Tag: Sierra-Leone

  • Like Nigeria, Ghana, The Gambia …and now Sierra Leone

    The train, which took off in Nigeria with opposition candidate winning the presidential election, has berth in Ghana, Gambia and Liberia. Sierre Leone joined the league on Wednesday with opposition leader Julius Maada Bio being sworn in as president.

    Sierra Leone’s opposition challenger Julius Maada Bio secured his first term in office as a civilian Wednesday when he was declared the winner of a controversial presidential run-off, which his opponent, Samura Kamara, vowed to contest the result.

    With this feat, Bio has joined a trend which started in Nigeria. Then opposition candidate Muhammadu Buhari defeated Dr. Goodluck Jonathan. The trend soon spread to Ghana. The Gambia and Liberia are also now in the hands of hithertho opposition parties.

    Bio, a former soldier who briefly led a military junta more than two decades ago, won 51.81 per cent of ballots in last month’s election, according to official results.

    He beat former ruling party candidate Kamara, who secured 48.19 per cent of the vote, ending a decade in power for Kamara’s All Peoples’ Congress (APC) in the poor West African nation.

    Cheers and songs erupted among thousands of supporters of Bio and his Sierra Leone People’s Party, who were gathered in the capital Freetown on Wednesday evening. Shortly after the announcement, Bio was sworn in as president, handed a symbolic command baton by the country’s top judge.

    The official results of the vote had been delayed by a dispute over the method of tallying that left ballot papers from 11,000 polling stations uncounted.

    The campaign was characterised by ugly verbal exchanges and sporadic violence with Bio accusing the APC of using police intimidation against his party.

    Police reported a string of attacks on candidates and supporters on both sides since the first round on March 7 – which Bio narrowly won – after which Kamara declared that “the safety and security of Sierra Leone is in our hands”.

    Bio, a straight-talking retired brigadier, has blasted the government’s closeness to China, while Kamara had presented himself as a continuity candidate.

     

    Observers ‘satisfied’

     

    Although international observers reported some “issues” during the March 31 second round that saw heightened security measures, the monitors declared themselves “satisfied” with the overall conduct of the poll.

    Earlier Wednesday, Kamara supporters marched in Freetown, tearing down Bio posters and alleging “foreign meddling” in the vote, an AFP reporter said. Security forces erected a cordon around Bio’s SLPP party headquarters, where hundreds of supporters had already begun celebrating victory ahead of the expected official results.

    A total of 3.1-million people were registered to vote in the first presidential poll since a 2014-2016 Ebola outbreak that killed 4 000 people. Kamara’s party’s term was also marred by a mudslide that struck Freetown last year, killing hundreds of people.

    One of the world’s poorest nations despite huge mineral and diamond deposits, Sierra Leone is recovering only gradually from war and disease. Its economy remains fragile, with corruption widespread in the former British colony.

    Political loyalties are often divided along ethnic lines and traumatic memories of the 1991-2002 civil war run deep.

     

    U.S. Embassy greets new president

     

    The U.S. Department of State congratulated the new President and Vice President of Sierra Leone.

    A statement by its embassy said: “The National Electoral Commission of Sierra Leone has declared Retired Brigadier Julius Maada Bio and Dr. Mohamed Juldeh Jalloh of the Sierra Leone People’s Party the winners of the run-off election. As a longstanding friend, the United States congratulates the people of Serra Leone on their active and peaceful participation in the presidential elections held on March 31, which is a testament to the strength and resilience of Sierra Leone’s democracy. We look forward to working with President Julius Maada Bio to further strengthen our bilateral relationship.

    “We commend the National Electoral Commission for administering an orderly, well-managed process. We also recognise the important role Sierra Leone’s political parties and civil society organisations played in these elections, and we welcome the statements by international and domestic observer missions affirming the credibility of the election. Now is the time for all leaders to demonstrate their continued commitment to the constitution, Sierra Leone’s democratic institutions, and her people. “Finally, we would like to recognise President Ernest Bai Koroma for his commitment to an orderly and timely political transition.

    “We are committed to working closely with the Government of Sierra Leone and we look forward to advancing our longstanding mutual interests in economic development, trade, health, and the strengthening of democratic institutions.”

     

    Losing party intends to

    challenge vote results

     

    But hopes for a smooth transition were soon thrown into doubt after Kamara said he was rejecting the National Election Commission’s results.

