Tag: one

  • ‘She’s one in a million’

    ‘She’s one in a million’

    Alhaja Abiola Saratu Banire, mother of All Progressives Congress (APC) National Legal Adviser Dr Muiz Banire, has celebrated her 87th birthday in Lagos, reports OLATUNDE ODEBIYI.

    It was a day of joy for Alhaja Abiola Saratu Banire, mother of All Progressives Congress (APC) National Legal Adviser, Dr Muiz Banire, when she celebrated her 87th birthday. Many eminent personalities came to rejoice with her.

    Oduduwa Crescent in GRA Ikeja, Lagos, felt the celebration. Exotic cars filled the neighbourhood and the adjoining streets, announcing the celebration. Uniformed and armed security agents were on hand to ensure orderliness.

    Some wore turquoise blue lace with the chosen head gears for the ceremony, were in orange attire. Others simply looked charming in choice outfits.

    The celebrator was the cynosure of all eyes. She wore a white Iro and Buba with a matching blue head gear, and sat with friends and family members. Many of the guests came around to greet her.

    The event began with Alhaji Tajudeen Salisu leading the opening prayers and was coordinated by Abdul Hakeem Kosoko.

    Baba Adinni of Lagos Sheikh Abdul Afeez Abou and Abdur-Rahman Lekki led the gathering in prayers.

    In a lecture, the National Missioner of Ansaudeen Society of Nigeria, Sheikh Abdur Rahman Ahmad spoke on proper upbringing of children, saying what the celebrator has done for her children is the reason for the celebration. He said the celebrator trained her children well, urging other women to emulate her.

    Reception followed with plenty to eat and  drink.

    Alhaja said she is happy people came to celebrate with her.

    Lagos State APC governorship running mate Dr Idiat Oluranti Adebule described the day as wonderful. She said it was a thing of joy that mama clocked 87 and thanked God for her life.

    “With the people here today, we can say that mama has lived a very wonderful life; we pray that the almighty God will continue to be with her, give her sound health and Allah’s favour will not depart from her,” she said.

    She urged the family to continue to pray for mama, adding that at 87, mama is still a beauty to behold.

    Dr Banire said he joined his mother to thank Allah for sparing her life. He said he was happy that his mother is still around.

    He described her as gentle, admirable and an extremely amazing.

    “She is free with everybody and not discriminatory. She taught us to be God fearing and she is always willing and ready to express joy, and care for others, both in their joy and in their pain.

    “One moment I will never forget about Mama was when we were growing up, she is always ready to follow us anywhere. She is already at our school gate to take us home before school closes and when we are home she ensures we get something to eat immediately,” he said.

    Banire’s wife, Olufunmilayo, described her mother-in-law as wonderful and very humble, adding that she has been like her real mother. “She is a jovial person and one in a million. She is warm hearted with a heart of gold and she is worthy of emulation; a role model” .

    A guest, Hon Femi Wilson, said the celebrator is a great achiever to have clocked 87 because it’s not everyone that attains that age. He wished her the best.

    Another guest, Dr Buhari Oloto, prayed that mama would advance more in age.

    Former Chairman, Mushin Local Government Hon Olatunde Adepitan said the celebrator is a mother with a passion. “She has taken good care of her children and what is happening here today is something that mama is worth much more than”.

  • ‘She’s one in’ a million

    ‘She’s one in’ a million

    Alhaja Abiola Saratu Banire, mother of All Progressives Congress (APC) National Legal Adviser Dr Muiz Banire, has celebrated her 87th birthday in Lagos, reports OLATUNDE ODEBIYI.

    It was a day of joy for Alhaja Abiola Saratu Banire, mother of All Progressives Congress (APC) National Legal Adviser, Dr Muiz Banire, when she celebrated her 87th birthday. Many eminent personalities came to rejoice with her.

    Oduduwa Crescent in GRA Ikeja, Lagos, felt the celebration. Exotic cars filled the neighbourhood and the adjoining streets, announcing the celebration. Uniformed and armed security agents were on hand to ensure orderliness.

    Some wore turquoise blue lace with the chosen head gears for the ceremony, were in orange attire. Others simply looked charming in choice outfits.

