Tag: Visitors

  • The Visitors

    The Visitors

    Atiku Abubakar looks at himself in the mirror and sees a chess player.

     He may not be a certain politician who did so when he was governor and belted out a song of self-praise, to wit: “I am ugly but I am governor and the most powerful man in this state.” I spare the world his name and state.

     He, at least, exercised a sense of self-scrutiny and physical realism to chasten himself.

    Atiku lacks such self-deprecating humility.

    But he, of all days, chose a season of holy ferment to play a politics of visitation.

    As philosopher David Hume noted: “The corruption of the best produces the worst.”

    One can muse on visits and their imports.

    We know of arrivals of pesky in-laws and cold handshakes and placid smiles.

     The famous movie, Look who’s coming for Dinner with Sidney Poitier reverses that sentiment.

    The visit of coup plotters, like Buhari had when he was head of state.

     A handshake of grudges like the one between Yasser Arafat and Ehud Barak that betokened blood and death. Between Hitler and Neville Chamberlain, after which Hitler mocked: “Our enemies are tiny little worms. I saw them the other day at Munich.” Or the bearhug of Russian diplomat Andrei Gromyko in the embers of the Cold War. Richard Nixon rebuffed Brezhnev’s hugs. He preferred handshakes. Or the handshake between Tinubu and Atiku during the 2023 election campaign at a chance meeting where both had few words to exchange.

    Tinubu turned it into a fashion moment adjusting something on his rivals. Sometimes visits are sneaky, like Odysseus, who returned from the Trojan War to see a flock of men trying to take his wife, Penelope.  Atiku was not the only visitor.  Nasir El-Rufai also came calling, a few days before he decided to go to court to challenge an avalanche of corruption charges. But beware of visits under the cover of God. We had the visits of the three wise men at the birth of Christ, and it is still a liturgical controversy today whether they are of God or of the enemy.

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     In his famous poem, T.S. Eliot calls it a “hard journey” in his Journey of the Magi. So, what are we to make of that visit. Shehu Sani put it in context. He described it as a “façade” and “surreptitiously a new attempt to build a strong northern alliance using ex-President Buhari as a rallying point to challenge and evict President Tinubu’s government in 2027.”

    He did not end his note without a prophecy. He said the “project will eventually kiss the dust.”

    He says they want to exploit Buhari’s folksy charm in the north and rally his mass following. Hence, I say the man has no sense of a real chess player.

     He wanted to play on the optics of a handshake to cast himself as a provocateur of the talakawa. He has invoked, without knowing it, a story of tribal prejudice during the 2023 election campaign.

