Despite a presidential appointee’s numerous enviable privileges,
there are persons who don’t wish to become one today under President Muhammadu
Buhari. A few even pity his aides. This is not because contractors will not
build houses or buy cars for them because of the anti-corruption stance of the
man. It is also not because they detest being referred to as usurpers, hyenas
or jackals by the first lady whose outspokenness could sometimes be more critical
of the government than that of a spokesperson of the rival political party.
Neither are those who feel this way nursing presidential ambition come 2019
general elections. Rather it is because of the shortcomings of the government
for which, whether out of fear or reverence for the President, the aides are
always being blamed.
For instance, the exasperating ineptitude if
not sleaze that plagues the Ministry of Petroleum Resources which the President
has appropriated for himself despite his enormous responsibilities are never
attributed to him. It is the Junior Minister and the Group Managing Director of
the Nigerian National Petroleum Company that always take the flak for
everything including the frequent scarcity of petrol all over the country
especially at Christmas/New year periods. Monday, July 16, 2018
Buhari 2019: The Audacity Of Buharideens
By Martins-Hassan Eze
“Nothing in the
world is more dangerous than a sincere ignorance and an
conscientious stupidity” — Dr. Martin-Lurther
King Jnr.
Walahi!
This thing called shame some Dudu’s just don’t have it. How can a man with
conscience and human heart refuse to acknowledge the regrettable fact the GMB
is a disaster; a ticking time bomb. Is it not now clear that GMB is the worst
thing to happen to Nigeria
since the return of civilian rule in 1999? Yet, some mugus are not just
shameful enough to stop selling the candidature of this Mobutu in the social
media. And, I ask. Is the protection of lives and properties no longer the
primary responsibility of government? Have PBM and APC not failed woefully in
this regard? Perhaps, for Elrufai; the petit Kaduna
tyrant and Dean, college
of Buharideens , good
governance is all about ethnic cleaning and political jihad.
Who
should we blame? Did KONGI the noble laureate not bemoan the fact that social
media is a vomitorium some years back? Some folks think that the
social media is their village stream. They just jump into the square with
rotten and stinking narratives: fighting corruption is the reason why we should
become slaves in our country. Fighting corruption is also the reason why all
ancestral lands of non-Muslims in the north should become a mass grave and
grazing land for Fulani herdsmen.
President Buhari |
Nigeria: Before Bad Politics Relegates Good Policies
By Martins Oloja
Combined effects of bad politics within governing party (APC),
president’s aloofness and strange executive procrastination appear to have
stolen some thunder from two good governance policies that would have shaped
good public opinion for the Buhari administration last week.
*President Buhari |
In other words, curious focus on do-or-die
politics in Ekiti and the implications of incipient implosion within the
governing party where some born-‘again(st) reformers’ are scrambling for new
platforms seem to have taken the steam out of what would have been reported
last week as the Buhari government’s special focus on building institutions for
strengthening democracy and the economy.
Why Good Journalism Truly Matters
By Adewale Kupoluyi
Media, democracy and development are tripartite partners that
could drive any modern society. These critical issues formed discussions at the
just-concluded 67th General Assembly and 2018 IPI World Congress of the
International Press Institute, held in Abuja for the very first time in the
history of Nigeria and attended by some 330 participants, 65 speakers from 37
countries. Themed, Why Good Journalism
Matters: Quality Journalism for Strong Societies, the congress coincided
with when IPI would hold its flagship global press freedom event in West Africa .
Welcoming all, IPI Executive Board Vice-Chair, Dawn Thomas, said
the hosting was an acknowledgement of the country’s historical importance to
the institute and that Friday, July 13, 2018
Igbo Independence And Biafran Identity
By Osita Ebiem
In this essay we will take time to clarify some areas that seem
to confuse some people in the on-going Biafra separatist movement in Nigeria .
Over the years, as will be expected, the move for the independence of Biafra has undergone some transformations. These changes
seem to have created a sort of mixed messages in the minds of both observers
and participants. So, at this point it is really important that we try to
clarify some of the seemingly ambiguous aspects of the movement.
It is a fact that for some of the participants, those involved in
the struggle, many are finding it difficult to come to terms and accept the
obvious realities of these changes when they seem to go against some of their
assumed or preconceived notions of what the struggle should be about. This is
understandable. But in spite of the genuine appreciation of the position of
these colleagues it will be foolish if we should ignore the prevailing obvious
new realities and facts as they concern the movement. We can only ask that such
individuals will be humble enough to find the sincerity and courage to
acknowledge these truths and incontestable facts when they are revealed to them.
