It's hard for many
Africans in Europe, to tell Africans at home the truth about the hard living
conditions in Europe . In the midst of
suffering, many Africans in Europe take
pictures sitting behind a table covered with bottles of beer, creating a false
impression that they live in comfort and luxury.
I
share my stories to warn Africans that Friday, August 10, 2018
Heart-Wrenching Tales Of An African Illegal Immigrant In Europe
By Joel Savage
Europe
is not paradise, a perfect place of riches, peace, and happiness. After reading
this story, any African who wants to come to Europe
must think twice. As
a child growing up in a strongly religious family, I was taught that everything
which is opposite to the teachings of the Holy Bible, including laziness is a
sin. I tried my best to live a clean life. We were taught to believe that Israel , Jerusalem ,
and other Biblical countries were all in heaven, without a slight knowledge
those countries were all on the same earth we are living.
So, Our Democracy Is Only Under Threat When DSS, Police Harass Senators?
By
Fredrick Nwabufo
I have
become flaccid to the unending drag drama at the national assembly. And I have
lost erection for the routine executive-legislature dominatrix. The reason is
that I am in a “fair weather” relationship with both parties.
In July, I raised my feeble voice against the police blockade of Senate President Bukola Saraki’s convoy. I did that principally because of his office. Saraki is only a tenant in that office; Nigerians are the landlord. We must protect our institutions regardless of the tenants who happen to find themselves there now. They will remain long after the present occupants have left the scene.
In July, I raised my feeble voice against the police blockade of Senate President Bukola Saraki’s convoy. I did that principally because of his office. Saraki is only a tenant in that office; Nigerians are the landlord. We must protect our institutions regardless of the tenants who happen to find themselves there now. They will remain long after the present occupants have left the scene.
Nigeria: As Electricity Discos Throw In The Towel
By Sunday Onyemaechi
Eze
Keen observers and
genuine opposition to privatisation of the power sector must be giggling with
smiles at the recent turn of events. Core investors of Electricity Distribution
Companies are beginning to throw in the towel, after five years of
privatisation characterised by ineptitude and abysmal performance. This was
coming on the heels of government’s determination to wield the big stick and
correct the anomaly prevalent in the power sector for ages.
Government’s
position has already sent shivers down the spine of stakeholders especially
DISCOs known to have persistently violated the rules of engagement. In its bid
to blackmail the government to soft-pedal on certain decisions, the
Distribution Companies registered the Association of Nigerian Electricity
Distributors (ANED).
Nigeria: A Country That Refuses To Grow Up
By Dan Agbese
Is it a storm? Is it a
gale? Is it a tsunami? It is defection, the latest virus in the sclerotic arteries of our national
politics. This poison is the only lucrative political business in town today.
People are defecting from APC to PDP and from PDP to APC. It beats common sense
but then you would do well to remember that common sense is not exactly a
marketable product in the realm of politics, here and indeed, else where.
Some of us are scratching our heads, wondering
about this latest, and not to put a fine spin on it, ugly development in our
national politics. The politicians do not believe that they owe us an
explanation for what they are doing. But we cannot pretend not to know what is
pushing them out of one party into another. It is meet and proper that in
search of the why question, we raise questions that seem to beg reason. One of
which is, in whose interest?
*Nigeria's Ex-Heads Of State |
Nigeria, A Nation At War With Itself
By John Odeyemi
For the past couple of
weeks, I have had the weirdest misfortune of listening to friends and former
colleagues, people that I hold in high respect espousing ideas that I did not
imagine any rational Nigerian would consider at this time. I have heard the
incessant clamouring for PVCs – and for a while I thought they were referring
to some plumbing device. On further inquiry, I came to understand that it has
to do with the upcoming elections.
I wonder how PVCs translates to electoral power when your votes are limited by the choices available to you. APC, PDP, are they not the same characters we ought to kick out of government? I am aligned with the position to suspend any absurd elections and call for a national referendum. The other insipid and malignant vituperation is the suggestion that President Muhammadu Buhari is fighting corruption and moving the country forward.
