Tag: October 1

  • When the President speaks

    When the President speaks

    •The Independence Day promises should not end at mere pronouncements

    It is customary for the President to address Nigerians every October 1.

    This year was no different as President Bola Tinubu was on all the information channels to discharge that responsibility.

    One major highlight of the speech was the promise to convoke a Youth Confab at which young people would air their views and come up with recommendations on the way forward. Indeed, this is unprecedented. It is as desirable as it has become imperative, as the young people constitute 60 per cent of the population which the President acknowledged; but, they have had to force their voice to be heard in recent times.

    In October 2020, they took to the streets of major cities to express their grievances. Although it started as protest against police brutality, it soon turned to a revolt against the system, as additional demands were added. It could be summed up as rejection of a system that had shut them out of the decision making process.

    Then, more recently, they again poured out on the streets between August 1 and 10; and on October 1, Independence Day. While the Independence Day protest was not as loud and disruptive as the earlier ones, it was obvious that the younger Nigerians remain angry and something must be done urgently to pacify them.

    The administration’s promise to bring together representatives of the youth to plot the way forward should be seen as a direct response to the restiveness. It is equally sequel to the Not Too Young to Run Act enacted under the Buhari administration.

    There have, however, been concerns over the modalities for the conference. How would it be worked out, and to what extent would the target participants be involved in setting it up? Besides, some have wondered about the altruism of the conference, that is, whether it is not only a way of buying time or burrowing into the fold and drawing some of them to government’s side.

    One point that must not be lost on patriots is that we should not allow the past to keep stopping us from charting a way forward. Chronic cynicism is one poison that should be avoided if we are indeed to achieve the lofty goals of the nation.

    President Tinubu had used the opportunity to announce other plans for the youth, including a Labour Employment and Empowerment Programme (LEEP) that would be launched this month. The programme, expected to be anchored by the Ministry of Labour and Employment, is to provide jobs for about 2.5 million Nigerians. This is quite ambitious and would, if successfully pulled through, help in tackling insecurity and boosting economic development.

    Read Also: Nigeria, Japan strengthen ties to boost trade, development, food security

    He also announced a Three Million Technical Talent (3MTT) scheme that would train, retool and empower the young. To underscore its importance and draw attention to the focus, it is to be handled by the Ministry of Communication, Innovation and Digital Economy.

    It should, however, be pointed out that Nigeria has never lacked beautiful programmes and lofty schemes; the challenge is in their implementation as many of those saddled with executing them are either inept or unpatriotic. We hope that these new initiatives would be different.

    If President Tinubu intends to reshuffle his executive council as widely speculated, we hope he would take the opportunity to ensure that only the competent are retained or brought on board. Some of those working for his government now have not acquitted themselves well, yet, Nigeria is not lacking in men and women of great ability, some of whom are serving other countries.

    This is a time that all useful hands must be on deck. It is a time to locate people who would truly be public servants, willing to roll up their sleeves in service of the motherland.

    As the Tinubu administration is approaching the mid-term point, ministerial and other appointees’ assessments should be more regular and those identified as surplus to requirement should be shown the way out without delay so that at the end of the four-year tenure, we would be in a position to proudly sing: “Nigeria we hail thee”.

  • October 1: Protest overtaken by events

    October 1: Protest overtaken by events

    Sir: Protest is one of the ways used by citizens to draw the attention of the government to pressing issues that are not being appropriately addressed. Most of the demands of the organizers of the October 1 protest have either been resolved or are being addressed while others are not in the best interest of the country. Moreover, protests in Nigeria that are tagged as peaceful often end with elements of violence, leading to disruptions of economic activities and loss of lives and property. The #EndBadGovernance protest is an example.

    The federal government has commenced paying the new national minimum wage, and therefore state governments and members of the organized private sector who have not started should follow suit. It’s important that government enforces it. The national minimum wage has a multiplier effect on the economy; it will boost employee productivity, reduce brain drain, and stimulate demand for goods and services. For some time now, many businesses have been struggling in Nigeria, with many going under due to low sales stemming from the low disposable income of the Nigerian worker.

    According to the National Bureau of Statistics, Nigeria’s headline inflation on a year-on-year basis has eased for two consecutive months ; dropping to 33.40% from 34.19% in July, and dropping further to 32.15% in August. The drop in July was the first time since December 2022. While this is commendable, the government is not resting on its oars, as it recently raised the Monetary Policy Rate by 50 basis points to 27.25%. I expected this rate hike in light of the new national minimum wage implementation.

