*Today's Exchange Rates |
Monday, January 30, 2017
BREAKING: It Is Now US1$ To N500!
As Nigeria's economic recession worsens, the Naira has suffered further depreciation. One US dollar now exchanges for five hundred Naira (N500)...
Nigeria: Awaiting The Second Colonization
By Abraham Ogbodo
Why are we
what we are in Nigeria ?
Nothing is ever promptly handled to create maximum benefits. If it is road
construction or rehabilitation, government waits until a tiny pothole becomes a
dangerous crater and lives lost through accidents caused by the failed part of
the road and after a deafening public outcry too, before a contract is awarded
for the fixing.
This
national lethargy is even more manifest in government – labour relations. No
proposed strike action by workers union is ever nipped in the bud. Government
usually lives through the build-up and in a fire-fighting approach sets up
committees to negotiate a cease-fire with the warring union after everywhere
had been put on fire. It is all a measure of our inability to sift through the
issues of today and articulate a proper future. More or less, we live by the
day or in everyday language, from hand to mouth. No nation attains greatness
operating on pay-as-you-go basis.
Is the
fault in our star or style? I mean is there anything about our geo-ethnic locations
that makes perception difficult? We are incapable of perceiving danger even if
it is just an inch away. An online trending statement allegedly by South
African Apartheid President P.W Botha, but which has been reworked or adapted
to suit the personalities of Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu and
American President Donald Trump, is very hard on the Black race.
The summary
of it all is that the Negro lacks completely in the essentials to cultivate a
high culture. He is neither innovative nor resilient and hides under the
circumstances of his social evolution to always remain under his challenges
instead of rising above them. It is a damning verdict, nevertheless, supported
by ample evidence in the observable political leadership of the Black world.
Also, a video of an American Black preacher, Dr. David Manning of Atlam World Missionary Church
in Harlem , New York on the same subject matter of the
copious and inexplicable inadequacies of the Black race went viral.
The narratives in both instances came close to creating a separate
taxonomy outside the homo-sapiens specie for the Black race. The commentators
only stopped short of branding black people sub-human. The temptation is to
lash out at these bigots and proclaim (not prove) that Blacks and Whites are
denominated in a common humanity and the so-called difference between them is
not any more substantial than illusive perception of pigmentation. And that is
largely true because even President Trump, in a moment of absolute sanity, said
in his inauguration speech that the same red blood runs in the veins of
everybody.
Nigeria: APC’s Road To Infamy
By Alabi Williams
In the
beginning, all seemed very well with the All Progressives Congress (APC). As
the fortunes of the former ruling party, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) dimmed,
that of the new coalition shone luxuriantly. Politicians began to fall over
themselves to partake in the assemblage, even as thousands of volunteers
outside the party system placed their bet on the party. Without being asked,
they turned social media campaigners for the election of candidate Muhammadu
Buhari.
It could be said that in the build up to the 2015 elections, Buhari and
his party had their palm kernels cracked on their behalf by a benevolent
spirit. APC had little to do to clinch victory, as PDP had burnt its credit so
prodigally that it was only a matter of time for it to unravel. At home and
abroad, enthusiasts were just waiting for elections to come and go. The frenzy
was so pervasive that the government of Goodluck Jonathan had to device some
means to adjust voting dates, and postpone day of reckoning. Even that did not
stop chants of Sai Baba!
Eventually, Buhari won
and was crowned on May 29, 2015. It was time to unbundle the wrap of campaign
promises, especially that of making one naira equal to one dollar. It turned
out that there was a huge difference between asking for votes and delivering on
promises. It turned out that beyond the excitement of winning election, there
has to be proven capacity to comprehend the issues and conceptualise a process
to confront them. That is where a good number of Nigerians, particularly
friends of the APC in the social media, were forced to part ways with
government.
Today, the level of
discontent with the Buhari government is frightening. The quantity of bile
social media ‘journalists’ spew and its toxic content is enough to send a
chicken-hearted president on permanent bed rest. The rumour mill is agog with
very offensive content, and you wonder how fast the APC has frittered away the
credibility and trust on which it rode to power. And they are not about to back
off, as the economy is not showing signs of quick recovery. Their anger is that
they were conned by the ruling party, into believing that once they assist to
send the other government away, Nigeria
will become an el dorado
overnight. In other words, they are angry with this government over its
policies that do not seem to work and have human face.
When Buhari came onboard, reflex action on the part of some agencies of
government created mirages that were thought to be early signs of the change
that was promised. Electricity supply became relatively more assured; supply of
PMS at the former price of N87 became readily available, and Nigerians were
beginning to reenact the social discipline that hallmarked Buhari’s first
coming, as military head of state. Effortlessly, and without raising a hand,
things seemed to work and the party in government attributed that to be the
body language of Buhari in action. They began to celebrate with much noise.
