Ebola is a dreadful
disease that once ravaged the West African coast, leaving in its trail sorrow,
tears and blood. According to a World Health Organisation (WHO) data, at its
peak, Ebola had over 10,000 victims in West Africa .
The WHO records further reveals that 9,936 people in Guinea ,
Liberia and Sierra Leone
contracted the disease. Nigeria
also had her own share of the Ebola brouhaha, no thanks to the dastardly
escapade of late American-Liberian, Patrick Sawyer.
After weeks of scary Ebola episode, Nigerians
were understandably over-joyous to hear the news that the country was certified
Ebola-free. While the Ebola trauma lasted, 19 cases were recorded out of which
eight died and 11 survived. Aside the number of lives it claimed and
attendant psychological trauma, the Ebola ordeal came with lots of economic
losses. Thursday, May 31, 2018
Arabisation Of The Nigeria Police?
By Paul Onomuakpokpo
As though to prove the sceptics wrong, the country suffers no
deficit of evidence of its descent into anomie. This is underscored by the fact that what
seems only plausible in the provenance of macabre fantasy easily becomes
reality.
It sounds implausible that a country and its
leaders would do nothing while citizens are being killed and pillaged. But this
is the reality in Nigeria
- Fulani herdsmen are busy raping, maiming and killing citizens.
Even places of worship that should have served as refuge from bloodlust and
plunder have become the prized targets of the herdsmen.
Wednesday, May 30, 2018
Security Under President Buhari’s Watch
By Kolawole Anthony
Nigeria was literally and
practically handcuffed by subsisting, budding, consuming and persistently
explosive acts of terrorism, local armed conflicts, militancy, violent
separatists’ agitations, ethno-religious conflagrations and other
insurrections. They did not only disturbingly assail and crippled Nigeria , but
had morphed into threats to regional insecurity threats.
The first official covenant a leader makes with the people, on
the first day of official function is security of lives and property of the
citizenry. It is neither negotiable nor subject to compromise under any guise.
A law
abiding and peaceful nation is the panacea to uninhibited development and
prosperity. It is the primary essence of governance. And the capacity of the
Armed Forces anywhere in the world is gauged by its capacity and competencies
to assist the President to defray internal and external aggressions against its
country. But the military abdicated on this basic constitutional responsibility
under the last administration.
And the
consequences were quite grave. No Nigerian can agree less that Nigeria was on a
precarious cliff of total breakdown of law and order, by May 2015, when
President Muhammedu Buhari took the reins of office.
Burdened
by an extremely weak Military, prior to the ascension of the Buhari Presidency,
Nigeria
replaced its peaceful soul with almost everyday violence, deaths and agonies
from terrorism. Dominantly at the home front, Boko Haram Terrorists (BHTs)
obstinately pulled the cord of disunity and disintegration of Nigeria . It
went paranoid and regrettably unchallenged in the organized atrocious acts and
heinous crimes against Nigerians. But Buhari has smothered the fire.
Why Federalism, Confederalism Or Restructuring Is Not Enough
By Chinweizu
22may18
The Federalism of
the First Republic ,
of the 1963 Constitution, is being demanded by some as the solution to Nigeria ’s
problems. The proponents of this view seem to think that once Nigeria returns
to that constitution, with possibly some slight modifications, they and their
interests will be protected, and their cherished “One Nigeria” can go on.
*Chinweizu |
But they are
mistaken, I think.
They haven’t
considered why that constitution failed them. If it failed them before, can’t
it fail them again?
Like the 1963
constitution, the 1960 Constitution limited the powers of the Federal
Government to Defence, Foreign Affairs, and a few other items.
Monday, May 28, 2018
2019: Why We Must Vote In Young Nigerians
By Dan Amor
At the
dawn of civil rule in 1999, after about fifteen years of uninterrupted military
gangsterism, rapacity and greed, there emerged on the nation's political
firmament, an assembly of politicians and professionals under the age bracket
of 50 years, the National Integration Group (NIG). The group's aim was
ostensibly to re-engineer the Nigerian public life and take over the mantle of
political leadership from the old brigade. There were, indeed, conflicting
reactions to the development.