    In a bid to eliminate banditry and terrorism in the Northwest, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu recently ordered the Chief of Defence Staff and Minister of State for Defence to relocate to Sokoto State. This move has already yielded remarkable results. The federal government has also deployed 10,000 agro rangers to safeguard farmlands and protect farmers from escalating attacks in 19 states of the country. In an effort to curb oil theft, the Chief of Defence Staff recently inaugurated a joint monitoring team to enhance military operations in the South-south region of the country. Generally, the level of insecurity across the country has dropped significantly, but there is still much to be done and the government is aware.

    Read Also: Niger Delta youths embark on solidarity walk for Tinubu

    The request for the reversal of the removal of the fuel subsidy is retrogressive in my opinion. This government has decided to do things differently in order to achieve better results. Yes, it has resulted in a hike in the cost of transportation; therefore, to alleviate this, the government has started distributing CNG buses and conversion kits across the country, with CNG tricycles to be distributed to youth in the pipeline. CNG is a much cheaper alternative to PMS whose price is expected to drop when domestic refineries come fully on stream due to economies of scale, competition, and the envisaged increase in the value of the naira due to reduced FOREX pressure.

    People have the right to protest as long as it is peaceful; however, in my opinion, the planned protest had become unnecessary as most of the demands made have been overtaken by events. The government has commenced implementing the national minimum wage, inflation is on the decline, the distribution of CNG buses and conversion kits has commenced, and the government has shown its commitment to reducing the cost of governance, as evidenced by President Tinubu’s directive to reduce the Nigeria’s delegation to the just concluded United Nations General Assembly. It is also worthy to note that some of the arrested #EndBadGovernance protesters have been released, and the request for reversal of the removal of the fuel subsidy is not in the best interest of Nigeria.

    Protest is not the only way to make our voices heard, nor is it the most effective.

    •Kenechukwu Aguolu,Kenerek1@gmail.com

  • October 1 protest: IG orders tight security  in states

    October 1 protest: IG orders tight security  in states

    Ahead of today’s 64th Independence Day celebration and the planned protests by some people, Inspector General of Police (IGP) Kayode Egbetokun yesterday ordered water-tight security across the country to ensure a peaceful atmosphere for the citizens.

    Egbetokun directed police formations to clampdown on miscreants in any part of the country.

    The police boss gave the order in a statement by Force Public Relations Officer (FPRO) Olumuyiwa Adejobi, an Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP).

    The statement reads: “As part of the IGP’s comprehensive plan to ensure a seamless celebration, the IGP has ordered the deployment of adequate human and tactical resources to enable a maximum level of security for the independence celebration.

    “The police, in synergy with other security agencies, will fortify various designated event venues and the major highways across the country to forestall any threats to lives and property and the celebration.

    “Additionally, the IGP has directed all personnel deployed for various operations during the celebrations to be courteous and firm in their engagements with members of the public. The IGP also felicitates Nigerians as we commemorate our independence anniversary, noting that Nigerians are urged to reflect on the journey, triumphs and challenges that have shaped our nation, honoring the sacrifices of our founding fathers and the generations that have contributed to our nation’s growth, unity and progress.

    “IGP Egbetokun reiterates that the Nigeria Police Force remains committed to safeguarding our nation’s security, ensuring peaceful coexistence, and upholding the rule of law. We are dedicated to serving our communities with integrity, compassion, and professionalism.

    Read Also: Money laundering charges against Bobrisky legally dropped – EFCC

    “As we move forward, let us rekindle our sense of national pride, foster unity, and work together towards a brighter future for all Nigerians. As we commemorate our journey to freedom and self-governance, let us remember our responsibilities to promote peace and respect for the rule of law”.

    Police deploy explosive, anti-riot equipment

    The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Police Command yesterday deployed Explosive Ordinance Disposal (EOD) personnel, anti-riot equipment, visibility policing, among others, ahead of today’s celebration of Nigeria’s 64th independence anniversary.

    A statement by the command’s spokesperson Josephine Adeh, a Superintendent of Police (SP), reads: “The FCT Police Command, in anticipation of the upcoming October 1 Independence Day celebration, has strategically deployed adequate personnel and equipment throughout the FCT.

    “This proactive deployments aim to ensure that residents of the FCT enjoy a hitch-free Independence Day celebration. The deployment will include Explosive Ordinance Disposal (EOD) personnel, anti-riot equipment, visibility policing, among others.

    “Traffic diversions will be implemented in areas expected to experience large crowds, including Central Area and Eagle Square. While celebrating Independence Day, residents of the FCT are encouraged to remain vigilant and report any suspicious movements or activities to the FCT Police emergency lines: 08032003913, 08028940883, 08061581938, 07057337653, PCB: 09022222352, CRU: 08107314192”.

