Tag: Peace

  • Plateau celebrates peace at 40

    Plateau State has turned 40 and its people are in the mood to celebrate but it is more than the usual anniversary party. The people are happy that peace is returning to the state after inter-communal and sectarian crisis threatened to tear it apart. They are grateful to Governor Simon Lalong whose initiatives may have ushered in what now looks like a new order of tranquility.

    The state was created in 2001.

    Residents said they believe the prevailing atmosphere of peace is attributable to the peace initiative of Governor Lalong who took office last May.

    In a press conference held in Cabinet Office Jos to kick off the anniversary celebrations, a group known as Plateau Patriots for Peace and Change said, “It is a thing of joy that the state clocks 40 years in an atmosphere of peace and security.”

    Leader of the group, Pastor Huseini Gotan said, “Our is 40 years of good old memories and rough experience having gone through the good, the bad and the ugly occasioned by ethno-religious crisis and tribal sentiments.”

    He said, “The life of our dear state has been a very bumpy experience, but we have reason to celebrate today because we have conquered peace that has eluded us over the last decades.

    Gotan said, “We deeply appreciate the role played by the All Progressive Congress (APC) administration of Governor Simon Lalong whose peace initiative has been the solution the state has been lacking in all its search for peace over the years.

    “We have also witnessed bad leaders and good leaders in the last forty years, we  therefore feel that the best way to commence the celebration of 40 years of our dear state, we should commend the efforts of our governor, Governor Lalong who is now our hero of peace.

    He said, “Now that we have achieved peace, the glory of Plateau State has been restored fully, our state remains the home of peace and tourism that used to be the acronym before the crisis.

    “After 40 years, we are now on the threshold of hope, peace and greater expectations for good governance and responsible leadership.”

    One low side of the anniversary is the awful shape of the state schools, which the government has described as the worst in the region.

    “The standard of education in the state has not improved from what it was 25 years ago,” said the Deputy Governor, Professor Sunny Tyoden. “The state government, not satisfied with a report of the Transition Committee, I embarked on a tour to see things myself and I came face to face with the reality of things in our schools. To put it straight, our schools are in the state of total decay, the level of infrastructural decay is really disturbing, you would find out that in some of the institutions visited there is no any additional value added to the schools in terms of infrastructure and manpower since their establishment 25 years ago.

    There is hope. “Our government is on a rescue mission,” he said, “we are going to give the education sector top priority that was why on assumption of office government released funds to rescue its university which was in total mess. Our university could not graduate their students ten years after it commenced admission because their courses were not accredited due to poor lack of necessary facilities.

     

  • Stakeholders hail Lalong’s peace initiative

    Stakeholders hail Lalong’s peace initiative

    Plateau State indigenes have hailed the peace initiatives mooted by Governor  Simon Lalong to end the protracted conflict rocking the state since 2001.

    The indigenes under the aegies of ‘Patriots for Peace and Change’ noted that the state has celebrated its 40 years of existence in an atmosphere of peace and security.

    The group’s leader, Pastor Huseini Gotan, told reporters in Jos, the state capital, that the governor has contributed largely to the peace accord.

    He said: “Ours is 40 years of good old memories and rough experience having gone through the good, the bad and the ugly occasioned by ethno-religious crisis and tribal sentiments.

    “The life of our dear state has been a very bumpy experience, but we have reasons to celebrate today because we have conquered peace that has eluded us over the last decades.

    He added:  “We deeply appreciate the role played by All Progressive Congress (APC) administration of Gov Simon Lalong whose peace initiative has been the solution the state has been lacking in all its search for peace over the years.

    “We have also witnessed bad leaders and good leaders in the last forty years, we  therefore feel that the best way to commence the celebration of 40 years of our dear state, we should commend the efforts of our governor, who is now our hero of peace.

  • How to graze in peace

    It has been an eventful week. In Kogi State, on Wednesday, Alhaji Yahaya Bello walked into Lugard House, the state’s seat of power, a much lonely figure. He had no deputy walking in with him. So when the litigants come charging in, as they sure will, seeking to toss him out of his cosy seat, he won’t have much top-level company from which to draw comfort. Poor him.

    In Rivers, that same day, Governor Nyesom Wike must have felt he had the last laugh. The wise Justices at the Supreme Court unreservedly declared him the rightful winner of last year’s governorship election. That ruling would have stunned the equally judicious appellate court team which could not stomach Wike’s victory as earlier announced by INEC, the nation’s electoral body, after the polls, and promptly nullified it. Dakuku Peterside who won the appeal, and his team, must be bewildered, too, but they must accept it and move on.

    The day was not done. In Ogun and Ebonyi, where less noise was made on the elections, Mr Ibikunle Amosun and Mr Dave Umahi also got the Supreme Court clearance to carry on with governance without having to worry about challengers and court cases.

    But even before all of that, on Sunday, blood had flowed freely in Adamawa. It was not the usual suspect Boko Haram. It was the other suspects, Fulani herdsmen versus local farmers. Some accounts said 30 people were killed in the clash. One of the dead was a Divisional Police Officer Mr Okozie Okereofor, barely two months at his new post. According to the report, the violence occurred in four villages namely, Demos, Wunamokoh, Dikajam and Taboungo after Fulani herdsmen invaded them. Apart from the police officer, not much is known about the other casualties, but to their families and friends, as well as the entire country, their death should be just as painful. It doesn’t matter whether the dead were simply herdsmen and growers who sized up one another or other folks who were simply cut down by the brutes. What is important is that lives have been taken so violently in a country governed by reasonable people and laws.

    Apart from the terror group Boko Haram, it is difficult to find any other combatants as bloodthirsty as herdsmen and farmers. Of the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory, there is hardly any spared the herdsmen-farmers bloodletting. They have caused as much misery in Kaduna and Adamawa as they have in Plateau or Taraba or any other state. In Plateau, the violence would have been admitted into the realm of proverbs. Was that not where we heard, in 2010, of a pre-dawn raid which all but wiped out a community called Dogon-Nahawa?