*Gov Yahaya Bello of Kogi State: Nigeria's youngest governor |
While some Nigerians believed that the group had ulterior
motives, and therefore its mission preposterous, many believed and still
believe that amidst the despair that has enveloped the nation, there is an
obvious need to call to question the desirability of continuing with business
as usual. This issue has remained prominent in the upper reaches of our
national discourse especially given the woeful failure of the old generation of
politicians to improve the standard of living of the people and engender
positive development in the country since independence.
Paradoxica Nigeriana
By Dan Amor
Nigeria is a beautiful
edifice built with bricks of contradictions. Somewhere between the idea and the
reality hovers a huge geographical abstraction that beguiles the imagination.
Situated at the Eastern end of the Gulf
of Guinea , between the 4th and the
14th Parallels, Nigeria
occupies a total area of 923,768 square kilometres, slightly more than the
combined areas of France and
Germany .
From Lagos in the South-west to Maiduguri
in the North-east is the distance between London
and Warsaw .
*President Buhari |
Its population estimated at about 190 million, exceeds the
combined population of all other countries in the West African sub-region of
the Sahara . Endowed with enormous wealth, a
dynamic population and an enviable talent for political compromise, Nigeria stood out in the 1960s as the potential
leader of Africa , a continent in dire need of
guidance. For, it was widely thought that Nigeria was immune from the
wasteful diseases of tribalism, disunity and instability that remorselessly
attacked so many other new African states. But when bursts of machine gunfire
shattered the pre-dawn calm of Lagos its
erstwhile Federal Capital in January 1966, it was now clear that Nigeria was no exception to Africa 's
common post-independence experience.
Nigeria: Gen Gowon’s Desecration Of History
By Sunny Awhefeada
Nigeria ’s history has been so
abused and distorted that there is hardly a consensus on what constitutes a
genuine national narrative. Nigerian rulers have had to manipulate the history
of their record in office to suit their whim. History ought to be sacred as the
ultimate guide of a people. It is the unseen, but powerful propelling force
from which a nation derives inspiration in the tortuous odyssey of national
evolution. But when the history of a nation is subjected to deliberate
distortions then such a nation is bound to be moored to the past with the
people as captives. This has been Nigeria ’s lot.
Nigeria hosted the 8th
Commonwealth Regional Conference for Heads of Anti-Corruption Agencies in Africa last week. It was at that forum that Nigeria ’s
former military ruler, General Yakubu Gowon (rtd) did what amounted to a
desecration of history. Hear him: “During
our time, we did not know anything like corruption”.
*Gen Gowon |
He went a great length
to buttress his assertion. Let us dream up an apotheosis for Gowon so that even
in his lifetime he could become Saint Yakubu Gowon! What Gowon told his
audience was far from the truth. The government he led from the hurly-burly of
1966 to the sedate ambience of 1975 was one of massive corruption.
If President Buhari Were A Patriot…
By Benjamin Obiajulu
Aduba
President Muhammadu Buhari (PMB) is one of only two people who
have ruled Nigeria
both as a military dictator and as an elected president. In a country of about
100 million citizens, this is not an insignificant accomplishment. In Maslow’s Hierarchy
of Needs, President Buhari should be at the top, Self-Actualization
level. He should not have any more needs. If he were a patriot he should quit
right here and right now.
But he is
not.
If he
were a patriot he should read the warning signs.
1. His
most ardent supporters are showing signs of weariness. They still offer some
defense and protection for him but they seem tepid. Mr. Lai Mohammed can lie on
his behalf for only so much as his integrity begins to deteriorate. Even
Professor Aluko is now willing to accept that some of PMB’s actions/lack or
actions are mistakes. Mr. Theophilus Yakubu Danjuma (former Defense Minister),
one of his richer and early backers has openly called for the North Central
(NC) citizens to buy arms to protect themselves as the government is unable to
do so.