  • October 1: Tight security as police deploy explosive, anti-riot equipment

    October 1: Tight security as police deploy explosive, anti-riot equipment

    Ahead of the October 1, Independence Day celebration, the FCT Police Command on Monday, September 30, deployed Explosive Ordinance Disposal (EOD) personnel, anti-riot equipment, and visibility policing, among others.

    The command also announced the diversion around Central Area and Eagle Square during the celebration.

    A statement issued by the FCT Police Public Relations Officer, SP Josephine Adeh said: “The FCT Police Command, in anticipation of the upcoming October 1st Independence Day celebration, has strategically deployed adequate personnel and equipment throughout the FCT.

    Read Also: Police foil two kidnap attempts in Katsina

    “These proactive deployments aim to ensure that residents of the FCT enjoy a hitch-free Independence Day celebration. The deployment will include Explosive Ordinance Disposal (EOD) personnel, anti-riot equipment, and visibility policing, among others.

    “Traffic diversions will be implemented in areas expected to experience large crowds, including Central Area and Eagle Square. While celebrating Independence Day, residents of the FCT are encouraged to remain vigilant and report any suspicious movements or activities to the FCT Police emergency lines: 08032003913, 08028940883, 08061581938, 07057337653, PCB: 09022222352, CRU: 08107314192”.

  • October 1 and the torment of memory

    Forget the rose-scented official statistics, the sweet words of the establishment. There can be no procedure to tracking Nigeria’s progress graph more efficiently, more intimately than a gesture as ordinary as dusting up old copies of newspapers or journals to find just how much of yesterday’s promises were eventually delivered and the gradient to which current lamentations in the land bear resonance with the cry of yester-years.

    The first likely surprise on that excursion into the past: not a few of yesterday’s heroes would have dramatically morphed into today’s villains, with old crooks now miraculously canonized as saints.

    The annual national ritual resumed last Sunday as we marked another October 1. Listening to President Buhari making his fourth outing that day as either civilian or military head of state, perceptive older Nigerians were unlikely to miss the recurring decimals in all. Always permeating his National Day speeches from 1984 to date are the themes of anti-corruption, containing centrifugal forces and titanic exertion to fix leaking economy.

    One, the noble duel against Boko Haram which has dominated PMB’s October 1 in the past three years slightly echoes back to what was said against no less aberrant Maitasene sect in 1984 as military head of state.

    Talk of salvaging the national economy out of recession days ago bears same cadence with what we heard in 1984 after failed politicians had reduced “our hospitals to mere consulting centres”. The same way the anti-corruption rhetoric persistent today had also featured back in 1984 amid a national crackdown on those who looted the exchequer during the preceding dispensation.

    In a way, it all tells of a nation hopelessly locked in the frenzy of motion with little or no movement.

    Turning the pages of Sunday Concord of October 5, 1997 last Sunday, this writer, for instance, could not but shudder at the striking pungency the points made some donkey years ago by respected columnist, Mr. Lewis Obi, still bears with current human condition in contemporary Nigeria.

    With democracy then in retreat under dictator Sani Abacha, the national mood was perhaps best captured by Obi in a piece entitled, “37 Years in The Wilderness”, contained in that edition. His grim observations after listening to the Independence Day broadcast by the then head of state:

    “(A)fter the speech, most households in Lagos went out in search of water. A cholera epidemic is imminent in Lagos unless the water supply is restored and increased. Most homes in Lagos get two days electricity a week. Since only the rich – indeed, even the rich can no longer run their electricity generating sets – only the obscenely rich still has a set working. The reason is that the Tokunbo generators have had to be overburdened and the cost of running them is driving their owners mad.”

    With trillions of naira since expended on power by Abuja in the succession of five administrations and surfeit of reforms in the past twenty years, generating set market has, in fact, boomed further with fuel cost completely out of reach of the common man as the nation still largely wallows in pitch darkness. Back in the 70s, a federal rolling plan panel led by Chief Olu Falae had projected the nation’s energy need would be over 10,000 megawatts by 2000. More than 40 years later and with the population almost tripled, electricity generation is still officially estimated at a controversial 7,000. Yet, by 1988, official records indicated the 4,000 mark had already been attained. Even after pouring more than $16b into the energy sector by 2007 (according to the House of Reps in 2009), Chief Olusegun Obasanjo only delivered a miserable 3,000 megawatts.

    Today, statistics from an international agency, WaterAid Nigeria, indicate that 40 percent of the population still lack access to potable water despite hundreds of billions voted yearly by various levels of government. In short, ten percent of the world’s thirsty are in Nigeria today.

    So pervasive has the sinking of private boreholes become that authorities in many states have since enacted assorted regulations not to lose out in making profit (by way of levies) from the misery of the thirsty populace desperately seeking quick-fix. Of course, no one seems to bother about the adverse consequence for the environment ultimately.