    Why should people die repeatedly because of animals? Why is it impossible for breeders to graze their cattle peacefully?

    The answer is simple. Government whose job it is to protect life and property through effective policies and enforced laws has consistently failed to do so. In a country brimming with lawyers and lawmakers, social scientists and public administrators, to say nothing of people with good old commonsense, it is curious that we simply have not discovered how to guide our animals to where they can eat grass quietly or drink water without upsetting the local population or spilling blood. I find that unacceptable. It is about time we started holding our leaders, especially those at the centre, accountable for the herdsmen-farmers violence, for every drop of blood spilled when they clash.

    It is true that herdsmen, finding less and less pasture for their growing stock, risk the hazardous trek from North to South and in so doing routinely encroach on farmlands. It is also true that when their cattle hoof through farms and destroy crops, the nomads do not quite manage the disagreements enough to avoid clashes, many of which turn out bloody. A young farmer in Delta State reported how he found a herd of cattle on his cassava farm and urged the herdsman to take them away to prevent more damage. The herdsman reacted, according to the grower, by raising and aiming his AK-47 at him. Thankfully, he did not squeeze the trigger, and eventually led his animals away but not before they had chewed up or trampled a good deal of the farmer’s crops. The breeder is not always the aggressor, though. Sometimes, and this seems to happen more in the North than elsewhere, armed thieves, called rustlers, simply rob them of their livestock, something the Fulani would rather die than let go unchallenged.

    Can the breeders avoid violence while grazing their animals? Yes. The federal government is reportedly planning to provide grazing areas, where they will have exclusive rights to look after their livestock. This will help but only in the interim. The politics, logistics and realities of grazing areas can be daunting. For instance, will people’s farmlands be acquired by government to keep herdsmen happy?

    Ranching is the answer. Every breeder should be sufficiently supported by government to own their breeding grounds, which they do not have far to seek. With support, ranches can be developed right in the herdsman’s home state, no matter how arid it may be. Deserts are reclaimable and can become fertile. It cannot be as costly as is sometimes feared. Besides, it is certainly cheaper to save lives. Ranches will save the breeders much foot travel. Their animals which the whole population munches on everyday will be healthier, their milk enhanced.

    With ranches in place, even the newly sworn-in state governors and others who no longer have to fear for their seats will also not worry about breeders and growers violence. Diners can eat fufu and chew beef in peace.

     

  • When ‘ll peace return to Ekiti APC?

    When ‘ll peace return to Ekiti APC?

    The national leadership of the All Progressives Congress (Apc) has taken the bull by the horns by reconciling the factions in Ekiti State in a bid to reposition the crisis-ridden chapter as a formidable platform. Odunayo Ogunmola examines the impact of the peace move.

    Ekiti State All Progressives Congress (APC) was hit by a crisis, following its outster from power by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) two years ago.

    The chieftains started to trade blames. Since 2014, a lot of water has passed under the bridge.

    APC is the ruling party at the federal level, former Governor Kayode Fayemi is a minister and the last local government election was boycotted by the party and majority of voters.

    Before the appointment of minister, various interest groups in the party were locked in intrigues, lobbying and horse trading with the party’s national secretariat and the Presidency was flooded with petitions against  “ministerial aspirants”.

    It was widely believed that any group that got the ministerial slot would gain the upper hand in the “battles” that lay ahead.

    The suspense over who becomes minister dragged on for about four months before it was resolved with the appointment of Fayemi by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Following the angst created by the loss of the governorship poll, not less than four factions emerged in the party, although their promoters always maintain that they are not factions but “interest groups” or “caucuses” raised to revive the party.

    The groups include the APC state executive, which is believed to be loyal to Fayemi and other party members, who served in his administration referred to as the Isan Group. the Action Group is led by a Special Adviser on Political Matters in the Presidency, Senator Babafemi Ojudu; the Bibiiire Coalition is led by former House of Representatives member Hon. Opeyemi Bamidele; the Restoration Group initiated by four former House of Representatives members- Hon. Bamidele Faparusi, Hon. Ife Arowosoge, Hon. Robinson Ajiboye and Hon. Bimbo Daramola-and the Justice Group led by Chief Sesan Fatoba, former commissioner during the Adebayo administration.

    Although the APC is not in power, the various groups are positioning themselves to get appointments and patronage in the emerging APC Federal Government and ahead of the next governorship primary and election anytime the opportunity beckons.

    With the key appointments in the Presidency and the FEC already settled, eyes are now on the commissions, boards and agencies of the Federal Government.

    Realising that the party needed unity to realise its dream of bouncing back to power, the national leadership held a meeting with the caucuses last December, with a view to bringing them together to chart a new course.

    Shortly before the meeting, they had earlier met the APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu; National Chairman Chief John Odigie-Oyegun; National Secretary Mai Mala Buni; National Vice Chairman (Southwest), Chief Pius Akinyelure and the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Babachir David Lawal.

    Those at the meeting included former governor of old Ondo State, Evangelist Bamidele Olumilua, former Senator, Chief James Kolawole, former Commissioner for Women Affairs, Mrs. Ronke Okusanya and Prof. Joseph Oluwasanmi.

    The meeting, according to a source, was centred on the issue of appointments which was settled with the submission of names, from the caucuses into the federal commissions, boards and agencies.

    Another issue at the root of the crisis of confidence in the party was the matter of the dissolution of the state party executive led by Chief Olajide Awe, which some groups in the party believe is loyal to Fayemi.

    The aggrieved groups are calling for an Executive Council (EXCO) which, according to them, will represent all shades of opinions in the party. They insist that the Awe-led EXCO, which they accused of leading the party to defeat in several elections, must go to allow a new set that will represent all shades of opinions.