2. The
massive demonstrations by Christians in Abuja
a few days ago show how deep the disgust of Christians with his administration
is. Christians constitute about 50% of Nigerians. When a leader loses the
support of most his nation, patriotism demands that he, the leader, steps
aside.
Nigeria: APC Congresses Of Blood, Tears And Sorrow
By
Ikechukwu Amaechi
Beleaguered Senator Din Melaye got a mischievous dig in at his own
political party, the All Progressives Congress (APC) on Saturday May, 2018. Shortly after a contentious state congresses of the party, Melaye tweeted,
"Congratultions tot he 72 new state chairmen of APC. Everywhere na
double double. What a blessed party!!!!"
As at the time I stumbled on the tweet on Sunday morning, it had been retweeted
968 times with 2,103 likes.
Dr. Doyin Okupe, a chieftain of the opposition Peoples Democratic Party
(PDP), re-echoed Melaye’s tweet three hours later.
“36 states, 72 chairmen. APC! Going! Going. Who is d bastard now?” Okupe
tweeted.
Friday, May 25, 2018
For The Sake Of Nigeria, Our Nation!
By Anthony Cardinal Olubunmi Okogie
For the sake of our nation exposed to insecurity
by absence of governance, the time has come for us to differentiate
between a political jobber and a statesman. A political
jobber is a merchant who buys and sells loyalty in order to be in
power. He does not care about the morality of his
means. He would, therefore, do everything to win an election or be
declared the winner. His sole and ultimate objective is access to
power and to the perks of office.
But the ultimate aim of a
statesman is not power. It is service of the common
good. And even if he plans to win an election, he does not
transgress the boundaries of morality. He is fair in running for
office and fair in running the office. He works for the good
of the nation and for the good of its citizens. Rather than use or
threaten to use violence, he shares his vision with the citizens, respects
their right to share or repudiate the vision, and their right to decide through
an electoral process free of fraud or coercion. Political jobbers
manipulate the electoral process. Statesmen respect its
integrity. The choice before Nigerians in the 2019 elections,
therefore, is that of choosing between political jobbers and
statesmen. And, for the sake of our nation, we must make a right
choice this time around.
Cardinal Okogie |
Electricity: Unending Rip-Off Of Customers By Distribution Companies!
By Godwin Ijediogor
Some may call it
cheating, while others may see it as smart billing but it is nothing less than
fraud. The system of billing some electricity consumers, otherwise known
as estimated billing, adopted by the Electricity Distribution Companies
(DisCos) in Nigeria, is a clear case of extortion of consumers without metres,
whether prepaid or the old order. Ironically, the DisCos are unconcerned and
unrepentant, instead they are passing the buck concerning metering to
customers. Imagine living in a compound with four three-bedroom flats and while
three metred three flats get billed about N2, 500 each, the remaining one is
slammed N10, 000 estimated bill, just for one month, by Ikeja Electricity
Distribution Company (IKEDC).
Yet, the DisCos are reluctant to provide
prepaid meters or at least minimise the incidence of over billing or crazy
bills; just promises and no action. And the Managing Director
and Chief Executive Officer of Eko Electricity Distribution Company (EKEDC),
Adeoye Fadeyibi, tried to justify the action of the DisCos while speaking at a
town hall with residents of Ibeju-Lekki, Lagos (its customers), saying the
‘crazy bill’ was because distribution companies take the reading of electricity
consumption of customers who are not metered directly from the transformer. Gov Rochas Okorocha’s Swan Song
By Cos Nnadi
Its last notable civilian governor remains the
late Samuel Onunaka Mbakwe, who ruled the old Imo
State comprising the present-day Imo State , Abia State
and parts of Ebonyi
State . Since that
seasoned administrator, whose concern for the down trodden earned him the
appellation of ‘weeping governor,’ left the saddle 35 years ago, the state has
been unable to fill the vacuum. Those who succeeded him all failed to display a
similar sense of responsibility, intellectual depth, and social empathy.