    Sadly, the generation that drank from efficient, hygienic public taps in the 70s/80s sat by idly and over the years watched in surrender as the cartel of “pure water” merchants gradually displaced state water boards across the country and today have proved to be far more efficient, even though carcinogenic, in water supply.

    Now, let us fast forward to October 2007. This is what Chief Chukwuemeka Ezeife, one-time Anambra governor, had to say about the activities of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) then under Mallam Nuhu Ribadu:

    “As you know, all of us are in support of anybody or institution that is anti-corruption. The only problem is the right process to take in fighting corruption. We need to know that selective justice is injustice. That is the point I want to emphasize. And so far, the EFCC has been doing selective justice, pursuing people it is asked to pursue. It cannot claim to be following due process.”

    Today, with yesterday’s opposition now in power at PDP’s expense, what could only be said to have changed is the voice; the complaints of “selectivity” have not stopped trailing the anti-graft war.

    Then, fast forward to 2017. Ezeife’s reaction to the October 1 broadcast by President Buhari as published by Vanguard two days later (October 2), no doubt turns a darker page on a different issue altogether – national unity/integration: “Buhari … is trying to push the South-East out of Nigeria by marginalizing, dehumanizing  and humiliating them… The young ones (IPOB) couldn’t understand what he was up to and so they reacted as young people.

    “We didn’t have these problems under President Olusegun Obasanjo, Umaru Yar’Adua or Goodluck Jonathan but immediately Buhari took the oath of office and swore to protect the constitution, he reneged on such things as federal character. He told us he belongs to everybody and to nobody but we have seen that he belongs to Katsina.”

    At Nigeria’s 47 anniversary, these were the reflections of Chief Falae as published by  Sunday Sun of Sep 30, 2007:  “At 47, Nigeria has a lot to grapple with, the insecurity of lives and property, unemployment among the youths which has turned young ones to prostitutes and armed robbers, unstable economy which is telling seriously on the downtrodden, the masses and massive rigging that is pervading our electoral system and other vices of our leaders. All these are enough to ruin the nation.

    “There will not be meaningful development unless our leaders are ready to change their attitudes and their approach to governance… Tell me, how you do think the nation will develop when a whole deputy governor was snatching ballot boxes in the presence of voters? I mean this nation needs a lot of reforms and sanity, otherwise the nation may not witness any meaningful development.”

    Poor Chief Falae. While uttering those sanctimonious words in 2007, little did the Akure high chief know that he would find himself being implicated nine years later in the alleged unsightly receipt of N100m from Dasukigate.

    Ten years ago, Bishop Bolanle Gbonigi, one of the nation’s surviving moral authorities, had wept at the nation’s wasted opportunities, urging prayers for the country’s salvation. His views as published by Sunday Sun of September 30, 2007: “Our nation needs serious prayers and God’s intervention. Our leaders, instead of listening to the cry of the masses and engage in developmental projects that will alleviate the sufferings of already downtrodden masses, they were busy looting the nation’s treasury. Therefore, we need to intensify our prayers so that God can touch the hearts of our leaders. You can see that at 47, the nation has little to show for it. Our leaders should have the fear of God in their minds.”

    Today, the octogenarian, after a decade of fervent prayers, seems to be giving up. His comment in the Punch three days ago (October 1): “(M)ajority of the politicians join politics not to serve the people but to serve their pockets. That is why I always say these so-called politicians lobby for positions in order to get possessions to enrich themselves. Look at the way they are stealing billions from the treasury and keeping them in their private accounts in Nigeria and abroad while many Nigerians are suffering.”

    Pity, the more things change in Nigeria, the more they appear the same.

     

    • First published in October 2017
  • October 1 and the torment of memory

    October 1 and the torment of memory

    Forget the rose-scented official statistics, the sweet words of the establishment. There can be no procedure to tracking Nigeria’s progress graph more efficiently, more intimately than a gesture as ordinary as dusting up old copies of newspapers or journals to find just how much of yesterday’s promises were eventually delivered and the gradient to which current lamentations in the land bear resonance with the cry of yester-years.

    The first likely surprise on that excursion into the past: not a few of yesterday’s heroes would have dramatically morphed into today’s villains, with old crooks now miraculously canonized as saints.

    The annual national ritual resumed last Sunday as we marked another October 1, the 57th actually. Listening to President Buhari making his fourth outing that day as either civilian or military head of state, perceptive older Nigerians were unlikely to miss the recurring decimals in all. Always permeating his National Day speeches from 1984 to date are the themes of anti-corruption, containing centrifugal forces and titanic exertion to fix leaking economy.

    One, the noble duel against Boko Haram which has dominated PMB’s October 1 in the past three years slightly echoes back to what was said against no less aberrant Maitasene sect in 1984 as military head of state.

