Tag: Save Nigeria

  • 2019 elections: Save Nigeria from hate speech

    As the 2019 general elections draw near, it is a healthy development that the Buhari administration has invested a lot of resources, hope and confidence, so that the exercise would be hate speech-free. The intent, for one, is to have an exercise that would be ruled, by all participating political parties, local and foreign observers and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), as transparent, peaceful, credible, free and fair.

    For another, it is to protect the country’s Fourth Republic and nascent democracy from the ugly effects of violence, destruction of lives and property that are associated with hate speech.

    It should be pointed out that until 2016, hate speech was rife on radio, television and the internet; and in form of opinion or news published in newspapers. Some had the impression that they were sponsored by the enemies of the Buhari administration. A majority of those involved in the propagation of such hate speeches – individuals who ought to have known better – probably mistook freedom of speech as enshrined in Section 39 of the 1999 Constitution, as a licence to be irresponsible and loose.

    And when the Buhari administration moved against the propagation of hate speech – making it a crime, as it were – via the Nigerian Broadcasting Commission (NBC) and Ministry of Information and Culture, which lodged a protest with proprietors of radio and television stations, and policy-makers at newspaper houses, many were those who felt it was an abridgement of free speech.

    The truth, nonetheless, is that, today, Nigeria’s airwaves are a lot sanitized than they were two years ago. The 2019 general election will be the first that INEC would organize under the All Progressives Congress-led Buhari administration.

    The Buhari administration wants to make a clean break with the experience that this country has had with most electoral exercise. And concerted efforts – beyond such lines as religion, ethnicity, tribe and political party – should be made, so that the elections are, if anything, peaceful.

    Therefore, there’s a pressing need for policy-makers of the various political parties and their standard-bearers to queue behind the Buhari administration to shun hate speech as they go about campaigning. They also have a compelling duty to admonish their supporters to be mindful of what they say in the run-up to, during and after the elections, if only not to create unnecessary tension in the policy – at the expensive price of national peace, security and harmony.

    When the Buhari administration threatened to withdraw the license of any broadcast medium that was found guilty of disseminating hate speech, it was with a conscious effort to nip in the bud what was perceived as likely to shove the country back to the early ’60s; if was not political rascality and brigandage, in which all the dominant political parties and their members were complicit, it was Operation Wet’ie – one of the top most acts of violence that buried the First Republic, following the military camp in January 1966. No responsible government would want a play-back of that tape.

    The prelude to that bloody event started with hate speech: intolerance, mud-slinging or character assassination, crude political intrigues that were centred unrepentantly on ethnicity, religion, tribalism and political affiliation.

    Worse still was the fact that they were very enlightened political leaders who, so it seemed, superintended over those untidy developments. Perhaps for their selfish political ambitions, the Nigerian nation state that they aspired to govern, should burn – and, possibly, too – to ashes.

    But, because the Fourth Republic has lasted longest than the three before it, all the political parties – their leaders and members – should see themselves as its worthy ambassadors or protectors. Their utterances should be constructive and their opposition to government policies or programmes should portray them as being of loyal disposition. Not being a specialist in hate speech that many a political party leader or captain of pressure group or activist have come to see as an expressway – via social media, in most instances – to sell him or herself as a representative of a certain genre of politics or social tendency that does not promote the cause of democracy and national stability.

    In place of propagating hate speech or fake news – ‘the bombing of the headquarters of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC)’ or Nigeria’s foreign reserves now empty’ – both fake news that some mischievous elements posted not so long ago on social media – one thinks it’s imperative for political, religious and tribal leaders, and media owners to do what they can – a la President Muhammadu Buhari – to the preservation of the unity, security and peace of the Nigerian nation state.

    After nearly two decades of the maladministration by the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), which was terminated by the dawn of the Buhari’s administration in 2015, most discerning Nigerians are tempted to hold firmly to the belief that hate speech was invented by opponents of the APC-led administration to plunge the country into a deep crisis – one that would have had a crude mix of political, religious and tribal complexions.