The political rivalry in Imo State
is reminiscent of a dramatic form which depicts the circumstances surrounding
the fall of despots. The state has been in dire need of such a dramatic
conflict, blighted by a long history of poor leadership.
*Okorocha |
Thursday, May 24, 2018
Nigeria: The Past As President Buhari’s Utopia
By Paul Onomuakpokpo
Whenever President Muhammadu Buhari lifts the façade and allows us
a glimpse into the convictions that propel him, he leaves no room for doubt
that he is out of depth with the demands of his high office. At that moment of
supposed candour, Buhari rather recommends himself to us as a relic of an
antediluvian era that is far removed from the nuances of democracy and the
challenges and possibilities of contemporary life.
Buhari is fixated on
the valourisation of the past as an irreplaceable era that was full of glories
that neither the present nor the future can yield. Thus, Buhari yearns for that
past. He wants us to exhume that past because it held the secrets of an
Eldorado that are elusive to the present.Yet it is a past that the majority of
the citizens would like to consign to eternal oblivion because it only afflicts
them with searing memories. Indeed, the past that in the imagination of Buhari
provided a utopian state is in the reckoning of the citizens a dystopia that he
is recreating in the present.
*President Buhari |
Mad Rush For Expensive Rags!
Before now, these 'clothes' should have been
found at a madman's corner at some dirty, disused spot in Lagos,
for instance; or used as rags
in various homes – by people who no longer find them useful since they can no
longer be considered suitable attire for anyone still in possession of a stable
mind.
Wednesday, May 23, 2018
Nigeria: The Impending Implosion Of APC
By Reuben Abati
Just take the phrase: “impending” in the title above with a pinch of salt. I use the word because in politics as in life, things happen – as seemingly absolute situations become redeemable and what originally appears impossible could be the catalyst for fresh opportunities.
Otherwise, the truth is that the ruling Nigerian political
party, the All Progressives Congress is already imploding, it has in fact
imploded; the party is in the throes of a debilitating illness. The implosion
began almost as soon as the party assumed power in 2015.
Just take the phrase: “impending” in the title above with a pinch of salt. I use the word because in politics as in life, things happen – as seemingly absolute situations become redeemable and what originally appears impossible could be the catalyst for fresh opportunities.
The APC emerged as a special purpose vehicle – composed
almost entirely from second hand, used groups from the CPC, the ACN, APGA,
ANPP, and a break away faction of the PDP, known as new PDP (nPDP) – even if
there was nothing new about it, with the sole objective of taking power from
the then ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), and the then incumbent
President Goodluck Jonathan.
Tuesday, May 22, 2018
Chinua Achebe’s ‘Things Fall Apart’ Listed Among Ten Top Stories That Shaped The World
A recent poll conducted by the British Broadcasting Service (BBC) among “writers,
critics and academics” yielded the verdict that Chinua Achebe’s classic, Things
Fall Apart, published in June 1958 – which turns 60 this year –
qualifies as No 5 on the list of “ten top stories that shaped the world.”
Other
works on the list are: The Odyssey by Homer (8th Century
BC), Uncle
Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe (1952), Frankenstein by Mary
Shelley (1818), Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell (1949), One
Thousand And One Nights by Various Authors (8th – 18th Century), Don
Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes (1605 – 1615), Hamlet by William
Shakespeare (1603), One Hundred Years Of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez (1967)
and The
Iliad by Homer (8th Century BC)
In a recent release, the BBC
said that the writers, critics and academics who participated in the opinion poll voted
these works “as the most influential and enduring works of fiction” ever published.
The 1985 Coup In Nigeria
By Ray Ekpu
The August 1985 coup
in Nigeria
was regarded as a palace coup, a smooth changing of the guards. I have no idea
if anyone died in the operation but the event itself has refused to die, thanks
to President Muhammadu Buhari. The victim of that coup, Buhari, has reminded us
from time to time that he was unfairly removed as the head of state and kept in
detention for three years by the Ibrahim Babangida boys. Let us roll back the
tape a little bit. On December 31, 1983 as Nigerians were at various prayer
venues asking God to make 1984
a better year than 1983, they had no idea that Buhari
and his co-conspirators were on the verge of removing a legitimately elected
civilian government headed by President Shehu Shagari.
