A first glance at the title of
Alexander Pope’s poem The Rape of the
Lock immediately rouses the sensibilities to his deployment of the word
‘rape’. Although the mind instantly acquires a sexual cognition of ‘rape’,
Pope’s use of it connotes entirely different meaning in the context of the
poem. For Pope, ‘rape’ means to take away or remove something from its original
place thereby depriving the owner of its importance and service. Indeed, this
appears remote from ‘rape’ which describes the forceful initiation of sex
without the consent of one of the persons involved.
Before we begin to scrutinize
rape, let us establish that the symbolic ethos of any society is essentially
composed in its moral order by which the conduct of members is regulated. A
breakdown of moral order in any society through rape signifies a dislocation of
cosmic harmony and therefore requires propitiation, sometimes punitive; in
order to salvage humanity’s doomed fate before chthonic gods. Rape is an
undesirable, anti-social act which must be consistently repudiated and
abhorred. I do not know of any religion, culture or creed that condones rape.
Whether as an act of sexual perversion or an act of stealing, rape today – like
all other social vulgarity – stands trial in the court of public opinion.Monday, April 2, 2018
Winnie Mandela Dies At 81
Mrs. Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, a veteran of
the anti-apartheid struggle and wife of the late former South African president,
Mr. Nelson Mandela, is dead. She was 81.
Her PA‚ Zodwa Zwane‚ confirmed the ant-
apartheid struggle veteran’s death on Monday afternoon. She said the family
would issue a statement later in the day.
Born in
Bizana in the Eastern Cape in 1936‚ Nomzamo
Winifred Madikizela-Mandela moved to Johannesburg
to study social work after matriculating.
She met
lawyer and anti-apartheid activist Nelson Mandela in 1957 and they were married
a year later.
Saturday, March 31, 2018
President Buhari Can’t Fight Corruption, He Is A Direct Beneficiary Of Corruption Freebies — PDP
Press
Statement
The Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) says President Muhammadu Buhari has no moral rectitude
to fight corruption being a direct beneficiary of the corruption freebies
deployed by his party leaders to fund his 2015 presidential campaign.
The party
said the President who declared that he had no resources to run a presidential
campaign in 2015 ought to have known, particularly as a leader, that the
billions of naira deployed for his campaigns were proceeds of corrupt
activities of known All Progressives Congress (APC) governors and leaders.
The party
further challenged Buhari to make open the sources of fund available to his
campaign in the 2003, 2007 and 2011 race as well as the names of the donors.
The Petroleum Industry Governance Bill (PIGB) – A Watered-down version of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB)
By
Idowu Oyebanjo
The 8th Senate has passed the PIGB which, when assented to
by the President, will give birth to a new era for the Petroleum Industry in Nigeria .
Most of the countries that established National Oil Companies as did Nigeria have actually developed their Petroleum
Industries to benefit their citizens and nations especially in making
electricity available as a free commodity which in my opinion can also be
implemented in Nigeria .
*Buhari: President and Petroleum Minister |
After several years of attempts to reform the oil and gas
industry in Nigeria , the
watered-down version of the original Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) may be on
its way for Presidential assent with a 5% levy on fuel sold or distributed in Nigeria .
Nigeria’s Arrested Development And Bill Gates Wake-Up Call
By Magnus Onyibe
According
to Gates, for real development that would make reasonable impact on the polity
to take place, both human and physical infrastructure have to be developed pari
pasu.
By now, most Nigerians would be familiar with Bill Gate’s incisive
perspective on Nigeria ’s
development because his speech to the National Economic Council has gone viral.
So there is no need repeating the fact that he identified health and education
as sectors that Nigerian policy makers have to rejig in the Economic Recovery
Growth Plan, ERGP to enable the full realization of our country’s potentials.
This is because he noticed that even if the ERGP boasts of being focused on
Nigerian people via investment in healthcare and education which are the
critical elements of human development, attention seem to be skewed in favor of
physical infrastructure to the detriment of sustainable human development from
birth.
*Bill Gates |
To me,
Gates’ perspective is a pretty straight forward analogy of the prospects and
impediments to Nigeria ’s
much anticipated lift off from the poverty trap. But such positive optics of
Gates presentation is not shared by Nasir El Rufai who was part of the audience
at the forum. He faulted Gates’ presentation and offered a counter view which
is that the ERGP is a great document as it is. He is of the view that it only
needs to be adopted at the state level for the vision behind it to be
accomplished.