    The clamour for the dissolution of the state EXCO led the stakeholders to Ila Orangun, Osun State to hold a meeting with the former APC National Interim Chairman, Chief Bisi Akande.

    Akande is believed to be in charge of the organisation of state congresses, hence the recourse to him to find a way of dissolving the Ekiti EXCO to pave way for a fresh congress where a new set of party executives will emerge.

    A very reliable source said the last meeting held in Abuja on December 16, 2015, was at the instance of the former governor and Deputy National Chairman (South) of the party, Chief Segun Oni.

    The meeting was said to have commenced at 12 noon and lasted till 6.00 pm.

    The December 16 meeting was attended by former Governor, Chief Niyi Adebayo, former Deputy Governor, Prof. Modupe Adelabu, state Chairman, Awe; his deputy, Mrs. Kemi Olaleye; members of the Seventh Senate, except Sen. Olubunmi Adetunmbi; members of the Seventh House of Representatives, excluding Bamidele.

    Also in attendance were former Chief of Staff to Fayemi Hon. Yemi Adaramodu; former Special Adviser on Parliamentary Affairs Hon.  Dapo Karonwi; former Assembly Majority Leader Hon. Churchill Adedipe; former Assembly member, Hon. Bunmi Oriniowo; state Publicity Secretary, Hon. Taiwo Olatunbosun.

    The list also includes: Former Secretary to the government Dr. Gani Owolabi; former Special Adviser (Governor’s Office), Chief Biodun Akin-Fasae; Elders Forum Publicity Secretary, Dr. Adebayo Orire; former Commissioner and Afenifere leader Hon. Funminiyi Afuye; former governorship aspirant Chief Babatunde Odetola; and Mr. Kayode Afolabi.

    The source revealed that Oni, who set the ball of discussion rolling, appealed to the interest groups to sink their differences and come together as a formidable and united front.

    The source said: “Oni opened the discussion that we should become one and united, so that we will be focused to fight a common enemy. He said the party needs a unity of purpose because Ekiti people are not happy with the Ayodele Fayose-led PDP government at the moment.

    “Oni said Ekiti needs the APC now to salvage them from bad governance and rudderless leadership going on in the state, hence the need for all interest groups in Ekiti APC to close ranks and work towards returning the party to the Government House to give quality leadership to the people.

    “Former Governor Adebayo in his own contribution said he is not against any caucus in the party, as there are no political parties without caucuses but infighting should not be allowed to kill the party and affect its electoral fortunes.

    “Former Deputy Governor, Prof. Adelabu appealed to members to bury the hatchet, saying the APC is the natural habitat of all members irrespective of groups to which they belong.

    “Chairman Awe who spoke thereafter toed the line of Oni; he expressed his delight that we came to the meeting because that was the fourth attempt to invite us.

    “But, we members of the Action Group insisted that we are not against anybody, but that the party must be reconstituted and must be open to allow others interested in joining to do so without let or hindrance.

    “We told the national body that we don’t like the way the three former governors have been treating Olumilua; that he should be carried along in the scheme of things.

    “We have been holding meetings in Olumilua’s house on the need to restore unity to the party, be it Action Group, Restoration Group, Bibiire Coalition and Justice Group. It is only the Isan Group that has not been holding meetings with us.”

    “From the body language of the (state) party leaders, the party is now open to all members. In fairness to her, the Deputy Chairman, Mrs. Olaleye, who is the most senior EXCO member on ground, adopted friendlier approach to members of other caucuses.

    “The executives no longer antagonise members of other caucuses and this is a good development and a direct result of the Abuja parley and we believe they would build more on it.”

    Another major breakthrough resulting from the Abuja peace parley was the visit to Olumilua at his Ikere Ekiti country home, by Adebayo, Oni and Fayemi.

    The visit, which delighted many party members, was seen as the implementation of the Abuja parley.

    Fayemi  said he is interested in pursuing unity and ensuring that the party waxes stronger, adding that there are no factions but interest groups working assiduously to restore the party back to power.

    According to him, a party is formed by members who come from various backgrounds with the intent of capturing power for the benefit of the people and in party politics, disagreement is normal.

    He said the Ekiti APC is on the right track as its teeming members are still intact and are working hard to keep the party stronger, virile and more united.

    Fayemi explained that the unity within the party was brought to the fore by the agreement of leaders and members not to participate in the last council election and to challenge the composition of the state electoral agency in the court of law.

    The former governor described the election of the new local government administrators as “an illegality which will not be allowed to stand.“

    Consequent upon the Abuja parley, the Action Group caucus held a meeting where 12 resolutions were made. The resolutions which  were conveyed in a communique made available to our reporter reads:

    “We agreed that we are all members of the party (APC), with a resolve to make the party stronger, vibrant  and viable; we agreed that the party is our veritable jar from which all of us have drank and will continue drink; we agreed that the party is sick today and requires the right treatment, which may include surgical operation; we all agreed that no sacrifice is too small from any quarter within the party to ensure that the party regains the lost glory; and it was a shock that some elements in the party have taken unilateral actions to suspend some  members within our party.

    “We all agreed that such negative steps already taken by some leaders in some local governments and wards should be reversed, particularly those wards and unit excos allegedly suspended from the party in Efon should refrain from doing so.”

    It was also agreed that the state EXCO should set up a fact-finding committee to visit Efon and meet with Chief Mrs. Ronke Okusanya, Hon. Dapo Karounwi and other leaders, as well as the local government EXCO, with a view to resolving the crisis. This should be replicated in other local governments as a way to foster unity within the party.

    Other resolutions, according to the comminuque, are: “We agreed that members of the Action Group and other groups are bonafide members of APC in Ekiti and nobody should pronounce otherwise or threaten to suspend them from the party.

    “We all agreed that there is the need to forge a new understanding within the party in Ekiti State.”

    The question was asked as to how Olumilua, who hitherto was excluded from the ex-governors caucus, was classified. It was agreed that he should be one of them and we mandated Oni and Otunba Adebayo and the State Chairman to meet with Olumilua with a view to giving him the deserved recognition.

