Tag: python

  • Python in the parliament

    A serpent will ordinarily evoke anxiety. Fear is added if that nocturnal creature were found slithering up from the depth of a communal well. To the superstitious in these parts, such spectacle can only be indicative that the surrounding community had either come under a plague or arrived at its threshold.

    So, when reports came last week that the “hallowed chamber” of Ondo State House of Assembly had suddenly come under the occupation of a python just before the commencement of a plenary, public responce was understandably hysteria.

    A photograph of the invader purportedly taken live and splashed in the chilling account on the social media, is the stuff only found in a magic-realist fable, with a section of the giant snake shown suspended from the broken ceiling.

    Not even CNN, the global media giant, could resist the temptation to report the phantasmagorical development on its online platform.

    After reading such report, anyone could, therefore, be pardoned if they succumbed to sheer imagination by visualizing a sprawling gallery strewn with discarded gavel, forgotten shoes and scattered sheets after the about two dozens frightened lawmakers had managed to scramble through the emergency exits to safety on that dark day.

    Of course, it would be pointless to ask if, faced with possible death from snake-bite, anyone had even remembered to whisk the much prized mace along this time.

    More, let it be noted that, with the assembly forced to adjoin indefinitely in such distress and utter disorientation just days after a top state functionary admitted that some Fulani herdsmen were officially engaged at some point as bush navigators, we were inadvertently denied perhaps a golden chance to ascertain if overwhelming public opinion across Ondo’s eighteen councils would not be enough to persuade the college of twenty-six lawmakers to pass a motion on that fateful day compelling Governor Rotimi Akeredolu (a.k.a. Aketi) to, as a matter of urgent public emergency, explain whether cells of Miyetti vigilante sighted on some highways of the Sunshine state, brandishing dane guns and blunt daggers, were now to be taken as the pilot scheme of the state police of which advocacy he would appear to have become so implacably fastidious lately.

    But 48 hours later, we would hear a starkly different story from Aketi, whose other observable passion is Indian hemp farming, in what sounded like a calculated attempt to disown his own share of the blame.

    During a “fact-finding” visit to the assembly complex, it was a self-righteous Akeredolu we saw seeking to weave a conspiracy theory by arguing that 1) the snake story was entirely fabricated; 2) the cited dilapidation should be blamed on the leadership of the legislature for poor housekeeping, and 3) his tenancy in power for less than three years should not be held accountable for the cumulative pillage the termites had inflicted on the chamber’s roof for donkey years.

    Without any attempt at concealment, Aketi’s tone reeked of a strange magisterial finality of the prosecutor-juror; far from the open-mindedness expected of a fact-finder, let alone the objective detachment of a senior lawyer under the circumstance.

    But, at best, whatever view the governor expressed could only be entertained as an opinion; it cannot be entered as the truth.

    By taking liberty to also insinuate blackmail, Aketi only left one with the impression that someone wanted to stampede him into awarding a sweetheart contract.

    Curiously, before the phalanx of Government House television cameras that day, Speaker Bamidele Oloyelogun, who had adopted the language of anger, desperation and destitution on the day of the incident, began to em, em, em modify his words to a worship of Aketi within earshot.

    Obviously intimidated by the governor’s presence, Mr. Speaker quickly conscripted the media as the fall guy. As if a short gun was put to his temple, he was now accusing the media of “blowing things up”. To be sure, the Chairman of the house committee on information was quite unambiguous in his recall of what transpired: “When we were about to enter into plenary, a big snake just ran out of the chamber which disrupted our sitting and we had to hurriedly leave the chamber.”

    Taken together, maybe the issue is whether the species sighted was actually as gargantuan as that depicted in the social media; but certainly not that the story was entirely made up.

    Indeed, in the age of social media with little or no fidelity to truth, there is no doubt that lies are made to appear more seductive these days while the few facts often get mangled beyond recognition. While it should be admitted that a controversy of this nature invariably underscores the absence of rigour of true journalism thus far, at least one indubitable fact can be distilled from the muddle — the space presently designated as “hallowed chamber” in Akure is clearly now a monument to dilapidation and shame. Thank God, no attempt was made to paper over the holes in the ceiling, or deny the ravages of the termites over the years.