    The celebrator was the cynosure of all eyes. She wore a white Iro and Buba with a matching blue head gear, and sat with friends and family members. Many of the guests came around to greet her.

    The event began with Alhaji Tajudeen Salisu leading the opening prayers and was coordinated by Abdul Hakeem Kosoko.

    Baba Adinni of Lagos Sheikh Abdul Afeez Abou and Abdur-Rahman Lekki led the gathering in prayers.

    In a lecture, the National Missioner of Ansaudeen Society of Nigeria, Sheikh Abdur Rahman Ahmad spoke on proper upbringing of children, saying what the celebrator has done for her children is the reason for the celebration. He said the celebrator trained her children well, urging other women to emulate her.

    Reception followed with plenty to eat and  drink.

    Alhaja said she is happy people came to celebrate with her.

    Lagos State APC governorship running mate Dr Idiat Oluranti Adebule described the day as wonderful. She said it was a thing of joy that mama clocked 87 and thanked God for her life.

    “With the people here today, we can say that mama has lived a very wonderful life; we pray that the almighty God will continue to be with her, give her sound health and Allah’s favour will not depart from her,” she said.

    She urged the family to continue to pray for mama, adding that at 87, mama is still a beauty to behold.

    Dr Banire said he joined his mother to thank Allah for sparing her life. He said he was happy that his mother is still around.

    He described her as gentle, admirable and an extremely amazing.

    “She is free with everybody and not discriminatory. She taught us to be God fearing and she is always willing and ready to express joy, and care for others, both in their joy and in their pain.

    “One moment I will never forget about Mama was when we were growing up, she is always ready to follow us anywhere. She is already at our school gate to take us home before school closes and when we are home she ensures we get something to eat immediately,” he said.

    Banire’s wife, Olufunmilayo, described her mother-in-law as wonderful and very humble, adding that she has been like her real mother. “She is a jovial person and one in a million. She is warm hearted with a heart of gold and she is worthy of emulation; a role model” .

    A guest, Hon Femi Wilson, said the celebrator is a great achiever to have clocked 87 because it’s not everyone that attains that age. He wished her the best.

    Another guest, Dr Buhari Oloto, prayed that mama would advance more in age.

    Former Chairman, Mushin Local Government Hon Olatunde Adepitan said the celebrator is a mother with a passion. “She has taken good care of her children and what is happening here today is something that mama is worth much more than”.

  • Can you Say You’re One of Them?

    Can you Say You’re One of Them?

    can you Say You’re One of Them? was the question thrown to the over 170 people at the Port Harcourt World Book Capital, January Book-of-the-Month discussion and drama performance. It was held on January 25 at the Hotel Presidential in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital. Oprah’s book club author, Fr. Uwem Akpan, author of Say You’re One of Them was at the performance.

    A panel made up of students from Rainbow Book Clubs in Secondary Schools in Port Harcourt, interacted with the author in a discussion moderated by Daniella Menezor of the Port Harcourt World Book Capital project office. Fr. Akpan asked the audience to close their eyes while he read a portion from Luxurious Hearses (one of the stories in his book). It was a narration of an incident where the hand of Jubril (a young boy) was going to be chopped off because he stole a goat and Jubril expressed how he felt about the consequences of his deeds. This dramatic scene set the tone of the evening.

    The book is a collection of five stories about children in various parts of Africa and some of the tragic and traumatic situations in which they find themselves. These stories provoke questions such as How do you react to the ‘stories’ you hear and see in the media? Do you understand that these are real life situations? Can you imagine yourself in the shoes of the people in the stories, Can you really Say You’re One of Them?

    The University of Port Harcourt Institute of Arts and Culture, gave an enthralling performance of An Ex-mas Feast, a story in his book about child prostitution. Reacting to the performance, the author commended the UNIPORT troupe, adding that “when I was writing the book, I never imagined something so visual and creative could come out of it.” The Port Harcourt World Book Capital outing was an eye opening and thought provoking one.

    This month, the Port Harcourt World Book Capital adult book club will be reading Children of the Revolution by Dinaw Mengetsu at the Atlantic Hall, Hotel Presidential by 3pm on February 22.