    “We dispute the results and we will take legal action to correct them,” Kamara said in a televised address, calling on his supporters to stay calm. The results, he added, “do not reflect the party’s many concerns about massive ballot box stuffing, supernumerary votes and other irregularities.”

    He said his APC party intends to take “appropriate legal action.”

    Any registered voter has seven days to petition the Supreme Court over the results.

     

    The man Julius Maada Bio

     

    Bio (born May 12, 1964) is a Sierra Leonean politician and the fifth and current president of Sierra Leone since

    As the candidate of the main opposition Sierra Leone People’s Party, Bio defeated Samura Kamara of the ruling All People’s Congress party in the runoff in the 2018 Sierra Leone presidential election. Bio succeeded Ernest Bai Koroma as president, who was constitutionally ineligible for the presidency because he had served the maximum two five year terms.

    Bio is a retired Brigadier in the Sierra Leone Military. He was the military Head of State of Sierra Leone from January 16, 1996 to March 29, 1996 under the National Provisional Ruling Council.

    He was the SLPP presidential candidate in the 2012 presidential election, having won the nomination at the July 31, 2011 SLPP national convention held at the Miatta Conference Hall in Freetown.

    Bio led a military coup in Sierra Leone on January 16, 1996, ousting his close friend and the leader of the NPRC junta government, Captain Valentine Strasser, following a division within senior members of the NPRC junta.

    In his first public speech after the coup, Bio justified his actions as a means to return Sierra Leone to a democratically elected civilian government and end the Sierra Leone civil war.

    He fulfilled his promise to return Sierra Leone to democracy; and he handed power to Ahmad Tejan Kabbah of the SLPP following the latter’s victory in the 1996 presidential election.

    After retiring from the military in 1996, Bio moved to the United States, where he earned a Masters Degree in International Affairs from American University in Washington, D.C. He also served as the president of International Systems Science Corporation, a consulting and investment management firm based in the United States.

    He is an ethnic Sherbro and a native of Bonthe District in Southern Sierra Leone. Bio is a practicing Roman Catholic Christian. His wife Fatima is a practicing Muslim, and an ethnic Mandingo from Koidu, Kono District in eastern Sierra Leone.

     

  • Sierra Leone candidate Kamara to challenge presidential runoff result

    Presidential candidate of the All People’s Congress (APC), Samura Kamara on Thursday threatened to challenge the outcome of the presidential runoff.

    Meanwhile, Kamara has refused to congratulate President-elect Julius Maada Bio.

    He stated that the National Electoral Commission failed to look into complaint made by the APC, regarding voting in the eastern part of the country, stronghold of the Sierra Leone People’s Party.

    He was speaking on the Sierra Leone Broadcasting Corporation radio, where he called on supporters of the party to exercise patience and allow peace to rein.

    Read Also:  Kamara eyes Elephants’ upset

    The presidential runoff election was contested between Maada Bio of the SLPP and Samura Kamara of the APC.

    Maada emerged winner with 51.81 per cent of votes while Kamara secured 48.19 per cent.

    Julius Maada Bio has been sworn in as the president of the country and his inauguration would take place anytime soon.

    The APC was the ruling party before this election.

    NAN

  • Julius Bio sworn in as new Sierra Leone president

    Opposition candidate and former military junta leader Julius Bio was sworn in as Sierra Leone’s new president late on Wednesday, just hours after the elections commission announced his victory in a tight run-off poll.

    He now faces the difficult task of rebuilding the impoverished West African nation’s economy that was dragged down by the world’s deadliest Ebola epidemic and a global slump in commodity prices.

    Representing the Sierra Leone People’s Party ( SLPP ), Bio won 51.81 per cent of votes cast in the March 31 poll, according to results announced by the National Electoral Commission ( NEC ) on Wednesday.

    He defeated former foreign affairs minister and ruling All People’s Congress ( APC ) candidate Samura Kamara, who had held a slight lead based on partial results earlier in the day but in the end garnered 48.19 per cent.

    Dressed in traditional white robes, Maada Bio was sworn in just before midnight at a hotel in the capital Freetown, raising in the air the Bible upon which he swore the oath of office to the cheers of supporters.

    “This is the dawn of a new era. The people of this great nation have voted to take a new direction,” he said in a speech following the short ceremony in which he made an appeal for national unity.

    “We have only one country, Sierra Leone, and we are all one people.”

