t be operated without being insured.

    “It will take some days at best to switch to the secondary market of Russia and China, whose premiums will also have skyrocketed if we are blacklisted by Lloyd’s,” Meggison said.

  • Yoruba in the Nigerian situation

    The general decline of Nigeria, and Nigeria’s growing poverty, has dragged the Yoruba nation steadily down since independence. Typically too, federal administrations hate the Yoruba spirit of enterprise and modernization, as well as the Yoruba frontline position in development, and devise various ways to drag the Yoruba people back.

    In spite of all these, the Yoruba are deservedly proud of their consistent contributions to the progress, stability and survival of Nigeria. They have always served as the pace-setters in educational and most other aspects of modernization in Nigeria. They have faithfully preserved their culture of religious tolerance and accommodation in their homeland, their cultural openness to the acceptance and inclusion of immigrants from other parts of Nigeria, and their political culture that promotes the growth of modern democratic society. They are always the foremost in the promotion of a sane federal structure for Nigeria, and in the defence of the integrity and well-being of Nigeria’s many nationalities. The Yoruba   homeland has therefore regularly been the destination for most Nigerians needing to relocate from the harsh conditions and conflicts of their homelands.

    The Yoruba also have a proud record of stepping forth at critical moments to defend Nigeria’s existence and stability. In 1966-7, as Nigeria slid towards chaos and civil war, the Yoruba were the only major Nigerian people standing up for peaceful resolution of differences in Nigeria. Unfortunately, the very courageous interventions by Yoruba leaders (Leader of the Yorubas, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, and the Western State’s then Military Governor, Gen. Adeyinka Adebayo) did not succeed in achieving an amicable and peaceful resolution of the passionate differences – and civil war followed. In the civil war, the Yoruba nation’s various inputs (on the battle field and in the government’s management of Nigeria’s war effort) proved the most crucial contributions to the preservation of Nigeria as one country.

    In 2009-10, when President Yar’Adua from the Arewa North died in office, the Arewa North political elite demanded that he must be succeeded by another Arewa North    politician – a demand that sought to set aside his Vice-President, Jonathan from the Delta, in negation of the constitutional provision that a president who dies in office shall be succeeded by his vice-president. It was a strong and resolute defence of the constitutional provision by masses of Yoruba elite and people at home and abroad, that stopped the crisis which threatened Nigeria with conflict and disaster.

    In 2014, when the President of Nigeria convoked a National Conference, the overwhelming majority of the Yoruba elite and people arose to give it full support. Many Yoruba civic organizations submitted memoranda. A series of Yoruba leadership meetings was held, and a restated Yoruba Agenda was put forth, spelling out the well-considered proposals of the Yoruba nation for Nigeria’s stability and progress. Furthermore, in the interest of Nigeria, the leaders of the Yoruba South-west reached out to the leaders of the other zones. Their contacts with the South-east and South-south resulted in a meeting of the leaders of the three zones at Asaba just days before the commencement of the National Conference. At the Asaba meeting, the leaders of the three zones agreed to work together. On the whole, the Yoruba delegation discharged its duties creditably at the conference, did a good job of putting the Yoruba position clearly forward, and deserves much of the credit for the success achieved by the conference.

    Even though not much hope for change ever manifests in the Nigerian situation, the Yoruba generally don’t give up on Nigeria. Thus, in the course of 2013-14, the collapse of Nigeria appeared imminent. The Federal Government became more chaotic than ever before. The ruling political party was breaking up. Corruption was at a peak in all aspects of government. The Armed Forces, horribly weakened by corruption, were limping pitifully against Boko Haram in the North-east, and the fear was high that Boko Haram would expand its terrorism all over Nigeria. Faith in the country was at its lowest. Even in the Arewa North, whose political elite had always held a predominance in Nigeria’s governance since they had been installed over Nigeria by the British at independence, people were talking of dissolution of Nigeria. Various prominent Arewa North citizens threatened a resort to war. Reports of illegal arms imports into Nigeria sky-rocketed. An organization of Arewa youths held demonstrations demanding that Southerners resident in the North should return to their homelands within two weeks, that Northerners resident in the South should return to the North, and that the “failed experiment” of Nigeria should be terminated without delay.

    In these dark hours, a Yoruba political leadership group stepped forth to save Nigeria. Their resourcefully and competently managed effort mobilized leading citizens from all over Nigeria and produced a new Nigeria-wide political party which boldly promised change. In order to stem the tide of the prevailing inter-regional hostility, these Yoruba leaders helped to nominate their party’s candidate for Nigeria’s president from a nationality other than their own Yoruba nationality – a candidate from Arewa North, Muhammadu Buhari. Their party won the presidential election as well as majorities in both houses of the Nigerian federal legislature. Change seemed about to begin.