    In place of hate speech and fake news on social media, which thrives somewhat unrestrained, Nigeria’s political leaders and their associates, who indulge in them should channel their energy and resources towards how best, in league with the Buhari administration, to make history of the Boko Haram terrorist sect, steel the country’s economy in a post-recession period and assist INEC – via non-violence, honesty and transparency – to conduct an election, come 2019, that will sink the roots of democracy in the Fourth Republic.

    In fact, one’s opposition to hate speech and fake news – two pointed instruments of violence that could harm this country, if unchecked, especially during an election period – is akin to advocating “politics without bitterness” for which the late Waziri Ibrahim, the presidential candidate of the defunct Great Nigeria People’s Party (GNPP) was very much admired.

    He was on record to have cautioned one of his party loyalists in the late ’70s against what was akin to hate speech at a campaign rally in one of the towns in what was then Cross River State. That’s an example that should be emulated by today’s actors.

    Nigeria’s political leaders should bear in mind that it was the criminal abuse of freedom of speech or expression that led to the Rwandan genocide: a large-scale slaughter in which nearly one million people – a majority of them Hutu people – were slaughtered. Nigeria’s political and opinion leaders have a binding responsibility to shield the country and the Fourth Republic from such a catastrophe by joining hands with the Buhari administration against hate speech and fake news.

    Same goes for faceless bloggers on the social media and journalists on mainstream or traditional media, too. Politics and democracy should be seen as allies in building a culture of tolerance, good behavior, trading of concessions, and peace. In the Nigerian context, it presupposes a responsibility to build and strengthen national cohesion and harmony; one that should be less accommodating of hate speech. Nigeria needs clean politics not only to fortify her economy and unity, but also to present her as a model worthy of emulation by other African countries.

     

    • Uzuakpundu, is a journalist.
  • How to save  Nigeria, by  Peace committe

    How to save Nigeria, by Peace committe

    The Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar led National Peace Committee yesterday x-rayed developments in the polity and listed six steps to “save the country from danger”.

    In a statement titled: “A call for restraint”, signed by Gen. Abubakar and Catholic Bishop Hassan Kukah, the committee urged Nigerians not to stoke the fires of hate and divisiveness.

    The steps are:

    • on-going efforts to reach out to leaders from various parts of the country should be broadened into honest dialogue with all segments of the population to ensure that ordinary citizens get the opportunity to convey their views to government at the highest levels and get carried along in the formulation and implementation of government policies;
    • government should urgently work with the private and voluntary sectors to put in place measures to address the crisis of skills and jobs as key vectors of radicalisation;
    • the federal government should review, update and enforce all laws relating to citizenship in Nigeria to ensure the equality of all under the law;
    • the government should consult on the possibility of examining the reports of the Political Reforms Conference of 2005 and other National Conferences as basis for further and continuing dialogue on co-existence among communities in Nigeria;
    • politicians should deny support to groups that express disdain for peaceful coexistence among Nigerians;
    • support for the position of government on the need to ensure effective enforcement of laws that prohibit hate and divisive speeches that constitute a threat to our constitutional and collective right to live in a democracy founded on free expression.

    The committee advised politicians not to support groups that harbour disdain for peaceful coexistence among Nigerians.

    It also asked the government to consider the report of the 2005 political reforms and those of other national conferences as basis for further dialogue on co-existence among Nigerians.

    The committee however recommended six steps to save the nation from danger.

    The committee praised Acting President Yemi Osinbanjo for engaging with leaders of influence across the South-East and North to check tension in the country.

    The statement said: “We’ve recently come to the end of the holy month of Ramadan, for millions of Nigerians, a time of spirituality, introspection and the request for God’s forgiveness.

    “Therefore, there could be no better time than now as a nation for us all to be thoughtful, deliberate and make ourselves worthy of divine mercy, especially in the atmosphere of a steep rise in divisive and hateful rhetoric in our country.

    “It is indeed, the appropriate time to underscore the imperative of peaceful co-existence of all communities and all Nigerians.