    The communique also reads: “We agree that after the Evang. Olumilua meeting, another should be convened with all the other groups within the party including the Bibiire/Labour Party group in attendance, to further unify the party.

    “We agreed that there should be cessation of hostilities, especially in the newspapers and on the social media.

    “We agreed that the fine point of restructuring and reforming the party for better effect has not been addressed at the last meeting, as it was simply exploratory and that there is the need for further meetings in various strata of the party.”

    The interest groups also celebrated the appointment of Ojudu as senior political aide in the Presidency which they described as well deserved and an indication that the state chapter is blessed with personalities who can prove their mettle in the country.

    The state chapter praised President Muhammadu Buhari for the appointment of Ojudu as Special Adviser on Political Matters. Publicity Secretary, Taiwo Olatunbosun, said in a statement that the appointment reinforced the importance of Ekiti State in the nurturing of the party for the challenges ahead.

  • Kogi elders preach peace

    Kogi elders preach peace

    Kogi elders have sued for peace ahead of tomorrow’s inauguration of Governor-elect Yahaya Bello of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    They urged the people to refrain from any act that could cause a breach of the peace during and after the swearing-in.

    The elders, under the aegis of the Kogi West and Central Forum for Equity and Justice, in a communiqué at the end of their meeting at the Rockview Hotel, Abuja, noted that the much-needed unity and development could only be achieved in an atmosphere of peace.

    The communiqué was signed by ex-Health Minister Prof. Eyitayo Lambo, former Director-General, National Broadcasting Commission, Dr. Tom Adaba and a retired banking executive, Alhaji Idris Yusuf Tawari.

    The elders affirmed the constitutional right of those who participated in the November 21 election to seek redress in court. They said pending the outcome of the cases, the people, regardless of their political affiliations, should ensure that the in-coming administration had the right environment to begin the rebuilding and repositioning of the state after years of ruin.

    The communiqué enjoined the people, particularly parties in the electoral dispute, to accept the outcome of the judicial process and support the winner.

    The meeting was attended by 26 leaders from Kogi Central and Kogi West, including Amb. Babatunde Fadumiyo, former Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Chief Bayo Ojo, SAN, Amb. S. A. Lawal, Chief Joshua Omuya, Maj.-Gen. Julius Oshanupin (rtd), Prof. Shuaib Ahmed Ibrahim, Prof. Ibrahim Abdu- Aguye and Prof. Phillip Shekwolo.

    Others are Prof. Mike Ikupolati, Alhaji Mohammed Aliyu, Chief Vincent Aiyedun, Alhaji W. I. Bajehson, Alhaji A. G. Usman, Mr. Jimmy Olumudi and Mr. Tunde Ipinmisho.

    Kogi elders have sued for peace ahead of tomorrow’s inauguration of Governor-elect Yahaya Bello of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    They urged the people to refrain from any act that could cause a breach of the peace during and after the swearing-in.

    The elders, under the aegis of the Kogi West and Central Forum for Equity and Justice, in a communiqué at the end of their meeting at the Rockview Hotel, Abuja, noted that the much-needed unity and development could only be achieved in an atmosphere of peace.

    The communiqué was signed by ex-Health Minister Prof. Eyitayo Lambo, former Director-General, National Broadcasting Commission, Dr. Tom Adaba and a retired banking executive, Alhaji Idris Yusuf Tawari.

    The elders affirmed the constitutional right of those who participated in the November 21 election to seek redress in court. They said pending the outcome of the cases, the people, regardless of their political affiliations, should ensure that the in-coming administration had the right environment to begin the rebuilding and repositioning of the state after years of ruin.

    The communiqué enjoined the people, particularly parties in the electoral dispute, to accept the outcome of the judicial process and support the winner.

    The meeting was attended by 26 leaders from Kogi Central and Kogi West, including Amb. Babatunde Fadumiyo, former Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Chief Bayo Ojo, SAN, Amb. S. A. Lawal, Chief Joshua Omuya, Maj.-Gen. Julius Oshanupin (rtd), Prof. Shuaib Ahmed Ibrahim, Prof. Ibrahim Abdu- Aguye and Prof. Phillip Shekwolo.

    Others are Prof. Mike Ikupolati, Alhaji Mohammed Aliyu, Chief Vincent Aiyedun, Alhaji W. I. Bajehson, Alhaji A. G. Usman, Mr. Jimmy Olumudi and Mr. Tunde Ipinmisho.

     

  • Tinubu-Ojo urges market  leaders to be security conscious

    Tinubu-Ojo urges market leaders to be security conscious

    The Iyaloja-General of Nigeria, Chief Folashade Tinubu-Ojo, has urged market leaders in Lagos State to give sanitation and security maximum priority.

    She said market leaders were expected to be environmental and chief security officers in their various markets.

    Mrs. Tinubu-Ojo, who spoke in Lagos at the installation of Mrs. Risikat Philip as the Iya Oja and Hajiya Sidikat Mayegun-Yekin as the Otun Iya Oja of Folashade Tinubu-Ojo Ebute-Ero Market, Gorodom, Lagos Island, enjoined the new leaders to ensure the safety of lives and property.

    She urged them to form a committee that will ensure all-round security in the markets.

    Chief Tinubu-Ojo said market leaders should ensure that no one was allowed to sleep in markets at night, and the committee should be saddled with the responsibility of ensuring that electrical appliances were switched off after the day’s business to avoid fire outbreak.

    She said to avoid being disturbed by environmental officers; market leaders should ensure that markets were kept clean.

  • Global peace: Down the unraveling road (part one)

    Global peace: Down the unraveling road (part one)

    The wise man abhors the insane device so that the fruit of his effortsmakes not his own destruction.