    Talk of salvaging the national economy out of recession last Sunday bears same cadence with what we heard in 1984 after failed politicians had reduced “our hospitals to mere consulting centres”. The same way the anti-corruption rhetoric persistent today had also featured back in 1984 amid a national crackdown on those who looted the exchequer during the preceding dispensation.

    In a way, it all tells of a nation hopelessly locked in the frenzy of motion with little or no movement.

    Turning the pages of Sunday Concord of October 5, 1997 last Sunday, this writer, for instance, could not but shudder at the striking plagency the points made some donkey years ago by respected columnist, Mr. Lewis Obi, still bears with current human condition in contemporary Nigeria.

    With democracy then in retreat under dictator Sani Abacha, the national mood was perhaps best captured by Obi in a piece entitled, “37 Years in The Wilderness”, contained in that edition. His grim observations after listening to the Independence Day broadcast by the then head of state:

    “(A)fter the speech, most households in Lagos went out in search of water. A cholera epidemic is imminent in Lagos unless the water supply is restored and increased. Most homes in Lagos get two days electricity a week. Since only the rich – indeed, even the rich can no longer run their electricity generating sets – only the obscenely rich still has a set working. The reason is that the Tokunbo generators have had to be overburdened and the cost of running them is driving their owners mad.”

    With trillions of naira since expended on power by Abuja in the succession of five administrations and surfeit of reforms in the past twenty years, generating set market has, in fact, boomed further with fuel cost completely out of reach of the common man as the nation still largely wallows in pitch darkness.

    Back in the 70s, a federal rolling plan panel led by Chief Olu Falae had projected the nation’s energy need would be over 10,000 megawatts by 2000. More than 40 years later and with the population almost tripled, electricity generation is still officially estimated at a controversial 7,000. Yet, by 1988, official records indicated the 4,000 mark had already been attained. Even after pouring more than $16b into the energy sector by 2007 (according to the House of Reps in 2009), Chief Olusegun Obasanjo only delivered a miserable 3,000 megawatts.

    Today, statistics from an international agency, WaterAid Nigeria, indicate that 40 per cent of the population still lack access to potable water despite hundreds of billions voted yearly by various levels of government. In short, ten percent of the world’s thirsty today are in Nigeria.

    So pervasive has the sinking of private boreholes become that authorities in many states have since enacted assorted regulations not to lose out in making profit (by way of levies) from the misery of the thirsty populace desperately seeking quick-fix. Of course, no one seems to bother about the adverse consequence for the environment ultimately.

    Sadly, the generation that drank from efficient, hygienic public taps in the 70s/80s sat by idly and over the years watched in surrender as the cartel of “pure water” merchants gradually displaced state water boards across the country and today have proved to be far more efficient, even carcinogenic, in water supply.

    Now, let us fast forward to October 2007. This is what Chief Chukwuemeka Ezeife, one-time Anambra governor, had to say about the activities of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) then under Mallam Nuhu Ribadu:

    “As you know, all of us are in support of anybody or institution that is anti-corruption. The only problem is the right process to take in fighting corruption. We need to know that selective justice is injustice… And so far, the EFCC has been doing selective justice, pursuing people it is asked to pursue.”

    Today, with yesterday’s opposition now in power at PDP’s expense, what could only be said to have changed is the voice; the complaints of “selectivity” have not stopped trailing the anti-graft war.

    Then, fast forward to 2017. Ezeife’s reaction to the October 1 broadcast by President Buhari as published by Vanguard two days ago (October 2), no doubt turns a darker page on a different issue altogether – national unity/integration: “Buhari … is trying to push the South-East out of Nigeria by marginalizing, dehumanizing  and humiliating them.

    “We didn’t have these problems under President Olusegun Obasanjo, Umaru Yar’Adua or Goodluck Jonathan but immediately Buhari took the oath of office and swore to protect the constitution, he reneged on such things as federal character. He told us he belongs to everybody and to nobody but we have seen that he belongs to Katsina.”

    At Nigeria’s 47 anniversary, these were the reflections of Chief Falae as published by  Sunday Sun of Sep 30, 2007:  “At 47, Nigeria has a lot to grapple with, the insecurity of lives and property, unemployment among the youths which has turned young ones to prostitutes and armed robbers, unstable economy which is telling seriously on the downtrodden, the masses and massive rigging that is pervading our electoral system and other vices of our leaders.

    “There will not be meaningful development unless our leaders are ready to change their attitudes… Tell me, how you do think the nation will develop when a whole deputy governor was snatching ballot boxes in the presence of voters? I mean this nation needs a lot of reforms and sanity, otherwise the nation may not witness any meaningful development.”