    “We cannot afford at this or any other time to stoke the fires of hate and divisiveness in our body politic especially when ordinary Nigerians are engaged in difficult struggles to secure their livelihood, amidst rising insecurity and increasing fear.”

    The nation, the committee noted, has lost many Nigerians to violence and mass killings, adding that there should be no further plunge into ethnic conflict.

    It said: “We have lost too many of our citizens to random and diverse acts of violence, have many more maimed for life or living in displacement.

    “Tens of thousands of children have been orphaned by conflict and millions of our fellow citizens now face threats of starvation in the face of rising food insecurity.

    “In many parts of the country, mass killings go unpunished and unresolved, inter-communal clashes have become chronic, economic deprivations and growing social exclusion and feelings of alienation, particularly among the youths are being exploited by segments of the elite with potentially dangerous and painful consequences for us all.

    “These developments are sources of serious concern for the Nigeria Peace Committee. We know, of course that we are not alone in our worries and would like to commend the Acting President, Professor Yemi Osinbanjo, SAN, GCON, for engaging with leaders of influence across the South-East and North in a bid to check the rise of mutual hostility and tension that have been stoked by elements from parts of the country.

    “Nonetheless, the National Peace Committee appeals to further voices of leadership, reason and moderation from all communities in the country to reinforce the message of the Acting President.”

    But the committee attributed the renewed divisive politics to poor governance.

    It added: “In this regard, the National Peace Committee acknowledges that the drums of rising division also reflect the perceptions by our citizens that there is poor governance in Nigeria today.

    “Politicians who have failed in delivering on the mandate of the electorate for better livelihoods and neighbourhoods have, instead, found common cause with advocates of division and hate.

    “In many parts of the country, young people who have been left without means of livelihood or hope in their future have become converts to radicalisation preached by demagogues in various guises including ethnicity and religion.

    “At this time in Nigeria, more than ever before, we need government at all levels, which work for the people, with commitment to respect for the rule of law and to the security and well wellbeing of persons and communities in the country.

    “We also need credible institutions, an economy that guarantees a fair deal and outcome for hardworking people, better physical infrastructures and an enabling environment in which citizens can thrive.

    “ The National Peace Committee therefore calls on state governments to commit to developing their own people more and relying less on Abuja to fund their consumption through monthly allocations.”

    The committee urged Prof. Osinbajo to remain steadfast in his effort to reassure all communities and citizens of equal stake in the country.

  • We need peace and progress

    Many people desire to have peace in their lives; we need peace in Nigeria right now. What is peace and how can one have peace? Peace is translated as Alafia in Yoruba language, Udo in Igbo and Zaman Lafiya in Hausa.

    Peace is when there is calmness, order, love, rest, unity, quietness, comfort, security, friendship, reconciliation and joy. Where there is no peace we find war, violence, insecurity, disunity, stress, disturbances, hatred, restlessness, complain, murmuring, disagreement, fighting, worry, commotion, difficulty, hardship and failure.

    Tell me, if anyone has no peace going by what the absence of peace represent from the above, will the person have progress? Absolute NO. There can’t be progress/prosperity without peace. Satan very much knows that where there is no peace there will be no progress, so he does everything to ensure there is no peace in someone’s life, in a family and in a nation, so that we will not be who God destined for us to be. But he is a failure already because today we will be receiving help from God to have peace, live a peaceful life so we can prosper and move forward.

    How can one have peace?  To have peace, to experience and live in peace – one must first be at peace with the author and creator of peace- He who is peace Himself without whom there is no peace, am talking about God Almighty. The God of peace, who created the whole world and desires that we have peace and progress, God Himself tells us how to be at peace with Him and in turn live in peace and progress. Right now I see Nigeria has no peace, so much hatred, violence, disunity, hardship in the land, this is because Nigeria is not at peace with God- this has to change, Nigeria has to progress. Who is Nigeria- Me and you, so we are the ones to bring about the progress and prosperity we desire through PEACE.