     

  • Ahmed Musa on vacation for one month

    Ahmed Musa on vacation for one month

    Edo State – born Nigeria international Ahmed Musa, 22,  has been permitted by CSKA Moscow to proceed on vacation.

    As a result of the winter break, the Muscovites will not resume training until the next one month, the official website of the Russian champions has reported.

    CSKA Moscow have mandated that every player in the first team must return to the Russian capital before January 11, 2015, the date the team will leave for Spain to hold a training camp.

    And two more training camps will be held before the resumption of the Russian Premier League in the first week of March.

    In the first stanza, Ahmed Musa scored seven goals in 17 matches for CSKA Moscow, who are second on the table.

  • Brazil 2014 heroes inspiring young Ticas

    Brazil 2014 heroes inspiring young Ticas

    This has been no ordinary year for Costa Rica so far. Fresh from hosting the FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup in March and April, the country remained firmly in the global limelight when the world’s top national teams convened at the 2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil™, with Los Ticos stunning everyone by going all the way to the quarter-finals.

    The spotlight has stayed on Costa Rican football at the FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup Canada 2014, and while results have not gone Las Ticas way so far, there can be no doubting the determination of the players to build a brighter future for women’s football back home.

    Three of them – Maria Paula Coto, Gloriana Villalobos and Melissa Herrera, respectively known as Paula, Glori and Ficha to their team-mates – spoke to FIFA.com about that goal and how the men’s ground-breaking campaign at Brazil 2014 is inspiring them to strive for more.

    “The Costa Rica team did something really beautiful at Brazil 2014,” said striker Herrera. “I got emotional about it because I’d never seen anything like it before me. I wasn’t born when Italy 1990 happened, and what our national team achieved was truly unforgettable.”

    The success enjoyed by Jorge Luis Pinto’s side has increased the pressure on Herrera and her team-mates to achieve results, though they have yet to come their way at Canada 2014, with defeats to France and Paraguay leaving Las Ticas with only a slim chance of qualifying for the knockout rounds ahead of their final Group D match against New Zealand.

    Reflecting on those growing expectations, Herrera said: “We have to know how to deal with that because the situation is different. Women’s football in Costa Rica has not had much support yet. It’s not like the USA, where there are professional leagues.”

    The fact that Herrera honed her electric pace on the athletics track and not in youth team or academy is an indication of the work that still needs to be done to raise the standard of Costa Rican women’s football.

    Explaining how she found her way into the game, the smiling Herrera said: “I was starting out as an athlete and I’d won a lot of medals already. Then I saw that the national team were holding trials and I told my mother that I wanted to go. She came with me and I was selected for a training camp in San Jose. I have to say, I’ve learned how to run fast and I still consider myself a sprinter. It’s in my blood.”

    Like Herrera, both Villalobos and Coto have starring roles in the side. Despite being only 14 and 15 years old respectively, they are among its most experienced players, having also formed part of the Costa Rica team that hosted the recent U-17 world finals.

    “It was tough for me to start with because the girls were very big,” said Paula, pointing to the challenges she has faced. “All the same, I saw that even though they were physically stronger, I had to give as good as I got and fight for my dream.”

    Though the intrepid Costa Ricans still have some way to go before they can compete on an even footing with the world’s top teams, the achievements of their fellow countrymen in Brazil a few short weeks ago have shown what can be done.

    “Costa Rica is a small country, but size doesn’t matter when you dream big, as the men proved at Brazil 2014,” said a defiant Villalobos. “Nobody gave them a chance, but they chased their dream and made it a reality.”

    Wrapping things up, she added: “We are going to do our very best to make history, just like the men’s team did. And we’re also going to do our bit to support the development of women’s football, to make sure it grows and gets more backing.”

  • Makinwa signs one year contract with  ND Gorica

    Makinwa signs one year contract with ND Gorica

    Nigeria international Stephen Makinwa will be playing for Slovenian side ND Gorica this coming season, Nigeria Federation licensed agent Akinola Makinwa has told allnigeriasoccer.com.