    Widespread conflagration is closer than it has been in the past half century. The sinews of war extend into tender confines where too many nations crave influence. Once isolated ructions now intertwine in a snarl of martial encounter reflecting a deeper rivalry between two nations.  America and Russia eye each other across the precipice of competing interests; they now move toward the bridge of conflict. The rainbows of peace disappear. The sky turns crimson with the promise of blood. This is not how events were supposed to turn but the world rarely does as it ought. It does as it is.

    Someone forget to inform the Cold War that it died with the Soviet Union. The current friction between America and Russia proves the Cold War was less a contest of ideologies than a modern version of the classical encounter of strong nations with competing interests. The Soviet Union eventually folded into the recesses of history. From its demise arose an unsure, weak Russia. In due course, Russia would become less unsure and less weak. It would soon remember itself as the nation bestride the Eurasian landmass with bulging designs to influence and return into its orbit those nations cast with the unenviable fate of bordering it.

    When the Soviet Union fell, America’s leadership ingested a litany of ideas that seemed self-evident from the Washington perspective. Today, the indiscriminant exercise of those ideas imperil world peace. When historians look back on this period a century or two from now, they will view these concepts as the tradecraft of madmen, a school of lunatic minds to which the foreign policy of the world’s mightiest nation was ceded.

    American foreign policy has been reduced to tenets more akin to theology than a rational assessment of strategic interests. American leaders came to depictthemselves as sole guardians and interpreters of international morality. They also were the lone superpower; the nation would fashion its military budget to maintain the vast power differential over all nations, making that superpower status an enduring feature of the global structure.  As such, might and right merged into one. America was both the strongest power and highest priest of the international order.

    American leaders felt their expressions were the words of supreme reason if not of God himself. They were the sword of peace ready to pass judgment on those who bade not to their righteous dictates.

    America would broadly export its political, economic, and military power to reshape the world in its image. Those nations and peoples that adhered to its way would not incur wrath; the cost would be their independence in action and policy. They must bend their national polices to suit American interests then secondarily their own. Those nations that dared follow their own inklings would be placed on the disciplinary list. If they venture too far down the self-minded course, they would be undermined, possibly attacked.

    Thus, Iraq and Libya were made to pay in limb and blood for the recalcitrance of their former leaders. Syria has been escorted to the chopping block. Iran remains on the list of the endangered. Afghanistan is a proverb for incessant violence. Forlorn Yemen mimics it. The Middle East has become the site of battle that has more to do with oil and irrational geopolitical competition than with a clash of religions or of Western and Islamic civilizations. There is little civilized about what the actors now do in the name of national interests.

    While internally democratic, America implementsits foreign policy with the spirit of a myopic theocracy. It is a well spring of high-sounding principles honored only in their enunciation, not in their implementation. That which is done looks dissimilar for what is said. The word “hypocrisy”ventures to mind.

    America says it primary battle is the war against terrorism. Indeed, America abhors the fingerprint of foreign terror inside America. When terror confines itself to distantMiddle East or Africa, American attitudes are more nuanced. Opposition to terrorism becomes conditional; cooperation with it even becomes possible. America may oppose terrorism in the abstract. However, America completely oozes with actionable hostility toward nations that refuse to tow its line. America will align with terrorists to subdue these nations.

     America and its allies cooperated with Al Qaeda to steamroll Qaddafi. In addition to devastating Libya, America was purposefully lax in securing Libya’s military armories. It turned the other way as Al Qaeda lay hold of the ample supplies of war materiel. With Western aid, many of these terrorist filibusters with their newly acquired weapons embarked for Syria. Aided by Western indifference, chunks of the weapons cacheswent south via Mali into the hands of Boko Haram. In downing a nonthreatening but stubbornly vociferous Qaddafi, American policy abetted a violent terrorism that spans an arc from the southern banks of Lake Chad, bending through Tripoli to the northern banks of the Tigris in Mesopotamia. To subdue Qaddafi, America was willing that Boko haram would wax stronger and that ISIL would spawn from the chaos that Syria and Iraq had become.

    Syria is now the crucial point but not the crucial counterparty. Russia is. Simply because everyone seems to want to put their hand in the matter, Syria is the most dangerous spot in the world today. Because of the roster of state and non-state actors crowding the narrow stage, it is a place where a minor tactical mishap can spiral intowider conflict pitting Russia againstAmerica.

    America seeks to ejectAssad simply because they have always sought his ouster. He has been blacklisted for years although he is not a material threat to any interest America would deem vital. At most, he has been merely a visible nuisance of no serious jeopardy except to America’s expectation that no international player should publicly object to its ways and means. To remove him from the list of the condemned would be to implicitly admit error; this would hamstring the aim of recreating the world in their image instead of allowing sovereign nations to evolve as their sovereignty leads them. Like any self-righteous theocracy, America cannot amend its edicts for they consider their strategies as ex cathedra. Inertia becomes anathematic to vision, adaptation and correction. America’s leaders fate themselves to grievous errors because they abhor admitting minor ones.

    However, something happened on the road to Damascus. There was no divine revelation this time. There was mortal rivalry. Russia had invested itself heavily in Syria and was not about to allow America to ruin its long-established interests.  A key Russian naval base resides there, protecting Russia’s Black Sea portal and projecting Russia into the eastern Mediterranean.

    Russia passively watched as America bushwhacked Saddam in Iraq because Moscow had no affection or the Iraqi despot. They watched as America entangled itself in Afghanistan. America’s thrust against Al Qaeda and the Taliban served Russian interests on many levels, including giving Moscow the perverse satisfaction of seeing America fall into the same quagmire that perplexed the Soviet military some thirty years before. The more powerful the nation, the fewer lessons it seems to learn until that power is sorely dissipated by folly.

