The
twentieth century drew to a close with America's erstwhile Queen of Daytime
Television Oprah Winfrey clutching a coveted trophy - proclaimed "Woman of
the Century" (by Newsweek magazine) and "arguably
the world's most powerful woman" (by Time.com and CNN). As though in a
relay toward glorification of their ethnic stock, another African-American,
Barack Obama, assumed office as President of the United States in the opening
decade of the 21st century.
Tuesday, May 28, 2019
Is Buhari Poorer Four Years After?
By
Banji Ojewale
A new race
of men is springing up to govern the nation; they are the hunters after
popularity, men ambitious…the demagogues, whose principles hang laxly upon
them, who follow not so much what is right as what leads to a temporary vulgar
applause.
– Joseph Story (1779-1845), American Judge
*President Buhari |
President Muhammadu Buhari has offered the
‘ideal’ measuring rod to assess him and other public officers while serving the
people or when out of office. We don’t need to consult any arcane research or
some tongue-twisting grammatical construction to guide us to determine whether
outgoing executives have fared well or underperformed.
Monday, May 27, 2019
Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye's Peep Into Nigeria's Looting Culture
By DAN AMOR
Ugochukwu
Ejinkeonye is not only a quintessential Nigerian writer and journalist, he is,
undoubtedly, one of the most formidable literary and social critics in the
country today. Ejinkeonye, whose birthday is today (May 27), is not only a
wordsmith of note whose diction, and images capture the experiences and
nebulous fancies of the Nigerian condition, he is also one of Africa's most
celebrated newspaper columnists and public affairs analysts.
Friday, May 17, 2019
Ganduje, Sanusi And Other Monarchs
By Paul Onomuakpokpo
With a hasty dismissal of Abdullahi Umar Ganduje and Emir Sanusi
Lamido Sanusi as victims of self-induced embroilment in a power tussle, we are
denied vital lessons for national development. Again, there is the cynicism
that Ganduje who is allegedly steeped in corruption, fecklessness and vendetta
lacks the altruism that should underpin his dismantling of the Sanusi monarchy.
But until Sanusi secures judicial validation, his royal influence remains vitiated
as his centuries-old Kano emirate is split into five.
We must appropriate the development in Kano
State as an opportunity to assess once again the relevance of the traditional
institution to contemporary existence. In Nigeria, like some other parts of the
world, communities at inchoate stages of development where they lacked defined
institutions for cohesion might have had a need for traditional rulers. But
with the development of great institutions for self-regulation, Nigeria does
not need the traditional institution.
*Gov Ganduje and Emir Sanusi |
Tuesday, May 14, 2019
Bulkachuwa: Red Rag To A Bull
By Banji
Ojewale
We are not in Spain. But there, it is claimed that bulls
are enraged when red flags flutter before them. The matador, the man who fights and kills a
bull in a sport, gets the beast into the game by waving the red cloth. The
indifferent, motionless animal only charges at his opponent when it sights his
muleta, the stick with a crimson swathe employed in the final third of the
bullfight…We know what follows:
savagery, slaughter and sanguinary cheers from the spectators.
*Justice Zainab Bulkachuwa |
In Nigeria, we appear to be in for a bullfight over the
Justice Zainab Bulkachuwa affair. She is the President of the Appeal Court, who
has been asked to head the Presidential Election Petition Tribunal looking into
the suit of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, and its Presidential Candidate,
Atiku Abubakar. They are challenging the victory of Muhammadu Buhari in the
poll of February 2019.
Thursday, May 9, 2019
Nigeria: President Buhari And The Untouchable Bandits
By Paul Onomuakpokpo
If the senate really
needed unimpeachable answers to the nation’s security questions, it only
demonstrated another case of its accustomed dilettantism when it summoned the
acting Inspector General of Police Mohammed Adamu.
Latching on to the platitude
that the knowledge of state security matters should be the privilege of only
the few in the inner sanctum of government, the senate did not publicise the
outcomes of its over two hours’ meeting with Adamu. Yet, unauthorised sources
have divulged what transpired at the meeting. The IGP, not unexpectedly, at the
meeting blamed his inability to tackle the insecurity on paucity of funds,
personnel and weapons.
*Buhari |
Wednesday, May 8, 2019
Imo: Will Emeka Ihedioha Be Different?
By Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye
Since Mr.
Emeka Ihedioha of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) emerged the winner of the
governorship election held recently in Imo State, all sorts of people who are
able to get themselves interviewed by reporters have been filling our ears with
rambling tales about how a new “messiah” had emerged to liberate Imo people
from the hands of their “oppressors” and “exploiters” and usher them into a
glorious era of limitless happiness.
Emeka Ihedioha |
As a
citizen of Imo State who has closely observed several governors enter and leave
the Imo Government House, I find the whole absurd drama so revolting.
If
only Mr. Ihedioha would spare some moments and reflect, he would realize that
there is nothing new about the drab performance that these characters are
staging today; nor is it peculiar to Imo State.
Why Public Office Holders Can't Enjoy Privacy
By Banji
Ojewale
I do not believe that a society can sustain its democratic claims if
it allows its public office holders to run two lives: an open public life and
another jealously sheathed private one. At work, he or she is immersed in
files, open for scrutiny, even if their over embroidered agbada or sky-touching
gele wouldn’t permit a full and close watch. But at home, in their closet, they
are liberated from any restraint. They at liberty to trash the discipline of
service and accountability.
That is equal to performing Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, the eponymous
protagonists of the book by Robert Louis Stevenson. It’s one person leading two
different lives. Jekyll takes a drug that breaks him into two separate
personalities, one good and the other evil. Dr. Jekyll is the amiable
character, while Mr. Hyde exhibits the pernicious traits. Yet it’s one person
at work.
Buhari |
Monday, May 6, 2019
27 Years In The Hangman’s Noose
By Paul Onomuakpokpo
One of the enduring tropes of human comeback and survival is
associated with Fyodor Dostoevsky who gained reprieve from execution at the
last minute.
Yet, the glistering
success of the Russian writer in his post-near-death epoch would not have
effectively obviated the ordeal of the pall of an imminent death that hung over
him before his sudden freedom.
But quite unlike
Dostoevsky, that tragic hiatus was not short-lived in the case of a Nigerian
citizen Clinton Kanu. In 1992, at the age of 29 when he brimmed with the hope of conquering the
world, Kanu was sentenced to death for murder. Kanu’s ordeal began
when his in-laws were accused of stealing a generator and fluorescent tubes.
*Clinton Kanu |