    Poor Chief Falae. While uttering those sanctimonious words in 2007, little did the Akure high chief know that he would find himself being implicated nine years later in the alleged unsightly receipt of N100m from Dasukigate.

    Ten years ago, Bishop Bolanle Gbonigi, one of the nation’s surviving moral authorities, had wept at the nation’s wasted opportunities, urging prayers for the country’s salvation. His views as published by Sunday Sun of September 30, 2007: “Our nation needs serious prayers and God’s intervention. Our leaders, instead of listening to the cry of the masses and engage in developmental projects that will alleviate the sufferings of already downtrodden masses, they were busy looting the nation’s treasury. Therefore, we need to intensify our prayers so that God can touch the hearts of our leaders. You can see that at 47, the nation has little to show for it.”

    Today, the octogenarian, after a decade of fervent prayers, seems to be giving up. His comment in the Punch three days ago (October 1): “(M)ajority of the politicians join politics not to serve the people but to serve their pockets. That is why I always say these so-called politicians lobby for positions in order to get possessions to enrich themselves. Look at the way they are stealing billions from the treasury and keeping them in their private accounts in Nigeria and abroad while many Nigerians are suffering.”

    Pity, the more things change in Nigeria, the more they appear the same.

     

    PMB’s lexical inflexibility 

    Columnists Sam Omatseye and Segun Adeniyi drew attention to the abuse of language in official quarters the last time. But President Buhari’s speechwriters appear too immersed in their hubris to accept that republican spirit forbids them from addressing the rest of us in a certain fashion.

    From “My dear citizens” of August 21, the president only slightly modified to “My dear Nigerians” to preface his October 1 national broadcast without mitigating the extant epistolary goof.

    Under feudalism, the community grovels at the ruler’s feet. He is therefore at liberty to treat and address everyone as “my subject”. He may wish to wave the horsetail with an imperial swagger as well.

    But such predisposition is taboo in a republic, let alone democracy.

    Shared patriotism is however implied at the invocation of “My fellow Nigerians/citizens/compatriots”. That bespeaks a leader viewing others as fellow stakeholders. Conversely, “My dear citizens/Nigerians” only suggests an insufferable condescension, being duplicitously affectionate. It reeks of a conceited aloofness. It is the language of an emperor. An assault on the civic dignity of Nigerians. Even putschists in the past always started courteously with “Fellow countrymen and women…” in announcing regime change.

    What confounds is not so much the occurrence of this gaffe at all, but the obvious unwillingness of the presidential speech-writers to climb down from their high horse after the dust raised by the August 21 episode and attune themselves to the simple syntax of democracy. If we can’t get PMB to yield on little things like this, what hope is left that he could ever be sold on more abstract imperatives needed to change Nigeria for the better.

     

     

  • October 1 

    At 57, this year’s October 1,  National Day 2017, was fated to enter and exit with minimum fuss.

    Nigeria’s Golden Jubilee (though without much gold to show) was seven years past. The Diamond Jubilee (with a promise of true diamond to come?) is still three years away.

    Yet, some maladies came to blow away that anonymity, replacing it with raw fear — a deja vu of horrors once endured?

    It all started with the Nnamdi Kanu Biafra advocacy, which not only set the whole of the South East on virtual fire, but also sentenced other areas to an emotive tinder.

    Then came the baleful riposte, from some Arewa “youths”; who growled that should the Indigenous People Of Biafra (IPOB) be serious with its secessionist threat, then the Igbo, living and earning their living in the North, must quit that region by October 1 — or else!

    That raised the bogey, of a possible 50-yearly bloodbath — 1967, 2017, 2067? — while Nigerians grapple with Nigeria’s unending crisis of nationhood.

    Well, October 1 has come and gone; and the ballyhooed thunder of slaughter has all but stilled!  But could it be another Ides of March and the Julius Caesar tragedy?

    The Ides of March is come, the intrepid Caesar faced down his prophet of doom.  Ay, countered the other, but it’s not gone.  In truth, before the Ides of March eclipsed, Caesar himself was history!

    For starters, Nnamdi Kanu’s IPOB has, in Achebe-speak, run itself lame before the real dance began.  Kanu himself has vanished, a cheap fugitive from the law, though there is some infantile propaganda, as to his living — or dying.

    Still, given that the IPOB campaign was driven by the impassioned orchestration of Igbo “marginalization”, it is interesting that the Anglophone Cameroon issue is flaring at about the same time.

    Remember the 1961 plebiscite, in which the Anglophone south-western flank of Cameroon voted to join the Francophone majority to the east and north, while the northern tract of the same English-administered territory opted to stay, as Nigeria’s Sardauna Province?