    He stirred up the “our own is our own” mantra after he told the Arewa Council that the north should vote for their son. He forgets two things. One, that he cannot re-evoke the PDP primary strategy where he turned the north into a political horse trading. He took over Tambuwal’s vote and entrenched himself as the northern candidate. Two, his visit to Buhari reignites the allegation that the former president’s cabal were working for Atiku. That fueled the Nasir El Rufai’s rhetoric to confirm Tinubu’s camp’s charge that some elements in Buhari government wanted to sabotage his party’s candidacy. Does this visit not whip up that charge? Buhari will have, of course, to prove again that he is a party man, not an ethnic man. In the last polls, he had to brandish his voter’s card just to advertise his loyalty. Of course, Buhari will be forced to do same this time if the Atiku men want to play up the ethnic card. Atiku only remembers the north when he wants their vote. The point has ben made over and over as to what he has done to help the north as a big man of influence and wealth. His Adamawa State is one of the worst in development indices. The north has never done well. Atiku cohabits with southern elite where he makes wealth all the time except when he wants power. He is the most cynical politician of this generation. The second, of course, is El Rufai, who exposed Atiku’s ethno-regional chicaneries last year but he is in bed with him today. In the north, according to all researches including that of Redline and Oxford, most of the states have over 50 percent of citizens living below poverty line. In the northwest, in the last eight years, between 35 and 40 percent and in some states between 50 and 75 percent of its citizens were living below poverty line. These surveys covered between 2014 and 2023. Where was Atiku if not ensconced in his Dubai luxury rampart? For El Rufai, his Kaduna was 55 percent below poverty level when he could have done better with over N400 billion no one can account for. Yet, the Tinubu administration has appointed ministers in the north in the most critical part of their needs. Vice President Kashim Shettima made this assertion in the presence of Chief of Staff Femi Gbajabiamila. Vice President Shettima asserted that for insecurity, President Tinubu appointed two defence ministers from the north, Abubabakar Badaru and Bello Matawalle, Chief of defence staff Gen. Christopher Musa. But there is more. Few have heard of the Paluka initiative, a non-kinetic programme, amounting to hundreds of billions of naira, that focuses on pursuing development in a suite of states like Kano, Kebbi, Jigawa, Bauchi, Sokoto, etc. It is to be pursued by ministers of health, defence, economic planning, housing, agriculture. The ministers of health and agriculture are also from the north. These ministers have done little to serve as the story tellers of their mandates, and should have been the ones to tackle Atiku in his megalomaniac visitations. For instance, why has the agricultural minister not shown how the federal government has devoted about N300 billion so far in that sector in the area of largescale farming, fertilisers, etc.? With his appeal to northern sentiments, Atiku forgets that a narrative of such nature projects the north in what French thinker Michel Foucault sees as prefabricated identities, a people without dynamic or conscience to be corralled at will towards unthinking loyalty.  Writers and thinkers like Zadie Smith and Charles Taylor have mused over how such identities can endanger and problematize civilization. The last election exposed the futility of such automatic fanaticism as the north had hefty votes for the APC candidate. As Shehu Sani asserts, Atiku wants to privilege prejudice over national cohesion.

    He is the most dangerous politician in the country, followed by Peter Obi.

    The Atiku visit reminds one of Friedrich Durrenmatt, one of Europe’s best playwrights’ masterpiece, The Visit,  in which a native and now wealthy lady returns to her town and turns the whole community upside down. Atiku may want to read that play, if he reads.

  • ‘What exhibitors, visitors’ll gain from ‘Medica Trade Fair’

    Trade Fair Services Limited has explained what West African visitors to Medica 2017 will gain at the world’s biggest medical trade fair.

    The firm, which is West African representatives for Messe Dusseldorf GmbH, organisers of Medica for over three decades, said the annual event is set to host exhibitors and visitors in areas of the healthcare industry in Dusseldorf, Germany.

    This year, the 41st in the series, will hold from November 13 to 16, across 17 exhibition halls and 262 000 sqm of space.

    The company’s Managing Director, Augustine Itua, in a statement, said: “The uniqueness of this event resides in the fact that it has remained the premier networking and communication platform for the global medical technology marketplace. Visitor statistics from Medica 2016 indicate 128,000 international visitors, including 100’s from Nigeria and 1000’s from the West African region chose Medica as the base for their business deals.

    “Over 5,000 exhibitors from 70 countries will use Medica 2017 to present their entire range of new products, services and processes for inpatient and outpatient care. No other event worldwide matches the display of such a wealth of innovations.”

    According to Itua, the trade fair will focus on: Electromedicine/medical technology, laboratory technology/diagnostics, physiotherapy/orthopaedic technology, commodities and consumables, information and communication technology, medical furniture and specialist furnishings for hospitals and practices.

    He said: “Our local healthcare industry is not isolated from the huge leaps in digitisation, artificial intelligence and all the other topical technology buzzwords that abound these days.

    “Exponential growth in Smartphone penetration and the use of health-related apps, the use of wearable devices fitted with activity trackers as well as simple novel solutions for detecting the authenticity of medicines via SMS prove that Nigeria is certainly included in this discourse.”

    Itua noted that some gaps certainly exist between healthcare solutions as currently offered locally versus cutting edge solutions domiciled in more developed environments. He, however, said exposure to new technology was a core requirement to spur the nation’s vast intellectual capital.

    “Only those who use their creativity and power of development to consistently align themselves with customer interests and market developments will be able to succeed,” he pointed out.