    The experienced attacker has been without a club for the past five months after his acrimonious departure from Beijing Baxy, China.

    “Stephen prefers to stay close to his family now, and that is why he chose to sign for ND Gorica.

    “He has signed a one – year contract with the club but he hopes to be there as long as they want to keep him,” Akinola, who is legally permitted by governing body of football, Fifa, to represent his brother, told allnigeriasoccer.com.

    A product of famous grassroots team FC Ebedei, Stephen Makinwa was a household name in Italy with Atalanta and Palermo which earned him a move to Lazio in 2006.

    He has also sported the jerseys of Como, Reggiana, Genoa and Modena amongst others.

    The 31 – year – old joins compatriot Marshal Johnson at the four – time Slovenian champions.

  • Shehu signs one-year deal with Kuwaiti side

    Super Eagles’ star Abdullahi Shehu arrived Kuwait yesterday, to complete his transfer to Qadsia SC .

    Allnigeriasoccer.com gathered  that the defensive midfielder penned a one – year deal with the Kuwaiti champions.

    It puts an end to speculation regarding his future,with earlier reports strongly linking him with a shift to Sporting Lisbon and Al Orubah of Saudi Arabia.

    The deal almost failed to materialise after Kano Pillars threatened that the club will not give the green – light to the Nigeria Federation to issue his International Transfer Certificate.

    But a top official of Kano Pillars confirmed  that Abdullahi Shehu now has the blessings of the club to join Qadsia SC.

    The former Flying Eagles midfielder was handed jersey number 21 by his new employers.

     

  • David Mark backs One Service, One Medal (OSOM) game

    David Mark backs One Service, One Medal (OSOM) game

    SENATE President David Mark has given his support to the upcoming One Service, One Medal(OSOM) games set to come up in August.

    The event, expected to be contested for between military personell and Para military establishments is aimed at taking Nigeria back to the days where Olympics and International meets medal winners were discovered from the military and Para military.

    David Mark praised the initiative when the game’s organising committee headed by Nigeria Olympic Committee boss, Sani Ndanusa paid him a visit to seek his endorsement of the game.

    Ndanusa, in his presentation to Mark, decried the low level involvement of men of the  military and para military in sports in comparism to the past which he claimed is having an effect on Nigeria’s showing in continental and global sports challenge.

    Ndanusa is however optimistic that the OSOM games will help rekindle interest in the hearts of military and para military personnel as talent abound in them which the nation can use to good effect in the world of sports.

    Speaking to Sportinglife after the visit, deputy director of Institutional Sports, Dr Ademola Are who is the secretary to the organising committee, praised the idea and the effort of  Ndanusa in making the idea work.

    “Firstly, we have to say a big thank you to the Nigeria Olympic Committee Chairman, Sani Ndanusa for his tireless effort in making sure this idea works and Nigeria picks medal at the next Olympic in Rio using a system that has served us well in the past.”

    “The Sports Minister Tamuno Danagogo and the NOC chairman are firmly focused on increasing Nigeria’s medal prospect at the Olympics in Rio come 2016 and the OSOM games will brighten our chances of discovering talents to make us proud.”

    The games is scheduled to take place in the mainbowl of the Ahmadu Bello Stadium in Kaduna and is a collaboration between the National Sports Commission(NSC) and the Nigeria Olympic Committee(NOC).

    The idea is to bring back the glory days of Nigeria military and para military men who won laurels for the country despite being service men.

    Two Olympic medallists – Chioma Ajunwa and the late Sunday Bada – were men of the Nigeria Police Force who did Nigeria proud in the past.

    The game will be contested for by men of the Nigeria Army, AirForce, Navy, Police Force, Civil Defence, DSS and other military and para military institutions in the country.

  • Two crutches are better than one (II)

    Before zeroing in on the technical issues of the book, permit me to make some comments about the second book, Pleasant Dreams. A confession is in order here:a Since I was not fortunate to see the actual finished product, stylistically, some of my conclusions maybe a little off-key.