*President Buhari |
Nigeria: Of Treacheries By Political Mercenaries
By Sufuyan Ojeifo
“As soon as Judas took
the bread, Satan entered into him.
So Jesus
told him, what you are about to do, do quickly”
– John 13:27 (New
International Version of the Holy Bible).
Those who are conversant with the verse of the Bible quoted supra would
remember very vividly what happened and the context in which Jesus made the
statement.
*Buhari and Saraki |
But for those who are not, what transpired was
that the time that Jesus Christ would be crucified was at hand and it has been
written that one man, Judas, a son of perdition, who would fulfill a negative
prophecy, would betray him to those who sought to carry out his arrest for the
purpose of His trial and crucifixion. Jesus knew from the outset of creation that
Judas had been predestined to accomplish that task in human history. Judas, therefore, did not have the grace to
resist the supernatural obligation to keep that grisly appointment with
destiny.
Thursday, August 9, 2018
Discrimination Stoking Poverty In Nigeria
By Bayo Ogunmupe
Kenya , Ghana ,
Ivory Coast and Senegal are
better than us in terms of global system of mobile communication skills
education and adaptation of technology. Every telecom company in Kenya
has helped financial penetration through free skills training and
financial inclusion.
Lack of enlightenment,
poor adaptation of technology and poor telecommunication infrastructure have
been identified as reasons for financial exclusion in Nigeria . This lack of financial inclusion caused Nigeria to lack
behind its sub Saharan African (SSA) country peers.
Many of our colleagues in the SSA like Is Christopher Okigbo’s Star Here Again With Us?
By Banji Ojewale
Nigeria appears to be falling again under the excruciating spell of a
star presaged by this remarkable poet of limitless possibilities.
“An old star departs,
leaves us here on the shore, gazing heavenward for a new star approaching. The
new star appears, foreshadows its going, before a going and coming that goes on
forever…”
At the time Christopher Okigbo wrote the poem shortly before his
death in 1967, the young republic had writhed in a series of setbacks dating
from the Western Region upheavals. Okigbo had a keen mind that correctly interpreted these crises as the shadows
of some bigger, more devastating whirlwind into which we were being drawn.
An Ailing Country In A Season Of Political Defections
By Chiedu Uche Okoye
Nigeria , he was
tardy, visionless, and clueless. So, he couldn’t transform Nigeria
and take it to unprecedented economic and technological heights.
It’s divine providence that thrust Dr. Goodluck Jonathan into the
loft of power following the death of his predecessor in office, Alhaji Umaru
Musa Yar’Adua.
However, Jonathan’s poor leadership performance
in office is a proof that he was not prepared for the arduous task of leading Nigeria .
*Some Nigerian Politicians
During his stay in office as the president of
So, in order to prevent Nigeria from
drifting into an anarchical state, leaders of some political parties, including
the rump of APGA, reached an agreement, which culminated into the coalescing of
the political parties to form APC.
Now That President Buhari Is ECOWAS Chairman
By Owei Lakemfa
One of the first things I learnt about leadership is the William
Shakespeare quotation that: “Some are born great, some achieve
greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them” That again
played out in Lome, Togo on July 31, when President Muhammadu
Buhari had the chairmanship of the Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS) ‘imposed’ on him.
The
Presidency said Buhari had gone innocently to the ECOWAS Summit
prepared to vote for Cape Verde, Sierra Leone or Ghana as ECOWAS
Chair when during the campaigns and without warning, the region’s Heads of
State asked the candidates to step down only to: “impose the leadership of the
organization (on Buhari)against all protestations on the Nigerian leader.”If we
accept this tale of the Nigerian Presidency, what happened at the ECOWAS
Summit was the hand of a miracle-working God; a divine intervention.