    Russia even watched as America crushed Moscow’sunreliable friend in Libya because Russia had no vital interest involved in the matter. Based on this long string of passive inaction, America badly miscalculated Russian interests and resolve. America tried to pluck Ukraine from Russia’s orbit. That was a step too far. Russia was not going to relinquish this bird in the hand. Russia not only opposed Western designs, it annex the Crimea to secure the northern reaches of the Black Sea and to show it was a master of the geopolitical game when played in its own back yard. The tables had now turned. After embarrassing America and NATO in the Ukraine, Russia again recently outflanked that duo in Syria. By complementing Assad’s ground forces with strong air cover, Russia has annealed the regime and undermined America strategy to topple Assad.

    In Eastern Europe and then the Middle East, Russia foiled American foreign policy drives in two successive instances. This affrontsAmerica’s claimed global leadership. It also testifies to the superior logic and validity of traditional balance of power considerations in comparison to American unipolar conceptions. America may be the lone superpower but it is not the only power. When President Obama dismissed Russia a mere “regional power,” he revealed a shocking lack of appreciation for the principles underlying the wise application of geopolitical power. Geographic propinquity has much to do with most things politic. Actual events and crises only occur in a defined geographic space; that space can never be equidistant for all interested parties. As a general rule, the closer the problem, the more likely that problem impinges on a nation’s strategic interests. The more a nation’s objective strategic interest is involved, the more assets and commitment that nation will devote to resolving the matter in its favor.

    The obvious power differential between America and Russia is but a portion of the equation. The fuller answer requires an assessment of the two nations’ interests and relative commitment to seeing their policy to fruition, regardless of the costs. In the arena of limited wars, asymmetry in power is often overcome by a countervailing asymmetry in vital interests and firmness of commitment to national cause. America has yet learned this simple truth. Consequently, America calculates that all nations should look in awe at its superior arsenal then bow to whatever it wants, wherever it wants it.

    Conversely, Russia more accurately judged in Ukraine and Syria that its interests were such that it could bring more assets to bear because it would more likely walk the hard mile. America, with all of its muscle, would calculate that the risks outstrip the potential reward. It would dip its toe in the water but recoil from getting its entire foot wet.  America had more power but lesser interests; thus, it was unwilling to bring that full power to bear, particularly in the Ukraine. Meanwhile, Russia enjoyed inferior power but was more willing to bring a greater percentage of that lesser might to bear in order to win its way.

    In war and most forms of human rivalry pitting one aggregation against another such entity, commitment and willpower likely are more decisive than the possession of superior power, particularly when the locus of the confrontation lies closer to the weaker entity than the stronger one. In such instances, the superior power has less interest in the outcome. Thus, it retains most of its power in the bank. By not bringing such power into play, that actor renders its superior muscle impotent as if nonexistent.

    This tracks events in Ukraine. Russia was prepared to support the rebels to the hilt. America merely played around the edges. Learning a lesson from Ukraine, Russia felt it might be able to outflank America in Syria if America’s policy errors left such an aperture.

    President Obama has temporizes in Syria for years. To his credit, his preternatural caution may be his greatest contribution to world peace during his term as president. He has resisted the call of foreign policy hawks in both parties to engage more intensely in Syria and to confront Russia more aggressively in all places and in all manner of ways.

    Many of these hawks pine for war against Russia. By bringing Russia, the world’s second most potent military, under heel America would solidify its position as the lone superpower. It would also send a chilling message to more inferior nations: they best not provoke American ire lest they want to suffer an avalanche of steel and fire. Obama is not such a wanton militarist. Not wanting to get involved in wider military engagement unless the outcome was basically assured, President Obama has been a brake on these aggressive, Prussian designs.

    While Barack the Hesitant dallied between war and diplomacy, the Russian leader waited for his opportune moment. When he saw Assad was eroding in what had become a war of attrition, he entered the fray to bolster the beleaguered ally. Putin turned his air force into Assad’s, attacking ISIL and those like ISIL that America backed.

    This was a calculated risk, an intrepid move. For the first time, American and Russian military aircraft flew in the same theater of war, fighting in part on the same side (both against ISIL), in part as enemies (one in support, one against Assad). Putin now bombs ISIL and its supply and commercial lines with Turkey with a ferocity absent from the American air strikes. In comparison, American strikes have been recreational, not attempting to hit ISIL where it hurts as that would undermine NATO ally Turkey and also turn Assad into a third party beneficiary of Washington’s aerial might.

    Putin wagers that Obama will not try to match Russia’s escalation with an America escalation. Putin believes he has the measure of Obama: that Obama shrinks from the risks attendant togenuine war fought with so many variable factors that the result is less then certain. Add heat and Obama is more likely to sue for diplomacy than roll out his bigger guns. Thus far, Putin has been right but perhaps for the wrong reason.

    Although Obama is risk averse, we should give him more credit for being clear-headed than for being chicken-livered. He realizes much could quickly go wrong. In his constellation of important issues, the risk of regional and possible world war over Syria is senseless. He would have to venture the risk if Israel’s existence was being threatened. But Syria is an inferior case. To assume such a risk just to unseat Assad would be the acme of professional negligence. It could shred peace to tatters.

    Already too many actors are engaged in Syria. The nation is taking on the attributes of the Balkans before 1914, with more powerful nations seeing important interests in the weak region where no such interests actually attach. The overinflated interests of one power clashed with the real interests of another. One assassination struck the match that set all aflame. WWI erupted in this straitened atmosphere, bringing Western civilization to near collapse.

    Barack Obama does not want this insanity on his resume. However, others connive to bring about momentous collision. In shooting down a Russian plane weeks ago, Ankara tried to goad Moscow to retaliate against it. If Moscow had swallowed the bait by responding militarily, Turkey would have invoked the NATO principle that an attack on one is deemed an attack against all. This would have placed the nose of the Russian bear squarely against the American eagle. The world would have taken a colossal stride toward scarlet encounter.