    “Medica is indeed more than a trade fair in the traditional showcase format. Features like the Medica Start-Up Park created with the intention of matching founders of innovative businesses up with potential business partners, investors and distribution partners exemplify this.

    “With the aim of complementing the contents that are going to be presented at Medica Connected Healthcare Forum and the Medica Health IT Forum, up to 40 start-ups will be presenting themselves and their ideas to an audience of experts in direct proximity to these events,” Itua said.

    He added that the Medica LABMED FORUM is also new this year. Under the key heading of “The Interdisciplinary Fascination”, he said laboratory medicine, molecular pathology, microbiology, medical technology and life sciences will be presenting themselves as drivers of innovation and generating new impulses for the entire medical sector.

    COMPAMED 2017 will also be taking place alongside the Medica trade fair on all four days.

  • Jumbo offer for visitors at exhibition

    Many innovations and benefits await participants at the 16th Nigeria International Book Fair scheduled to kicksoff today at the University of Lagos, said the chairman Nigeria Book Fair Trust (NBFT), Alhaji Rilwanu Abdulsalami.

    A statement signed by Mr. Abiodun Omotubi NBFT Executive Secretary, stated that drama, poetry and cultural display, as well as free internet facilities, will form a part of the activities.

    As against past editions, Abdulsalami said the exhibition would also witness government representation.

    “Unlike in the past a more noticeable presence of government officials will take place this year as top members of the executive and legislative arms of government have indicated interest in participating at the fair, “he said.

    He said visitors to the fair would enjoy buying books and other learning materials at discounted rates, in addition to access to the latest local and foreign titles and exposure to national and global updates on the new developments in the book industry.

    Aside the platform as a confluence between authors and publishers, there will also be discounted books and other learning materials for bulk purchases by proprietors, librarians or any other stakeholder, said Omotubi.

  • Buhari and his August visitors

    As we know, there are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns—the ones we don’t know we don’t know.”

    —Donald Rumsfeld, former US Secretary of Defence during a news briefing on February 12, 2002 about the lack of evidence linking Iraq’s Saddam Hussein with the supply of WMD to terrorist groups.

    Former president OlusegunObasanjo’s visit to President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday, August 8, 2015 was promptly reported by the nation’s media. It was almost instantaneously reported by the various social media platforms. But Nigerians did not know that the immediate past president of the republic, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, had gone to also see his successor on Thursday, the day before Obasanjo’s visit. Jonathan’s visit to Aso Rock, reportedly made at night, was also reported to have been facilitated by former Head of State Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar who is the chairman of the 2015 Elections Peace Committee. News reports also had it that Jonathan’s attempt to see his successor was not particularly smooth-sailing as Abubakar himself had to rally other arrowheads in the nation’s power centres to intervene for the former president before the Aso Rock gate could be opened. If true, it shows the ultimate futility of power. As if given a report that the visits of the godfather and his godson (now estranged) may not have yielded the result(s) they expected, the following Tuesday, members of the 2015 Elections Peace Committee ‘invaded’ The Villa to meet with President Buhari. In what can now be referred to as a stampede, in less than five working days, Buhari had received three former Chiefs of State either individually or within a group, including the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Sa’adAbubakar III, who is also the spiritual leader of the nation’s Muslim faithful and other high profile individuals in the committee. Although it may not have been expressly and officially stated, Nigerians do not need to be told that the rush to The Villa was on account of Buhari’s vow to kill corruption before it ‘kills’ Nigeria.

    Perhaps the best way to look at the sprints of these major power centres to Aso Rock is to situate their convergence on the ‘Rock’ (in quick succession) within the context of the epigraph above. The epigraph encapsulates the relationships (mostly convoluted) that exist between the various power centres that these people represent on the one hand, and the relationship between President Buhari and these power centres on the other. The ‘third hand’ is the relationship between the Nigerian electorate yearning for change as an emergent power centre—represented by Buhari—and the entrenched, elite power centres in the country responsible for the sorry state of the country and her people. Buhari’s emergence through the democratic process has revealed the gory state of the nation, and the debilitating, suffocating stench in which Nigerians are mired, no thanks to the most vicious corruption that the world probably has never known, that Buhari himself may be wondering by now if Nigeria has not already been ‘killed’ by it now that there are things he knows that the visitors to the ‘Rock’ now knows he knows. These are the “known knowns.”