*President Buhari |
Many Nigerians may
have been amazed at the scale of rigging in the October 1983 Presidential
elections but may not have expected a return of the military to the
presidential podium after 13 years of brutal military dictatorship. Nigerians
woke up on January 1 not knowing whether to say to each other a ‘Happy New Year’
or a ‘Happy New Government’ since they were uncertain what was in the belly of
the coup. One year and eight months later, Buhari was overthrown by the same
Babangida Boys who put him on the throne. Babangida now took over the
presidential chair and kept Buhari in detention for about three years.
Apparently, Buhari has not been able to bring himself to forgive or forget
since then.
Monday, May 21, 2018
Nigeria: The Igbo Are Speaking!
By Humphrey C. Nsofor
The 40 million Igbo
people resident in Nigeria
and elsewhere, represented by Ohaneze
Ndigbo and the South East Governors Forum, will on Monday, May 21, command
global attention as they take a stand on how Nigeria can achieve a more perfect
union and consequently regain its manifest destiny. It promises a galaxy of
Igbo stars in politics and leadership. The promise of the gathering has been
accentuated by the fact that it is hosted by Governor Willie Obiano of Anambra
State whom former Senate President Ken Nnamani rightly describes as the Star of
the East. No one doubts that Nigeria ,
as currently configured, needs a better design.
The ruling All
Progressives Congress (APC) set up a powerful committee headed by Kaduna State
Governor Nasir el-Rufai to fashion out a more realistic and effective
Constitution. President Muhammadu Buhari has stated categorically that he is
not opposed to rearranging the country’s administrative structure. Ex-Vice
President Atiku Abubakar has become one of the greatest proponents, after
initially opposing it because of his mistaken ideas about it. In other words,
the call for Nigeria ’s
rebirth is popular and patriotic. All of us desire—and are deserving of— a
better Nigeria .
In the moving and wise language of the late Vice President Alex Ekwueme, Nigeria is a
miracle waiting to happen.
*Nwodo, Ohaneze President-General |
Thursday, May 17, 2018
Nigeria: A Hard Lesson For Gov Rochas Okorocha
By Olusegun Adeniyi
On 24th March 2012, Chief Rochas
Okorocha, then less than a year in office as Imo State Governor, was in Kosovo
where he signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) for an independent power
plant, an agro processing plant and several other industries that he promised
would be established in his state. There were neither feasibility studies nor
any clear ideas as to where the money to finance these projects would come from
but those sorts of things never really worry the ebullient governor.
A few weeks before the trip to the
Balkan Peninsular, Okorocha had declared a four-day holiday for workers in Imo State
so they could partake in the take-off of the Community Council Government (CCG)
he instituted. And for this extra-constitutional fourth-tier of government, the
governor approved the disbursement of N5 million to each of the communities in
the 27 local councils from a subvention of N3 billion that was not captured in
the 2012 Imo State Appropriation Bill.. He also declared free education at all
levels in the state after announcing that he would be paying salaries to all
the primary school pupils (yes, pupils, not teachers alone). And to be sure,
Okorocha actually went to some primary schools where the pupils were lined up
for him to hand them N100 each!
*Gov Rochas Okorocha |
Nigeria: Is There Any Democracy Here?
By Lewis Obi
The last fortnight has been dominated by the miserable stories emanating mostly from the All Progressives Congress (APC), its local congresses, its attempts to select officials for its grassroots, choose delegates to attend the all-important party convention next month, and conduct primaries for its governorship contests.
It is hard to know where the sordid tales should begin. But I watched two contending officials of the River State APC trade blames on TV. ThePort Harcourt headquarters of the party was eventually set ablaze, and the High Court of justice attacked and for a while was seized by a faction to prevent the other side from seeking an injunction by the court to stop the local government congress.