*President Buhari |
Wednesday, August 8, 2018
Femi Fani-Kayode, Nnamdi Kanu, IPOB And Other Victims Of Oppression
By Jude Ndukwe
I read with derision the infantile missive of one
Churchill Okonkwo which he mischievously titled “FFK Stabbed Nnamdi
Kanu, Betrayed IPOB and Kissed Kwankwaso” which was published in Sahara
Reporters of August 3, 2018. It is unfortunate that in attempt to
score cheap points, use FFK’s famous name to climb to momentary limelight and
satisfy his paymasters, Churchill vitiated the seriousness of the struggle of
IPOB and reduced it to mere politics out of the need to satisfy his hirers.
I would have ignored him but then on a second thought,
what does it take to enlighten an ignoramus of Churchill’s status. Let me start
by making it clear from the outset that IPOB’s struggle is not hatred for the
Fulani, it will amount to reducing the noble struggle of IPOB for freedom and
justice to hatred for the Fulani or any other tribe for that matter just like
Churchill alluded to in that unfortunate essay of his.
*Nnamdi Kanu and Femi Fani-Kayode |
Africa Still Needs Strong Men
By Paul Ojenagbon
Africa
the African political landscape negatively for a long time would make many
perceive and dismiss them as evil.
Former United States President, Barrack Obama, famously made a
statement that Africa did not need strong men
but strong institutions. Like many, I had swallowed the import of this message
until prevailing circumstances compelled me to see reason on the flip side. On
the contrary, the continent needs both strong men and strong institutions
because it takes strong men to build strong institutions that would endure in
their own spheres of influence.
The general perception of many is that strong
men in power denotes negativity but the experience in other climes that had
similar situations and challenges as Africa showed that the emergence of such
super strong men was the turning point in the history of their countries.
Strong men can be positive too, it depends on how they are skewed; the negative
image of the strong men who dominated Tuesday, August 7, 2018
Of Migrant Politicians And Political Prostitution
By Anthony Akinola
Quite a number of
Nigerians are politically aware, even if their level of political participation
hardly goes beyond voting in an election. They could be heard taking sides at
election time, arguing vociferously as to why they would support one candidate
against another. My recent visit to beloved Nigeria , coinciding with the Ekiti
gubernatorial election of June 14, 2018, reinforced my insight into the
thinking of the locals as to the possible direction of their votes in the
election.
At the highly-impressive Afe Babalola
University , Ado-Ekiti, I
encountered a local chief and another lady visitor to the institution who talk
animatedly about how they would rather vote for the candidate of the Peoples Democratic
Party (PDP), than that of the rival All Progressives Congress (APC). In
praising Aare Afe Babalola for founding a university that has provided job
opportunities for hundreds of Nigerians, they said Dr. Kayode Fayemi of the APC
would rather build his own university in Ghana ,
providing jobs for the people of Ghana instead of Nigerians.
*President Buhari |
The Coward Called Godswill Akpabio
By Femi Fani-Kayode
"You
remain the father of the nation, our father and political father to all. Just
like I told Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Vice President Osinbanjo yesterday in
Nigeria ...
Those who think that they have politically grown to insult you will all regret
it before month end sir. I am here (London )
to register my undiluted love and unalloyed support to you. I was involved in
all their meetings and I know what their plans are. The long recess of NASS is
going to be your advantage and not theirs like they thought and planned"
Those that do not have the courage of their
convictions and that do not have the guts to stand against tyranny when under
fire are not worthy of being called men: they are little better than beasts.
The fact that the former Governor of Akwa Ibom,
Senator Godswill Akpabio, is a coward and a traitor is no longer in dispute.
The fact that his brazen treachery knows no bounds is what can best be
described as "settled law".
Nigeria: Another Paradise Just Lost
By Abraham Ogbodo
I apologize for the rude exit. When one friend called to find out
what happened to Backlash, I told
him the bitter truth. I was tired of pushing positions that had not drawn down
on President Buhari’s nepotism, tyranny and cluelessness on one hand and
enhanced his statesmanship, democratic credentials and capacity to govern well
on the other hand.
*President Buhari |
My last appearance on this page was on April
15. Since then, the degeneration in national life has continued unabated. In
fact, the bizarre has become the norm. Yet, the purpose today after the break
is not to give any good news. It is to reinforce the futility in expecting a
reversal in the narrative of negativity. I apologize for increasing your
worries.