    It would have been foolish on the part of these power centres not to have sought audience with a man who, not only deliberately, unrepentantly and unapologetically stands apart from these power formations in which they are either individually or collectively a part of (a man who has also long been suspected that he may one day be their nemesis), but a man known for his pathological disdain for corruption that some of them deliberately fed, nurtured and injected with massive dosage of steroids that mutated the monster into a “HYDRAPUS” (a hydra-headed monster and octopus combined) as aptly coined by WS. They do not need to be told that the “shit has hit the roof” when a president of the most populous country in Africa blurted, and in exasperation in far-away United States, that the monies in the accounts of these corrupt elements in our midst was “mind-boggling.” For Buhari, whose country is already known in the international community to have taken corruption as a way of life to have made this damning declaration must have sent serious shock waves to the corrupt but very powerful class in the polity, hence the marathon race to The Villa because the things they believed Buhari did not know—the “known unknowns”—have become the “known knowns.” Thanks to Buhari, the hapless Nigerian public now also knows that a minister carted away more than $6 billion within four years.

    Buhari must be reminded that the power centres’ ‘pilgrimage’ to the ‘Rock,’ most probably to wrest concession from him not to go the whole hog, or at least give some people, if not some on the entourage, some slack in his war against corruption, are among a group of very powerful people that tried in his previous attempts—even in the last presidential election—everything humanly possible to shut him out of the presidency even by foul means.

    Jonathan’s reply when Buhari unveiled some of the earth-shaking corruption that took place under his watch – which he claimed he was hearing about  ”for the first time” – was the most irresponsible statement to have been made by a former president. Hardly did he realize that the statement, in itself, was a serious indictment on his leadership. But we are relieved that Buhari was reported to have also told the former president in no unmistakable terms that “all looted funds must be returned to the nation’s coffers.”Just as that statement was another testament to the fact that Jonathan’s thoughts and utterances, if not his approach to governance, were far below the office he was saddled with, one is not fooled that what was inherent in the statement was his intentional refusal to acknowledge what he knew; the “unknown knowns”, that psychoanalytic philosopher SlavojZizek says is the fourth category of Rumsfeld’s declaration that he either deliberately left out or wasn’t aware of.

    ‘Thanks to Buhari, the hapless Nigerian public now also knows that a minister carted away more than $6 billion within four years’

    Bishop Mathew Hassan Kukah’s statement in the aftermath of the 2015 Elections Peace Committee’s meeting with President Buhari that they “are concerned about [the] process” because the Buhari administration “is no longer a military regime” was most insidious and a dead give-away that the meeting with the Nigerian president had nothing to do with Nigerians’ collective desire to stamp out corruption after all. One may want to ask the Bishop if Buhari had arrested anyone on account of what he now knows—from the fool-proof evidence supplied by the international community—about these corrupt elements. He should also be asked if the president had thrown anyone in jail without any trial. One then wonders what would have warranted this unfortunate comment if not to intimidate and/or blackmail the Nigerian president. A committee imbued with strong moral values should not have allowed some of its members, most especially Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor, to attend the meeting with the president on account of his passive involvement in a morally despicable and illegal attempted gun-running with the use of his private jet. The Buhari presidency represents the very first time in the nation’s democratic history that Nigerians have a government of the people and for the people. But the sad and unfolding irony is that the “by the people” component that gives democracy its name and meaning is what seems to be the reason why the battle line is slowly but surely being drawn to prevent this component from happening. This phenomenon has further been exemplified by this recent rush to Aso Rock just as the war of attrition currently underway at the National Assembly, most especially in the Senate, is another testimony. Buhari can use all the support he can get from those Nigerians whose future had long been mortgaged by these corrupt elements who are ready to fight with all the ‘weapons’ at their disposal. It’s now time to be vigilant more than ever.