The last fortnight has been dominated by the miserable stories emanating mostly from the All Progressives Congress (APC), its local congresses, its attempts to select officials for its grassroots, choose delegates to attend the all-important party convention next month, and conduct primaries for its governorship contests.
*President Buhari |
It is hard to know where the sordid tales should begin. But I watched two contending officials of the River State APC trade blames on TV. The
Nigeria: A Dying State In The Of An Ineffectual Government
By Obi Ebuka Onochie
“People speak sometimes about the
“bestial” cruelty of man, but that is terribly unjust and offensive to beasts,
no animal could ever be so cruel as a man, so artfully, so artistically cruel.”
― Fyodor Dostoyevsky
The above line from
Fyodor is truer of Nigerian situation today which leaves one to wonder if we
will ever come out of this pit. The killings are no longer fluid but
continuously stable that many of them go unreported.
Kidnapping is now a
mass business and every detail about these kidnappings are questionable raising
debate if they were real or staged.
We are so deeply torn apart that evil is triumphing not only within our
boarders but the psyche, mind, heart, ability and competence of those entrusted
to govern presently.
Wednesday, May 16, 2018
Nigeria: Banning Codeine In APC
By Owei Lakemfa
Following a codeine-propelled high drug addiction problem, the
Federal Government in a swift reaction, banned the production and importation
of codeine containing cough syrup. The syrup usually taken by millions of
youths who mix it with soft drinks, alcohol or illegal drugs, leads to
physical and mental reliance on the drug and can be fatal.
Five days
after the welcome ban, the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) on May 5,
held its Ward congresses across the country. In most of the
thirty six states, they were characterized by thuggery, manipulation,
imposition, and in at least two cases, murder. In Rivers State, a member was
shot dead right in the party secretariat while in Ughelli, Delta
State, a party chairmanship aspirant, Mr. Jeremiah Oghoveta was stabbed to
death. In Oyo
State , supporters of
Governor Isiaka Abiola Ajimobi and those of Communication Minister,
Adebayo Shittu, were engaged in a mini Civil War with the Governor
accusing the Honourable Minister and some members of the House of
Representatives of perpetuating the violence and threatening arson.
Nigeria: Sweet Codeine, Bitter Consequences
By Wale Sokunbi
Nigeria is on the global hotspot on account of a crisis brought into bold relief by an investigative documentary trending in the media. The documentary entitled Sweet Sweet Codeine, made
by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) Africa Eye undercover reporters,
featured some workers of three Nigerian pharmaceutical companies – Emzor
Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. Lagos; Bioraj Pharmaceuticals Ltd. and Peace
Standard Pharmaceutical Ltd., in Ilorin , Kwara State .
One of the workers featured in the documentary openly admitted his company’s massive sales of codeine cough syrup in the country, and boasted that he could sell a million cartons of the syrup in a week. The sales representative has since been fired by the company concerned.
One of the workers featured in the documentary openly admitted his company’s massive sales of codeine cough syrup in the country, and boasted that he could sell a million cartons of the syrup in a week. The sales representative has since been fired by the company concerned.
Tuesday, May 15, 2018
APC: The Broom Of A Broken Family
By Dan Onwukwe
It’s all about the outcome of the recent APC Ward and local
government Congresses across the states. From South East, to South South,South
west to North west
and North East, there were unprecedented disputations. Some party faithful were
reported killed, many injured. Yes, politics has been described as “hardball”
sometimes, but the fractious and parallel Congresses we saw a few days ago
across the state chapters of APC foretell a more dangerous consequences nine
months before the general elections next year.
This has been a dizzying season in Nigerian politics. In the ruling All Congress(APC), the
crisis, the divisiveness and mud throwing that have racked the party, indeed
should trouble the mind and hurt the hearts. It’s like the forklore called the
‘Witches’ Dance’ that has made shame a sort of passé to the party
members. Nigerians are watching in astonishment: what’s going on?