    In seeking to push the patently escapist argument of “media mischief” on this matter, both Aketi and the Speaker could, therefore, not be said to be familiar with the cautionary wit of immortal Khalil Gibran that an exaggeration is only a truth that had lost its temper. For, regardless of the fierce official arguments to the contrary, the truth surely lies between Aketi’s self-righteousness and the Speaker’s half somersault on the one hand, and the media reports on the other.

    It is quite disturbing that none among today’s political “prodigal children” in Ondo appears to feel ashamed that an edifice their ancestors labored hard to build over forty years ago and officially designated on February 3, 1979 as the “hallowed chamber” of the old Ondo State (from which Ekiti was excised in 1996) for the sole purpose of fashioning laws to foster the happiness and prosperity of the people has been allowed to wither.

    Again, while in hot pursuit of a scape-goat, it did not seem to occur to the governor and the speaker that that very squalid chamber accounts for a critical section of the public space for which not less than a whopping N2 trillion has been appropriated in the last twenty years of uninterrrupted democracy, to maintain either under capital or recurrent subheading. In 2019, for instance, Ondo’s budget is N190b, while that of 2018 was N180b.

    Like his three predecessors, Aketi would not allow any chance slip without trumpeting his own idea of “total transformation” of the state from the “decay inherited”. But if an institution as critical as the assembly chamber — the very sanctuary of lawmakers themselves — could suffer such neglect, one can then imagine the plight of the lesser sectors.

    Another point: this incident surely reinforces the old argument for fiscal autonomy for both the legislature and the judiciary. Apart from Lagos, legislative and judiciary arms in most of the states are still at the mercy of the executive arm for funding. It explains the buck-passing we saw between Aketi and the speaker. The former was quick to defend that the chamber could have been better maintained from the funds released to the legislative arm. While the speaker, in turn, contended that adequate allowance was made consistently for a complete overhaul of the property in previous budgets, but the fund was never released.

    Truth be told, the speaker is correct. It is only in Lagos that the speaker or chief judge would not have to constantly go cap in hand to the governor’s to literally beg for the release of budgetary provisions or funds to meet the challenges of their respective offices. That leaves room for a governor harboring some grudge against the other institutions of democracy to literally sit tight on the funds, teeth-clenched to boot.

    Come to think of it, Ondo ordinarily prides itself on the mantra of “Sunshine State”. On the website of its Budget Ministry, the following lofty words are proclaimed as the corporate vision: “To make Ondo State the best administered state in Nigeria and the cynosure of all eyes of which all its citizens shall be proud; where equity, justice and fairness shall be the driving forces of government action.”

    But for the truly proud citizens of the province noted for perhaps the tallest cocoa pyramid in the South-west, utter shame is what is ultimately spelt by even the mere suggestion of a snake ever peeping from the assembly’s dingy rafter, much less the certainty of a drooping ceiling, and the probability that the presiding speaker missed death providentially by not being on seat when finally a section of the roof collapsed right on his desk under the weight of treacherous termites.

    That should be the takeaway from the drama at the Ondo assembly last week.

  • EdoJobs, Curators Academy commence training on programming for youths

    Less than two weeks after the Vice President, Prof.  Yemi Osinbajo, commissioned the Edo Innovation Hub, the Edo State government in partnership with the Curators Academy, have commenced training on Python, Data Science, and other programming tools, at the new facility in Benin City.

    The Special Assistant to the Governor on Job Creation and Skills Development, Mrs. Ukinebo Dare, who disclosed this to journalists in Benin City, said the Curators Academy has opened its laboratory for Edo youths, to acquire on-demand tech skills.

    According to her, “Beginners and intermediate classes would be held on Python and Data Science programming for youths who were part of the boot camp held when the Vice President, Prof Yemi Osinbajo, launched the Edo Innovation Hub.”

    She added, “In preparation for this class, the lab is now open for people who are interested in learning Python and Data Science programmes to come in and use the lab to learn.”

