Tag: Nigerians

  • Nigerians, don’t be deceived

    SIR: It is barely two months away from now that Nigerians will go all out to determine the direction in which they will be piloted for the next four years. The people will exercise their right under the constitution by voting for the leader of their choice. We do hope that the powers that be will not tinker with the electoral process.

    Politicians have started their permutations and combinations. Among them are those who are deceiving the people and making empty promises and also, those who are really committed to providing the dividends of democracy for the people. In short, we have the bad and the good apples. It’s left for the electorate to choose.

    The presidential election promises to be keenly contested. Now, Jonathan and Buhari have been presented by the PDP and APC respectively, who do we vote for? I don’t know. All I know is that it is high time Nigerians stopped voting based on sentiments. Forget religion, ethnic group, region or party affiliation. Instead, weigh intellectual ability; is it high or low? What can he do? Is he competent? Is he up to the task?

    Merit should be the first and the most important thing to consider. Nigerians should not fall for tricks. We should not be deceived by stomach infrastructure. We do not need a leader that will give us fish, but the one that will teach us how to fish.

    Many Nigerians are swimming in the pool of poverty; who among these aspirants have the ability to save them? Nigeria is thirsty for infrastructural development; who will quench its thirst? Our economy is in shambles; who can rejuvenate it? Our security is at stake; who can save us?

    So, it is not just about going out to vote; it is about choosing the best person for the job. The electorates are the architect of what is currently happening in Nigeria today. All will be well only if we get it right by carrying out a revolution that can save us from the mediocrity of our leaders. Please vote wisely, otherwise, things will fall apart.

     

    • Jamiu Idowu Esho,

    Eruwa, Oyo State.

  • UK varsities’ £1m  scholarship for Nigerians

    UK varsities’ £1m scholarship for Nigerians

    A consortium of leading UK Universities (NCUK) has launched a £1m scholarship scheme aimed at attracting the brightest Nigerian students to UK. The scheme will also develop their leadership skills in addition to creating leadership opportunities for Nigerian students.

    Chair of the Trustees for NCUK and Vice President of the University of Manchester Prof Colin Bailey students that undergo NCUK programmes turn out hot cakes

    Said he: “Students that come through the NCUK programmes are well sought after by our universities.  They provide a valuable contribution to campus life here in the UK, integrating not only with our UK students but also other international students.  We believe our universities offer the best education in the UK”

    The competitive scholarship scheme is open to all Nigerian students who enroll on an NCUK pathway programme, designed to prepare students for university study in the UK, Baily said.

    According to him, students who are eligible for the scholarship scheme can study at one of the study centres in Nigeria and thereafter be awarded the university scholarship to study in the UK when they graduate from the programme in 2016.

    The scheme, he added, includes 57 UK scholarship of up to £20,000, offered by 16 of the UK’s most prestigious universities, the opportunity to join a world-class leadership training programme and additional awards of £2,000 offered by study centres in Nigeria.

    NCUK was first established internationally in 1987 and began working in partnership with its study centres in Nigeria over 10 years ago.  Today NCUK programmes are run in Calabar, Kaduna, Lagos and Port-Harcourt by Oxbridge Tutorial College, Chrisland Pre-Degree College, Executive Business School, Lagos, Zamani College Kaduna, Access Group of School Calabar and Brookstone School Port-Harcourt respectively.

    The university consortium offers a one year international foundation programme (IFY) and an international Diploma.

    In addition to the 57 scholarships, the winner will also be eligible to compete for 20 places on a training programme which will be offered by the international leadership development organization and common purpose founded in 1989, which runs scholarship development programmes that enable people from different backgrounds, sectors and geographies to work together to solve common problems through globally oriented programmes that give participants the inspirations, skills and connections to become better leaders both at work and society.

    Country Director of the British Council, Connie Price said: “This collaborative £1m  scholarship scheme is excellent news for young students.  The UK Government has always valued Nigerian students highly and we are delighted by NCUK’s initiative.  It will provide many opportunities to the most talented Nigerians who have their sights on an international career”

     

  • Remain focused, cleric advises Nigerians

    The Archbishop of Riye Methodist Church Nigeria, Most Revd Luke Odubanjo, has advised Nigerians to remain focused on God to surmount the myriad of challenges the country is experiencing. He also urged parents to bring up their children according to God’s precepts to have a happy and healthy family.

    Revd Odubanjo spoke during a homily at the solemnisation of the matrimony between Mr. Oladipupo Oluwaseun Oyenola and his wife, former Miss Olaoluwapo Titilope Akinwale held at the Revd Mellor Memorial Methodist Church Nigeria Cathedral, Sagamu and Remo Ogun State.