*President Buhari wields APC broom in Anambra |
Monday, May 14, 2018
Kaduna Council Polls: Highly Provocative, Indefensible Fraud – PDP
Press Statement
The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) rejects as highly
provocative, fraudulent and completely indefensible the alteration of final
results and declaration of the All Progressives Congress (APC) as winner in
areas clearly won by the PDP in the Kaduna
state local council elections held on Saturday.
From the reports of results at
the polling centers, it is clear that the PDP defeated the APC in most of the
areas where elections held across the state, including Governor Nasir
el-Rufai’s ward where the PDP led with over 90% percent of the votes cast.
Nigeria: A Culture Of Substandard Living
By Passy Amaraegbu
“All good is hard. All
evil is easy. Dying, (suicide) losing, cheating, and mediocrity are easy. Stay
away from ease.”
– Scott Alexander
One major way to measure the degree of
development in any society is the value she placed on human life. Even animals
operate with the instinct that human life is sacred. This is the reason they
initially exhibit fear and flight when they encounter human beings.
Consequently, every progressive human society
focuses on the double task of preserving and improving the lives of mortals. Some
European and even Asian nations have perfected in this crucial task to a high
degree that the elderly cohort (65 and above) form a significant part of their
population. In other words, the life expectancy of such nations is high. For
instance, the UN 2015 world life expectancy of Nigerian is 52.29 years, UK is 80.45, and Japan is 83.74. The main reason for
this divergent disparity in the life expectancy of nations is based on the
different values these nations place on the lives of their citizens.
Saturday, May 12, 2018
State Of The Nation: Open Letter To President Buhari
By Olasupo Abideen
Opeyemi
Dear Mr. President
Dear Mr. President
It is with a heavy heart
that I sit down to write Your Eminence. As a conscious, patriotic and
progressive youth, I could not help but register my dissatisfaction with my
country’s plight alongside a volley of plea to your administration to rescue
this dire situation. Excuse the curtness of my manners. The intensity of my
pain has almost robbed me entirely of formality. My passionate plea is not for
a personal gain but for a revision of government’s position on issues of
health, poverty and education, the individual components forming the fulcrum
around which our collective development and glory as a nation revolve.
Sir, I read the
disapproving remarks you made at the 58th general conference of the Nigeria
Medial Association (NMA) concerning the unpleasant effects of various strike
actions embarked upon by the country’s health professionals on the nation’s
health. With a commensurate level of concern – and perhaps more, I have found
myself under the onus of speaking on this trend with a view to achieving an impressive
turn in events.Friday, May 11, 2018
Liberia: Social Revolution Or Barbarism—A State On The Edge Of An Explosion
By Alfred
P. B. Kiadii
No
victory is worth winning without a bit of sacrifice or suffering. So we accept
the evolving processes in the Homeland, as we prepare ourselves for the task of
nation-building. The vulgar minds suppose we are wishful thinkers, but beyond
their noses and the abstraction of common sense they understand not complicated
processes and see not the simmering contradictions, driven by molecular
movement that lies beneath the surface. Such sterility preclude them from
understanding that under certain conditions everything changes into its
opposite.
*President George Weah of Liberia |
My Cry As A Drug Addict!
By Suntaa
Abudu Ibrahim
I also started just like how many
people started. At first, I chose to take drugs because of how it made me feel.
I used to think I could control how much I take and how often I used it but
however it changed how my brain works which led to some physical changes in me
and it finally made me loose self-control and took over my whole life. I used
to take these drugs just to feel good, ease stress, or avoid reality but now it
has changed my entire health habits. And now it has put me in health dangers,
financial difficulties, and other problems between me and my loved ones. Yes I
know it is dangerous using drugs, I know all the dangers involved in using it.
I don’t also feel comfortable using it for it has caused me more than enough
harm already.