    It is larger, compared to Soul Refreshers, and yet it is singular in its thematic pre-occupation. Simply put, it’s all about dreams. And as Onasanya is quick to note in the introduction to the 310-page collection, he chose to write this book on the backs of some bitter experiences he was “lucky” to suffer between 2003 and 2007 – in Nigeria and the UK. As you will see, challenges are not synonymous with our country.

    The work (in progress) dwelled on the author emotionally and physically, even up until last year (2012), which is why he says: “…That period I lost my job in 2007 was not my first ordeal. I passed through some bitter experiences in 2003…Some days, I would come out to my car and find the rear glass window smashed. Sometimes, my radio got stolen and once my car battery was stolen. Several times, I got penalty notice which I scrimped to pay. Those were tough times for me… When I moved to Lagos in July 2003, I was in severe emotional pain.… Some people who knew I was going through pain did not know the depth. Words spoken to soothe me only aggravated the pain….When all these things were occurring in 2007, nobody knew I was trying to compose a book. With all these happenings in 2007, some folks may say, “It wasn’t your year” and expect me to pour out bitter things …”.

    My first reaction to Pleasant Dreams – as I did not have the benefit of the finished product being launched today – was “here is long string of tiny stories of religiously advanced people in tales broken deliberately to teach some lessons”. In the format I studied, the illustrative cartoons were amateurish. How, the final copy I can now see, may God forgive me, the cartoons are of a very high quality and very appropriate.

    Since life’s experiences, like one’s faith, are peculiar and personal; yet there is some sort of universality in the process of responding to faith matters. One, you must believe; therefore you have to be ready to disbelieve what you had hitherto believed, if it’s contrary.

    And in believing you must recant and verbally confess your new reality. Then you must make up your mind to remain on your new Way…irrespective of what may come to challenge or threaten your new reality.

    It is on this platform that Pleasant Dreams takes a special significance. The book seeks to illuminate your mind that experiences in the intangible worlds which you used to call nightmares in your unregenerated reality could actually be windows to great advancement in your new reality.

    Your old nightmares can now be interpreted and categorized effectively as life-saving, pleasure-giving dreams. While earlier, they frightened and tormented you… now, with adequate prayer, fasting and counselling; they are windows of heaven throwing light into your darkness so that you can soar and fulfil your actual destiny.

    In a convoluted yet progressively enthusiastic manner, the book unleashes snatches of dreams and half-bodied visions…by ordinary people (whether real or imagined I cannot tell).

    Sometimes, as it is consistent with dreams, Pleasant Dreams appears disjointed as the author attempts to sustain readers’ interest in these 90 dreams, by constantly encouraging us to “find out from the Key” at the end of each piece – for the full impact and interpretation.

    Many of the dialogues are stilted and unnatural to a reader who is not steeped in Pentecostal Christianity – and therefore appear “out of synch with reality”.

    However, many people can see glimpses of their private experiences in some of the recorded dreams. Illuminating interpretation and seemingly “reluctant” addendum by the author at the end of each story allow us to “see” the actual real-life conclusions of the dreams.

    I said “reluctantly” because there are insufficient attribution, data and landmarks to persuade, beyond doubt, that these characters rendering those dreams are flesh and blood like you and I.

    But as earlier indicated though, Pleasant Dreams is not written for doubters and rabble-rousers. The apparent focus is on those who believe that dreams are one of God’s ways of revealing a part of Himself and His redeeming works in the affairs of men.

    Now to technical matters. First, I commend the level of progress attained in the over-all packaging of the books. It is a good leap from the author’s maiden book (The Missing Ingredient). The covers are very attractive; printing sharp and eye-friendly; fonts and graphic designs are attention-getting; and generally as units of visual pleasure, very satisfying.

    Only one suggestion though: henceforth, all of Onasanya’s new works must sufficiently advertise and highlight his old books.

    And this: one of Onasanya’s major achievements (another may say deficit) is his great interest in poetic rhyme scheme and rhythmic patterns. In many of his poems (in Soul Refreshers) he strives relentlessly to deepen his sometimes prosaic sentences with rhyme cadence.

    On many occasions, the rhymes flow well; at other times they seem contrived, and few alternate rhymes refuse to jump to his poetic prodding.