    Archbishop Odubanjo stressed the need for the couple to sustain the love between them. He urged them to imbibe the sterling qualities of their parents.

    The cleric cautioned the parents against any undue interference in the couple’s marriage.

    On the state of the nation, Archbishop Odubanjo warned the politicians and the electorate, against voting based on “bread and butter”, but to rather vote for very credible, respectable aspirants that would cater for their well-being.

    Archbishop Odubanjo also warned those in authority, especially the politicians against selfish, incessant and flagrant abuse of power and accumulation of wealth at the expense of the innocent poor masses that voted them into power.

    The cleric therefore urged the electorate to assist the leaders through genuine, constructive criticisms and suggestions on how to move the society forward.

    While congratulating the couple, he enjoined them to guard jealously against any breakdown of the marriage.

    The Lay President-elect of the church and one-time Permanent Secretary of Lagos State Ministry of Works and Infrastructure, Mr. Adelana Odutola, advised the couple to uphold the sanctity of the wedlock.

    Eminent personalities that attended the event included the representative of the Prelate, Methodist Church Nigeria the Archbishop of Abuja, Most Revd. Job Uche, Bishop, Remo Diocese Anglican Communion, Rt. Revd. Michael Olusina Fape, the Prelate Emeritus Dr. Sunday Ola Makinde, Lay President-Elect, Diocese of Remo, Methodist Church Nigeria, Mr. Adelana Odutola and his wife, Ranti, the Permanent Secretary, Lagos State Ministry of Information and Strategy, Bishop Diocese of Ikorodu, Rt. Revd Olumuyiwa Odejayi, Bishop, Diocese of Aiyedun Ekiti, Rt. Revd Ola Osunsina, the Baba Ijo and the Iya Ijo General of the Diocese of Remo Methodist Church Nigeria, CEO, Mike’O’ Carpets Limited and Sir Michael Olusegun Odunaiya, among others.

  • ‘Buhari is Nigerians’ choice’

    ‘Buhari is Nigerians’ choice’

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola has said that the emergence of former Head of State  Gen Muhammadu Buhari as the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) is the best democratic pill to galvanise Nigerians towards  change.

    He said Buhari is candidate of  Nigerians, who have been yearning for a change.

    Aregbesola said the decision by all party men and women to elect the former head of state demonstrates the commitment to presenting a candidate who would not only win the presidential election but go ahead to rescue Nigeria from the present quagmire anti-democratic and anti-development elements had brought her in more than a decade and a half.

    Aregbesola, in a statement by the Director, Bureau of Communication and Strategy in the Office of the Governor, Mr. Semiu Okanlawon, was quoted as speaking shortly after the declaration of Gen Muhammadu Buhari as the presidential candidate of the APC after a keenly contested primary held in Lagos.

    “We must congratulate Nigerians for the emergence of Gen Muhammadu Buhari as the presidential candidate of our party. The excitements, commendations and jubilations that have greeted the election and consequently the announcement of Gen Muhammadu Buhari are clear demonstrations of the fact that Nigerians have been anxious and now poised for an immediate change in Nigeria.

    “It is clear now that Nigerians are determined to jettison their religious, tribal, partisan and other mundane interests to rally support for our candidate. Gen Muhammadu Buhari, I can confidently say, is not just the candidate of the All Progressives Congress but the popular choice of entire Nigerians,” Aregbesola was quoted as saying.

    Reminding Nigerians of the urgent need to fix the country, Aregbesola said the outcome of the primary election itself confirmed that the APC has taken transparency, the fight against corruption and graft to a new height.

    “People have chosen the best man for the job regardless of all other less edifying considerations. Buhari represents the face of the required battle against corruption. He represents openness and commitment to good governance. For those who consider the awful impact of corruption on our country, the choice of Gen Buhari would easily translate to the readiness of Nigerians to battle against the most debilitating scourge against the country’s growth,” Aregbesola said.

    Listing the challenges that lay before an APC government at the centre, Aregbesola reminded Nigerians that the 16 years of the Peoples Democratic Party at the centre has spelt economic doom, political complications and social morass.

    “We have witnessed the most horrendous crimes against the soul of this country. There has been a mindless rape of the country by a gang of looters who have made Nigeria a laughing stock in the comity of other nations.

    “There is needless hunger in a country with many untapped opportunities. All the critical sectors have been bled to states of coma and what we have left as a country is fractured entity gasping for breath.