The use of
these drugs have made me look inferior among my colleagues, family members and
other relatives, even some people I am better than always show me disrespect in
many ways. I certainly know my family doesn’t feel comfortable in public to
announce I am part of them and I also don’t feel comfortable with that because
I also need love and companionship from them but since I have subjected myself
to these drugs and they have now overtaken me, yes I know I am the cause of
their shying away from me. Sometimes when I look into my mother’s eyes I see
the pain in her heart but I usually find it difficult to make her happy because
I am not always happy myself. All that I always say is that she shouldn’t worry
everything is going to be alright for there are many others involved in it. Thursday, May 10, 2018
As Imo APC Chieftains Defang Okorocha
By
Ikechukwu Amaechi
Imo State Governor, Owelle Rochas Okorocha, who prides
himself as a political colossus was taught “Politics 101” last
Saturday. It didn’t come as a surprise, though. To any discerning political observer,
it was only a matter of time. While he was clowning and punching way above his
political weight, his opponents were waiting for the auspicious time.
And when that time came, the man who claims to
have conquered Imo
State and dominated its hapless
people himself was left high and dry. Sublime political intrigue at its best.
*Rochas Okorocha |
Wednesday, May 9, 2018
Nigeria: At A Pro-Propaganda Rally
By Dan Amor
Yet, since January this year (2018), I have occasionally squeezed
a few minutes of my limited time in my little room to watch CHANNELS
Television's flagship programme, SUNRISE
DAILY. On occasions, viewers are treated to a crossfire which usually features
a chieftain of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and another of the
opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), who are made to argue on a topical
issue of public concern in a moderated atmosphere.
I'm not your run-of-the-mills television freak or
enthusiast. Due largely to the nature of my job, which is basically guided by
the need to beat deadlines, I hardly have time for over-indulgence in leisure
and other niceties. Whereas my wife and kids occasionally feast on the
television screen for either of their usual sops- Zee World, or Nickelodeon,
yours sincerely would always lock himself up in the study writing an editorial
or a column.
Nigeria: Defectors As Jesters
By Dan Amor
It is a sickening reality in Nigeria that defection, the
act of leaving one political party for another, also known as carpet –crossing
or what the eminent poet and humorist, Uzor Maxim-Uzoatu called “Jumpology” (the political act of
jumping from party to party), has been elevated to the height of a national
ideology.
This glamourisation of political prostitution by Nigerian politicians signals the death of commonsense. Before the December 2013 defection of 37 members of the House of Representatives elected on the platform of the then ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to the then opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) in an open show and fanfare, four PDP governors had led the way in a much more rehearsed, media pampered braggadocio in November 2013.
Tuesday, May 8, 2018
Pini Jason – A Date Still Fresh
By Kanayo Esinulo
It happened in the
morning of May 4, 2013. Pini Jason was already beginning to recover from surgery
which his doctor considered necessary and urgent. He had no choice but to
submit himself in obedience. But days before he left Abuja for Lagos, we kept
talking not just about the impending medical tour to Lagos, we also discussed
the rampage of Boko Haram in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State, a city he
said he visited a number of times and developed so much love “for its streets
lined with trees and flowers, but which these rascals are now destroying.” He
told me how beautiful and peaceful Maiduguri
was each time he visited the city either on official duty or on holiday.
We
talked of other things like Jonathan’s response to the terror group, and then
we would return to his health. “I am not feeling too well,” he said repeatedly,
but kept assuring me that his doctor was certain that the surgery would come
off pretty well.
*Pini Jason |
Monday, May 7, 2018
How Nigerians Consume Poison Daily
PLEASE NOTE THIS
SUBMISSION BY PROFESSOR AFOLABI OLUWADUN, PROFESSOR OF MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY, OLABISI ONABANJO
UNIVERSITY , AGO-IWOYE, OGUN STATE ON THE DANGER
WE FACE WITH SOME COMMON FOODS AVAILABLE IN NIGERIA !
Dr. F. Abayomi
Oguntoye
I promised to write about what is killing people in Nigeria
today. Nigerians should be focused on solving this problem which are causing most of the
cancer going around now:
1.) Ripening agent for banana and plantain. Because people are in a hurry to harvest their bananas and plantain, they spray it with Calcium Carbide. This is a ripening agent which makes the plantain to ripen very quietly.
It is extremely hazardous to the human body as it contains traces of arsenic
and phosphorus.