    She explained that “Those who were trained during the launch of the Edo Innovation Hub are practicing, working and using the knowledge and tools to improve their skills. This kicks off a one-year partnership where 600 young people in Edo will be trained as tech entrepreneurs and tech experts participate in international competitions and get jobs globally in the tech space.”

    Mrs. Dare also noted that the Edo State government will be organising a 2-day training programme on Book Keeping and Financial Management in partnership with Recounting Limited.

    “Edo Innovates is focused on leveraging technology for job creation and enterprise development so it is a connection point for entrepreneurs and tech enthusiasts. At the financial management training, entrepreneurs will be trained by accounting experts. It is targeted at giving business owners up-to-date skills needed to manage business finance. Interested applicants are encouraged to apply on the EdoJobs portal before June 28.”

    She further said that Mobicure, a social enterprise, is the first tech business to secure office space in the Edo Innovation Hub and encourages other start-ups and businesses to take full advantage of the facility and training programmes.

  • Army to launch Python Dance II in South East Friday

    Army to launch Python Dance II in South East Friday

    The Nigerian Army said last night that Operation Python Dance II in the Sotheast of the country would continue today as planned.
    A statement from the Director of Army Public Relations, Brig General Sani Usman, urged Nigerians to disregard the rumours that the army would withdraw from the operations from the Southeast.
    The statement Reads: ” The attention of the Nigerian Army has been drawn to some stories in the media that it is withdrawing its troops from Exercise EGWU EKE II, crediting such information to Abia State Governor and the General Officer Commanding 82 Division Nigerian Army. This is not true.
    “The Nigerian Army wishes to enjoin members of the public to disregards such rumours. For the avoidance of doubt, the Abia State Governor in his speech stated that “there will be gradual withdrawal of soldiers on the streets of Aba and Umuahia from tomorrow”.
    “This should not be misconstrued as withdrawing of troops earmarked for Exercise EGWU EKE II. The General Officer Commanding 82 Division has not said such thing. Consequently, we wish to state that Exercise EGWU EKE II is commencing tomorrow as scheduled.
    “Commanders have been instructed to ensure that all hands are on deck to commence the Exercise to its logical completion. We wish to state further that the successful completion of the exercise will dovetail into the various states security outfits till the end of this year.
    ” Members of the public especially in the areas where the exercise will take place are please enjoined to go about their lawful businesses. We wish to also state that we would not allow any individual or group to jeopardize the conduct of the field training exercise through unlawful or criminal activities.
    ” Hoodlums and criminal elements are once again warned to be law abiding and not cause any breach of peace. We hereby reiterate that our troops would conduct themselves in the best professional manner, abide by the Rules of Engagement and Code of Conduct in line with requirements of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
    ” Any act of indiscipline by any of our personnel would be decisively dealt with. While we enjoin all Nigerians to go about their normal businesses, the Nigerian Army urge all to support the troops as they carry out their constitutional duties and make Exercise EGWU EKE II a success”.
  • When python and David danced

    Despite explanations by the Nigerian Army, the controversy generated by its launch of Operation Python Dance in the South-east appears not abating. In its response to the flurry of criticisms trailing the decision to deploy the army to the zone between November 27 and December 27, the army said the aim was neither to kill secessionist agitators nor cause untold hardship to people of the region.

    Army Deputy Director, public relations, 82 Division, Col. Sagir Musa said the measure is to ensure crime-free yuletide and free flow of traffic within the region during the festivities. According to him, it is a command post and field training exercise to enhance troops’ preparedness across a spectrum of contemporary security challenges peculiar to the South-east.

    “It is only a field training exercise that is designed to, where necessary, dovetail into real time activities such as anti-kidnapping drills, patrol, raids, cordon and search, checkpoints roadblock and show of force. The aim is to checkmate anticipated rising wave of crimes usually prevalent during the period”.