Planned Detention Of Apostle Suleiman, Bishop Oyedepo: Don't Plunge Nigeria Into Religious Crisis, Fayose Cautions DSS
PRESS RELEASE
Ekiti State Governor and Chairman
of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Governors’ Forum, Mr. Ayodele Fayose has
warned the Department of State Services (DSS) over the planned detention and
trial of Apostle Johnson Suleiman of The Omega Fire Ministries Worldwide and
the General Overseer of Living Faith Church Worldwide International (Winners'
Chapel International), Bishop David Oyedepo, describing it as indirect
invitation to religious crisis in the country.
*Bishop Oyedepo |
Governor Fayose alleged that, "There is plan to charge Apostle Suleiman and Bishop Oyedepo for
incitement and attempt to cause public disorder on Friday, and make sure that
they are not granted bail so to get them remanded in Kuje Prison
perpetually."
He said this plan was to humiliate these men of God as
well as silence them and create fear in other people that may want to speak
against the heinous crime against humanity being committed daily while
perpetrators are being shielded by the federal government.
In a statement issued on Sunday by is Special Assistant
on Public Communications and New Media, Lere Olayinka, Governor Fayose said the
DSS should tell Nigerians how many of the Fulani herdsmen that killed thousands
of Nigerians across the country have been arrested before going after Nigerians
who merely expressed their frustration over the to failure of the federal
government to protect them.
The governor said: "Even
though the DSS has allowed commonsense to prevail by properly inviting Apostle
Suleiman as against the gestapo manner with which the service attempted to
abduct him last week Wednesday, it is still questionable that the DSS is more
interested in a man who threatened to defend himself against any attack by
Fulani herdsmen rather than those herdsmen that murdered thousands of
Nigerians.”
Saturday, January 28, 2017
Indeed, Right Time For Igbo Presidency
By
Bolaji Tunji
One Tuesday, former
President Olusegun Obasanjo made a case for the South east to also be given a
chance to produce the next president of Nigeria . In canvassing this view
which he said was personal to him, he noted that most of the other zones in the
country- the North, South West and even the minority south South had all
produced the nation’s president at one point or the other and it would only be
fair if the south east was also allowed to produce Nigeria’s president in the
not too distant future.
Indeed, the iconic former president seems to have spoken the mind
of most of us who still believe in fairness, justice and equity as way of
stemming the agitation from that part of the country.
Within a few days of the ex-president’s statement, there have been
reactions from some Nigerians,though mostly of the South east extraction. While
some are in support of the former president’s statement, a few remain skeptical
believing that Obasanjo’s statement came because he saw that the agitation of
South east ethnic nationalities such as Movement for the Actualization of
the Sovereign State of Biafra, (MASSOB) and the Indigenous People of
Biafra (IPOB) have grown more strident. Notwithstanding the messenger, the
question is whether there is any substance in the message and whether it is or
should be a reality worth pursuing?
For someone who has always believed in fairness, equity,
Obasanjo’s message resonates with me. If Nigerians have not been thinking in
this direction, it is time to start looking that way.
It is not in doubt that the South east has contributed immensely,
like any other zone to the development of this country. One would even believe
an average South easterner to be more nationalistic than any other, among the
different zones in the country. And why would I say this? It is only an Igboman
who feels comfortable in any and every part of Nigeria . There is hardly a state or
town in Nigeria
today where you would not find an Igboman. He either has a business
running or is found offering different services to the host community. He
builds his house in that community and feels comfortable there. He sees himself
as part of the community. There is a saying in the Southwest, especially among
the Oyo-speaking Yoruba that if you got to a town and you could not locate an
Ogbomoso person, it would be better for you to run from the place. The
implication being that the inhabitants are inhospitable. Ogbomoso people in
those days are traders who ply their trade in far-flung places, far from their
home.
I think the same applies to the Igbo race. If you ventured into
any town or village and you could not locate an Igboman, you would do yourself
a world of good by running away from the place. The Igbo is an irrepressible
race. Prior to the civil war period, they were everywhere in the country. They
were the railway engineers and great merchants while majority were also seen as
intellectual giants. With the civil war, majority went back home. But less than
five decades after the war, they are every where in Nigeria , trading and contributing
to the economy of the host community. If that is not a good example in
nationalism, I wonder what is. Their attitude is the trait of a race that still
believes in the oneness of the country, despite what some people would say to
the contrary.