    Bio, who briefly ruled Sierra Leone as head of a military junta in 1996, replaces outgoing President Ernest Koroma, who could not seek re-election due to term limits.

    The largely peaceful election process has come as a relief for the country of seven million people, who in the 1990s endured a brutal civil war fueled by the diamond trade and notorious for its drug-addled child soldiers and punitive amputations.

    SLPP supporters packed into the NEC headquarters on Wednesday, and following the announcement of the election results party officials urged the Maada Bio’s backers to remain calm.

    “Celebrate responsibly. Do not disturb your neighbour. Victory for all men, not victory for some.

    “Everyone in, no one out,” the party’s campaign manager Ali Kabba said.

    Opposition supporters, confident of victory, sang and danced in the streets of Freetown on Wednesday evening hours before Bio was officially declared the winner.

    “I feel happy about the results. I am here because my president Julius Maada Bio has won the election in this country,” said Adolfus Kargbo, among a group of SLPP supporters chanting Maada Bio’s name.

    Reuters/NAN

  • Opposition’s candidate, Julius Bio wins Sierra Leone’s presidential poll

    The opposition party’s candidate, Rtd Brig Julius Madaa Bio of the Sierra Leone Peoples Party  (SLPP) has been declared  the winner  of the March 31 Sierra Leone Presidential run-off election.
    According  to the result announced by the Sierra Leone’s National Electoral  Commission (NEC) on Wednesday  in Freetown, Bio received  1,319,406 votes representing 51.81 per cent of the total valid votes cast, 2,546,577, to defeat the candidate of the ruling party.
    According to  the result  Kamara  Wilson  of the ruling All Peoples Congress (APC)  polled 1,227,171 votes, representing 48.19 per cent of the valid votes cast.

    The Chairman  of NEC,  Mohamed Conteh,who announced the result,  said that the national turn out in the election  was 2,578,271 representing 81.11 registered voters,  while 31,694 invalid votes were recorded.

    “Therefore, in exercise of the powers conferred on me as National Returning Officer by sections 52(2) and 94(4) of the Public Elections Act, 2012 (Act No 4 of 20l2), I hereby certify that Bio Julius Manda having polled 1,319,406 of the valid votes cast in the March 31 Presidential election run-off has been duly elected President of the Republic of Sierra Leone.

    Any citizen of Sierra Leone who has lawfully voted in this election may challenge the validity of the said election of the President by petition to the Supreme Court of Sierra Leone, within seven days after the declaration of Presidential result pursuant to section 55(1) of the Public Elections Act, 2012 (Act No. 4 of 2012),” Conteh said.

     Bio is to take office as Sierra Leone’s 5th President having won the  run-off election with more than 92,000 vote margin against his APC counterpart.

    Bio replaced President Ernest Bai Koroma of APC, who has completed his two terms of five years each.

    Under Sierra Leone’s constitution, a winning candidate is sworn in once the Chief Electoral Officer certifies the results of the election, followed by official inauguration later.

    Fourteen  political parties participated in the first ballot which was conducted  on March 7, where no candidate  secured  the mandatory  55 per cent of the total  valid votes cast.

    The News Agency  of Nigeria (NAN)  recalls that the opposition candidate,  Bio led the final result of the first ballot with 1,097, 482 votes, making 43.3 per cent of the 2, 537,122 valid votes cast in the polls.

    Samura Kamara of APC at the first ballot  came a close second with 1,082, 748 votes, representing 42.7 per cent of the total votes cast.

    The  run-off election became necessary since none of the candidates was able to get 51 per cent of the total votes cast,   as  provided by the country’s constitution (NAN)

  • Sierra Leone High Court halts Tuesday’s Presidential run-off poll

    A High Court in Freetown on Saturday order ordered a halt to the Sierra Leone Presidential run-off presidential election scheduled for March 27.

    The court ordered that the run off poll should be put on hold pending the hearing of a petition by private lawyer, Ibrahim Sorie Koroma of Port Loko District, Northern Province, over alleged electoral malpractices during March 7 inconclusive election.

    Koroma had on March 22 filed a petition before the Court in Freetown, seeking an injunction to suspend the March 27 Presidential run-off election between the candidates of the opposition Sierra Leone People’s Party and the ruling All Peoples Congress.