Burning Questions On Abacha’s Returned Loot
By Ayibakuro Matthew
It is
significant to note at the onset that the concerns of most Nigerians about the
use of the $322.5 million for the conditional cash transfer programme, instead
of a legacy project with more visibility and impact, is both valid and
understandable. However, the use of the funds for cash transfers is an outcome
of months of negotiation that enabled the repatriation of the funds in the
first place.
Over the last week or so, there has been heightened interest
amongst Nigerians about the use of the most recently repatriated $322.5 million
Abacha loot. The questions raised around the issue include the choice of
using the money for the conditional cash transfer programme of the Federal
Government, the choice of states benefitting from the programme, the usefulness
of a monthly transfer of N5, 000 to poor Nigerians and concerns about the
re-looting of the funds.
*Gen Sani Abacha |
Ekiti Election: Test For Our Democracy
By Raymond Oise-Oghaede
The Ekiti State
governorship election is around the corner and all eyes from far and wide are
on the state because of its cruciality to determining the level of the people’s
preparedness for the 2019 general elections. Its importance to the permutations
of the ruling parties at the federal and state levels respectively cannot be
overemphasized. Presently, Ekiti is the only state in the South West that is
not under the control of the (APC) and it is the only state that the main
opposition party is holding on to and hoping to build on in its quest to have a
major breakthrough into the region.
Consequently, you will
agree with me that it is going to be an interesting contest in all
ramifications. The situation is further embroidered with curious expectations
as a result of the caliber and personalities of the candidates that are been
thrown into the contest. The popularity, political acumen and the wherewithal
at the disposal of these candidates and their party platforms have made it look
very unpredictable.
*Fmr Gov Fayemi and Gov Fayose of Ekiti State |
Thursday, July 12, 2018
President Buhari, End These Killings Now!
By Folaranmi Adegbite
“My father, my mother,
my wife, our four children were shot, killed and burnt.”
This cry of horror by a survivor of the Fulani
herdsmen massacre of innocent people in Plateau State
calls to question the sincerity or competence of the President of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria, Muhammadu Buhari to provide security for Nigerians. President Buhari during his campaign for 2015
Presidential Election promises to improve on fragile security in the land then
among other campaign promises.
*President Buhari |
However, since his coming to power, we cannot say that the nation has had a
relief from insecurity. All his efforts and that of his service chiefs are like
taken one step forward and two backward which leads to nowhere in particular.
In fairness to Buhari, the killings in Nigeria
predated his administration. Whether killings by Boko Haram, insurgents, Fulani
herdsmen, or ethic militants all these have been happening before Buhari came
to power.
Wednesday, July 11, 2018
Carnage And Poverty As National Tragedies
By Sufuyan Ojeifo
Two existential issues – security and poverty- that bear great
relevance to the assessment of performance of governments globally reared their
heads back-to-back, last week, in Nigeria . Both issues were so tangible that they could
not escape essential appraisal and indictment.
While the carnage in Bakin Ladi local
government area of Plateau State on June 23, 2018 was so self-evident such that
it could not be denied by the Federal Government, the Brookings report that
Nigeria has overtaken India as the global poverty capital has been rebutted by
government through the Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Okechukwu
Enelamah.
Tuesday, July 10, 2018
Nigeria: Descending To Slaughter Land
By Adeniyi kikelomo Evelyn
Nigeria , our once beautiful country has been transformed into the
playground of evil minded and uncouth individuals who have taken immense
advantage of our poorly managed and weak security. If you like, call it
shameful. Citizens of Nigeria
are being pushed out of their homes, villages and forced to abandon their
heritage due to the lackadaisical, deceptive and compromised stands of the
government towards the safety of the people which should be the constitutional
privilege of the citizens.
A few days agoPlateau
State was thrown into an
uproar once again as some villages were attacked for 48 hours. 48 Hours! At
this period of many hours, one wonders what our security agencies were doing
before and during the attack. Have they negated their sniffing assignment or
slept on their active watch? I believe no excuse is plausible for this
dastardly act and seemingly permissive genocide.
A few days ago
Saturday, July 7, 2018
Nigeria Must Atone For the Blood Of The Innocent
By
Arthur Agwuncha Nwankwo
The recent revalidation and recognition by the federal
government of late Chief MKO Abiola as the rightful winner of the June 12, 1993
presidential election in Nigeria has generated intense debate in the country.
This debate has further been exacerbated by the unilateral declaration of June
12 of every year as Nigeria ’s
democracy day instead of May 29.