The Shocking Rise Of Paedophilia In Nigeria
By Tony Ogunlowo
Hardly a day goes by when there isn’t a news report about a minor
being sexually abused by a much older person. And the shocking thing is that
for every case reported dozens are not because the young victims are either too
scared of their attackers or embarrassed to talk to anyone. And it’s so bad now
that it’s rising to epidemic levels and soon Nigeria
will be overtaking Cambodia
and the Far East as the paedophile hotspot of
the world!
Currently
the law stipulates life imprisonment for rape of a minor under the new Sexual
Offences Bill but the law doesn’t deal with those who marry under-age girls to
circumvent the law. Whilst it is a horrendous crime to rape anyone it’s even
worse when the victim is a child and the perpetrator can get away with it by
either marrying their victim or shutting them up. Most paedophiles get away
with their crimes because they are much older and can intimidate or brainwash
their victims. And most of the time the perpetrators of these crimes are people
known to the victims as fathers, brothers, neighbours, uncles, in-laws etc.
Disturbingly,
families are prepared to put up a wall of silence and pretend as if nothing is
going wrong if there is a case of incest or paedophilia going on in their
household. They all keep quiet, hoping it blow over, in an attempt to preserve
their dignity often threatening the victim to remain quiet and not dealing with
the perpertrator.
Some
tribes even encourage paedophilia by marrying off their under-age daughters to
men old enough to be their grandfathers. And over the years no government
policy or law has been put in place to outlaw this practice until recently and
it’s still not enforced. Our society needs to shape up; it’s not okay for a
50-year old to be seen walking down the road with his new under-age wife. It
doesn’t matter if he’s the richest man in Nigeria , an Oba or Emir. It’s
morally wrong and the person belongs in jail! And for those who disagree or
hide behind the flimsy excuse of ‘it’s our tradition’, how would you feel if
your under-age son or daughter was being sexually abused by a 50-year old? Some
men even think it’s ‘cool’ to sleep with an under-age child. It’s not and
anybody who sleeps with an under-aged child, whether it’s consensual or not, is
a paedophile. On a sadder note thirty-five Nigerian Senators actually voted,
recently, for the legalization of child marriage! And the Senators in question
all happen to be from the North and Muslims! Somebody ought to tell them we
live in the 21st century now and such barbaric acts are not tolerable despite
what the Koran says about marriage.
Thursday, January 26, 2017
January 15, Fajuyi And The Northern Christians
By Emma Okocha
“Colonel Francis Fajuyi was the Commander of Operation Baby Chimra,
the mock battle at Lenlete before Abeokuta
few days to Operation Damisa…. Even if a tree stands in Yoruba land, Akintola
will rule that tree!”
– Colonel Fajuyi addressing the
Revolutionaries at the mock battle, Lenlete.
*Fajuyi |
Revisionists of the Nigerian Civil war history distort the role,
diminish the active participation of Colonel Adekunle Fajuyi’s support to the
boys of the January 15 revolution. Without any scientific evidence, they have
gone forward to present the Colonel as a hero, who sacrificed his life in
solidarity with his condemned high priced guest. Encircled by the blood-thirsty
Phalangists, who were in the Ibadan Government House to kill the Head of State
and effect a change of government, the story went on to say that the Governor
was offered an option… “The Governor
decided to die with his guest when it was inevitable that the coup plotters
wanted General Aguiyi Ironsi dead…” Bla bla bla.
Our researches on the other hand, counter that fable. In the first
place, Adekunle Fajuyi did not belong to the same philosophical school of his
guest. The late Colonel was a hero alright but his heroism was built out of his
exceptional gallantry, as a field commander during the United Nation’s Peace
Intervention in the Congo .
Recently, in a Punch interview, Fajuyi’s sister shocked our present Roman
leaders and governors when she revealed that her brother started to avoid her
when she asked him to influence a contract job she had quoted for in one of the
ministries under his government in 1966!
Like Kaduna Nzeogwu, who was going to die in the South African
Liberation war, hence he refrained from getting married. Governor Adekunle
Fajuyi had no house and would not allow his sister “disgrace his reputation” by getting him involved in contract jobs.
Adekunle Fajuyi and the leaders of the January 15 revolution were pioneer
African Revolutionaries, who were primarily motivated into action by their
experience in the Congo .
Kaduna Nzeogwu principally did not forgive the African conservative Monrovia
Group led by Nigeria for
their complacency, following the C.I.A conspiracy, which overthrew the
legitimate government of the elected Prime Minister of the Congo . Since
that despicable putsch and the murder of Patrice Lumumba, the Congo has
remained on the cliff hanger. Indeed, Kaduna Nzeogwu’s January 15 spontaneous
Declaration of the Revolution was as arresting and in delivery, a carbon copy
of Patrice Lumumba’s independent speech, which challenged Imperial Belgian’s
enslavement of the Congo .