    How to have peace- like I said earlier to have peace which births progress, you must first be at peace with God and there is only one way by which God has given us to be at peace with Him… “FOR UNTO US A CHILD IS BORN; UNTO US A SON IS GIVEN; AND THE GOVERNMENT SHALL BE UPON HIS SHOULDER. THESE WILL BE HIS ROYAL TITLES: “WONDERFUL,” “COUNSELOR,” “THE MIGHTY GOD,” “THE EVERLASTING FATHER,” “THE PRINCE OF PEACE.” His ever expanding, peaceful government will never end. He will rule with perfect fairness and justice and peace to all the nations of the world…” Who is the person spoken of here? The person is JESUS. God has given us His son Jesus- the prince of peace to give us peaceful lives and a peaceful government.

    He is the only way to be at peace with God and then have a peaceful government which will prosper. Jesus is the gospel that brings about peace with God, peace with God in turn brings about progress. The scripture says… “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life.”

    All you need do is to believe that Jesus is the Son of God, accept Him as the saviour of the world and your saviour and Lord then you will enjoy the peace of God eternally, for in Jesus alone is PEACE- God Himself made it so. If you say you believe in God Almighty, but not in Jesus, the one God sent to redeem mankind, then your belief has to be checked. Rejecting Him and trying to fix things by yourself will lead to what was said about the nation Israel in the Bible when they tried to bring about progress in their own strength…

    The Lord has spoken out to the braggart Israel who says that though our land lies in ruins now, we will rebuild it better than before. The sycamore trees are cut down, but we will replace them with cedars! The Lord’s reply to your bragging is to bring your enemies against you- the Syrians on the east and the Philistines on the west. With bared fangs they will destroy Israel. And even then the Lord’s anger against you will not be satisfied- His fist will still be posed to smash you.”

    The worst still remains that people will still keep arguing and rejecting Jesus; the saviour of the world, the prince of peace, without whom there cannot be lasting peace and progress. Israel’s rejection of the truth in spite of their predicament was predicted with grave consequence… “For after all this punishment you will not repent and turn to God. Therefore the Lord, in one day will destroy the leaders of Israel and the lying prophets, for the leaders of the people have led them on the paths of ruin.” 

    Let us learn from other people’s experiences and escape being destroyed eternally. I wish every Nigerian irrespective of religion, tribe, tongue, race, etc will put aside our differences, stubbornness and pride and embrace the TRUTH- to believe and accept Jesus the prince of peace so Nigeria can be at peace with God and have peace and progress….How  glorious it will be when this will happen. Oh Lord! Please let this happen.

    This will happen through individual decisions and also collectively; let every head of families, religions, tribes, tongues believe in Jesus themselves and call their wards to believe too so we can have rest from all the turmoil around and within us.

    Let us allow the prince of peace to reign over our lives, families, nation that we may have peace, love, health, well being, happiness, prosperity, progress and cessation of enmity, hatred, violence, war, bloodletting, kidnapping, murder, armed robbery, corruption and all the vices in our country. This is very possible if only we will all believe in Jesus.

    TEXT: Isaiah 9:1-21, John 3:16.

  • Washington Post article: Five ways Buhari can save Nigeria

    Washington Post article: Five ways Buhari can save Nigeria

    AN international affairs fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, Matthew Page, has identified five things President Muhammadu Buhari can do to get Nigeria back on track.

    In an article published in the Washington Post, he said the President must “carefully clean the house”, reduce the number of parastatals, “tame the white elephants”, rein in sub-national debt and legislate for the long run.

    On tackling graft, Page said Buhari’s reform agenda probably faces its greatest threat from corrupt, old-school politicians within the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    “The U.S. Department of Justice has accused one sitting APC governor of helping former dictator Sani Abacha steal at least $458 million from state coffers. Buhari should neutralise some of the APC’s shadiest figures, who could emerge as ‘veto players,’ as described in Carl LeVan’s recent book,” he said.

    On parastatals, he said  Buhari has an opportunity to realise immediate savings by eliminating or merging some of the more than 500 federal parastatals and boards, which he said were used by past presidents to cultivate national political allies and provincial cronies.