*Dr. Arthur Nwankwo |
While this move by the Buhari administration
has been interpreted by his apologists as a political master stroke aimed at
galvanizing support from the south-west, many others have interpreted it not
only as a political mischief but also as the debauchery and selective treatment
of issues that bear at the foundation of the country.
Fulani Herdsmen Have Declared A War On Nigeria – Eastern Mandate Union (EMU)
Communiqué Issued By The Eastern Mandate Union (EMU) On The Level
Of Insecurity And Menace Of Fulani Herdsmen In Nigeria
*Background
to the Communiqué:
Following the recent carnage by Fulani herdsmen in Plateau State in which over 200 persons were slaughtered in cold blood; and growing level of insecurity in the country, the Eastern Mandate Union convoked an emergency meeting last Monday, July 2, 2018, to review the state of the country and the ethnic cleansing and jihad that is currently sweeping across the Middle Belt region of the country.
Following the recent carnage by Fulani herdsmen in Plateau State in which over 200 persons were slaughtered in cold blood; and growing level of insecurity in the country, the Eastern Mandate Union convoked an emergency meeting last Monday, July 2, 2018, to review the state of the country and the ethnic cleansing and jihad that is currently sweeping across the Middle Belt region of the country.
We have on several occasions
pointed out that Nigeria
is an aberration created by a colonial fiat to feed its insatiable economic
appetite. Regrettably, since political independence, Nigeria
has failed to weave a nation out of the welter of ethnicities that make up Nigeria to the extent that today Nigeria has
become emblematic of a failed state capacious only in the wastage of human
life. Today in Nigeria ,
human life has been subordinated to the life of a cow.
Friday, July 6, 2018
Disturbing Killings In Plateau State
By Adewale Kupoluyi
Over 200 persons have
been reportedly killed and over 50 houses razed down in renewed attacks in 11
villages in three local government areas of Plateau State ,
namely: Barkin Ladi, Riyom and Jos South, attributed to armed herdsmen bandits,
who have been terrorising the Middle Belt region since 2001. This time around,
heavily armed gunmen had invaded the affected villages of Exland, Gindin
Akwati, Ruku, Nghar, Kura
Falls and Kakuruk; in the
Gashish district as well as Rakok, Kok and Razat villages in Ropp district of
the local government area.
Eye witnesses to the killings claimed that
security agents failed to intervene despite the high level of presence, as a
result of the recurring communal violence. The source further noted that the
crux of continuous unending bloodbath in the state was the unresolved crisis,
saying the latest fighting was a result of the sale of cattle by herdsmen.
After selling the cow, some locals attacked the herdsmen, killed them and took
away the money alongside the cow. President Buhari, Call A Spade A Spade!
By Anthony Cardinal Olubunmi Okogie
Every human life is precious. The life of every Nigerian,
irrespective of ethnic, regional or religious affiliation is to be treated with
dignity.
All around the world, citizens look to their
government to protect them. But, here in Nigeria , the blood of the innocent
flows like water despite Nigerians’ desire and demand that government secure
their lives and property.
Not too long ago, Chief Olu Falae, a senior citizen of Nigeria , was
abducted on his farm by herdsmen. Since then, others have struck in Enugu , Delta and Oyo
states. In the Middle Belt, they have robbed, raped, and slaughtered human
beings like cows. They have taken over other people’s land in the name of
grazing.
*President Buhari |
A member of Miyetti Allah appeared on
television, justifying as retaliatory the killings in Plateau State . He
was not the first member of Miyetti Allah to make the statement. Nigerians are
baffled that he is yet to be arrested. Where were those responsible for
our security at a time they were needed most?
Thursday, July 5, 2018
Buhari, Abacha’s Loot And The Poor
By Paul Onomuakpokpo
As the administration
of the President Muhammadu Buhari lurches into the twilight amid the
fast-vanishing possibility of securing a second mandate, it flails in all
directions in search of survival. It is striving currently to make the poor
among us to accept as reality the illusion that it can ratchet up their
fortunes in the remaining days.
It is an unrelieved illusion because since the
administration has failed in three years to improve the lot of the people, it
cannot in less than one year secure the acumen to accomplish this. Rather, the
citizens should steel themselves for the prospect of their immiseration
reaching its nadir in the remaining period of this administration.
*Gen Abacha |
Nigeria: Plateau Massacre And An Overwhelmed President
By Levi Obijiofor
When news broke last
week of the massacre of more than 150 women, children, and men in remote
communities of Plateau
State , everyone turned
their attention to President Muhammadu Buhari for his explanation of how the
mass murder of citizens on such a scale could take place in a country that is
not at war. Buhari is the Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces. In that
context, he is also the country’s chief security officer. The buck, we are
reminded, always stops at the president’s desk.