    Other features consistent in almost all of Onasanya’s works are fluidity of language; absence of jargon and simplicity of imagery… His poems convey images and themes in passionate ordinariness. And yet suggest depth and rich sense of correctness.

    His works glorify integrity, strong family ties, dependency on the Almighty and portray deep understanding of human foibles and eccentricities.

    There are still typographical errors that more adept proof-reading could have eliminated; they are especially more pronounced in Pleasant Dreams.

    The use of “Keys” as guide in tying together the dreams and riddles may be more effective if placed in-between the collection of stories and their explanations. Having to read on and on… only to realise down the road that the “Keys” are further back… can dissipate interest.

    The Glossary of answers on Page 229 (Soul Refreshers) should have been headlined appropriately instead of leaving it bare.

    And to the author, whatever his intention, never advise your readers that “one does not need to read everything. He/she may concentrate on an area of interest that makes him/her feel good”. It is not part of your office to suggest how your readers should proceed in their relationship with you. To put it mildly, that is “dangerous”.

    So, in the light of my opening remarks, what is Soul Refreshers really all about? What fuels its author? What perspective is this young writer motoring from? This is my conclusion: Femi Onasanya, having overcome his personal challenges; having overwhelmed his private devils, is now eaten up with a quiet but raging desire to tell all who care to listen that there are broad pastures behind debilitating obstacles – whether physical, mental or metaphysical. He is afraid to create a holier-than-thou taskmaster image in the hearts of his readers; so with deliberate and sensitive application of suasive techniques, he struggles to stretch a plank across different cultures and consciousness in the hope that his readers will look long enough into the wells of God’s indescribable love and mercy – and that all we need do is peep intelligently into those wells, at Femi Onasanya’s promptings… scoop as much as we can, and drink as long as we can. So, what are you waiting for? Get your own cups.

  • One bad term …

    One bad term …

    Clearly the most damning irony about the controversial Goodluck Jonathan 2015 campaign poster, which copies flooded Abuja, is its claim that “One good term deserves another”. But even the most rabid of Jonathan supporters would concede his has been a bad, nay, terrible term.

    So, what does a bad term deserve? A re-sit, as Gabriel Igbinedion, the Esama of Benin, reportedly quipped in pleading the case of his son, Lucky? Lucky’s 2003 “re-sit” and the subsequent 2007 vote-fiddling meant to block positive change, only made Edo a near-total paralysis before the redemption of the Adams Oshiomhole era. Lucky for Lucky. But absolutely terrible for Edo.

    Yet the Edo paralysis was nowhere near the chaos and gridlock that is the Federal Republic under Goodluck Jonathan. Yet, the good luck president ogles a second term!

    If free and fair election were guaranteed, it would have been electoral suicide for President Jonathan to seek a second term; and supreme electoral folly for his party to present him.

    Indeed, so sure would have been the electoral rout to come that the opposition would have flocked into churches, mosques and traditional shrines for pre-election thanksgiving, doubly assured that the sitting president was a lamb being led to the slaughter, by virtue of his woeful performance.

    But alas! Nothing is assured, not the least free elections, in Nigeria’s peculiar politics. That is why a personage that logs the record of perhaps the most incompetent president Nigeria has ever had would deem to flex muscles and yearn for a second term! It is a salute to the contempt with which the ruling racket holds the Nigerian people, as well as the electoral process.

    Still, to be fair to the president, he has denied authorship of those posters – fair enough.

    The snag, however, is there is a feeling of déjà vu over the incident: a very vivid sense that we have seen all this dissembling before.

    Under Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, the self-made “military president” would say something and his alter ego, the trinity of Dr. Aitkins, Arthur Nzeribe and Abimbola Davies’ Association for Better Nigeria (ABN) would canvass the exact opposite, with sickening patriotic piety.

    Under Gen. Sani Abacha, Daniel Kanu’s phantom Youths Earnestly Ask for Abacha (YEAA!) urged a thoroughly hated iron dictator and power usurper to go ahead and transmute, prompting The Economist, the London weekly, to write, in its 23 April 1998 issue, a tongue-in-the-cheek article it entitled, “Abacha, for ever, and ever”. Only “divine intervention” put paid to the Goggled One’s inordinate dreams.