Monday, August 6, 2018
Celebrating The Literary World Of JP Clark
By Hope Eghagha
It is within the context of a poignant, profound and perhaps
arcane ritual imagination that we encounter John Pepper Clark in his literary
world as evidenced by the evocative power of his primal poetic and dramatic
compositions. Especially so are some of the early works such
as Song of a Goat through Ozidi,
the ‘middle’ The Boat, The Return Home, Full
Circle, Casualties and the later Remains of a Tide.
*JP Clark |
His only known work of prose the
semi-autobiographical and bitingly sarcastic America their
America, at once immediate in content and prophetic in thematic concern
exists outside this ontology of ritual and the mythic imagination. Almost to the letter (or depth) of contemporary effusions from Trumpian America,
this work captures the supercilious arrogance of white America and victims of
racial disharmony narrated after a personal encounter with the programmed
academy of American culture, capitalism and sociology which our young and
bristling JP had found condescending and utterly restrictive.
PDP And The Burden Of Managing A Windfall
By Sam Ohuabunwa
So very often, we pray for something. And sometimes when the payer
is answered, a new problem emerges and that of managing the outcome.
The problem is sometimes exaggerated when God
decides to ‘embarrass’ you and give you more than you asked for or were
expecting.
There was this story of an Okada driver who
had been praying for a child for seven years and eventually his wife became
pregnant. Throughout the pregnancy he was full of joy, but could not afford to pay for a
scan for his wife and so, had no idea what was on the way.
Friday, August 3, 2018
Sack These Incompetent Security Chiefs Now!
By Tayo Demola
For several months now, some parts of the nation have been boiling
with hostilities. We have since lost count of the number of
killings that have taken place. We have lost count of the number of innocent
Nigerians that have been killed in one of the most dastard and mindless
killings in the history of Nigeria . I can’t believe that this is happening before our own very eyes and nothing has
been done about these killings up till now!
President Buhari and Service Chiefs |
It seems as if the government has now accepted
this as the norm because I’m yet to see any drastic step taken by the President
to address these urgent issues and put a permanent stop to these security
challenges. President Muhammadu Buhari should realise that
the primary responsibility of government is to protect lives and property and
to care for the welfare of the people. The government has failed to provide these
for the people.
Lagos: The Tanker Gridlock And Leadership’s Ineptitude
By Chijioke Nelson
The continued siege by the drivers of articulated vehicles to one
of the most important road networks in the country’s economic nerve center-
Lagos State, is nothing short of dearth of ideas and tacit admittance by the
country’s leadership at all levels. I am talking about the Oshodi-Apapa
Expressway.
This road, not only serves as the country’s
gateway, but also the connecting corridor to Nigeria ’s
boundary with the popular Cotonou Town of Benin Republic and routes for
commercial vehicles heading to Togo ,
Ghana ,
among others. But more important is the fact that the road leads off to the homes of millions
of residents in nearby suburbs, who work in the Island
and other Mainland areas.
When Leadership Calls For The Best And Brightest
By Chiedu Uche Okoye
Thankfully, Anambra State is on the march to greatness,
again, after being held down in the past by unscrupulous political elements in
the state. Then, they placed their selfish and parochial interests above the
collective good. When the fourth republic dawned here, the generality of
Nigerians heaved a sigh of relief and expected that things would change for the
better. It did not change for the better, immediately, however.
In Anambra
State , instead of
enjoying the fruits and gains of representative government, the people suffered
under suffocating and ineffective political leadership occasioned, partly, by
the political godfatherism that characterised the politics of the state, then.
Is Dr. Chinwoke Mbadinuju and Sir Emeka Offor’s fight for the financial purse
and soul of the state not fresh in our memories? And Dr. Chris Ngige took on
his political benefactor, Chris Uba, over the control of the state. Those
needless political fights hobbled the state and stalled its development.
*Peter Obi |
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