     

    • Femi Odere is a media practitioner. He can be reached at femiodere@gmail.com

     

     

  • Enter farewell visitors

    With about a month to the handover date, President Goodluck Jonathan has started to receive dignitaries on a thank-you and farewell visits from beyond the national borders.

    One of the first visitors was President Alassane Ouattara of Cote d’Ivoire who was at the Presidential Villa on Monday last week to thank him for all the support he has given him and his country in the past five years.

    Briefing journalists after the closed-door meeting, Ouattara, who was recounting Jonathan’s role that ensured Ouattara took over from Laurent Gbagbo who  was hanging onto power in 2010 in Cote d’Ivoire, became a bit emotional as the two leaders managed to fight back tears during the session.

    He was particularly grateful that Jonathan, who was Nigeria’s Acting President five years ago could mobilise other West African leaders to oust Laurent Gbagbo, who had refused to relinquish power after losing the presidential election.

    Besides commending Jonathan for shunning replay of the Gbagbo experience in Nigeria, he was happy that bloodshed was averted in the country as Jonathan peacefully conceded defeat to Gen. Muhammadu Buhari.

    Gbagbo’s refusal to concede defeat to him after the presidential election, he said, resulted in a four-month civil war in which over 3, 000 people lost their lives.

    He said: “So, I wanted to tell you our appreciation over the leadership we have received from you during these years. You know that about five years ago, Cote d’Ivoire had elections and I won the election and the former president decided not to leave office. This brought the civil war and 3,000 people were killed.”

    “We were put in a hotel for protection by the United Nations for four and a half months. We were there without food because the hotel was guarded by the president’s men. It was only after four and a half months of imprisonment in that hotel that finally we were able to leave the hotel; after the former president quit and finally left office for me.”

    “I am saying this to stress that what happened in Nigeria is a lesson to all of us. Please, accept my admiration. I think that avoiding violence, avoiding civil war when we have elections in Africa should be our utmost objective,” he said.

    Continuing, he said: “People are more important than power and Mr. President, my good friend, I am not surprised about what you did and I wanted to congratulate you, congratulate the Nigerian people and congratulate the President-elect.

    “My brother, you have shown support to me during the difficult years I went through, you have shown friendship to me all these years. So, I want to tell you thank you.” he added.

    The following day, Tuesday, the Ghanaian President, John Mahama, who is also the chairman of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) also, visited President Jonathan to commend him on behalf of ECOWAS for his statesmanship in conceding defeat to Gen. Muhammadu Buhari.

    He said: “I also took the opportunity to commend him for the statesmanship that was displayed after the election. We all knew that he congratulated the president-elect, Gen. Buhari after the election realities and he conceded. I feel that was a very great sign of maturity and has earned the respect of all Nigerians and the respect of the international community for all what he did.

    “We expect a smooth transition and possibly the role that Nigeria plays in the ECOWAS being the biggest economy not only in our sub-region but also in the whole continent.

    “Of course there is a special relationship that exists between Nigeria and Ghana too and so, in my second heart as the President of Ghana, I wish to congratulate our brothers and sisters in Nigeria on what has been a very good election,” he said.

    To ensure continued support from Nigeria after May 29, these leaders did not fail to seek audience with the President-elect, Gen. Buhari, during their visits.

    Jonathan and Buhari, no doubt, will continue to receive such visits as the D-day approaches.

     

    And Jonathan stings

     

    Barely 10 minutes after bidding the Ghanaian President, John Mahama, farewell from the Presidential Villa, Abuja on Tuesday the defeat of President Goodluck Jonathan at the March 28 Presidential elections recorded its first casualty.

    The President, through his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, announced the sack of the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Suleiman Abba from office.

    The tone of the statement showed that the Presidency was really angry with the IGP as similar statements normally avoid the use of the word ‘sack’.

    Although no reason was given in the statement for the sack, his exit was said not to be unconnected with the role he was said to have played during the 2015 general elections.