    The Lawyer in a 10-page petition, supported by an affidavit on his own behalf, joined the Chief Electoral Commissioner, the National Electoral Commission and the Attorney General and Justice Minister as co-defendants

    The lawyer, apart from seeking an interlocutory injunction restraining the run-off vote, he is also praying the High Court to order a recount of all the 2.6 million votes cast during the March 7 general elections.

    He is also seeking that the Defendants should also be restrained from further announcing or publishing the Presidential, Parliamentary or Local Council Elections results pending the hearing and determination of his application.

    The plaintiff, represented by another lawyer Lansan Dumbuya, in the application filed on Tuesday, is also seeking an Order to conduct a forensic audit on the internal systems and the entire electioneering system conducted by NEC on March 7.

    The case will be heard on March 26.

    Meanwhile, Sierra Leone’s NEC said it had received an interim injunction against the conduct of the run-off election.

    The Chairman of NEC, Mohamad Conteh, in a statement he issued on Saturday said that the “Commission will temporarily cease all logistical preparations for the run-off”.

    He appealed to Siera Leoneans to be patient “as our institutions carry out their respective duties, in accordance with our Constitution”.

    Conteh said the Commission was looking forward to  the continued support of the Sierra Leone Police and the security sector “to secure NEC’s premises, staff and sensitive election materials”.

    Under Sierra Leone’s 1991 Constitution, “a person elected to the office of President shall assume that office on the day upon which he is declared elected by the Returning Officer, or upon the date that his (her) predecessor’s term of office expires, whichever is the latter.”(NAN)

  • Sierra Leonians vote today, observers appeal for peace

    Sierra Leonians vote today, observers appeal for peace

    Voters in Sierra Leone are trooping out today for presidential, parliamentary and local council polls.

    Sierra Leone’s 3.17 million registered voters out of an estimated population of seven million are expected to cast their ballots in 11,122 polling states across the country.

    On the eve of the election, the heads of six International Election Observation Missions (IEOMs) called on all stakeholders in the country to ensure peaceful and credible elections.

    The observers  made the appeal, according a statement issued by Mr Paul Ejime, the spokesman  of ECOWAS Network of Electoral Commission (ECONEC) including ECOWAS, African Union (AU), and the Commonwealth.

    Other missions are the Electoral Institute for Sustainable Democracy in Africa (EISA), European Union (EU), and The Carter Center (TCC).

    The missions urged the political leaders, parties and their supporters to respect the rule of law during balloting and through the results tallying process.
They further urged them to uphold their commitments under the ‘Freetown Declaration’, which was signed by presidential candidates on 28 February.

    “The IEOMs encouraged the candidates to accept the outcome of the elections in line with Article 9 of the ECOWAS Supplementary Protocol on Democracy and Good Governance (2001) .

    “In the event of complaints or disputes, we encourage candidates to seek redress through legal channels whilst at all times refraining from acts of violence and intimidation.

    ”
The missions called on the National Electoral Commission (NEC) and party polling agents “to conduct their duties in a professional manner to ensure that “the elections are transparent, credible and conducted in accordance with prescribed laws and regulations.”

    It added that the missions looked up to the government of Sierra Leone to uphold its constitutional obligations to provide a secure environment that guarantees the safety of candidates, voters, NEC officials and electoral materials.

    “We  urged the security personnel to demonstrate professionalism and enforce the law in a neutral and proportional manner.”

    The meeting was attended by Nigeria’s former President Goodluck Jonathan, Head of EISA Mission, Prof Amos Sawyer, Liberia’s former Interim President and Head of ECOWAS Mission; South African former President, Kgalema Motlanthe; and Head of the AU Mission.

    Others were Ghana’s former President, John Mahama., Head of the Commonwealth Mission; Ms. Jean Lambert, Head of EU Mission and Mr Larry Garber, for The Carter Center.
Also present was the ECOWAS Commissioner for Political Affairs, Peace and Security, Gen. Francis Behanzin, who is leading the ECOWAS Commission’s Technical Support Team for the Prof. Sawyer-led 65-member ECOWAS Observation Mission.

    The IEOMs, have deployed more than 250  observers across Sierra Leone’s 16 Administrative Districts.

    Sierra Leone’s 3.17 million registered voters out of an estimated population of seven million will cast their ballots in 11,122 polling states across the country on Wednesday.

    The civil society under the umbrella of the National Election Watch (NEW) is deploying one citizen observer to each of the 11.122 polling stations in 3,300 Polling Centres nationwide.