    To further disabuse the minds of those who read other motives to the exercise, the army reeled out similar exercises it had conducted in other zones given their peculiar security challenges. These included operation Shirin Harbi to take care of insurgency, cattle rustling and other sundry crimes in the North-east, Harbin Kunama against banditry, insurgency, cattle rustling and other crimes in the North-west and Crocodile Smile in the Niger Delta against illegal bunkering, oil theft and piracy among others.

    For them, operation Python Dance is targeted against armed robbery, banditry, kidnapping, herdsmen-farmers clash, communal clashes and violent secessionist attacks. As if these were not enough, Governor Willie Obiano of Anambra State has taken a step further to reassure people of the zone that Exercise Python Dance was not an army of occupation but targeted at wiping out crime in the region.

    But unknown to him, he raised issues germane to raging scepticisms on the deployment of soldiers to the zone during this season when he said two and a half years ago, the state government raised “operation Kpochapu which cleared the state of crime such that today, Anambra is the safest state in Nigeria and that the army have always assisted the Joint Task Force we set up and they have not disappointed us”, Obiano disclosed this as the Chief of Army staff, Lt. Gen Tukur Buratai visited the headquarters of Operation Python Dance in Awka and reassured that soldiers will respect the freedom of the people while the exercise lasted.

    Evident from the governor’s disclosure is that the fight against armed robbery and the sundry criminal tendencies on which basis the army is now deploying its men and officers to the South-east has been an ongoing thing. As a matter of fact, the army had always been part and parcel of the Joint Task Forces that have been combating crimes in the zone.

    If this is so, what point is there in another campaign requiring the deployment of an armada of troops and ammunitions to duplicate checkpoints and ‘show force’ in the zone during this season? Before now, especially since agitations from the pro-Biafra groups seeking to break away from the Nigerian state gained momentum, the army has maintained checkpoints and roadblocks at some designated areas within the zone including the Asaba end of the Niger Bridge in Delta State.

    Their handling of peaceful protests by those agitating for self-determination was the subject of a recent report by Amnesty International in which it accused the military of shooting peaceful pro-Biafra protesters and bystanders among other human rights violations. The army has since denied the accusations. But despite the denial, the fact remains that its handling of peaceful demonstrations by secessionist groups is the main source of the suspicion on the motive of Operation Python Dance.

    Since that encounter, military checkpoints have permanently been stationed in strategic locations in parts of the South-east. During the same period last year, people travelling through the Niger Bridge saw hell as the checkpoints and roadblocks contributed heavily to the traffic gridlock that kept travellers at one spot for several hours. The situation is bound to worsen this time with the cordon and search, checkpoint roadblocks and show of force which operation python dance entails. So fears of the exercise creating serious incontinences for travellers during the festive period are well founded.

    Though there is usually a general rise in crimes in the weeks preceding the Christmas and New Year celebrations, these are by no means peculiar or limited to the South-east. Armed robbery, kidnapping, communal clashes and herdsmen-farmers’ clashes constitute serious security challenges to other zones. The only security issue that seemingly stands out the zone for this operation is what the army has termed “violent secessionist attacks”.

    Even then, we do know as a matter of fact that the pro-Biafra groups are not violent and they have stated this for the umpteenth time. They neither carry arms nor have they engaged the military in any armed confrontation- the kind typified by the insurgency in the North-east and North-west that gave rise to operation Shirin Harbi and Harbin Kunama respectively. We have not seen them in the kind of mindless killings that have become the hallmark of the activities of Fulani herdsmen in the North-central. Neither have they taken up arms as was the case in the militancy in the Niger Delta.

    So the operations cited to justify the dancing of the python in the South-east at a time the people are usually in their best of mood do not add up. And if one may ask, why should the python dance in the zone at a time of mass return if it has no intention of preying on the returnees? If anything, the timing of such a scarring engagement is bound to send fears into the spine of all those who plan to return to their ancestral homes from far and wide.

    So those who smell a rat over the exercise have ample grounds for it. Mounting military checkpoints and roadblocks here and there, cordoning and searching indiscriminately during the period will add to the suffering people usually encounter at the period. Moreover, the crimes for which the exercise is being justified are usually at their lowest ebb once the festivities have commenced.