    It is not clear whether the President, in the coming days, will also use his sledge hammer on politicians in his party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), who were believed to have played roles that had adversely affected his re-election bid.

  • Chime and his London visitors

    Chime and his London visitors

    After speculating for over three months and running the whole gamut of pathology, the media have suddenly come to a crushing anti-climax with the release by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) of a photograph showing a “great, very great,” but mildly pensive Governor Sullivan Chime of Enugu State in company with three other Nigerian governors in London. The visitors were Governors Gabriel Suswan of Benue, Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers and Godswill Akpabio of Akwa Ibom. And the visit was presumed to have taken place on Tuesday, though the photo caption did not indicate where in London Chime received his visitors. Apparently, the photograph was meant to convey a picture of general wellness than to answer the equally important question of where the picture was taken.

    The pointed message the news, which seems so affected, and photograph, which is so impersonal and yet familiar and puzzling, sought to convey is that the governor is as fit as a fiddle, is solidly on his feet, and will be back home very soon. The three visiting governors – they would gladly spend so much more of taxpayers’ money to show empathy – were quoted to have said a word or two underscoring Chime’s clean bill of health. One was reported to have said the Enugu governor had made full recovery; another said he was in good shape; and the third, before berating the public for ganging up to wish their leaders evil, claimed Chime had recovered tremendously.

    It is clear that neither Chime nor any of his three august visitors understood the issues involved, and indeed it is no surprise that most Nigerian governors are simply incapable of adapting to the governmental needs of the modern era. If Chime and his fanatical supporters had come clean on his health, regularly updated the public with news of the governor’s health condition, and not take the same electorate for granted, would there be speculations, let alone a wish for some hypothetical evil to befall him? The problem with Chime’s long absence is not whether the constitution had been breached or not; the problem is lack of good faith, disrespect for Enugu people, childish contrivances, and now additional verbal indiscretions from the visiting governors.

    But we have the three governors visiting Chime in London to thank for inspiring reports expected to dispel all rumours about the ailing or fully recovered governor’s health. It would have been unnecessary to look forward to any governor’s reports, not to talk of doubting them, had the state and its hospitalised governor done the commonsensical thing in the circumstance. It is truly dismaying that three governors believed to be incapable of exaggerations of any sort – Chime is no longer a reliable witness in his own health story – had to struggle to tell what they swore was the truth. Yet, the story is much simpler than they have made it.

    If, as they say, Chime has made “full and tremendous recovery, and is in good shape,” what on earth is he still doing in London? They say he’ll be home soon. This column wishes him safe journey. But it is a pity the constitution does not permit impeachment on the grounds of poor judgement, which Chime is exhibiting copiously. Nothing so degrades governance and retards progress as poor judgement, a vice most African governments, by their incompetence, haughtiness and insensitivity, revel in. And nothing has been so appallingly sentimentalised in Nigeria as when its leaders fall ill, as Chime, a few other governors, and at least two Nigerian presidents have shown.

  • ‘Americans top list of visitors to Badagry Museum’

    ‘Americans top list of visitors to Badagry Museum’

    The Curator of Badagry Heritage Museum, Mr. Peter Olaide-Mesewaku, said the museum receives patronage mostly from American celebrities and students on excursion.

    He told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Badagry on Wednesday that even though tourists from different countries patronised the museum, a greater number of tourists from the United States visited the museum.

    “15 per cent of foreigners that patronise the museum are Americans.

    “Evander Holyfield, Rev. Jesse Jackson and Marlon Jackson are among the celebrities who visited the museum recently,’’ he said.

    Olaide-Mesewaku noted that patronage at the museum was usually high during the first and second quarter of every year.

    “The patronage at the museum is seasonal; the big season starts during the months of February to July.

    “ Students of secondary and tertiary institutions visit the museum in this period when on excursion,’’ he said.

    Olaide-Mesewaku said the museum attracted foreigners because it was a repertoire of history on slave trade.

    “I believe that the foreigners who visit the museum do so because of the slave trade history and the monument it houses,’’ he said.

    He advised Nigerians to endeavour to visit museums to learn about their antecedents.