    The civil society under the umbrella of the National Election Watch (NEW) is deploying one citizen observer to each of the 11.122 polling stations in 3,300 Polling Centres nationwide.(NAN)

  • Jonathan seeks credible, peaceful elections, in Sierra Leone

    Jonathan seeks credible, peaceful elections, in Sierra Leone

    …Meets President Koroma, NEC, candidates, other stakeholders

    Ahead of Wednesday’s general elections in Sierra Leone, former President Goodluck Jonathan has urged the people of the West African nation to conduct peaceful and credible polls.

    The former President who is leader of the Electoral Institute for Sustainable Democracy in Africa (EISA) Observer Mission to the March 7 elections gave the advice while meeting with different stakeholders in Freetown.

    A statement by Jonathan’s media adviser Ikechukwu Eze said that Jonathan had met with Sierra Leonean President Ernest Bai Koroma, chairman of the National Electoral Commission (NEC) Mohammed Conteh, chairman of the Political Party Registration Council (PPRC) Justice Patrick Hamilton, some Presidential candidates as well as leaders of the international community, youth associations, media unions, security outfits and civil society organisations.

    Jonathan advised the stakeholders to ensure non-violent processes during the elections.

    He said “The need to sustain the peace that the good people of Sierra Leone have been enjoying since the end of the civil war.

    “As Africans we have to avoid the temptation of playing politics of desperation. It should be played without bitterness or rancor, with our mind focused on development and the welfare of our people.” he said

    He added that the Mission was in the country to support “the integrity of the electoral processes through diligent observation of the polling activities in line with the rules and code of conduct for international election observers.”

    While welcoming Jonathan to his office the PPRC boss Justice Hamilton thanked the former President for his roles and contributions to the growth of democracy in Sierra Leone.

    He said: “I believe that the reason you are here is to see that we have something similar to the credible and transparent elections you organized as President of Nigeria.”

    Speaking in the same vein, the Presidential Candidate of the main opposition party, Sierra Leonean Peoples Party (SLPP) Brig. Gen Julius Maada Bio (rtd), noted that the presence of Jonathan and other former African Presidents in Sierra Leone was an indication that democracy is on the rise on the continent.”

    Meanwhile the international election observation missions (IEOMs) present in Sierra Leone on Tuesday issued a joint statement urging the people of the country to ensure that these elections “are transparent, credible and conducted in accordance with prescribed laws and
    regulations.”

    The statement issued by Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), African Union (AU), The Commonwealth, Electoral Institute for Sustainable Democracy in Africa (EISA), European Union (EU), and The Carter Center (TCC) reads: “We recognise that the 2018 elections in Sierra Leone, the fourth since the end of the civil war, are critical to the maintenance of peace and stability in the country.

    Based on consultations with Sierra Leonean stakeholders over the past weeks, have noted the efforts of the National Electoral Commission, the Political Parties Registration Commission, the Judiciary, the Office of National Security, the Sierra Leone Police, civil society, the media and other key institutions towards the conduct of peaceful and transparent elections.

    “We call on the political leaders, parties and their supporters to ensure peaceful elections and respect for the rule of law as they go to the polls tomorrow (Wednesday) and through the results tallying process. Further urge them to uphold their commitments under the ‘Freetown Declaration’, which was signed by presidential candidates on 28 February 2018.

    “We further call on the NEC and party polling agents to conduct their duties in a professional manner, which would ensure that these elections are transparent, credible and conducted in accordance with prescribed laws and regulations.

    “We encourage candidates to accept the outcome of the elections in line with Article 9 of the ECOWAS Supplementary Protocol on Democracy and Good Governance (2001) and, in the event of complaints or disputes, encourage candidates to seek redress through legal channels
    whilst at all times refraining from acts of violence and intimidation.

    “We look to the government of Sierra Leone to uphold its constitutional obligations to provide a secure environment that guarantees the safety of candidates, voters, NEC officials and
    electoral materials. The missions urge the security agencies throughout the country to demonstrate professionalism and to enforce the law in a neutral and proportional manner. The different IEOMs have deployed over 250 international observers across the country to follow
    all aspects of Election Day and some will remain to observe the tallying process and post-election period.”

    Read Also: Search for unity begins in Jonathan’s home

  • China approves domestically-developed Ebola vaccine

    China approves domestically-developed Ebola vaccine

    China has approved a domestically developed Ebola vaccine, according to China Food and Drug Administration ( CFDA ) on Friday.