    “With the election of General Muhammadu Buhari, Nigerians are assured that a new Nigeria is possible,” he added.

  • Nigerians and S/Africa’s gun violence

    SIR: South Africa has become the Mecca and the place of refuge for Nigerian economic migrants. But, daily, we are regaled with tales of how some Nigerians were killed in gun fight in South-Africa, the rain-bow nation. Those killed were alleged to be involved in illicit and illegal drug trafficking.

    Like America, South Africa has a gun culture that permits people to own guns. So, some people in these countries do use their mercanhdise of death to dispatch their friends and relatives to the great beyond when they’re emotionally troubled. And, armed robbers, terrorists, and kidnappers carry out their operations with guns, too.

    Lucky Dube, the great cultural ambassador of South Africa, was shot dead in Rosettenville, Johannesburg, South Africa, as he dropped off his daughter and son. Reeva Steenkamp, the beautiful model and lawyer, was another victim of the reprehensible gun violence in South Africa. Oscar Pistorious, the paralympian champion, who overcame physical disabilities, to achieve global fame shot and killed Ms SteenKamp, on Valentine’s Day in 2013. He was convicted of culpable homicide by Judge Thokozile Masipa.

    Again, Senzo Meyiwa, the South African football captain, was killed while staying in his girlfriend’s house. The killing of Meyiwa sparked off outrage in South Africa. Zanokhule Mbatha, who was suspected of killing him, was arrested after a nation-wide manhunt.

    The government of South Africa should enact laws to curtail the possession of guns by its citizens. And, those that violate the country’s gun laws should be punished by the existing gun laws in the country. Nigerians who are living in that country should abide by the laws governing South Africa. They should desist from engaging in criminal activities, which can attract unpalatable repercussions to them.

     

    • Chiedu Uche Okoye,

    Uruowulu-Obosi, Anambra State

  • Nigerians and Bio-Safety Bill

    The Nigeria Bio-safety Bill is one bill that has suffered a lot of legislative setback over the years. It was first presented to the National Assembly in 2006 and was passed eventually in 2010 during the sixth assembly, but failed to get presidential assent before the expiration of the last administration.

    The bill amongst other things, seeks to provide derived benefits from modern biotechnology under a legal framework for economic growth, improved agriculture, job and wealth creation, industrial growth and sustainable environment. It also aims at minimising risks to human health, confirm and harness potential of modern bio-technology, protect and guard against any adverse effect of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) on biological diversity and the environment and guard against any economic consequences among others.

    However, the bill was returned to the seventh assembly for further legislative actions with the hope that the President may assent to it this time around. It was on this belief that the Senate recently conducted a public hearing on it.

    One of the major issues that the bill seeks to address is the establishment of a National Bio-safety Management Agency for the country. The agency if established would be responsible for the development of risk-management plans and strategies for protecting human health, biological diversity and the environment from potential risk associated with genetically modified organisms. The agency is also to take samples and carry out laboratory analyses of crops, products or materials for purpose of determining if they contain genetically modified organisms and ensure compliance with the law.

    It is instructive to add that the overall objective of the bio-safety bill is to provide a regulatory regime and guidance for the sustainable development of the science of modern biotechnology, its application and safe use of GMOs and the products thereof without prejudice and risk to public health, environmental health, national sovereignty, human dignity and fundamental human rights.

    The bio-safety bill covers all modern biotechnology activities, GMOs and products thereof including all germplasm. It defines modules of practice of modern biotechnology, the handling, transfer and use of GMOs and products thereof to ensure safety to the environment and to human health. It is also intended to guide different segments of society in contributing to safe application of modern biotechnology.

    The bill recognises the complex issues to be addressed by relevant authorities in the judicious application of modern biotechnology, ensures that modern biotechnology activities and their products (GMOs) are safe for the environment and to human health. It bases the deliberate release of GMO on advance informed agreement.

    Furthermore, the bio-safety bill defines offences and penalties for violation; contains powers to authorise release of GMOs and practice of modern biotechnology activities; confers the power to carry out risk assessment/management before the release, handling and use of GMOs; covers all genetically modified organisms/living modified organisms, products food/feed and processing and also covers socio-economic consideration in risk assessment.

    Interestingly, Nigeria signed and ratified an internationally binding bio-safety protocol known as the Cartagena Protocol on Bio-safety in 2000 and 2002 respectively. The Cartagena Protocol on Bio-safety is a protocol of the Convention on Biological Diversity. The protocol entered into force on September 11, 2003 and currently has 160 members. The Cartagena Protocol on Bio-safety, on its own, addresses the safe transfer, handling and use of Living Modified Organisms (LMOs) that may have adverse effects on conservation and sustainable utilisation of biodiversity, taking into account risks to human health and focusing on trans-boundary movement of the LMOs.