    “Buhari may also want to disband some nice-to-have but non-essential parastatals in light of competing priorities and current fiscal constraints.  Does Nigeria need to spend more than $4 million annually on a Center for Space Transport and Propulsion?” he wrote.

    According to Page, industry experts were worried that Buhari’s bid to revive oil refineries and steel mills might end up like other white elephant projects where state-owned enterprises were funded for long periods, even if they incur huge losses.

    “Instead, he should address the graft, inconsistent policies and opaque privatisation deals that experts say turned these industries into white elephants in the first place,” he suggested.

    Page said as Buhari tries to put Nigeria’s public finances back in order, the 36 states’ balance sheets are sinking deeper into the red, with his administration having bailed out 27 cash-strapped ones to the tune of $2.1 billion. He believes states’ borrowing trends were risky and needed to be addressed.

    On the need to legislate for the long run, Page said: “Nigeria will need to feel the ‘Buhari Effect’ (the sense, evident in a recent New York Times article, that there is a new sheriff in town) long after the president’s tenure is over.

    “The best way for him to protect his legacy is to partner with the National Assembly to enact legislation enshrining key reforms.  With few other politicians like him on the horizon, Buhari should put his legacy in writing.

    “A good place to start would be an act prohibiting the use of ‘security votes.’ Both a definitive article by Uche et al. and a 2007 Human Rights Watch report illustrate how these secretive budgetary line items are used by officials at all levels of government as slush funds.

    “Even Nigeria’s leading anti-corruption agency had a $1,000,000 security vote included in its 2014 budget. Buhari has his work cut out for him.”

  • National Conference: Use this lesson and save Nigeria

    As the National Conference is now taking off in Abuja, I consider it appropriate to repeat some things that I recently wrote in this column. Nigeria could soon break up – if anybody thinks otherwise, as things stand today, he is deceiving himself. Anybody who is conversant with the strong feelings of most Nigerian peoples can easily see it.

    But I believe that Nigeria can be saved – that Nigeria can survive, and go on from there to prosper in the world. The country called India offers us a very useful lesson. If we learn that lesson and use it, we can save our country. This is the historic task facing the National Conference as it sits in Abuja.

    India was, like Nigeria, created by the British. It was the largest British protectorate in Asia – in the same way that Nigeria was the largest British protectorate in Africa. Both Nigeria and India contain very many nationalities (otherwise known as “linguistic nations” in India) – Nigeria contains nearly 300 nationalities, India about 2000. At the independence of India in 1947, India was a “federation” designed by the British overlords. The British had created the Indian Federation merely for “administrative convenience”; the states or federating units of the federation were arbitrary blocks of territories based on administrative convenience – without any deference to the nationalities. The nationalities were grouped or split irrationally.

    Like the India of 1947, the Nigeria of 1960 (at independence) was also a federation designed by the British for administrative convenience – without deference to the nationalities. The nationalities were grouped arbitrarily into three regions, and some nationalities were split up along the boundaries of the three regions. When many nationalities cried out against this irrational treatment, the British rulers answered that they were not willing to change anything – and that Nigerians themselves could tackle the problem after independence. Since independence in 1960, the Nigerians (civilian politicians and military dictators) who have controlled the powers of the federal government, have just followed the example of the British – by creating states for administrative and ulterior political considerations, and by irrationally grouping and splitting our nationalities. Therefore, the Nigerian federation of 2014 is, unfortunately, still almost exactly like the Indian federation of 1947.

    Worse still, as Nigerian rulers have created smaller, weaker and poorer states, they have reasoned that these states are too weak to hold much power or responsibility, and they have consequently grabbed all power, all resources, and all resource control in our country, and heaped everything in the hands of the federal government. The federal government has therefore become a sick and unrestrained monster, mud-swimming insanely in limitless power and money, barging into everything and anything according to its whims and caprices, dragging all efficiency down, generating corruption, distorting electoral and judicial processes all over our country, and breeding hideous poverty. With the poverty grew crimes, insecurity, various species of conflicts, and now, terrorism. Today, most Nigerians have had enough – and Nigeria is about to implode.