The President's Dining Table Of Corruption
By Nnaemeka
Oruh
*Buhari |
However, Nigerians had not reckoned with two things:
One, to rise to power, the man popularly known as Sai Baba needed money. So to get
that, he leaned heavily on some poster-children of corruption, some governor, mostly from the South. who
looted their states dry, to fund Sai Baba's election campaigns. By doing
that, they forever bought Buhari's loyalty such that even when there are
concrete proofs of their corrupt actions, Sai Baba closed his ears to them,
and unintelligently continued to defend and shield them.
But what every discerning person immediately understood was that there was no way Sai Baba was going to fight the very corruption that made him President! So, naturally, the first seats around Sai Baba's table were taken by the poster-children of corruption, who have since then remained untouchable—out of the window goes the “favour” part of the without-fear-or-favour sword.
But what every discerning person immediately understood was that there was no way Sai Baba was going to fight the very corruption that made him President! So, naturally, the first seats around Sai Baba's table were taken by the poster-children of corruption, who have since then remained untouchable—out of the window goes the “favour” part of the without-fear-or-favour sword.
President Buhari And His Rumoured Death
By Paul Onomuakpokpo
An
impediment to the quest for the full return of history to schools is our fear
of excavating the seamy past of our heroes. We want history to be returned to
our schools so that we can learn about our past and its avatars and draw some
useful lessons for an effective response to our contemporary challenges. But we
are trapped in the tragic paradox of the fear of being confronted with the
foibles and peccadilloes of the past heroes who shaped our history. This
paradox is amply expressed in the warning not to speak ill of the dead.
We are even
forbidden from speaking ill of the living. Fawn on the living, credit them with
the virtues they are crassly bereft of and there would not be any problems. But
attempt to draw attention to their less than stellar qualities and a kerfuffle
is provoked. There is a grimmer possibility of this if the subjects are public
office holders. They would deploy all their might to teach the daring offenders
the lessons that they should not traduce a big Nigerian. With the complicity of
the police, they would throw them into jail where they would be forgotten.
It is in
this context that we can situate the developments around the rumoured death of
President Muhammadu Buhari. To be sure, it is wrong to wish anybody dead. For
neither do we have the power to take the life of someone we did not create nor
know when that person would die. Again, we are reminded of Michel de
Montaigne’s warning that we should not consider anyone happy until his death.
In other words, no human being, no matter his or her station in life is immune
from the storms and tempests of life. Thus, we must not be deterred from
discussing the rumoured death of the president and appropriating some useful
lessons from it.
After all,
other leaders like Nnamdi Azikiwe were said to have died while they were still
alive. Even in Zimbabwe ,
there have been many rumours of death about Life President Robert Mugabe.
Mugabe who is amused at the rumours has quipped that he has resurrected more
often than Jesus Christ. And just recently, one Pastor Patrick Mugadza
prophesied that the 92-year-old Mugabe would die on October 17, 2017. And
unsurprisingly, Mugadza has been taken to court. But the joke is on Mugabe as
Mugadza’s lawyer has said that the pastor was only relaying a message from God
and the police had to prove that God is not its originator.
The reactions of Nigerians to the rumoured death of the president are a mix of
genuine shock and barefaced humbug. How dare malevolent persons claim that the
president is dead? hollered some. If our president had reacted like this to the
recurrent wastage of lives in the country, we would have disincentivised the
propensity for willful killing by fellow citizens or through government neglect.
We glimpse our president’s lack of respect for human life through his
protection of those who allegedly stole the money meant for starving and
sexually exploited internally displaced persons. Obviously, these lives are not
as precious as the president’s. This is why despite the outrage at the sleaze
of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Lawal Babachir, Buhari is
begging the Senate to allow him to stay in office.
Wednesday, January 25, 2017
Infrastructure Collapse In The South-East Of Nigeria
By Emmanuel
Onwubiko
During the last
Yuletide, when people from diverse sectors of life trooped down to their
indigenous hometowns in the South-East of Nigeria from across the globe to
celebrate with their loved ones, this writer also spent quality periods in the
South-East.
But, unlike several
millions of our people whose major point of attraction in going home for
Christmas is to be with loved ones, as a professional journalist and human
rights campaigner, I also moved round the South-East states to catch
impressions of the state of infrastructure in the zone, largely due to the
existential fact that the South-East of Nigeria suffers severe infrastructure
deficits.
With the possible
exceptions of Enugu
and Anambra states, all other states in the South-East like Imo, Ebonyi and
Abia states have serious infrastructure shortages. Some elected politicians in
some of these states operate like merchants who are in Abuja to enrich their families.