    The protocol requires parties to it to develop their bio-safety administrative and regulatory framework in order to effectively regulate activities of modern biotechnology, GMOs and products thereof to avoid harmful effects on the environment, biodiversity and human health. The bill is therefore to domesticate the Cartagena Protocol on Bio-safety which Nigeria has signed and ratified and to abide by the protocol in line with our national needs. It is in furtherance of this that Nigeria participated fully at the fifth meeting of the Conference of Parties of the Convention on Biological Diversity serving as Meeting of Parties to the Cartagena Protocol on Bio-safety, which was held on October 11 – 15, 2010, in Japan.

    Modern biotechnology has been identified as an important tool that can help countries to achieve food sufficiency/food security, industrial growth, health improvement and environmental sustainability.

    It entails the fusion of cells beyond the taxonomic family that overcomes natural physiological reproductive or combination barriers and that are not techniques used in traditional breeding and selection. It is gene specific. Nigeria adopted biotechnology policy in 2001 as an alternative tool to achieving the objectives of biotechnology for national development. A National Biotechnology Development Agency was further established in 2001 to actualise the policy to promote biotechnology activities in the country.

    However, the absence of a bio-safety law has hampered the activities of the agency in the research and development in genetically modified organisms in the country, thereby, denying Nigeria the benefits associated with modern biotechnology practice.

    Modern biotechnology helps to produce plants that can reduce Greenhouse gases thereby reducing effects of climate change; it is precise in its trait utilisation, develops plants that have greater tolerance to stress in marginal environment, improves growth and productivity of plants and animals, food quantity, nutritional improvement and consistency for healthy living. Besides, it produces new breeds of animals and plants, reduces use of pesticides and herbicides, as well as farming land area with higher yields. In as much as modern biotechnology has great potential, there are fears of possible adverse impacts on the environment and human health, which has necessitated the bio-safety bill.

    As rightly enthused by Prof. Shehu Ado of the Institute for Agricultural Research, Zaria, the coming on board of the bill would equip Nigerian scientists to practise biotechnology as it relates to food, health and the environment. To him, the bill would protect Nigerians as all biotechnology activities and scientists would be subjected to strict monitoring to ensure that no harmful activities are employed to affect human, animals or the environment.

    As he put it, “It will help the country to harness the potential modern technology has to offer under a legal regime. There is currently a lot of concern regarding the possible toxicity and allergy to food products derived from GMOs. There are equally concerns on the environmental consequences of the use of GMOS and their release into the environment, in particular, the effects on biological diversity, but it will  ensure environmental, human and socio-economic safety”.

    The consequences of not having a biosafety law on the environmental, human health and on our economy may be unquantifiable, which might pose serious threat to our national security, particularly now that modern biotechnology has come to occupy centrestage globally in nearly all facets of human endeavor.

    Some of the consequences are that farmers might resort to the smuggling of GMO seeds they consider as having the potentials to enhance their earning without risk assessment being carried out on them; there will be apprehension among the populace on the socio-economic consequences of modern biotechnology and GMOs, especially among the small-scale farming systems that are prevalent in Nigeria. Since there will be no law to protect them, Nigeria will not be able to guarantee the purity of its agricultural products for the international market, thereby losing her international partners and also foreign earning. Nigeria will serve as a dumping ground for unregulated GMOs which may have adverse impact on our environment and human health.

    Finally, Nigeria will be denied the opportunity to harness the potential modern technology has to offer in the field of improved food production, medicine/health, industrial growth and environmental sustainability, employment generation and wealth creation.

     

    • Samson wrote in from Jabi, Abuja
  • Can Nigerians observe Buy Nothing Day?

    Can Nigerians observe Buy Nothing Day?

    Accross the world, Buy Nothing Day has become an entrenched tradition as shoppers stay indoors to observe the day. While some shoppers and shop owners say it will be a wonderful idea if Nigerians embrace the idea, others differ, arguing that they would be deprived of income, TONIA ‘DIYAN reports

    Penultimate Friday was observed as  Black Friday all over the world, including Nigeria, where shoppers went on a shopping spree.

    While many are still relishing those moments, shoppers across Europe, United Kingdom and America are already getting set to mark the Buy Nothing Day, a day people would be asked to put down their credit cards and wallets and stay away from shopping.