    Why these southern Cameroonians decided for a new country was partly the ominous political crisis, in the new Nigeria, less than one year after independence.  But the local and more pressing decider was the charge of “domination” by the then Eastern Region majority — the Igbo.

    Chinua Achebe it was who, among the many Igbo aphorisms in his works, said a man that, for donkey years, ran away from a certain ailment, yet ended up dying the same death, had simply lost his care.  Anglophone Cameroon fled from feared Igbo domination in Nigeria.  Now, it is crying blue murder, under alleged domination by Francophone Cameroon!

    Ironically, the same Igbo would-be dominators of yore are themselves howling “marginalization” in a Nigeria that just turned 57, even after a futile violent attempt at secession (1967-1970).

    Now, what is happening?  Some political karma at play?  Or just the spectre of unrelieved domination, that turns everything a fevered nightmare of exclusive “Igbo marginalization”?  Mere analytic projections, crying for more definitive researches!

    Still, President Muhammadu Buhari’s Independence Day speech sharp rebuke of Igbo elders, who should have cautioned Kanu, was spot on.  If angry youths can work themselves into a lather that knows no history, elders cannot permit themselves that ruinous luxury.

    Well, with the callow Kanu running himself out of town, the Nigerian national question is resolved?  Hell, no!

    Indeed, the South East excitement, making October 1 loom as some sure Armageddon to come, exposed the stark fault lines — at least among the pigeon-holing elite, jousting for political gravy, but never shy of using their fellow ethnics as tragically disposable battering rams.

    Take the North.  Faced with the rather irascible IPOB taunts, the Arewa political elite played the Nigerian-unity-isn’t-negotiable card.  Yet, that’s another illusion, if not outright delusion.

    Nigerian unity — or otherwise — would have to come from the people themselves, not from some self-appointed champions, living up to the old cynical quip: patriotism is the last bastion of the scoundrel.

    Still, you could hardly fault President Buhari’s hardline stance.  He wasn’t elected to dismember Nigeria.  He was elected to improve it as an entity.

    Having admitted that, however, there often is a gulf between frozen law and living reality.  De jure, Nigeria is one and ought to be united and strong.  But de facto, it is hardly so.

    The National Day anniversary thus offers another window for serious thinking to turn Nigeria, warts and all, into that dream country it is capable of being, if only everyone would work hard at it.

    That is why the North must drop its instinctive opposition to re-working the federation to a more workable, productive and prosperous one, away from the present centralist desert that delivers stupendous poverty from stupendous wealth.

    In return, proponents of “restructuring”, must cease serving it as some anti-North comeuppance; for that region’s past excesses.  If the country is successfully reworked, it would be win-win for all — and the long-suffering northern masses would perhaps be the greatest beneficiaries.

    That brings the matter to the grand “restructuring” and “true federalism” barons of the South West.  Since 1949 when, with Path to Nigerian Freedom, the immortal Obafemi Awolowo started his federalism push, Nigeria’s West had always been champions of re-federalization for development.

    Yet, when the opportunities at a rare consensus came calling, what some Yoruba elders, former young Turks under Awo, offered was mere dross.

    While some were busy pointing at real or imagined “Yoruba enemies”, others were goading IPOB on, promising a Yoruba support they lacked the capacity to deliver.  Yet others, poor young romantics, spurred by these elders’ open show of ethnic supremacy, foamed in the mouth, proclaiming the Paradise Republic of Oduduwa.  What hubris!

    The main dampener, to the near-consensus over restructuring, is the eminent bad faith, on which horse it galloped into town.  It all started with the fad to hate and demonize the “Hausa-Fulani”, just because a certain Muhammadu Buhari was president.

    Then, to the South West progressive grandees, flashing their Awo franchise as Geoffery Chaucer’s Pardoner would, in Canterbury Tales, flash his papal pardon, hot, fresh and smoking from Rome, it was additional gall, that a certain Bola Ahmed Tinubu, midwifed the Buhari coalition!

    Still despite this human dross, the Nigerian government should seriously address re-federalizing towards a productive Nigeria.  That should be the principal message from National Day 2017, after the aborted thunder and fury.

  • October 1, not Independence Day

    SIR: Celebrating Nigeria’s independence on October 1 is uncalled for, because, Nigeria and the parts that made up the modern Nigeria were naturally independent, socially organised and politically sovereign before European slavery and colonisation. Marking and celebrating the end of these illegal invasions is indirectly recognising and endorsing them. So, October 1, 1960 is not Nigerian independence. It only reminds us of when the then illegal invaders left our shores. The amalgamation of the different kingdoms of Nigeria can be commemorated to symbolise and remind us of our unity in diversity, and to reflect back on our founding values and heritages.