But, throughout the
movement I had around the South- Eastern States, a common noticeable trend
emerged, depicting the reality that, indeed, the South-East of Nigeria is
witnessing first class infrastructural emergency.
Home truth dawned
on me that steps and mechanisms must be put in place and meticulously
implemented to restore the pride that the South-East of Nigeria used to
enjoy in times past.
But, in all of
these bad states of social amenities, the almost complete absence of effective
social services and professional policing of most states of the South- East
goes to show another hidden fact- that the South- East is currently witnessing
human rights emergency.
Federal security
agencies operating in the South-East States, most especially in the capital
cities, usually operate with a hostile mindset, as if to say the South-East of Nigeria is a
conquered territory.
Tuesday, January 24, 2017
Fulani Herdsmen And Endless Killings
By
Benedict Ahanonu
FOR most part of 2016, Nigeria was plagued by incessant
letting of blood by a group alleged to be Fulani herdsmen. While some may claim
that the real Fulani herdsmen are peaceful and essentially mindful of their
flock, the fact remains that this marauding group is composed of herdsmen who
appear in the garb of Fulani pastoralists.
That aside, their modus operandi is unwavering and follows a common pattern.
From Benue to Enugu , Delta, Ekiti and now Niger , Kaduna
it has been a gory tale of woe.
Thousands of innocent
Nigerians have been killed, cash and food crops destroyed, villages and
communities sacked.
Because there seems to be no indication of readiness by the government through the security agencies to deal with these murderous offenders, they have got more emboldened even as they visit mayhem on Nigerians with flagrant impunity.
One had expected President Muhammadu Buhari to demonstrate strong leadership in dealing with these marauders whom it appears may not be Nigerians.
Because there seems to be no indication of readiness by the government through the security agencies to deal with these murderous offenders, they have got more emboldened even as they visit mayhem on Nigerians with flagrant impunity.
One had expected President Muhammadu Buhari to demonstrate strong leadership in dealing with these marauders whom it appears may not be Nigerians.
While there is
“Operation Lafiya Dole” for the Northeast insurgency, “Operation Python Dance” for the Southeast Biafran agitators, “Operation Crocodile Smile” for the
Niger Delta, there is none for this bunch of killers who have succeeded in
inflicting pain on almost every part of the country.
It is even quite
disturbing and strange that the same President Buhari who is always quick
to condemn such dastardly acts when they happen elsewhere has so far been
unable to rebuke what seems like genocide taking place in Southern Kaduna.
Reacting, perhaps,
at the behest of Buhari, Special Adviser to the President on Media and
Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, who spoke on a Channels Television programme,
“Sunrise Daily,” said that it was needless for the president to speak on the
destruction of southern Kaduna State since the governor assured that he was in
full control of the violent crisis and had been briefing his boss regularly.
Nigeria: Drifting To A One-Party State
By
Victor Effik
Nigerians may have to expect a full blown one-party rule unless
the opposition parties gear up and put their houses in order. 2019 may just end
up as a one horse race. The evidence is simply overwhelming. As I write, the
ruling party is using all the political tricks in its bag to lure many
members of the opposition PDP in the National Assembly into its fold. Their
soft targets are the serving members who may, in the estimation of the party
apparatchik, not get a return ticket for another term; they are also targeting
those who are not in the good books of their state governors.
*Buhari |
And that reminds us that the greatest problem in the opposition
camp are the governors. Apart from bringing a frankenstein monster called
Sheriff, they seem not intelligent enough to know where their power stops. Some
of them are even antagonizing serving members of the National Assembly who
should add political value to the party and by extension, their second term
ambitions. And apart from Rivers
State ’s Wike, not many of
the serving PDP Governors can withstand the heat of federal might during
elections.
Really, the opposition PDP is in tatters. That has been the plan
of the ruling APC. The plan is working well now. No thanks to overzealous state
governors, lack of party cohesion and discipline that characterize Nigerian
party politics.
The feeling from within the ruling party is that except a death
blow is dealt on PDP given its 16 years dominance, there is a threat that it
might bounce back. So, the strategy of the ruling party to dismember it was
carefully hatched. Let us now look at the following scenarios:First, the
Sheriff strategy fitted the bill. Given his case with EFCC and the likelihood
of him being roped into the Boko Haram conundrum, he was seen as an easy prey
who will play ball. And he has done that so perfectly. The APC strategists did
their homework well.
Second, a section of the judiciary perceived to be hostile must be
brought to its knees if the Sheriff strategy must work. Those judges perceived
to be a stumbling block needed to be singled out and dealt with. True, the
state may have a genuine case against some of them, but like the anti
corruption campaign has shown, the campaign is heavily skewed in favour those ready
to acquiesce.