    Thank goodness neither Putin nor Obama ran askew at that critical moment. The two leaders could hardly be more dissimilar. Obama is the skittish intellectual conscious about not fouling his singular place in history as America’s first Black president. Putin is the calculating practitioner of realpolitik seeking to etch his name in history by lifting Russia to its former glory as the core of an empire stretching from the Caucasus to the Pacific. While their room for maneuver without losing face is slowly and dangerously narrowing, both have thus far avoided the rash move. In different ways and for different reasons, both are flawed heroes because they represent the last line before peace turns to war. This may not hold.

    Both dislike each other; neither can afford to allow that sentiment to define future actions. They must work together as much as they will work apart.Meanwhile, both must fend off hawks in their camps who would like nothing better than to up the ante until the only wager possible is that of war.

    (08060340825 sms only)

  • Midlife peace or midlife crisis

    Everyone who is not yet 40 should pray that they spend their midlife (above forty till early sixties) as healthy and contributing members of society.  In any society, the young (below forty years of age) are typically takers.  They need to be provided for, fed, accommodated, taught, trained, supported, inspired, motivated, directed, sponsored, etc.  On the contrary, mid-lifers are expected to be givers.  They have already got.  They are supposedly settled.  They have landed somewhere good for them and they are poised to be their best and give their best, or so society expects.  The elders are the people who spend more time relaxing and the rest of us pet them.  Thus one expects the good life to progress as: you take, you give, you relax.  Unfortunately, this kind of peace evades many individuals and many societies and mid-lifers too commonly pass through the well talked about mid-life crisis.

    A husband comes home one evening and says he is not returning to that job even if they quadruple his income;Mummy abandons the kids at home and disappears for days or forever;  a  guy buys a posh car with all the money he had been saving for the kids’ education;Daddy decides to sleep with his teenage daughter; a wife turns the family’s sitting room into a chapel;  a woman collects numerous phone numbers of doctors and lawyers; a couple has regular physical fights; an administrator embezzles an outrageous amount of money; a boss fires somebody over trifles; a careerist kills a rival – these are common examples indicating midlife mishaps within human beings.   The midlife crisis is a syndrome of physical, emotional, psychological, and spiritual personal experiences.  There are underlying mechanisms of the midlife crisis: physical, mental, spiritual, environmental, and social mechanisms.  To know them helps the mid-lifer to undergo mid-life transition rather than midlife-crisis.

    Generally for both men and women, a crisis may center within one or more groups of life issues:

    • Looks, appearance, image, status, possessions…..
    • Job, livelihood, career, achievements, contributions…..
    • Health, capabilities, freedoms, powers……
    • Marriage, relationships, friendships, culture….
    • Beliefs, religion, hopes, fears, experiences…….

    The major driving force of a crisis may come from the ego or the emotions, and men may be more prone to forces of ego and women more prone to forces of emotions but none is immune to either.  The major remedy for any crisis may similarly be guided by the ego or the emotions.  A new and better life emerges when the head and the heart become the two polished sides of the precious coin of life.  Then there is a peaceful balance.

    A midlife crisis may be an individual experience or it may be a social experience.  A couple, a marriage, or an entire family including a mid-lifer may enter into a crisis.  If a mother walks away from her marriage or a father walks away from his job, a resultant crisis evolved in their children may become worse than their own personal crises.

    In order to arrive at a balance and peace, one has to deal with or peel off certain layers of a midlife crisis (peel off the P’s).  Chief of them are:

    • Perceptions: shock, confusion, doubt, anger, denial, remorse……obsessions, compulsions, risky behavior, rebellion……
      • Paralysis: boredom, indecision, unhappiness, cynicism, hopelessness, depression…..

      Change towards improvement is not always easy, quick, or strait forward.  Generally, people go through periods of ups and downs before arriving at a balance.

      Always, from a midlife crisis, a better or a worse person emerges, a richer or a poorer person emerges, a healthier or a sicker person emerges, a weaker or a stronger person emerges, a sane or a manic person emerges, a normal citizen or a criminal emerges, and a sinner or a saint emerges.

      Midlife is a necessary and normal stage in life.  Crisis is not necessary but it may be normal in today’s world and, if it comes, we can choose to aim for victory rather than succumb to defeat.

  • Ambode urges Muslims to pray for peace of Nigeria

    Ambode urges Muslims to pray for peace of Nigeria

    Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode on Wednesday called on Muslims in the nation to offer special prayers for greater peace, unity and continuous progress of Nigeria, as they join their counterparts across the world to celebrate Eid El Maulud, which is the birth of Prophet Muhammad.

    The Governor in a statement signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Habib Aruna, enjoined Muslims to follow the exemplary leadership of the Holy Prophet by promoting peaceful co-existence among the various segments of the society.

    While imploring Nigerians to shun ethnic, political and religious differences and work towards building a safer and better Nigeria, Governor Ambode said the celebration of the birth of the Prophet should renew the faith and bond of unity among Nigerians as one people and one nation irrespective of diversity.

    “On the occasion of the commemoration of the birth of the holy Prophet, it is imperative to reflect on his teachings and uphold his legacies of unity, integrity, peaceful coexistence and love for one’s neighbour, which are indispensable in our quest for meaningful development and the profitable management of our diversity,” he said.

    Ambode also urged Muslim to internalize the virtues of honesty, selflessness, charity, tolerance, good neighbourliness, justice, equity and fairness which the Mohammad preached, saying such will go a long way to engender national development.

    “I want to seize this occasion to urge all Nigerians to commit and rededicate themselves to making greater effort to imbibe these qualities and values as they celebrate the Prophet’s birth.

    “I therefore wish all our Muslim brothers and sisters in Nigeria and Lagos in particular a happy Eid-el-Maulud,” he said.

  • Where is Mama Peace?

    Where is Mama Peace?

    The people of Bayelsa State will tomorrow choose the man who will lead them for the next four years. It is a crucial decision.  It is a contest that has seen the two main contenders throwing serious jibes at each other. One called the other a ‘guy man governor’. The other described his rival as a ‘bush man’.