    For some reason, criminals also take days off to enjoy their loot at their homes during the season. That is why crimes are usually in the upsurge during the weeks preceding the festivities and drop once celebrations have commenced. So the usual joint taskforces should be able to handle whatever security challenges that may crop up during the season without the show of force denoted by operation python dance.

    The python will only dance at the sight of its prey or after feeding fat on it. The prey of the marauding python should not be the innocent and harmless people who have no issues with security agencies.

    IPOB/MASSOB has declared operation David Dance advising its members to keep away from the battle-ready soldiers during the season so that harm may not come their way. Not surprisingly, operation David Dance does not denote confrontation with the soldiers but a prayer for divine intervention over the siege in keeping with their non-violent posturing. Their fear of being the target of the exercise may not be unconnected with the fact that among the security challenges for which the operation has been rationalized, only secession is peculiar to the zone.

    In sum, the problem of marketing operation python dance in the zone is the making of the military leadership for two reasons. The first is with the choice of code name. The other hinges on timing. When next they come, their code name must reflect the challenges on the ground. But for the assurances of not interfering with peoples’ freedom as the operation lasts, time will tell.

     

  • When python dances in Igbo land

    “So the Lord God said to the serpent:

    “Because you have done this,

    You are cursed more than all cattle,

    And more than every beast of the field;

    On your belly you shall go,

    You shall eat dust

    All the days of your life.

    And I will put enmity

    Between you and the woman,

    And between your seed and her seed;

    He shall bruise your head,

    And you shall bruise His heel.”

    -Genesis 3: 14-15 NKJV

    Pythons are among the biggest snakes in the world and Christians know that our Lord has an especial revulsion for snakes. In many instances in the Bible Jesus laments the vileness of sinners and likens them to generation of vipers; another species of snakes.

    As in the opening quote above, early in creation, the serpent had got itself caught up in the mix between God and man and a severe, eternal curse was promptly placed on the creepy creature. The legless reptile is man’s spiritual albatross; an agent of the enemy and a virile member of the kingdom of darkness. The snake is therefore not in any guise, a pet to man.

    What then would anyone make of a dancing python? Encountering a python is ominous enough, to find one dancing would be a most menacing sight.

    Why on earth then would the Nigerian Army (NA) declare “Operation Python Dance” on a section of the country? It was early in the week that we heard that the NA had imposed this macabre dance of the python on the entire Igbo land from November 27 to December 27, 2016.

    Though apparently directed at the Biafra agitators, it is said to be designed to achieve more. According to Army spokesman: “The prevalent security issues such as armed robbery, kidnapping, abduction, herdsmen-farmers clashes, communal clashes and violent secessionist attacks among others would be targeted…”

    It is also suggested that the exercise would be a multi-agency one, to encompass a civil-military component and finally engage in such humanitarian functions as medical outreach, school and road repairs, among others.

    Laudable objective it seems, but a snake is a snake and a python kills by suffocation. The last time the Army garrisoned the Southeast in this manner supposedly in pursuit of IPOB agitators, the result turned out bizarre as recently reported by Amnesty International (AI). An alarming 150 people were reportedly killed and perhaps buried in secret graves across Igbo land.

    It must be said that this so-called operation is in itself an affront and an assault on the good people of the Southeast coming only a few days after the AI report. NA has not offered the world a coherent response on that allegation.

    The last time the region was garrisoned it was such tale of sorrow and angst. If it took six hours to get to the head bridge at Onitsha, you spent another 12 hours from there to your village. It was so tortuous that travellers cursed and cursed…

    Igbo land is among the most peaceful part of Nigeria, especially during Christmas holidays; what they need is not a garrison of the Nigerian military in any guise. In fact, the NA is over-reaching itself in the Southeast and indeed going beyond its call of duty across the country. The NA is usurping the powers and duties of the Nigeria Police and Civil Defence.

    The Federal Government must review the current activities of the Army; it must call them back to the barracks and deploy them only in armed combat situations. If the Nigeria Police is properly briefed and well mobilised, it has capacity to maintain the peace and ensure internal security in all parts of the country.