    CFDA said the vaccine was developed by Academy of Military Medical Sciences and CanSino Biologics INC.

    It stated that the approval made China the third country to develop vaccine against Ebola following  United States and Russia.

    The vaccine is based on 2014 mutant gene type and in the form of freeze-dried powder which can
    remain stable for at least two weeks in temperatures of up to 37 degrees Celsius and suitable for climate in West Africa.

    The vaccine was clinically approved by CFDA in February 2015 and underwent clinical trials in Sierra Leone, one of the country’s worst hit by Ebola.

    The virus was discovered in 1976 and severely affected countries including Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone from 2013, claiming the lives of more than 11,000 people.

    NAN

  • Learning from Liberia

    A former university course mate of mine from Liberia gave me a call recently. He was among several students from Liberia, Sierra Leone, Namibia and South Africa that Nigeria offered scholarship to study in the country in the 1990s. Yes, Nigeria was really the big brother of Africa back then. We played a key and strategic role toward the end of colonial rule in South Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), Angola and Mozambique and in the end of apartheid in South Africa.

    We were also a staunch supporter of the Frontline States of Angola, Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe which was established to achieve democratic rule in South Africa. Back then we had a robust foreign policy thrust with Africa as the “centerpiece.” This was the major reason most Nigerians were saddened that we were not duly recognised and accorded our dues and earned respect during the burial of Nelson Mandela.

    My ex-course mate expressed sadness at the state of insecurity in the country. Because of the Liberian civil war, he travelled to Guinea as a refugee from where he came to Nigeria and was granted scholarship by the government. He is one grateful Liberian that sees himself as a Nigerian any day.

    “Are Nigerians aware of what they are toying with?” was his question to me after we finished discussing old times. “The untold misery I witnessed in my country and Sierra Leone is better imagined. I hope Nigerians will rise up and nip this in the bud before it gets out of hand. Nobody is safe during a civil war; we are still battling to put ourselves together over two decades after the war. I love Nigeria for giving me a degree and pray this ‘madness’ ends before degenerating into something else. I am eternally grateful for all you guys did for me.”

    After I hung up I reflected on some of the gory stories he told about their civil war, some of which I already knew because I have friends who fought in that brutal war, some never came back alive. I must confess that sometimes I feel weighed down, especially with the senseless killings of innocent citizens by elusive “herdsmen.” And now IPOB has been added to the dangerous mix just when we are trying to shake off Boko Haram.

    Surely, we all hope Nigeria pulls through. But that should not be taken for granted or to underscore the gravity of the issues the country faces in the context of a changing global order and the need for deep thinking and strategic action. This is time to put on our thinking cap on and be reasonable for once.

    Samuel Huntington once noted that the force that seems to be moving the world these days is not political ideology, but political identity. Everyone is asking the question: Who are we? And who are we not?

    The question is imperative for today. While answering the former may be contentious because of inflamed ethnic, regional and religious tensions in Nigeria today, the latter can be answered immediately that we are not suicide bombers neither are we terrorists or murderers.

    In the midst of this it appears our intelligentsias have gone to sleep. Gone are the days when our ivory towers use to be a beehive of heightened intellectual activities. Gone also are the days when economists, sociologists, historians and political scientists gather to take interdisciplinary approaches to solving complex national problems that the government often find very useful.

    This is why it is frightening that deep thinking is sorely missing in Nigeria and the need to urgently popularise it again. When the bombs started to go off in the Northeast, Abuja and elsewhere, there were no serious workshop and strategic meetings organised by groups to rethink the social and political currents of the new wave of terrorism. Apart from a touch here and there, we almost never heard insightful expositions by our scholars and social critics. This is a clear evidence of the dearth of public reason.

    The sad story is that this grave crisis has not elicited the expected rigorous thinking and analysis from policy and intellectual circles in Nigeria. There have been no high-profile intellectual events to headline a serious commitment on the part of researchers and policy thinkers to properly understand and prepare for what may be a persistent challenge of the 21th Century for Nigeria.

    With the exception of some editorials and often biased op-eds, we lack a commendable civic engagement aimed at proffering solutions to our crises.  How many seminars, workshops and focus group meetings have been convened to think through our crises? Definitely, the absence of such sort of engagements illustrates the low-energy public intellectualism that defines our public space.