    Parts of India (the far northern provinces which became Pakistan and Bangladesh) broke away soon after 1947. After that, the rest of India continued to shake; many nationalities wanted to break away. Today, Nigeria is shaking, and many nationalities want to break away. But Indians took action and saved their country. We Nigerians can save Nigeria too – simply by doing what the Indians did.

    Here is what the Indians did. Many Indians began to advocate that their federation should be restructured in such a way as to show respect to the nationalities, and make the nationalities happy to be members of the Indian federation. Most of the biggest politicians opposed this, claiming that it would only lead to the breaking up of the country. The Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, threatened that if it was adopted he would resign. But the proposal grew more and more popular, more and more intense. Finally, by 1953, the country accepted it. Nehru and other powerful politicians humbly bowed to the will of the majority. A National Commission was set up to look into the matter and to advise the country.

    The Commission recommended the following: First, that the nationalities and their different cultures should be respected, and that no nationality should be split by any boundary in the federation. Secondly that the larger nationalities should each form a state. Third, that the small and contiguous nationalities in various parts of India should negotiate among them and form states (no nationality was to be pushed into any state; the nationalities that agreed to form a state would negotiate the constitution of their state). Fourth, that a lot of powers should be devolved to the states from the federal government, to make the states strong, and that, in revenue allocation, the states should receive much more than the federal government.

    The process of devolution resulted in the following list of powers for the states: public order; police; education; local government; roads and transport; agriculture; land and land revenue; forests; fisheries; industry and trade; state public service commissions; and courts (except the Supreme Court of India). It also laid down another list on which the states and the centre would both have power to make laws – namely, criminal laws and their administration; economic and social planning; commercial and industrial monopolies; shipping and navigation on the inland waterways; drugs; ports; courts and civil procedures. The federal (or union) government was given powers over such subjects as defence, foreign policy, inter-state commerce, the Supreme Court, etc. In revenue allocation, the states were given a percentage much larger than that of the Federal Government. Today, it is 85% for the states and 15% for the federal government.

    An Indian scholar and statesman, Dr. S.D. Muni, has described the effects of this careful restructuring as follows: “The elaborate structure of power devolution has combined with the linguistic basis of federal unity to facilitate the management of cultural diversity in India and to help mitigate pulls towards separatism and disintegration”. Muni adds that both at the federal and state levels, Indians are dedicated to “a consciously followed approach to preserve and promote the cultural specificities of diverse groups”, and that that “has helped such groups identify with the national mainstream”. Finally, the health of the whole structure has been greatly helped by the fact that Indians have consciously remained loyal to the integrity of their democratic institutions and to democratic politics.

    That is it. Surely we Nigerians are able to take these same steps and save our country. The National Conferenceshould restructure our federation along the same lines. We should also establish effective measures for upholding democratic politics in our country, the integrity of our elections and courts, and the handling of our public accounts. These steps will surely benefit our country, our states, our nationalities, our institutions, and all of us Nigerians. They cannot conceivably hurt any Nigerian nationality or group. Therefore, hopefully, no Nigerian nationality or group will, at the National Conference, put up a resistance to them. I fear that if any nationality or group resists these measures at the National Conference, Nigeria might quickly evaporate on the spot. We must all join hands to prevent that.

  • Help save Nigeria!

    SIR: There are two contentious issues threatening a possible drift to anarchy or catastrophic collapse of our great country Nigeria; the two must be promptly and transparently decided before holding the 2015 general elections.

    First, if we must live together as Nigerians, should it be as presently constituted? Perhaps we should convert existing six geopolitical zones into autonomous, self-governing regions or provinces under the leadership of a non-executive premier.

    They should control their own resources and contribute 13-15 per cent of their earned resource-revenue to sustain the federal government with drastic ally reduced membership of House of Representative. The President, at the federal level should be non-executive.