Thirdly, the electoral umpire, INEC and the security might of the
state needed to be mobilized to ensure that the ruling party makes an inroad
into South-south and captures the Edo and Ondo
top prizes ahead of 2019. That too seemed to have worked well in Edo and Ondo and partially in Rivers.
Oil And Local Prosperity: A Study Of ‘Two Kingdoms’
By Patrick Dele Cole
The King of
Abonnema has just finished a magnificent building he called his palace. The
king of Okpo has done the same – built a palace. But there the similarity ends.
Abonnema is one of the major towns among the Kalabari Ijaw; its history is long
and illustrious. It has prominent indigenes whose names are well-known to all
Nigerians, Wenike Briggs, Ajumogobia, Graham-Douglas, Ferdin and Alabraba, W.W.
Whyte, Mr. Justice Adolphus Karibi Whyte (SCJ), Odoliyi Lolomari (Ex-MD, NNPC),
Olu Fubara, Ambassador D.D. Obunge, Admiral Bob Manuel, Chief Lulu Briggs, Dr.
Dodiyi Manuel, Capt. Briggs (Ex-Minister of Transport), Capt. Ajumogobia, Chief
S.K Dagogo Jack (Ex-INEC chairman), Deputy Comptroller of Customs, Bibi Akpana,
Tom Fabyan (former chief executive of African Petroleum), L.M. Jacks (Permanent
Secretary, Internal Affairs), Miss World (Agbani Darego); Miss Nigeria (Syster
Jack), and many others.
Okpo, on the other
hand, is a small village which many years ago you would have passed even before
you blink once. It is part of Obuama or Harry’s town which is regarded as a
small village in the pantheon of Kalabari Ijaw towns. So Okpo is a small
village of a small village.
A few years ago, some
oil companies did some seismic work in Okpo village. In doing so, they brought
in a lot of equipment, reclaimed large tracks of land, and employed hundreds of
people – thus awakening a small dot of a village into a potential metropolis.
The seismic activity ended and the oil company packed up and left. Chief
Diamond Bob Manuel Tobin–West saw his opportunity in this substantial real
estate, substantial compensation for the seismic activities from a company with
a lively corporate social responsible mentality. The people of Okpo were
compensated. Instead of Chief Diamond taking his own share of the money to Port Harcourt to build a
beautiful house and or a hotel, he decided to return to the spot and there
restart and rebuild his community. The Chief is a man who lives by example. He
is a graduate from UK and Canada : has a
family well settled in these countries.
Chief
Diamond built himself a palace in the old seismic site. He encouraged his
people to return and follow his example. He built a complex of six houses; his
brothers and sisters are in the process of completing modern structures, with
roads and amenities – water, electricity, schools, etc. This year’s Christmas
and New Year celebration in his palace had all trappings of modernity, complete
with carols, fireworks, plenty of food and drinks. There is a clinic nearby. He
has galvanised all the villages around him and a modern metropolis is taking
shape in a formerly one – blink village. His neighbours in the bigger town of Obuama are beginning to
recognise his worth and influence and constantly visit him to talk about the
progress of Okpo and the surrounding area. Incidentally, the Deputy Governor of
Rivers State , Mrs. Harry Banigo is from Obuama.
So is Chief Ombo Harry, once Executive Director, Finance of NNPC. The former
Chairman of PDP Rivers State, Marshall Harry, the former Deputy Speaker of
Rivers State House of Assembly, another Harry and so on are from Obuama- None
of the above has what the vision of Chief Diamond who hopes to build a true
metropolis in this forsaken enclave.
Monday, January 23, 2017
Northern Governors, Monarchs Meet On Lingering Crisis In The Zone
Governors of the 19 Northern states of the Nigerian federation
are currently meeting at the Sir Kashim Ibrahim House in Kaduna to discuss the various crises plaguing
the zone.
Uppermost in their minds, according reports, is the
worsening security problem in the zone which has wasted thousands of lives,
including women and children, displaced lots of people and consumed properties
worth billions of naira.
The crisis has further polarised the zone along religious
and ethnic lines and deepened suspicion and mistrust among the various co-existing
people.
Nigeria: A Nation Of Cowards And Docile Citizens
By Nnanna Ijomah
It is said
that “a nation of sheep is governed by wolves”. Nigerians have not only become
sheepish and docile but also whiners and cowards. Docility has become our
middle name and we have come to display it on our chests as badges of honor. I
don’t know when we became this way but I’m sure it’s been long in the making.