Friday, March 30, 2018
That Danjuma’s Significant Outburst
By Sufuyan Ojeifo
We mean to hold our own. I have not become the King’s First
Minister in order to preside over the liquidation of the British
Empire , said the indefatigable Prime Minister of Britain during
World War 11, Winston Churchill, in 1942. But unfortunately, that was what
he was compelled to do as recounted by Peter Clarke in his book titled: The
Last Thousand Days of the British Empire . In a
rave review of the book, Allan Massie surmised that Churchill rightly dominated
the book as he was shown, warts and all, from the drawing on the diaries of
Alan Alanbooke and Sir Alec Cadogan, as infuriating, often boring, sometimes
wandering, arriving at meetings without having read his briefing papers, often
unrealistic in his demands, hell to work with.
*Gen Danjuma |
Curiously, the more Churchill’s weaknesses
were exposed, the more splendid he seemed. According to Massie, If at times
Alanbrooke and others wondered how they could win the war with him, they all
knew it would have been impossible without him. To be sure, Churchill,
soldier, writer and politician, was one of Britain ’s
greatest heroes, particularly remembered for his indomitable spirit while
leading Great Britain
to victory in World War 11. Churchill wrote his war memoirs and titled
the last volume: Triumph and Tragedy. He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in
1953 among other great accomplishments.
Nigeria: So Much Anger In The Land!
By Robert Obioha
There is anger in the
land. Nigerians are not happy. They are fuming with anger and despair over
failed electoral promises of the ruling party. They are angry over
their miserable living conditions. They are angry over the continuous rape of
the country by her unfaithful political leaders. There is no mistake about it.
Every Tom, Dick and Harry are
bitter about the excruciating Nigerian condition. Even children are not
excluded.
The Nigerian
condition is fast becoming beyond prayers and redemption. It has defied all
logic and solutions including dry fasting and intercessory incantations. It can
be easily felt from the north to the south and from the east to the west.
Everybody in Nigeria is
angry over the general insecurity in the country dubbed the giant of Africa . Apart from the menace of the Boko Haram
insurgents in the North-east and other isolated places, the murderous campaign
of Fulani herdsmen across the country has caused much pain and anguish in the
land to the extent that a former Defence Chief, Lt. Gen. Theophilus Danjuma
(retd), has urged victims of such mindless attacks to defend themselves.
*President Buhari |
Thursday, March 29, 2018
President Buhari, Danjuma And Looming Anarchy
By Paul Onomuakpokpo
Like medieval potentates who fiddled around while their empires
were in the grip of mortal perils, President Muhammadu Buhari has since lost
the capacity to resolve for us the question of whether our nation is on the
brink of anarchy.
This is because Buhari and his officials are
stuck in a reality that does not reflect the pains of the people.
In other words, if the country staves off a
post-Gaddafi Libya-like anarchy and it remains one after the tenure of Buhari,
the credit should go to the forbearance and prescience of those who are outside
his government.
*Buhari and Danjuma |
During the recession that the government claims to have overcome through its
deft economic management, it amounted to blackmail of the Buhari administration
to draw its attention to the reality of the suffering of the masses.
Wednesday, March 28, 2018
Nigeria: Dapchi Rescue And The Nemesis Of Propaganda
By Israel A. Ebije
Let me congratulate
parents of abducted Dapchi secondary school girls recently returned after weeks
of adoption. I must congratulate security operatives on their consistent
absence when the girls were taken and retuned. Let me also congratulate the
federal government on successful hostage negotiation, where millions in alien
currencies was allegedly paid and ‘just’ a few Boko Haram militants released in
exchange.
I will not forgive myself if I fail to congratulate those in
government allegedly involved in hostage on the ransom racketeering for a
booming business venture. Let me also congratulate those who have been able to
convince Nigerians that the abduction was staged for publicity stunt ahead of
2019 presidential election. Let me, however, condole with the losers, those
whose kids died for “money and politics”. My heartfelt sympathy also goes to
Leah Sharibu who is held as slave for her religious belief. Let me indeed
sympathize with those who have turned the unfortunate development into a
religious and ethnic fight.
Nigeria: VP Yemi Osinbajo Still Didn’t Get It!
By Afam Nkemdiche
He said for the ERGP to be effective, it must
reflect the people’s needs, and it should give priority to human capital
development over physical capital, contrary to the present composition of the
ERGP.
The federal government’s economic team, led by the National
Economic Council (NEC), has once again received a hard knock for its poor
understanding of how to grow a national economy.
Bill Gates; yes, Bill Gates of the Microsoft
fame, who came calling a couple of days previously, was reported to have told a
special session of the NEC that Nigeria’s ongoing Economic Recovery And Growth
Plan (ERGP) is broadly flawed.