    Buy Nothing Day is a simple idea, which challenges consumers’ culture by asking people to switch off from shopping for a day. It’s a global stand off from consumerism; it is celebrated as a holiday by some people.

    Spearheaded by Adbusters in the early 90s, it has grown into an international event celebrated in some parts of the world. In Canada and America,  Buy Nothing Day falls on the Friday after Thanks Giving Day. In Europe, where  shoppers shop  more on Saturday, it is the last Saturday in November.

    Last Saturday in some countries, after shoppers’ indulge in the Black Friday bargains, they were urged to curb their spending for Buy Nothing Day which happened to be the day after this year’s Black Friday.

    As developed countries, they make up 20 per cent of the world’s population and consume over 80 per cent  of the earth’s natural resources.

    Speaking on the justification of the Buy Nothing Day, one of the organisers, Michael Smith, said it is a tradition that has been going on for 20 years now.

    According to him, people should be encouraged to think about their consumption and see that there are some daily things they take for granted.

    He said: “The developing world is consuming far more than it needs to, especially the amount of waste and stuff we buy at this time of the  year, we need to lower our consumption to something that is acceptable. It is basically time to lock up wallets, purses, cut up credit cards and dump shopping.

    “Everything we buy has an impact on the environment; Buy Nothing Day highlights the environmental and ethical consequences of consumerism. The developed countries – only 20 per cent of the world population are consuming over 80 per cent of the earth’s natural resources, causing a disproportionate level of environmental damage, and an unfair distribution of wealth.

    “As consumers, we need to question the products we buy and challenge the companies who produce them. What are the true risks to the environment and developing countries? We all know recycling is okay for the environment, but consuming less is better and Buy Nothing Day is a great way to start.”

    Although the Buy Nothing Day is well-entrenched in the West, it is not certain whether this culture may resonate with Nigerians.

    Speaking with a cross-section of some shoppers and business owners on the possibility of commemorating the day in Nigeria, they expressed mixed reactions.

    A woman who simply gave her name as Madam Folake, and runs a boutique at Onipanu, in Lagos mainland, said as an independent shop/business, she doesn’t see the reason to support the Buy Nothing Day shopping culture.

    “I own my business and this so-called shopping culture will definitely affect my business for the period it will be observed. So, I can’t support such,” she said.

    Informed that the idea is to make people stop and think about what and how much they buy daily, enriching the purses of businesses, another trader, who gave his name as  Godwin, said if the idea is introduced in Nigeria, it will cause harm. This, he attributed to the fact that if people are not buying on a particular day, they may end up buying in excess the previous day which is likely to increase their expenditure.

    His words: “In my opinion, I don’t think Nigeria is developed enough to observe a day like that. More so, for the trader, there will be no benefits when he is not making sales.”

    A shopper, Mr. Sunday Kolawole, in his opinion said he doesn’t think Nigerians need anybody or anything to teach them about saving or spending because the harsh economy is doing that already.

    ‘’ In Nigeria, we have people who cannot feed if they do not make sales in a day, so you can’t tell such people to just stay at home for a whole day,’’ he said.

    A retailer in a Lagos shop, Mrs Ifeoma Okafor, explained that it will be a good thing if Nigeria could observe the day as it will give opportunity for buyers and sellers to have a day of compulsory rest.

    Her words: ‘’ I think it is good because, it will enable one to rest and save for that day. As a trader, it will not affect my sales in any way because, people would have prepared and shop the previous day for items they need. She, however, said it is important that people are informed before the D day. Therefore, if the government is able to create enough awareness we might just be able to observe ‘Buy Nothing Day’ you know!”

    Mr. Chinoso Uzor explained that a day such as that will not suite Nigeria because everybody is hustling come rain come shine to make ends meet, but it is not totally impossible to observe such a day as it will give opportunity to rest.

    An educationist and shopper, Mrs. Kike Ibrahim, said the Buy Nothing Day could be observed in Nigeria addng that it will give both the shopper and seller not just an opportunity to rest but also teach them the ability to minimise their expenditure.

    He said: “If other countries are doing it, why can’t we? If we don’t spend money in a day, I don’t think it will cause any harm. Therefore, it is important that parents teach their kids about spending habits and savings.”

    For Bunmi Bolajoko, a shopper, Nigeria should not venture into such project at all because we are not as developed as those countries observing it. In those countries where a day like this is being observed they have better economy compared to Nigeria. She said: “I don’t think those countries have people that will go hungry if they do not buy or sell for one day but in Nigeria, we have such people and as such, we can’t compare ourselves with them.”