Over the years it has become more evident that we have become a very timid and
spineless people, with a high degree of acceptance and tolerance of whatever
mistreatment our leaders, both at the local, State, and Federal levels mete out
to us. There is a popular saying, “the future belongs to those who change it”.In
“He, Buhari commanded the support of a significant number of the Northern poor, in spite of the fact that there is absolutely nothing in his curriculum Vitae about advancing the interest of the poor.”
Here he, the President is not alone. The same can be said of most of our Governors and national Assembly members. The reality of our situation in
The more I read about events in Nigeria or the
state of the nation, the alarming scope of corruption despite the war against
it, the ineffective or none -existent economic policies and its aftermath, the
increasing poverty rate in the country especially in the North, the complicity
of INEC and our security officials in rigging elections, the non-payment of
worker’s salaries both at the state and federal levels, the religious massacres
by herdsmen and the lack of a tough response or arrests by federal government
officials and the financial appeasement by a state governor, the instability in
the Niger Delta, the agitation for Biafra by the Igbo’s, the unending blame
campaign of the President of his predecessor, etc. etc., the more I feel
morbidly entranced like a homicide detective gazing into a pool of freshly
spilled blood. I use the phrase freshly spilled blood literally because that’s
what each new unfortunate event looks like. If I may borrow the words of Pat
Utomi in a recent comment he made, “Nigeria is a paradox of progressive
degradation, where every Government is worse than the one that preceded it”. As
the new year begins this month I have become more apocalyptic about the future
of the country and its political stability.
Sunday, January 22, 2017
Why President Buhari Ran(n) to Gambia and Away From Rann
By Reno
Omokri
Till date, the only person who has died in The
Gambia is President elect Barrow's son, Habibu Barrow, who was bitten by a dog.
But in Southern Kaduna , hundreds of people
have bitten the dust.
If in truth President Buhari really wants to
prevent a humanitarian crisis, the place he should be visiting and intervening
in is Southern Kaduna before The Gambia.
*Buhari |
And the penchant of the President to delegate
pressing domestic problems to his subordinates while personally addressing
foreign challenges of lower priority is on the increase.
I have chosen to empathize with the Buhari
administration over the deaths of Internally Displaced Persons and
international aid workers at the Rann IDP camp in Borno state by a bomb
mistakenly dropped on the camp by a Nigerian Air Force Jet, but for the life of
me I cannot understand why the President, who heavily criticized former
President Jonathan's handling of the Boko Haram crisis, elected to delegate his
Chief of Staff, Abba Kyari, and some ministers to visit the victims and
survivors of the Rann disaster to offer condolences and supposed support.
And to the Borno state governor who cheekily said
there was progress because in his words there was no "blame game" as
would have happened in the previous administration of Jonathan, I would just say,
wake up and smell the coffee. I can see no excuse for this faux pas except the
Borno state Governor is sarcastically trying to call out the Buhari government
for its over indulgence in blaming previous administrations.
If it was possible, the Buhari administration would
have taken out a registered trade mark on the phrase 'blame game'. Never in the
history of Nigeria , and
perhaps contemporary Africa , has an
administration invested so much of its focus and time on blame gaming as the
Buhari government. So Governor Shettima would have to pull more fallacious
words out of his mischievous magical hat of illusions to be able to pin such a
false accusation on the Jonathan Government.
It may be necessary to remind Governor Shettima
that the Jonathan he so likes to blame visited Borno more than once as
President during the height of the Boko Haram insurgency. Has President Buhari
even bothered to drop by? That is how much the President thinks of him!
But in all this, we still must give God the glory
that the mistake by the air force did not occur while Oby Ezekwesili and Lai
Mohammed were combing Sambisa forest in search of the missing Chibok girls.
And let me speak directly to the President.
President Muhammadu Buhari, as Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces, don't
you think you owe it as a duty to be in Rann at this very moment to personally
comfort victims and survivors of the unfortunate mistaken bombing by our Armed
Forces?
Mugabe Must Go! – War Veterans
Agitated war veterans have
reiterated their call for President Robert Mugabe to leave office now, adding
derisively yesterday that they would not "waste" their time
quarrelling with Zanu-PF youths who have said that they are prepared to take up
arms to defend the nonagenarian.
Speaking to the Daily News, the
spokesperson of the Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Association
(ZNLWVA), Douglas Mahiya, was emphatic that Mugabe - who turns a mature 93 next
month - could not continue to lead the country.
*President Mugabe |
He also took a swipe at
Zanu-PF youth leader Kudzanai Chipanga who said earlier this week that party
youths were ready to go to war against former freedom fighters and other
supporters of Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa, in defence of Mugabe - saying
Chipanga had "no idea" about wars and their deadly consequences.