    Second, should Nigerians continue to fund our over-paid, under-performing and corruption-invested legislature or should members revert to being part-time and allowance receiving legislators, as earlier was.

    Truthfully, commencing the country’s restructuring with the conveyance of a national conference, grossly manipulated constitution amendment or the holding of an open debate between Dr. Oby Ezekwesili and legislators will only postpone the country’s doomsday. Every Nigerian 18 years old and above, should be allowed to directly participate in the determination of the two issues raised here-above, through the conduct of a simultaneous, countrywide, “queue & count national referendum”.

    Presently, this is where patriotic Nigerians should focus their combined demand.

    God save Nigeria!

    • Oshin Ayoade,

    Epe, Lagos State.

     

  • Let’s rise to save Nigeria, again

    SIR: The Jonathan government is no longer in any pretence to pass for a government, but a rampage. The charade masquerading as governance is gradually embracing its precincts of extinction. In its incurable passion for self immolation, the fear is rife that it does not accomplish its avowed aim by pulling an already decrepit country along with it. There is no doubting the fact that Jonathan’s government has become, even in its paralytic state; self-serving.

    This verdict is devoid of grudge or malice, albeit the government itself has done nothing unworthy of it! A hapless and clueless government is making hopelessness so commonplace that it is almost a march of idleness to dream! It is a government that kills everything decent and noble.

    The children of the present Nigeria no longer see a future ahead of them worthy of hopeful embrace. What with insecurity and no guarantee for the safety of human life? Life and living, than at any other time in Nigeria, assume the same dangerous pattern; the brutish and the short!

    The youth of the present Nigeria has lost reasons for dreams, given the cluelessness of and the dearth of leadership. The older generation is mentally stranded in unfathomable bewilderment. The question forcibly inhabiting their awe-primed lips seem to be; how did we get here, this is a different Nigeria from the one we fought to make independent!

    Or what is the name for a government which surreptitiously forlorn its electoral mandate to embrace a priceless arena with a state governor? And in its mindless frenzy to foster the annihilation of the governor, it began to desecrate the country’s constitutional sacristy, an arena it swore under oath to defend? Or by what description does a government that consistently but shamelessly lends authenticity to unalloyed illegalities and breaches of everything sanctified be named?

    How can a rational conviction excepting irrationality (even insanity?) be grounded that the numerical number 16, is greater than 19? Only in a democratic fantasia, passing for a government, such as the present can that be excused!

    And l also hasten to ask if it does not cut short of irredeemable democratic dementia, how in God’s earth does five out of 36 house members constitutionally arm to impeach a speaker? Somebody somewhere must as a matter of urgency call the budding dictatorial leviathan to the democratic order. Nigerians paid very direful price to get the present near-semblance of democratic rule in place, than to sit tail-in-thigh and watch a fraudulent rulership deconstruct that labour of tears and pains with its intolerably organised cluelessness and arrogance.

    Where are the Tunde Bakares? Where are all lovers of constitutional democracy; where are all lovers of Nigeria? It is time to save her, again!

    • Wole Jones

    Lagos

  • Save Nigeria from shame

    NIGERIA Football Federation (NFF) has urged the Super Eagles to double their efforts in their last group C game against Ethiopia on Tuesday to qualify for the quarter final of the ongoing Africa cup of Nations in South Africa.

    The Super Eagles played a 1-1 draw against the Chipolopolo of Zambia on Friday to put the team’s qualification on a tight rope.

    A member of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF), Ahmed Muazu Kawu in South Africa said it will be an embarrassment should the Super Eagles fail to make it to the next round of the competition

    He insisted that the Federation still has faith in the Stephen Keshi technical crew and expressed confidence that the team will not only reach the quarter final but will make it to the final if the players put in their best.

    “We are happy with the way the boys have been playing so far. We could all see that there was an improvement in their game against Zambia considering what they played against Burkina Faso on Monday. Although, nobody is happy that we are not winning our matches but if you look at the circumstances that surrounded our games we will still not to condemn our players.