    She, however, added that even if such a day is observed in the country, most people will not observe it because they  work from Sundays to Saturdays to make ends meet.

    A shopper, Mr. Akachukwu Okoha, explained that if such a day is declared he won’t feel happy because he works hard for his money and reserves the right to spend how and whenever he wants to.

    He said: “I don’t need anybody to tell me how to save or spend my money, so I don’t think Nigerians need to observe such day.’’

    Mrs. Dolapo Oladele thinks Nigerians will not observe such day to their busy schedule. She said:  “If such happens here, it will be like shutting down the whole country and keeping everyone indoors because what brings most people out on a daily basis is buying and selling.  I don’t think such a day will be necessary in Nigeria because people have better things to do than just sitting at home  and not going about their normal businesses.”

    Another shopper simply known as Miss. Success explained that such a day will not be possible because there is no way a person will go out without buying a thing.

    She said: “I can’t go out without buying anything, if I am on my way from a place and I become thirsty that means I have to get home before drinking water? I don’t think it can be possible here.’’

    Tomiwa Oladele, Head of Public Relation and Communications Nigeria and Ghana, Kaymu said: “In this side of the world the concept of Buy Nothing Day has not caught on; however Black Friday in Nigeria is catching on like wild fire, with sales across e-commerce sites doubling, tripling in some cases.”

    Speaking with a source at the Consumer Protection council (CPC), who asked not to be named, the source said the Buy Nothing Day culture was strange but didn’t foreclosed whether the agency would support it or not.

  • Why Nigerians should vote APC, by Tafida

    Why Nigerians should vote APC, by Tafida

    Sokoto State All Progressives Congress (APC) stalwart Alhaji Abdullahi Aminu Tafida has called on Nigerians to vote for change in 2015.

    “We have to liberate ourselves from the bondage of failures, insecurity and backwardness,” he said.

    Speaking to reporters in Sokoto,  Tafida, a businessman, said Nigerians should vote for the APC for the change to occur.

    He noted that the North has been thrown into a sorry situation by few selfish persons.

    Tafida added:  “This is the time  to come together and face a common direction  to salvage the country.”

    Commenting on governor Wamakko’s senatorial bid, Tafida described the governor’s aspiration as apt,  in view of his leadership qualities.

    “ He is one politician that has been tested and confirmed to be worthy of making genuine representation in the Senate.

    “ He has made Sokoto state and Nigeria proud especially in recent time of politiking.

    “ Wamakko is united at heart and dependable in trust for leadership and a liberator in the northwest like his colleagues”, he noted.

    He appealed to the people of Sokoto  State to  support  the party, to take  Nigerians out of the woods.

  • Presidency 2015: Neither religion nor ethnicity

    Presidency 2015: Neither religion nor ethnicity

    Some February 2015, Nigerians would not be electing a bishop or an imam: we would be choosing a president. But you would not think so judging by the way religion is being manipulated to influence potential voting decisions.

    As if that were not bad enough, the usual suspects are already at it pushing ethnicity for all it is worth to gain political advantage. None of this is strange because these issues have always been overt factors in Nigerian politics.

    Indeed, it would be naïve and unrealistic to try to totally keep them out of politics. Even in the US which popularised the principle of separation of church and state, this is only observed in breach. They may not have a state religion but ‘In God We Trust’ is inscribed on their national currency.

    Even in largely homogeneous societies like the US, religion in politics sometimes manifests in positions taken by candidates e.g. Do they want prayer in schools or are they pro or anti-abortion?

    In multi-ethnic and multi-religious societies like ours you cannot run away from balancing. Giving people a sense of belonging is one thing, but when a person’s suitability for office becomes a function of what faith he follows, we need to ask hard questions.

    What I find discomfiting is the virulence with which these factors are being deployed this election cycle – without a proper sense that we are playing with dynamite. From Lebanon to Iraq to Northern Ireland, the human suffering caused by the combustible mix of religion and politics isn’t something to recommend to an enemy.

    In the past we somehow managed to step back from the brink. This time around, Boko Haram has poisoned the air with atrocities that have sharply polarised the ethnic and religious divides.

    Things are not helped by the fact that the two major political parties are set to pick the candidates from the opposing geographical poles – reprising the age-long North-South contestation for power. It was only in 1999 that we were briefly spared the aggravation when the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the then All Peoples Party (APP) chose candidates from the South West.