This comes as Zanu-PF secretary for administration Ignatius Chombo was also insisting yesterday at a press conference held at the party's headquarters in
"The youths do not know what taking up arms is all about. They only hear about it. Nobody in their right mind wants a war, especially those who were once involved in one. What the youths are saying is childish.
"What we are simply saying is that a 93-year-old may, naturally, not be fully capable of discharging their duties in the office of the president," the forthright Mahiya said.
However, Chombo was adamant
that Mugabe could only be challenged internally at the party's 2019 elective
congress.
"Some of you, including
the press elect not to read," Chombo said, adding that the Zanu-PF
congress was the only party event that was held to elect the person who would
represent the former liberation movement in future elections.
"We are saying this so
that newspapers do not create confusion where there is none. In 2014, we
elected our president.
"We said then that all
those who want to be president should raise their hands. Everyone rushed to
lift the president's, saying ‘we want Mugabe, he is the one we want to be
president of the party'.
"This was a mandate for
five years. So, anyone who wants to come in now can only do so at the 2019
congress. Logically and mathematically, it's all very clear and straightforward
. . . there is no shortcut. So what is bothering our reporters?" he said -
bizarrely appearing to blame Zanu-PF's worsening tribal, factional and
succession wars on the media.
Saturday, January 21, 2017
Mugabe Son Lives In 10-Bed $42,000/Month Mansion In Dubai
Zimbabwean
President Robert Mugabe’s son Robert Junior is living in a 10-bedrom villa
located in an exclusive and pricey Dubai
neighbourhood at a cost of $42,000 per month in rentals, it has emerged.
The revelation was made by Lebanese businessman, Jamal
Ahmed, who is at war with Mugabe’s wife, Grace, over a botched deal to buy a
million-dollar diamond ring supposedly intended as the President’s wedding
anniversary present to the First Lady.
Grace, the Lebanese claims, has ordered the seizure of his
properties in Harare , apparently to force the
return of about $1.4m she paid for the ring through her account with CBZ bank
in Harare .
Ahmed claims Grace surprisingly rejected the ring when it
was delivered Dubai
and demanded the return of her money. She reportedly insisted that the money be
paid into a Dubai bank account.
The Lebanese argued that full refund was not possible since
costs had been incurred in procuring and polishing the precious stone. He also
objected to paying the money in Dubai saying
this would be illegal under Zimbabwe ’s
laws.
In the ongoing court battle over the saga, the First Lady
denied demanding payment in Dubai ,
saying she did not have a bank account there.
However, in response Ahmed said the Mugabes rent an expensive villa in Dubai which is used by
son Robert Junior who is based there.
“Whether or not the second respondent has accounts outside Zimbabwe does not mean she did not ask for a
refund in Dubai ,”
Ahmed argued.
UN Investigative Panel On The Genocide In Southern Kaduna: A Call For Objectivity
By Paul Danbaki
In Southern Kaduna today,
many are desperately searching for answers right now. Southern
Kaduna indegenes have seen their loved ones slaughtered, raped and
brutalized. Some have watched their homes, businesses, villages, and religious
places set ablaze and destroyed.
Husbands
have helplessly watched their wives raped and humiliated.
Ordinary
people have been killed and burned publicly. For years, Southern
Kaduna has been experiencing economic, political and structural
siege. Thousands of people are traumatized, resulting in a range of different
cognitive, emotional, physical, and behavioural effects which impact
communities negatively. Hearts are hurting and the suffering is deep!
From
the aforementioned, I join myriads of good people of Southern Kaduna to welcome
the decision to launch an independent investigation with a mandate to cover
allegations of human rights violations since the unabated genocide in Southern
Kaduna; I have confidence that the UN panel would indeed be independent,
transparent, thorough and effective, with a view to establishing the veracity
of the facts before it with a view to bringing to justice the perpetrators of
the genocide in Southern Kaduna.
I
am confident that the indegenes of Southern Kaduna
are ready to assist in ensuring that the investigation is undertaken in line
with international human rights standards. I also reiterate our request for
access to the affected areas, as the situation on the ground makes it very
challenging to access because of the ‘lies’ put forward by kingpins of the
heinous attacks in the region.
More
so, given the tense situation in southern Kaduna where a large security
presence has reportedly been deployed only on the main streets and NOT in the
bushes and hills/mountains where the brutal killers commit their crimes and
withdraw to; in the midst of all these, there are still reports of ongoing
arbitrary arrests, intimidation and harassment of people, a majority of whom
are the victims, this call becomes vital for the survival of the Southern
Kaduna nation.
Friday, January 20, 2017
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