*VP Osinbajo |
He then advised the federal government to review the ERGP – I should interpret
that to mean reconstitute the NEC.
Tuesday, March 27, 2018
T.Y. Danjuma: The Hypocrisy Of A Chief Mourner
By Jude Ndukwe
When
on Saturday, March 24, 2018, Gen T.Y. Danjuma sent out a shrill cry to
Nigerians using the exalted pedestal of the Taraba State University’s first
convocation ceremony as a medium to send out his message, one could see nothing
but desperation, frustration and hopelessness all over him as a result of the
incessant killings of Nigerians of diverse nationalities by the marauding
Fulani herdsmen terrorists.
Such emotions are
expected of a man whose kith and kin are directly in the line of fire.
*Gen Danjuma |
There is no doubt that
Danjuma’s call for Nigerians to rise and defend themselves in the face of the
immutable failure of security agencies to come to their rescue is germane, it
is however too late, too little and too feeble. This is in addition to the fact
that Danjuma has since lost his exalted place in the scheme of morality before
the ordinary Nigerian.
Dapchi Abduction, Height Of Inglorious, Pathological Deceit And Hoax
Press Release
“The latest drama of the Dapchi school
girls release is the height of serial and inglorious, pathological deceit and
hoax. In their bid to make unfounded and unthinkable comparisons (with the
regime of Gooduck Jonathan) President Buhari and his hegemonic Fulani cabal
become antithetic as they are contradictory.
“Apparently, in a hurried orchestra to display their
high dexterity of quick response to the manipulated abduction (as against the
snail speed approach of the then Jonathan’s regime) the ‘good plan’ was marred
by poor execution. Over one hundred girls appearing in new and neat dresses
with their big bags of different makes.
“The thought-provoking questions are: Did all the
girls dress for a religious or social outing shortly before their abduction?
Were they allowed to bring their new clothes on abduction or were they taken to
a boutique for their fine ‘uniforms’ before they were brought back?
Monday, March 26, 2018
Nigerian Youths Must Fight For Real Change
By Dan Amor
I am first and foremost a Nigerian child. Then I am a
depressed Nigerian youth. Depression obviously has its several roots: it is the
doubtful protection which comes from not recognizing failure. It is the psychic
burden of exhaustion, and also and very often, that discipline of the
will or the ego which enables one to continue fighting, continue working, when
one’s unadmitted emotion is in panic.
And panic, it is, I think, which sits as
the largest single sentiment in the heart of the collective members of my own
generation. Today, I find myself in an overwhelmingly urban society, a
distinctly urban creature. Thus, I am adequately informed of current
developments in my country. I am anxious, angry, humorless, suspicious of my
own society, apprehensive with relation to the future of my own country.
Quixotic, yet optimistic, I am on the prowl for the immediate and remote causes
of our national predicament. My nostrils fairly quiver for the stench of some
injustice I can sally forth to condemn. Devoid of any feeling for the real
delineation of function and responsibility, I find all the ills of my country,
real or fancied, pressing on my conscience. Not lacking in courage, I am
prepared, in fact, to charge any number of windmills.
Friday, March 23, 2018
Of Hate Speeches, The Nigerian Senate And The Death Penalty Bill
By Arthur
Agwuncha Nwankwo
Recently, the Nigerian Senate entertained a bill on “hate speech”, the
high-point of which is the recommendation of death sentence to any person found
guilty of hate speech. I am utterly disappointed that the Senate could at this
point in our history be considering such bill even in the face of mounting
challenges confronting the country. This is a typical case of treating the
symptoms of an illness rather than the root cause of the illness.
*Dr. Arthur Nwankwo |
I am
disappointed that life in Nigeria
today has become so cheap; that while we are daily assailed by the atrocities
of Fulani herdsmen, Boko Haram and other merchants of death, that while other
countries are removing capital punishments from their statute books; an
institution such as the Nigerian Senate is considering a bill to
constitutionalize capital punishment. This is a tragedy of gargantuan
proportion and it does consolidate the impression among many that Nigeria
is irredeemable.
The Dapchi ‘Abduction’ Scam: Where Is Leah Sharibu?
By Femi
Fani-Kayode
I am happy that the abducted Dapchi
schools girls are all back home but I am deeply troubled by the fact that one
of them was left behind and by the assertion that five of them died whilst in
captivity. The day the truth comes out about what really happened
to the Chibok and Dapchi girls and those that were behind these two scams,
Nigerians will be shocked and they will spit on the graves of Buhari and his
collaborators.