    Finally, someone in the NA seems to be enjoying some gallows humour of the grim kind recently with all these so-called “operations”. Why would any army seem to gleefully declare a military “operation” within the borders of a country in a time of peace?  But suffice to say that we do not want to see pythons dancing in Igbo land please; it’s a taboo.

     

    New statement from Guild of Editors

    Come Tuesday, December 6, 2016, at Abuja Sheraton, the Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) will break new grounds with the public presentation of its book, “8 Evils of Human Trafficking”. It is the first in the NGE’s new, advocacy initiative.

    The book is a creative and exciting compendium on the ills of human trafficking and by it the Guild seeks to bring a fresh fillip to the campaign against this scourge of our society. The book is especially suitable for teenagers and young adults who are most vulnerable.

    Mr. Peter Obi is the chairman of the day; Governor Nyesom Wike is the chief presenter, while all the 22 governors of trafficking endemic states are expected to attend. NAPTIP D-G would be on hand to give a keynote address, while Mrs. Funke Egbemode, the hard-driving president of the NGE, is the chief host. It’s a new dawn for the NGE.

  • Hunter kills python at students’ hostel

    Hunter kills python at students’ hostel

    A 13-foot python was killed in a building close to a male hostel at the Nnamdi Azikiwe University (UNIZIK) in Awka, the Anambra State capital, last Saturday. Worried by the development, students are calling on  the management to ensure their safety. VICTOR OGBUAGU reports.

    Fear. Trepidation. Excitement. These captured the mood at the Nnamdi Azikiwe University (UNIZIK) in Awka, the Anambra State capital, last Saturday when a python was killed in an uncompleted building close to a male hall of residence.

    Being a weekend, majority of the students had gone out for extra-curricula activities; some chose to play football; others engaged in other games.

    Few minutes past 9am, an unidentified man raised the alarm on sighting the python.  Those in their hostels thought it was a joke, until the python crawled out of the building.

    Students ran helter skelter on seeing it. A local hunter, who lives in the building, chased the python with a cutlass, battling it for several minutes before overpowering it.

    Students, who watched the scene from a distance, were stunned by his bravery. The brave among them joined the hunter to kill the python.

    The students took the lifeless animal round the campus in a triumphant mood. As they went round, some students, out of fear that the python may come back to life, pulled back.

    Reliving the incident, the hunter, who simply gave his name as Okey, said he found the python when he heard a strange noise in the building.

    He said: “Out of curiosity, I moved round the building to know what was happening. I initially thought somebody was held in captivity within the building. But, what I saw was beyond my imagination. I saw the snake folded at a corner of a room. I quickly fetched my cutlass and an iron rod and moved to attack it before the students joined in killing it.”

    The students wondered how the animal got into the campus.

    A student, who gave his name as Iyke, compared the scenario to a “movie scene”. He said: “I was playing football with other mates as we do every weekend when we heard people shouting, “python”, “python”, “python”. We left the field to see what was going on and what we saw shocked us. It was like a scene in a movie. I never saw a snake as big and long as this. The length of the snake frightened other students, who ran away. We discovered that the hunter had already overpowered the python. We joined in killing the snake.”

    Another student, Ebuka Ezeah, said: “When the hunter raised the alarm about the python, some brave students rushed to the scene with stones and sticks. They hurled stones at the snake, killing it on the spot.”

    The students turned it all into a carnival, celebrating the python’s death. They sang and danced, carrying the python from one hostel to another and to various departments.

    There was a drama when the school security officers came to the hostel and attempted to remove the python. But the students resisted, chanting: “bring back our snake”. The snake was returned to the hunter.

    Some of the students, who spoke to CAMPUSLIFE, called on the school management to ensure that their safety on campus.

    One of them, Chuks Okafor, said: “This is not the first time we are experiencing something like this on the campus. The killing of two alligators in the hostel is still fresh in our memory. The management may have done well in protecting students against criminals; it is not just about crime. We need to be protected from dangerous animals. I expect the school management to do something about this latest python invasion.”