    It is also depressing, but true, that it is mainly in foreign think tanks and centres that our crises are receiving the quality attention it deserves from scholars and policymakers. The government, intellectual and civil society actors have not done well in engaging with the challenges of nation building. The danger of this lack of intellectual rigour and vigour is that we may not effectively overcome these challenges if efforts are not made to contain it.

    Is because of our ‘underdeveloped’ nature? The predicament of ‘underdevelopment’ approximates to the chronic absence of problem-solving thinking. Whether viewed in terms of the weakness of institutions or the low quality of goods and services, countries that persist in underdevelopment are those that are unable to socially produce quality solutions to environmental, social, economic and political challenges.

    It is not rocket science that developed societies have successfully mainstreamed their universities and other epistemic communities with their policymaking institutions. The marriage of knowledge production and policymaking is definitive of societies that are on the forward march.

    Prof Nail Fergusson, a Harvard historian, in one of his books: “The Great Degeneration: How Institutions Decay and Economies Die” said the real issue for societies is the quality of public reason. He shows how the degeneration of western society occurred or could occur. What stands out from his analysis however is that the quality of institutions for coordinating social transactions makes the critical difference between prospering and declining societies. So, when societies think clearly and act intelligently, they create superior social institutions to solve their problems. But when public reason is weak then problems persist or compound.

    The dilemma of public reason in Nigeria is very evident and troubling. The quality of debate is also depressing. In the place of logic there is anger and fury. This is where a vibrant civil society comes in. The focus of civil society is formulating policies and programmes that affect social and economic outcomes for the people. It plays its role best when it plays the policy game and not politically partisan. Of course, policy is politics. But that is only to the extent that policy seeks to achieve broader political outcomes. Not just partisan outcomes.

    As we grapple with our security challenges, we need to remind ourselves that most of the more difficult problems we face today are not the products of mere partisan politicking. They are outcomes of leadership. And leadership begins with mobilising ideas that could change situations.

    Our continued underdevelopment is a product of low quality public reason. If we don’t improve the quality of public reasons, if civil leaders don’t see problems as opportunity for creative thinking and mobilise social engagement in search of solutions, we will wake up after much politicking and many elections and discover we have simply compounded our problems. Just like my Liberian ex-course mate prays, I also pray we don’t get to that stage.

    In order to bypass that stage, we need to realise that creative ideas are not generated through superficial one-off encounter; they are generated through persistent, intense, rational and deep thinking. We must realise that solutions to social problems do not end with good ideas alone. There should be great leaders as well who can use the good ideas generated to mobilise citizens toward quality and positive collective actions.

    How we need such leaders in these trying times.

  • Super Eagles in Accra for WAFU

    Super Eagles in Accra for WAFU

    The Super Eagles on Sunday night landed in the Ghanaian capital, Accra, ahead of their West Africa Football Union ( WAFU ) Cup of Nations opener against Sierra Leone.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Super Eagles will take on the Leone Stars of Sierra Leone in a Group A clash on Monday at 6 p.m. Ghana time (7 p.m. Nigeria time).

    According to a statement by the Nigeria Football Federation ( NFF ), the Super Eagles landed in Accra and immediately proceeded to Takoradi by road.

    “The trip to Takoradi, where all the participating teams except the host team, Ghana are being accommodated, took four hours.

    “Nigeria’s flag bearers are accommodated at the Best Western Hotel in the twin city of Sekondi,’’ the statement said.

    It quoted the Eagles’ Team Administrator, Dayo Achor, as saying that the Nigerian team would depart Takoradi for Cape Coast, a journey of an hour and half by road at 3 p.m. on Monday, for the game against the Leone Stars.

    Victory over the Leone Stars will take Nigeria into the tournament’s group phase contest that will see the surviving eight teams divided into two groups of four teams each.

    Hosts, Ghana and Guinea are among the teams that have made it into the group phase after the Ghanaians survived a tough duel with The Gambia 1-0 while Guinea came from behind to trounce Guinea Bissau 2-1.

    Mali will tackle Mauritania in Monday’s first match starting at 3 p.m. Ghana time ( 4 p.m. Nigeria time).

    Eagles’ Head Coach, Salisu Yusuf, is using the tournament as part of preparations for next year’s 5th African Nations Championship (CHAN), for which Nigeria has qualified after edging out Benin Republic.