    President Olusegun Obasanjo, after hiding behind a finger over a botched term elongation gambit, invoked Diego Maradona’s “Hand of God” cheeky nonsense; declaring that if he really wanted a third term, and had asked his God, his God would have given it to him. In Nigeria’s political jungle, Obasanjo had found his own variant of Maradona’s Hand of God!

    And even Goodluck Jonathan, in his caretaker presidency days, was asked whether he would run for president, during the raging zoning controversy. Instead of a simple and straight answer, he lurched into a long and winding story of how he could run for president, or team up with someone as vice president, and how, in mid-sentence, he suddenly realised he was not even thinking of such things!

    Can someone please compare and contrast Jonathan’s answer back then to his current refrain that he is too busy on his job right now to be messing around with 2015 posters?

    Of course, the unsure caretaker president later became absolutely sure he would be real president for only one term – the one term he is making a hash of. Though now he disowns these satanic alter egos pasting Abuja with his campaign posters, he is now even more unsure whether to stop them or tell them to continue, because he is too busy with state duties! It is the making of Goodluck Jonathan as a presidential dissembler!

    It is clear therefore that, despite the empty anti-corruption posturing of the Obasanjo years, little has changed in Nigeria’s sick power chamber. And President Jonathan: his might have been a shifty, parlous and near-hopeless tenure. But the president has been clear-eyed and sure-footed in the power lessons he has allowed himself to learn. To the chagrin of long suffering Nigerians, he is no different from his far-from-illustrious predecessors.

    That is why Jonathan’s pre-election dissembling could well have been from a manual straight out of the Obasanjo, or Abacha or Babangida years. When IBB was swearing for the sanctity of this so-called transition programme, state money was being funnelled to his alter ego trinity to create so much chaos that, at the end of the day, a brow-beaten nation would “beg” the military president to please exchange his uniform for baba riga and continue his good work. Fortunately for Nigerians, the IBB scheme collapsed on his head.

    Everyone, of course, knew state money was responsible for Kanu’s thunderous YEAA for Abacha; and also behind the cacophonous racket by the musical soldiers of fortune that were part of the gravy. Goodluck Jonathan spawned his own musical mercenaries with his Eagle Square Abuja Goodluck Nigeria concert, which has turned nothing but bad luck for Nigerians. Obasanjo, to this day, denies the alleged hefty money that changed hands for his term elongation gambit. He can tell that to the marines!

    Not surprising, therefore, pre-election manoeuvring are afoot – again, straight from the IBB/Abacha/Obasanjo-era ignoble books.

    Up, from nowhere, has popped a 10 million cell phone-purchase programme for farmers. Ibukun Odusote, permanent secretary, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, disclosed N60 billion (about US $384 million) would be blown on this sweetheart deal. Akinwunmi Adesina, Agriculture minister, claimed otherwise after a public uproar.

    The making of another scam? Might this sudden quixotic love for Nigerian farmers be to 2015 what the oil subsidy voodoo payment was to 2011?

    Inside the PDP, a civil war has broken out – and not unconnected with 2015, even if the theatre of war is the party’s Board of Trustees (BOT). President Jonathan wants his man to head the BOT and help storm-troop delegates; and harvest nomination. Obasanjo, doomed to life-long political hustling when he could have earned post-presidency authoritative influence is, Don Quixote-wise, throwing his hat into the ring for a laughable candidate. To these party bosses, intra-party manoeuvres to skew the nomination process are even more vital than the long-suffering electorate!

    And outside, the cement cartel, unfazed poster children of Nigerian crony capitalism that reached its zenith during Obasanjo’s era of transparent corruption, is staging its own civil war! Might this high-stake manoeuvre be a bid to extract concession from a government whose party would soon come, cap in hand, for election donations?

    These bewildering dramas, not what the incumbent has done or not done, are why Jonathan could deign to dream of an encore, when his present tenure is nothing but disaster. But it is also left for Nigerians to counter: one bad term begets absolute electoral rejection.

    But will they? The day they do, all this rascality will stop.