When atrocities of extraordinary magnitude occur in any country,
the president has an obligation to furnish the citizens with clear,
unambiguous, and unexpurgated account of what happened, who was complicit in
the murders, and what the security forces did or did not do right to prevent
the disaster or to apprehend the criminals.
*President Buhari |
Wednesday, July 4, 2018
To Kill In The Name Of God Is Outrageous Murder – Archbishop Obinna
--------------------------------
THE
CHINUA ACHEBE
FOUNDATION INTERVIEW SERIES
April 2006
All Rights Reserved ©
______________________
*Archbishop Obinna during the interview |
Dr. Anthony J.V. Obinna, the Catholic Archbishop of
Owerri, is one of Africa ’s
foremost theologians and scholars. Born on June 26, 1946 in Emekuku
(near Owerri), and educated at St. Peter Claver Seminary, Okpala (near Aba ),
and Bigard Memorial Seminary, he was ordained a Roman Catholic priest on April
19, 1972. Obinna graduated with First Class Honours in Divinity, from the
Bigard Memorial Seminary, an affiliate of
the Pontifical Urban University, Rome .
He left for Rome for a Masters Degree in Theology, and then for the United
States for another Masters in Religious Studies, concentrating on Religion and
Culture, and then a PhD in Education and Theology.
A former lecturer in the Religious Studies
Department of the Alvan Ikoku College of Education, Owerri, Archbishop Obinna
is the current Chair of the Education Committee of the Catholic Bishop’s
Conference of Nigeria (CBCN). He was ordained a Bishop on September 4, 1993,
and became the first Archbishop of the Catholic Archdiocese of Owerri when it
was created in 1994.
In this interview with UGOCHUKWU EJINKEONYE, Archbishop Obinna canvasses an attitudinal
change, which he hopes will help steer Nigeria out of its present
political, moral, and economic descent, and reroute it to the path of progress
and lasting development.
Excerpts:
Your Grace, do you think we can in all honesty say that we have freedom
of worship in Nigeria today?
Well,
constitutionally there is freedom of worship. So, to some extent, it is
possible to say: yes, Nigerians worship as they choose. But we have had
problems in certain parts of our country, where people were prevented from
worshipping, as they desire. There have been attempts to muzzle Christians in
some parts of the country, and that goes to show that the freedom of worship
enshrined in the constitution is not given its full play. In the more
Christian-dominated areas, I believe that there is no prevention of anybody
from being a Moslem, from worshipping God. But in some areas of our country,
there have been churches that were bulldozed, and land allocations have been
refused to Christian worshippers.
Tuesday, July 3, 2018
For The Sake Of Our Nation, Nigeria
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.
*Cardinal Okogie |
Plateau Carnage And Antics Of A Low-Road Government
By Ikechukwu Amaechi
On Saturday, June 23, Dr. Sylvester Ugoh, former Minister of
Education, sent me a video clip of Chimamanda Adichie delivering a speech as
the Harvard University 2018 Class Day Speaker.
It was
the quintessential Chimamanda at her literary best – evocative and enchanting.
She was selected by the Harvard students, as it is the tradition, to act the
role, another validation for the lady of letters who has become Nigeria’s
foremost 21st century literary
ambassador.
I don’t know what informed the leitmotif of her speech which she titled, “Above All Ese, Do Not Lie,” but she handled the concepts of falsehood and truth in a uniquely fascinating way asking some fundamental questions such as: “Should we call a lie, a lie? When is a lie, a lie?”
*President Buhari |
I don’t know what informed the leitmotif of her speech which she titled, “Above All Ese, Do Not Lie,” but she handled the concepts of falsehood and truth in a uniquely fascinating way asking some fundamental questions such as: “Should we call a lie, a lie? When is a lie, a lie?”
President Buhari Or Herdsman Buhari?
By Paul Onomuakpokpo
Having not suffered any traumatic dilemma over his overweening
loyalty to herdsmen who are his fellow Fulani, President Muhammadu Buhari is
oblivious of his rapid erasure as a statesman. Or if he is aware, he is not
bothered about the grim verdict of history – here was a president of a great
nation who ended as a leader of a segment of the country, Fulani herdsmen.
*President Buhari (pix: African Herald Express) |
Yes, we must discountenance Buhari’s sense of
justice that seeks to exculpate him from the tragedies being unleashed by
Fulani herdsmen. He vouchsafed this notion of justice during his visit to
Plateau after the Fulani herdsmen’s attacks whose death toll has been
officially put at 135 while witnesses claim it is over 200. He wondered why he
should be accused of being silent over the now perennial massacres.
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