    The slavery and colonialization of Nigeria left negative psychological footprint of low self-esteem and inferiority. The invaders came to convert free men to slaves and exploit resources in Africa so they can build their countries. They caused backwardness to the continent and the country economically till date. Presently, we see how a shock in foreign economy or foreign currency directly affects the Nigerian economy. The time when Nigeria was supposed to develop policies and resources to build its economy, it was colonised in the interest of the West. This foundation of dependence and ruler-ship made it difficult for the country to build a resilient nation. Though, some of the country’s leaders played their roles in exposing the country more to external shocks for failing to build the real sectors of the economy and infrastructures.

    At the time when Europe was developing, Africans were made slaves, building other people’s nations. Yet, after abolishing slavery, the illegal slave owners were compensated, but the so-called slaves were not. The so-called slaves were in better positions to be compensated for their persecution; this compensation should have been paid to their countries to rebuild what they lost due to the exploitations.

    Like the second paragraph of the US declaration of independence stated, “All me are created Equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness”. This clause confesses the great error committed by the Europeans of turning others as slaves and for ruling other people’s lands against their wishes. The end of this error can be remembered anyway. Therefore, we can celebrate the departure of the invaders not our independence on October 1, because we are all created free, and we existed with sovereignty long before the invasion of Europeans.

    • Dr. Ahmed Adamu,

    Umaru Musa Yar’Adua University, Katsina.

  • Militancy: Avengers renew secession threat

    Militancy: Avengers renew secession threat

    The insurgent group, Niger Delta Avengers (NDA), has resuscitated the threat of a creating a Niger Delta republic from Nigeria, should the federal government fail to consider calls for restructuring of the federation.

    In a statement dispatched electronically to the media Thursday by its spokesman, Mudoch Agbinibo, the group suggested an October 1 ultimatum, hinging its reason for the threat on an alleged division of the country by the administrations ‘misdirected policies’.

    The statement said the nation’s situation had become so precarious that nobody, not even the Niger Delta people, wish to continue to be part of the Nigerian system.

    “Our prayer for Buhari and the Northern hypocrite (Northern Governors) is that oil should be found in commercial quantity in the North, so they can let the Niger Delta go.

    “The Buhari Led government has fail Nigerians with their misdirected policies that has divide the country, as such nobody wants to be part of that failed state not even the Niger Delta.

    “The October 1st, declaration of independence is still sacrosanct. If the Nigeria government fails to retrace its step by restructuring this country.We want to warn the general public that those using NDA to defraud people days of reckoning is close,” the statement said. 

  • APPLAUSE FOR ‘INVASION 1897’, ‘OCTOBER 1’, ‘DRY’ AT BON AWARDS

    APPLAUSE FOR ‘INVASION 1897’, ‘OCTOBER 1’, ‘DRY’ AT BON AWARDS

    AKURE, the Ondo State capital, witnessed an unusual crowd last Sunday, as celebrities from the Nigerian motion picture sector stormed the newly constructed International Conference Centre for the annual Best of Nollywood (BON) Awards. Hosted by Governor Segun Mimiko led government of Ondo State, the event which was also graced by politicians, government functionaries, fans of the celebrities and the media witnessed a poutpourri of performances which climaxed in the 40 categories of the award show.

    Lancelot Imasuen’s movie, Invasion 1897 took the lead with three laurels, including Best Movie, Best Director and Best Soundtrack, while Kunle Afolayan’s October 1, picked Best Production Design, Best Actor and Best Costume. Stephanie Okereke’s advocacy film, Dry, got Best Cinematography, Best Screenplay and Movie with the Best Social message. Special recognition awards went to former President Goodluck Jonathan, Senator Godswill Akpabio, actress Patience Ozokwor and filmmaker Tade Ogidan.

    The event which was emceed by Nollywood actress Bimbo Akintola and actor Gideon Okeke, also had names such as Ibinabo Fiberesima, Bukky Wright, Yemi Blaq, Yomi Fash Lanso, Dayo Amusa, Iyabo Ojo, Gbenga Adeyinka, Omo Baba, SIM Card and Segun Arinze who produced the show.

    Organisers of the event also remembered some of the entertainers who have passed on in the last five years. They include Amaka Igwe, Muna Obiekwe, Justus Esiri, Enebeli Elebuwa and Lekinson.

    Governor Mimiko, while acknowledging the resilience of the show’s organiser, Seun Oloketuyi, expressed how much he believes in the Nigerian entertainment industry. “I congratulate Nollywood practitioners as well as the CEO of BON, Seun Oloketuyi, who is focused and driven,” the governor said. Other winners at the event are Nse Ikpe Etim, Queen Nwokoye, Kunle Afod, Ope Aiyeola, Ebube Nwagbo, Nafisat Abdullahi and Omowunmi Dada.