    The PDP pulled out the religious card quite early as it sought to define the nascent All Progressives Congress (APC) as an ‘Islamic party.’ The ruling party’s spokesman, Olisah Metuh, enthusiastically accused the opposition of propagating Janjaweed ideology. The basis of this accusation was that the party that was then in formation had a preponderance of Muslims in leadership positions.

    After the APC’s first convention, a new hierarchy reflecting a better religious and ethnic balance emerged. But then suspicions that had been sown in the minds of the impressionable were reinforced with talk that the party was seriously considering selecting a Muslim-Muslim slate to challenge President Goodluck Jonathan.

    As the opposition intensified their attacks against the government for its impotence in the face of rampaging insurgents who had graduated from just lobbing bombs to actually holding territory, an administration on the defensive felt the best way to fight back was to accuse APC of sponsoring and funding the insurgency.

    Having made this astonishing claim, the government didn’t move to prosecute those it accused of such treasonable offences. By not taking that step it destroyed the credibility of the allegations. That has not stopped the administration from repeating the same meaningless claims in the face of new criticisms – and it leaves you wondering why.

    Matters of faith don’t lend themselves to reason since they flow from our hearts and emotions. Each time Boko Haram – in the name of Islam – invade a village in the North East, burn down churches and murder Christians, it plays strongly into the ‘them-against-us’ narrative.

    Just this last week at the meeting of the Nigeria Inter-Religious Council (NIREC) – a forum formed to promote better understanding between Nigeria’s two leading faiths, what made headlines were the exchanges between Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) President, Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor and the Sultan of Sokoto, Abubakar Saad.

    Oritsejafor had complained bitterly about the slaughter of innocent Christians in the North. He spoke of unjust treatment exemplified by the fact that in many parts of the region Christians cannot get land to build churches, and where they manage to get land they are denied Certificate of Occupancy (C of O) for no just cause.

    He then challenged the Sultan to direct the same letter he had written to ISIS to Boko Haram. The suggestion was that major Muslim leaders had not bent the ears of the insurgents sufficiently to turn them from their evil ways. Naturally, his views were not well received by the other side.

    I sympathise with Oritsejafor because much of what he said is the true experience of many Christians in the far North. Even before the coming of Boko Haram, sectarian clashes in which scores lost their lives were common occurrences in the last few decades.

    However, the CAN President’s comments don’t capture the total picture. If Christians have been victims of the insurgency, Muslims have also suffered terribly. Boko Haram has murdered thousands of nameless people who share the same faith they claim to be propagating across the Northern states.

    On Friday, at least 120 worshipper were killed when suicide bombers attacked the Emir of Kano’s mosque. Last week 45 innocent souls were blown to bits in a Maiduguri market after two female suicide bombers detonated their deadly cargo. A few days after in Adamawa, a roadside IED believed to have been planted by the sect claimed another 35 lives. I doubt whether these explosives were primed with instructions to slay adherents of a particular religion.

    There are serious unresolved issues in Nigeria revolving around ethnicity, indigene status and religion that we need to sit down and discuss frankly. A situation where the constitution talks of not adopting a state religion, while some Northern states openly do so undermines coherence and trust in the federation.

    That said, we must accept that Boko Haram has gone beyond the ‘them-versus-us’ stage. Those being murdered in places like Gwoza, Damboa, Bama etc are not all Christians. This is something that requires everyone pulling together. It is something that has defeated everything the current administration has thrown at it. Even with outside help, we now have a pseudo-caliphate on our doorstep.

    That is why I find it truly reprehensible that politicians are trying to fight the 2015 elections by manipulating religion and ethnicity – rather than focusing on their record and manifesto.

    When you hang the tag of an ‘Islamic party’ on your opponents, are you not suggesting that yours is the ‘Christian party’? The president has not helped with his subliminal religious campaigning involving church-hopping.  To decide whether he was going to run or not, we were subjected to a primetime ‘pilgrimage’ to Jerusalem flanked by two of the country’s most prominent pastors. Are their flock supposed to read between the lines and fall in line?

    Christians who try to paint Jonathan as the candidate for their religion need to pause and reflect. Voting for the incumbent president won’t take anyone to heaven, just as voting for his likely Muslim opponent will not open the gates of Paradise to anyone.

    How has Jonathan being a Christian furthered the Christian cause in Nigeria? Under his watch thousands of Christians are being slaughtered across the North and the butchering continues.

    I recollect that over two years ago when the US first toyed with the idea of designating Boko Haram a Foreign Terrorist Organisation (FTO), agents of the Jonathan government in collaboration with the American State Department then led by Hillary Clinton argued strenuously at the Congress against it.