Meanwhile I saw the pictures and watched the video of
Dapchi residents cheering on and waving at Boko Haram insurgents as they
dropped off the "missing" girls. It was clear to me that they
regarded the terrorists as heroes and I was compelled to ask myself the
following question, "Are we really one country?"Dapchi Girls: Of Sham Release And Cynical Citizenry
By Sufuyan Ojeifo
Between February 19, 2018 when the Dapchi schoolgirls were
abducted by supposed Boko Haram insurgents and Wednesday, March 21, 2018, when
the news broke that 101 of them had been released, I had offered perspectives
on the incident in two articles. The first was titled: “Chibok and Dapchi girls: The whoredom of
Karma” while the second was titled: “Gbomogbomo as metaphor.”
The second article, in
particular, provides the take-off point for the current intervention. Therein,
I had expressed a concern at the role abductions of schoolgirls play in our
presidential politics. My thesis was that our
abducted schoolgirls in the northeast zone have become objects of political
bargain in the hands of our modern day real or prearranged gbomogbomo, a Yoruba word transliterated as stealer
of children.
President Buhari, Before You Seek Reelection
By Matthew Ozah
I write not to dissuade you from running in 2019 elections just
like two notable statesmen in the country and others did the other day.
Nevertheless, you have
done well to ask the messengers of the ‘good’ and the ‘bad’ intention to give
you some time to think about a second term.
*President Buhari |
As you may know, many
Nigerians were charmed to ride that gravy train with you because of your
pedigree, captivating campaign promise to fight corruption and other miracles
that you pledged to perform during your election campaign in 2014/2015.
The recent corruption
rating of the country by Transparency International (TI) triggered this letter.
From the foregoing, it seems obvious that corruption has taken an armchair in
your administration.
Thursday, March 22, 2018
Fighting Corruption: Time For Nigeria To Take The Gloves Off
By Chris Douglas
Nigeria is making significant
inroads into the fight against corruption. Charges are being brought against
people in Nigeria
for corruption and fraud allowing significant amounts of cash to be recovered.
And the country has achieved some success in recovering the proceeds of
corruption laundered offshore, notably the return of US$700 million by Switzerland .
But not every country is cooperating. As an Australian Federal Police officer,
I have experienced the frustration of attempting to recover the proceeds of
crime earned in Australia
and laundered overseas. Recovering the proceeds of crime in other countries
involves a minefield of legal, logistical and financial issues. However, the
chances of success can be increased by undertaking a thorough criminal
investigation in country, having local money laundering laws that are robust
and which have extra territorial reach, and by the appropriate use of informal
and formal asset recovery arrangements.
President Buhari |
Dapchi Abduction: Scam Of No Equal Dimension, War Crime Against Humanity – PDP
Text of Press Conference of the Peoples Democratic Party, on the
Return of the Abducted Dapchi School Girls Presented by the National Publicity
Secretary, Kola Ologbondiyan, Today, March 21, 2018.
The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) condemns the All Progressives
Congress (APC) and certain officials in the Presidency for staging the
abduction of the schoolgirls in Dapchi, Yobe State ,
for political purposes.
Our Party considers this act as wicked, callous and tormenting to
use innocent schoolgirls as pawns in an ignoble script that was designed to
hoodwink Nigerians and orchestrate a great rescue and security prowess of a
conquering general, all to push a 2019 reelection bid, is an unpardonable
gamble with human lives.
Nigeria: Vice President Osinbajo’s Bluster And Burden Of Proof
By Paul Onomuakpokpo
Nations like
individuals who have recorded giant strides in most spheres of life sometimes
look backward. It is not to escape from the challenges of the present. Rather,
they appropriate vital lessons in such moments to turn their travails into
opportunities for a stellar lot in life. In that case, they appreciate the
place of history in their current march to progress. But we are trapped in a
tragic situation when we think that such moments only serve as opportunities to
gloatingly point to others the glitch in the wheel of a people’s quest for
development. Thus, we do not deny the necessity for the past to pay for its
misdeeds.
Vice President, Prof Yemi Osinbajo
In this regard, the
current government headed by President Muhammadu Buhari is free to hold its
predecessor to account. But the danger the current government has not
successfully negotiated is that of going to a ridiculous extent. Deluded by the
notion that the past is complicit in its denial of a star rating, the Buhari
government could unabashedly blame the Jonathan government for disrupting the
president’s domestic felicity by inducing his wife to rail at his failings in
private and public.
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