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 AdSense
AdSense
Wednesday, August 8, 2018
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.
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 |
Thursday, August 2, 2018
The Ship Of Nigeria's Ruling Party Is Sinking!
By Reuben Abati
When we wrote much earlier that the All Progressives Congress
(APC), Nigeria ’s
ruling party was a coalition of strange bedfellows and a one-chance special
purpose vehicle to get rid of President Goodluck Jonathan by all and any means
possible, we were accused of sour grapes.
When we argued even much
earlier that Nigeria ’s
Presidential seat of power was jinxed and that there was and there is a
spiritual side to power and politics in Nigeria ,
we were asked to shut up. The new power brokers were so much at home with their
taken authority they boasted that no demons could touch them and that they were
so self-secure, they were even snoring inside the Villa. Al- hamdulillahi, they
have been snoring since then.
*President Buhari |
Nigeria: The Chickens Have Come Home To Roost
By Chuks Iloegbunam
I knew that Muhammadu Buhari didn’t represent any sort
of change with the tiniest chance of improving the lot of Nigerians. I knew
also that people of my education and perspective knew that to have a man with
scant redeeming qualities at the helm of Nigerian affairs would represent a
tragic setback for the entity. It didn’t surprise me, though, that during 2015 a legion of informed
Nigerians ate up incredible media space promoting as sterling what they knew or
ought to have known was meretricious. It was all Buhari blah, blah; Buhari blah,
blah, blah; Buhari blah, blah, blah,
blah.
Well, the chickens since came home to roost. There had
been an American flank to the nauseating valorization of mediocrity. We all
always knew that once a Nigerian got educated in the United
States or claimed to have gotten educated in the United States , he or she automatically became
all-knowing – against the backdrop of all the nonentities they left behind in Nigeria for the
trans-Atlantic flight that invariably transformed every sojourner into a
genius. On and on, week in and week out, these infallible characters kept
churning out tomes of anti-Jonathan diatribe and fabulous episodes on their
messiah.
*Buhari |
Nigeria: National Assembly And The Retrogressive Media Bill
By Adewale Kupoluyi
Democracy requires an active media to thrive. This is because the
parameters that constitute good governance, which is a common feature of a
vibrant civil rule, can be measured by the level of accountability,
transparency and rule of law that exist in a country. Ordinarily, it is a
difficult task for many governments to appraise itself whether it is doing well
or not. Hence, the importance of the media in serving as the prism to review
the performance of democratic rule parameters is ever relevant.
An attempt to stifle the media in carrying out these functions
would bring about dire consequences for good governance. A case under
contention is the Nigerian Press Council Amendment Bill, which has already been
debated at the public hearing stage. The bill seeks to regulate journalism
practice by creating a statutory body to arbitrate between the media and the
public. It is on this premise that the media can be compromised that Nigerians
were angered with the new media bill before the National Assembly has been
described as retrogressive, unconstitutional and anti-people.
*President Buhari |
Wednesday, August 1, 2018
Nigeria: From Looting To Sharing The ‘National Cake’
By Matthew Ozah
“Neighbour! How have
you been? You seem a bit reserved these days. I hope there is nothing to worry
about?”
“Hmm! There is so much to worry about in these
perilous times. Even President Muhammadu Buhari is worried about 2019 elections
especially with the way APC is metamorphosing. Well, as for me, my pocket is in
recession and it is beginning to affect my blood pressure. Indeed, ignorance is a disease. You are here nursing agonizing distress while a
scrum is receiving cash handout in your state from the Abacha’s recovered loot.”
*President Buhari |
“What are you talking about? That has got
nothing to do with me and I feel let down for confiding in you about my
discomfort?”
“Please pardon me jare! But how come you have not heard about the ‘Social Investment
Programme,’ Buhari’s pet project to share the recently repatriated 322 million
dollars Abacha loot among the poorest and most vulnerable households within 19
states in the country?”
Gale Of Defections And The Buhari Factor
By Sufuyan Ojeifo
The coming together of political forces of the oppositional hue in
the build-up to the 2015 general election portended a grave danger for the
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). In any case, the behemoth, which the PDP
typified at the time, had imprudently and lightly treated the ill-omened
development and paid dearly for it.
*President Buhari |
The PDP was brought down in prostrate
surrender to the supremacy of the rainbow coalition of opposition parties that
formed the All Progressives Congress (APC) on which platform Muhammadu Buhari
clinched his historic victory over Goodluck Jonathan. That defeat of an incumbent president was novel in the annals of the nation’s
presidential elections.
APC Spokesman, Abdullahi, Dumps Party
*Bolaji Abdullahi |
He announced his
decision today through his verified twitter handle:
“In view of recent political developments in
the country and within the All Progressives Congress (APC), I have decided to resign
my position as the National Publicity Secretary as well as my membership of the
party with effect from today.