    They painted a picture of the sect as a minor irritant that could be controlled with home-grown solutions. At that same hearing was a CAN delegation led by Pastor Oritsejafor. He and his team were thoroughly astonished that agents of a government ostensibly led by a Christian would be making such arguments. All they were after was anything that would check the sect. They left America bitterly disappointed.

    Instead of demonising individuals and any particular religion, let us wake up as Nigerians and confront our demons. Since we have not agreed to dissolve our union, we must tell ourselves the truth and not allow political scam artists to take us for another ride in the same tattered religious cum ethnicity jalopy.

    As things stand in this country today, no Muslim can win an election without Christian votes and vice versa. Nobody can impose any religion on us without having to deal with the National Assembly and the 36 state houses of assembly.

    Voters must ask themselves if they are going to elect a president based on his piety or their performance. We are suffocated with religiousity and church/mosque-going at election time. Once the elections are won and lost, these supposedly pious politicians return to business as usual. How is it that with all our holy and prayerful politicians Nigeria is so messed up?

    We remember religion when it helps us carve up the nation’s wealth. Our faith takes a back seat as we despoil the land and desecrate the offices that God in his mercies has allowed us to occupy; we abuse the powers we should hold in trust for the people.

    We hoodwink the ignorant with ethnicity whereas the fact is voting for someone with whom you share tribal identity doesn’t change much if you’re not in his close circle.

    Northern leaders governed Nigeria for close to 40 years and yet their region remains the poorest and most backward in the country. Chief Olusegun Obasanjo was in office for eight years as civilian president. By the time he left, most roads in Sango-Ota where he used to live were impassable. Jonathan has been in office for over five years and millions of people from the South-South zone are still living a hardscrabble life.

    Instead of being scammed through sentiment Nigerians should realise that what we desperately need is a leader who will drag this blessed country out of backwardness.

    When a Christian leader delivers 24-hour electricity it’s not only for Christians, when a Muslim provides tap water it will also run in the homes of members of the other faith.

    Nigerian politicians playing the religion and ethnic card should remember the immortal words of our inimitable First Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan: ‘There is God oooooo!!!! And He’s a consuming fire.

  • Congolese humiliate Nigerians; chant Ebola go away

    Congolese humiliate Nigerians; chant Ebola go away

    • Police stop contingent from watching Friday training session

    Nigerians living in Congo Brazzaville would be subjected to negative reactions from the indigenes if the Super Eagles beat the Red Devil in today’s make or mar 2015 Africa Cup of Nations qualifying match.

    Not only that the visiting Nigerian delegation led by the Nigeria Football Federation President Amaju Pinnick are also in for a very negative reception from fans and the security agencies in Congo today as the Eagles  take on the Congo Brazzaville for the maximum three point at stake.

    A dose of what to expect if Nigeria beat Congo Brazzaville today was extended to Nigerian Journalists and Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN) team led by Friday Nwankwo  Kujah, some members of Nigeria Supporters Club and Nigerian fans in Congo were denied access to watch the Eagles training held 3.30pm yesterday.

    The fans rained abuses and tagged Nigerians Ebola people, singing “Ebola (effected people) go away from us”.

    The journalists, TAN team and Nigeria’s Supporters Club members had to run inside the Coastal Bus that brought them to the Stade Ominisport Stadium and begged the driver to leave the stadium before Congo fans attack them.

    What even amazed the Nigerian journalists covering the match was the way security men were listening to fans instructions not to allow the visiting Nigerians to enter the Stade Ominisport Stadium.  The main  gate of the Stadium was locked and any attempt by journalists, TAN members and Supporters Club led by their President General, Dr Rafiu Ladipo to enter was rebuffed by fans and the security men on ground.

    Meanwhile the Eagles have assured that nothing would distract them from getting the needed victory in today’s match.

    The Team Coordinator, Emmanuel Attah told NationSport that the players were resolute and very determined to beat Congo Brazzaville since that is the only way they can actualize Nigeria’s dream of playing in the finals of the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations.

    “The players are experienced to be bothered by the antics and undue threats from host fans. They have vowed to concentrate on the task to be done on the field of play not outside it. By the special grace of God we will come out smiling after tomorrow’s (Saturday’s) match’, Attah assured.

    Congo Brazzaville fans who also like Nigerian fans kept vigil at the Airport expressed optimisms of beating the African Champions, Nigeria as they points five fingers to players and officials emerging from the Discovery Air that conveyed the Nigerian team to the Augustoneto Airport which means that they are expecting their team to beat Nigeria 5-0”.