    The contenders are Governor Seriake Dickson and ex-Governor Timpre Sylva. Dickson is of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). Sylva is of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    As the people prepare to make this important decision, one question that comes to my mind is: Where is Mama Peace? If you do not know who Mama Peace is, she is ex-First Lady Dame Patience Jonathan. I am concerned about her whereabouts because of her deep involvement in the politics of her husband’s state of origin.

    The two top contenders are no strangers to Mama Peace. She knows them well. Sylva will never forget Mama Peace who recruited her husband into the Operation-Sylva-must-not- have-second term-in-office project. Dickson, the incumbent, made Mama Peace a Permanent Secretary, when she was First Lady. Every attempt to make him rescind the decision was resisted. With glee, Mama Peace went to Yenagoa and was sworn-in as a Permanent Secretary. Months later, she resigned as Permanent Secretary. We do not know if she had been paid her retirement benefits for doing simply nothing. I hear she resigned because things fell apart between her and the governor.

    Since the campaigns started, Mama Peace, to the best of knowledge, has not truly identified with Dickson. I caught a glimpse of her on the day Dickson launched his campaign. After that she has not been seen campaigning for the man who did her the unjustifiable honour of making her a Permanent Secretary  — to the consternation of many.

    Some days back, the PDP held a rally it tagged mega. Ex-President Jonathan was. Usually, Mama Peace would be beside him. She would have taken the microphone and throw punches at Sylva, the man she and her husband claimed failed Bayelsa people and as such was not qualified to lead the state for a second term. But she was nowhere near the rally ground, not to talk of drumming support for Dickson. Is she truly angry with Dickson and cares not whether or not he gets re-elected?

    The rally has also become a subject of a big row between the two major parties. The APC described as poor the turnout of supporters and members of the PDP for the grand finale of its rally in Yenagoa last weekend. A statement by the Sylva/Igiri Campaign Organisation (SICO) said the poor turnout was an indication that the PDP had lost the goodwill and support of the people.

    SICO’s Director, Media and Publicity, Chief Nathan Egba, said the rally, tagged: “Mother of All Rallies”, recorded poor attendance, as the main bowl of the Samson Siasia Sports Complex was empty, with only a handful of party faithful and supporters.

    Egba said Jonathan’s presence could not even attract supporters to the event. He said the defection of thousands of PDP members to the APC in the last few months was one of the factors responsible for the empty stadium.

    The statement reads: “This is a ranting by a drowning party. It is the trademark of the PDP to use federal might to win elections as recorded in the past when the party was at the centre.

    “For us in the APC, we will rely on the electorate to do the needful by voting our candidates on merit. The people have promised to savour the great momentum the APC is bringing into this election to change the retrogressive government of the PDP to a government of prosperity.

    “We will like to place on record that no member of the APC defected to the PDP during the rally. The almost 50 little children and boys brought into the arena brandishing brooms were impostors.

    “It was the governor and his lieutenants who stage-managed the show of shame. We are happy that the television camera captured the faces of the underage, who posed as APC members with more than 70 per cent of them less than 18 years.

    “The display was just to score point and deceive the national leadership of their party into believing that they are on ground when in fact, PDP is already dead and buried, while we await the burial on Saturday.”

    As expected, the PDP took exceptions to APC’s position. Dickson’s Chief Press Secretary (CPS), Mr. Daniel Iworiso-Markson, said the rally was successful.

    Iworiso-Markson said: “The crowd, who political watchers described as unprecedented in the political annals of the state, confirmed the supremacy of the PDP and its candidate, Governor Dickson, over others.

    “With songs and dances, the party faithful left no one in doubt of their preparedness to vote for the PDP governorship candidate, who according to them, has rewritten the political history of the state in the last four years.

    “The security operatives had a hectic time controlling the crowd, as thousands of PDP supporters across the creeks of Bayelsa defied the scorching sun to witness what is being described as the mother of all rallies.”

    To support his position, he listed the dignitaries who attended the event as the Acting Chairman of the PDP Board of Trustees, Haliru Bello, Delta State Governor Ifeanyi Okowa, Vice-Chairman, PDP, Southsouth, Dr. Cairo Ojougboh, Chief Olisah Metuh, serving and former National Assembly members, including, Senators Adolphus Wabara, Ibrahim Mantu, Chief Emeka Ihedioha, Leo Ogor, Nollywood stars and a host of others.

    What I am sure of is the fact that none of these men will vote tomorrow. It is about the people of Bayelsa. My final take is: The people of Bayelsa deserve the right to choose their leader. They should be allowed to do this in an atmosphere devoid of rancor, violence and intimidation. The stakes are high. And from what I can see now, it is too close to call. It can go either way.

     

    Black Day in Rivers

    On the run up to the general elections in Rivers State, fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters and friends were attacked and killed in their homes in cold blood. Their offence was their political leaning. Some were attacked and killed on their way to attend campaign rallies. Explosive devices and gun attacks were not rare at campaigns rallies of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Some citizens who wanted to cast their votes were killed or maimed by political thugs and mercenaries. Not a few got their noses bloodied at polling units.

    At the last count, over 100 were believed to have been killed. Prominent among the victims were the Adube family. Nine of them, including father, children and an in-law, were killed in one day.

    They were remembered on Monday. At the ceremony, APC’s governorship candidate Dr Dakuku Peterside said: “Our brothers and sisters died because some politicians who were consumed with vaulting and inordinate ambition engaged in horse trading. More than 100 innocent persons were killed, victims of the evil acts of desperate politicians. You have heard chilling stories from their families, but for the sensitivity of our sensibilities, I wish not to recant that narratives here. Unfortunately, till date not a single person has been prosecuted for these crimes against humanity.”

    Peterside went on: “For us, they were not just victims but martyrs. They constitute the ‘strong breed’ who have taken our collective burden to ensure the survival of democracy particularly in Rivers State and Nigeria in general.”

    Like I have maintained on the Rivers killings, the evil doers will suffer. Those who had hands in the deaths will not end well.