Nigeria’s Gunboat Democracy
By Sunny Awhefeada
There is a sense in
which some commentators are right when they argue that Nigeria is not a democracy. Their
argument is based on the reality that the military has remained more than a
recurring decimal in Nigeria ’s
political life. When the soldiers blew apart the pillars that held Nigeria ’s
democratic structure in January 1966,
a pall fell on the nation and, the tragic detour which
came with that experience is yet to yield the ideals of nationhood. Since then,
with the exception of a few promising years, Nigeria has been ruled by hooded
men who view statecraft as a cloak and dagger engagement.
The 1966 coup(s) birthed military rule for
thirteen long years and when Nigeria
returned to civil rule in 1979, the military adventurers didn’t give politics a
wide berth. They hovered around and menaced the politicians. It was concluded
then that Nigeria
had two leading political parties; the then ruling National Party of Nigeria
(NPN) and the Nigerian Army (NA). And in just four years after 1979, the army
serenaded Nigerians with an end of year’s gift of martial music on 31 December
1983. The soldiers were back in power. This time, they held sway for sixteen
tortuous years. Buhari, Babangida, ‘Bacha, ‘Bdusalami, all took turns to bash Nigeria .
*Nigeria's President Buhari |
Tuesday, July 31, 2018
Jakande: Visionary Leader At 89
By Tayo Ogunbiyi
The concept of leadership has always been of tremendous interest
to classical thinkers as well as contemporary political and management
scholars as our world continues on the path of progressive evolution. On the other hand, visionary leadership theory
rose to prominence in 1980-90s, and can be traced back to the political
sociology writings of Max Weber and James Macgregor Burns.
* Lateef Jakande |
Visionary leadership molds have a twin focal
point on who a leader is as well as what a leader does, merging both the trait
and behavioural theories of leadership. Visionary leaders are exceptional because they possess a deep
sense of personal purpose coupled with an unshakable self-confidence in the
ability to realise this purpose.
Monday, July 30, 2018
Special Status For Lagos Long Overdue
By Dan Amor
Alongside the experience of history and the role of
national and international identity, the one theme that emerges in the
evolution of cities throughout the continent of Europe
is the impact of ideology, whether conservative, ecological, feudal or socialist.
Past ideologies have created cities that are memorials to the divine monarch (Versailles ), to the imperial mission (Vienna ),
and to utilitarianism and the pursuit of profit (Bradford ).
It has been suggested that the morphology of the city is not only the product
of the civilization that houses it but also a factor in the creation of that
civilization.
*Governor Ambode |
At a more prosaic level, it is clear that in cities
such as Stockholm , Gothenburg, and Helsinki , attitudes
towards conservation, social housing provision and public transport reflect the
contemporary dominant social-democratic ideology of the Scandinavian countries.
In contrast, the development of many West German cities in the immediate
post-war period occurred within the framework of a social-market economy and a
certain rejection of planning resulting from the experience of twelve years of
National Socialism.
Sunday, July 29, 2018
I Celebrate Buhari For Killing APC
By Erasmus
Ikhide
On July 31st, 2013 a day after All
Progressives Congress (APC) was registered by Independent National Electoral
Commission, I got a surprising call at dawn from the storming petrel, warrior
of the pen, essayist and a poet who uses words like a sculptor, Mr. Odia Ofeimun
with troubling apocalypse thus:
"Erasmus,
do you know that Senator Bola Tinubu has sold Nigeria to the devil for accepting
the merger of Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) with Congress for Progressive
Change (CPC) and a few little known political parties".
*President Buhari |
I was caught off
balance. Moreso because I had barely retired from my study to the bed before my
sleep was rudely ruptured by the call.
Nigeria: July 29, 1966 In Retrospect: 52 Years After
By Dan Amor
"Life is
terribly deficient in form.
Its catastrophes happen in the wrong way.
There is a grotesque horror about its comedies.
And its tragedies seem to culminate in farce."
Its catastrophes happen in the wrong way.
There is a grotesque horror about its comedies.
And its tragedies seem to culminate in farce."
– Oscar Wilde
The January 15, 1966 military coup and the concomitant
tragic death, fifty-two years ago, of Major-General Johnson Thomas Ummunnakwe
Aguiyi-Ironsi on July 29, 1966
in the hands of young Majors from Northern Nigeria
extraction manifest the historical sense that creates a difference between mere
politics and constructive statesmanship in Nigeria 's turbulent history.
Aguiyi-Ironsi was a victim of our collective failure to appreciate the fact
that, in any given society, personality is not a welter of primitive impulses but
an achievement of the conscious will. Nigeria began its seemingly long
and tenuous political walk towards self-rule and democracy in 1960. Vividly
divided between the predominantly Muslim North and substantially Christian
South, there is always a marked ethnic and religious tension in the polity with
the Muslim in the North often hinting to their right to federal power.
*Gen Aguiyi-Ironsi |
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