    President Buhari is fighting corruption and the old terrorist organization, Boko Haram, with some success. But he has demonstrated that he is no President of change. He has seriously depressed the influence of the party that got him elected; and he runs what looks more and more like an ethnic-sectionalist administration. He never makes any reference to the need to restructure the federation, to allow some autonomy to the regions, to restore socio-economic development initiative to the regions and states in order to revive the country’s economy and reduce poverty.

    Moreover, under him, the most murderous terror gang hitherto known in Nigeria has grown and quickly extended its rampages to most parts of Nigeria. This gang consists mostly of Fulani herdsmen who are armed with sophisticated rifles – and are destroying farms, killing farmers and farmers’ families, raping women, and destroying villages in most parts of Southern Nigeria and the Middle Belt. According to President Buhari himself (in an interview with CNN in London in late May) gangs of Libyan militiamen from late President Ghadafi’s militia who fled from Libya with their arms after the fall of Ghadafi, are embedded among these Fulani herdsmen, and have been supplying much of their capacity for killings and destruction.

    What the objective can be for this whole storm of rural killings and destruction is a great mystery to most Nigerians. It looks very much like the Janjaweed kind of terror in the Darfur Province of former Sudan Republic. In the Middle Belt, it looks very much like ethnic cleansing – an attempt to wipe out the small nationalities of this region and seize their homelands. In the South, where the nationalities (like the Yoruba and Igbo) are larger and stronger, the immediate objective seems to be to disrupt the agricultural economy of the various peoples.

    Even as this new storm of terror has grown, President Buhari has chosen to take steps to terminate the debate over the restructuring of the Nigerian Federation. On May 28, he made the alarming statement that he had not “bothered to read”, and did not intend to read or to seek any brief on, the Report of the 2014 National Conference. He stated that he had simply dumped it into the archives. A week later, his spokesmen informed Nigeria that restructuring the federation was not part of their government’s agenda – even though their party had earlier promised Nigeria that restructuring the federation was a cardinal point in their change agenda.

    It is historically significant that, while President Buhari thus shot down all consideration of structural change in Nigeria, some nations in Nigeria stepped up their demands for separation from Nigeria. In the South-east, the Igbo pro-Biafra organizations put huge crowds of demonstrators on the streets, and the clash of some of these with the police resulted in death and injury to many people. In the South-south, Niger Delta militants repeatedly announced demands for a new sovereign Delta country. They then greatly intensified their blowing up of oil mining and pipeline installations, thus inflicting very heavy damage on the Nigerian economy. In the Yoruba South-west, some highly placed Yoruba citizens, gathered at a civic event, reiterated the demand for the restructuring of the Nigerian Federation, adding that continued resistance to restructuring would result in “no Nigeria”. A few days later, in a city in the Igbo South-east, many prominent citizens from most parts of Nigeria (including former Nigerian vice-presidents, ministers, governors, legislators, etc), gathered at a civic event, demanded that the Nigerian federation should be restructured without delay, insisting that the existing conditions of the country were no longer tenable or sustainable.

    In short, stubborn and rigid resistance to demands for restructuring the Nigerian federation and for increased local autonomy, now makes Nigeria steadily more unstable, more violent, more chaotic, and more unworkable day by day. It is difficult to see what more the Yoruba, or any group, can do now to stop the slide. The probability of Nigeria’s dissolution has become very real.

  • Nigerian inflation rises to 18.48%

    Nigerian inflation accelerated for the 13th consecutive month in November, climbed to 18.48 per cent from 18.3 per cent in October, theNational Bureau of Statistics (NBS), has said.

    In an e-mailed statement yesterday. NBS said, prices increased 0.78 per cent in the month. The median estimate of 10 economists surveyed by Bloomberg was for inflation to accelerate to 18.6 per cent, a level last hit 11 years ago.

    Inflation accelerated on higher import costs, after lower prices and output of oil, led to foreign currency shortages. Also, dollar scarcity that persisted even after the apex bank removed a currency peg in June, and the naira lost 40 per cent its value to the dollar, contributed to the economy contracting for the first nine months of this year. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) expects it to shrink by 1.7 per cent for the year.

    Food inflation increased by 17.2 per cent, while the average price of gasoline climbed to N146.7 compared with N145.9 in October, according to the NBS. The index’s rise was mainly driven by increases in the prices of imported foods, meat, bread and cereals and fish, according to the report.

    The weak supply of basic food items such as rice also helped drive up prices, according to Ayodele Akinwunmi, head of research at Lagos-based FSDH Merchant Bank Ltd.

    “The foreign exchange rate is also very weak,” Akinwunmi said yesterday. “People are sourcing the more expensive dollars from the black market to import items.”

    The CBN continues to bar imports of 41 items it deemed non-essential from sourcing foreign currency from the official market, forcing them to buy dollars from the black market. While the naira gained 0.16 per cent to N315.75 against the dollar.

    Mindful of the slumping economy, the CBN left its benchmark lending rate at 14 per cent last month to fight inflation.