By DAN AMOR
Sometime
ago, the former Petroleum Resources Minister, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke
hinted that the Federal Government had planned to stop the importation of
refined petroleum products in 24 months. I had said in this column then that if
that ambitious plan was not met, Mrs. Alison-Madueke should be prepared for a
legal battle with concerned Nigerians as her wild goose chase would amount to
perjury, a criminal offence since she made the statement under oath in her
official capacity as minister of petroleum resources. The truth, however, is
that our government officials make statements just because they have to read
out something to the expectant public for the fun of it.
There
is usually not substance or truth in their mouths. Otherwise,
why would the former Minister predicate the stoppage of importation of refined
petroleum products on the turn-around maintenance of the four decrepit
refineries? She knew that even if the four traditional refineries were to
function optimally their total output would still not meet the demand for local
consumption. All things considered, the business segments of the society and
the consuming public that suffer the brunt of petroleum products importation
would have jubilated at the pronouncement of the then Minister in far away Vienna,
Austria.
Monday, September 14, 2020
Thursday, September 10, 2020
Why Character Matters In Politics
By
Patrick Utomi
One of the sad paradoxes of Nigeria’s political journey is
the current widely held view that in politics anything goes. To explain the
most disgraceful personal conduct, it seems ‘okay’ to just say ‘na politics
na’.
*Prof Utomi
This dominant vice of politics, as the art of the indecent,
rather than the art of the possible, which is dominant in contemporary
political culture in Nigeria is exactly opposite the core issue in Western
political thought and history. There the central issue has been morality or
public virtue, as Montesquieu calls it.
The great escape from misery for Western civilisation, beyond
Angus Deaton’s case for the contribution of health care and the discovery of
the germ theory of disease, has largely come from freedom that democracy
offers.
Wednesday, September 9, 2020
How To Hold Elections Safely And Uphold Democracy During The COVID-19 Pandemic
By Nic Cheeseman
This
is critically important because despite the health crisis, there will be no
letup in controversial elections – starting with Tanzania in October and the
United States in November. International observation will not insulate these
polls from malpractice, but it will make it less likely and allow it to be
exposed.
Free and fair elections face a new kind of
threat. In addition to scheming leaders and compromised electoral commissions,
there is now the impact of the coronavirus pandemic.
In
response, a new report published by the British Academy sets out how elections
can be held safely and democratically amid COVID-19. Edited by renowned
political scientist Sarah Birch, it covers a range of topics, including how to
establish health protocols and manage the risk of election violence. The report
sets out the options for international election observers.
*Election Day in Benin Republic |
Yet
the kind of observation carried out by the Carter Centre, European Union ,
Organisation of American States, and other international organisations
requires flying large numbers of people between countries. It is therefore one
of the election activities threatened by the pandemic.
Monday, September 7, 2020
The Disinvitation Of Nasir El-Rufai By The NBA
By Tony Ademiluyi
Mallam Nasir El-Rufai came into the public limelight in 1999 when
democracy returned back to the country after a sixteen year hiatus of military
misrule. The then President Olusegun Obasanjo made El-Rufai the
Director-General of the Bureau for Public Enterprises (BPE) which was saddled
with the gargantuan responsibility of disposing some of the assets hitherto
held by the government to private investors. It was as the Minister of the
Federal Capital Territory that his name became permanently etched in the minds
of many Nigerians as he had the ambition of restoring the original master plan
of the city.
Many houses including those owned by prominent
Nigerians were bulldozed as the then diminutive minister spared no one and took
no prisoners. Some of his die-hard supporters pushed his name forward as a
possible successor to Chief Olusegun Obasanjo in 2007 after the alleged failure
of the latter’s third term bid. For some reasons best known to Baba Iyabo as
the former President is fondly called, he settled for the Late Umaru Musa
Yar’adua who was then governing Katsina state. El-Rufai went into political
winter for eight years after his former boss’s Presidency and he was hounded by
the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to give an account of his
eight-year stewardship especially as the minister. He went on to write his
memoir – ‘The Accidental Public Servant’ which was an interesting read
even though some critics accused him of hagiography.
Thursday, September 3, 2020
Six Million Nigerians Flee Boko Haram Terror Attacks In 10 Years, Says Report
By Adelowo Adebumiti
In the last 10 years, an estimated six million Nigerians have fled
their homes for fear of extermination, abduction, and other forms of treatments
by the Boko Haram group in Nigeria, a recent report has revealed.
The report, titled, ‘Managing Internal Displacement
Crisis in Nigeria: Toward Global Best Practices in Guaranteeing the Rights of
Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) through the Media’, was published
by Journalists for Christ with support from the World Association for Christian
Communication (WACC) and the Waldensian Church’s Otto Per Mille.
The research, which is a follow –up of an
earlier project titled, ‘Monitoring Media Reportage and Portrayal of
Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs): Cases studies of Nigeria, Democratic
Republic of Congo and Kenya’, stated that in the Northeast alone, the
decade-long attacks by the group have displaced over 1.8 million people.
According to the study, the Internally
Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC) estimates the total number of IDPs in the
country between January and December 2018 to be above two million with Borno
State alone accounting for 1.4 million of that figure.
Monday, August 31, 2020
India: Celebrating An Economic Giant At 73
By DAN AMOR
India
has been celebrating since penultimate week its 73rd independence anniversary
as a democratic nation having been juristically established on August 15, 1947
after several decades of British colonialism. But the great Indian nation did
not begin only about seven decades ago. Rather, it is the proud beneficiary of
several millennia of great and memorable history, culture and civilization.
Indian independence movement began in 1857 spanning 90 years before achieving
self rule in 1947.
As
the enterprising people of India celebrate their bold attempt at shaking off
the yoke of British imperialism and economic strangulation, yours sincerely is
pleased to join millions of people, nations and organizations all over the
world to congratulate this wonderful and spicy nation on her march from poverty
and despair to a position of preeminence, respect and pride. It would not be an
overstatement to say that the transformation of India is not only a challenge
to the sub-continent of Asia but has also provided a shining example for most
other countries still battling with the vagaries of underdevelopment,
militarism, poverty and corruption.Friday, August 28, 2020
The Enugu Massacre And Why Tribe Matters
By
Aloy Ejimakor
The invitation admittedly extended to the Army by the Enugu State Police Commissioner ahead of the deadly shooting at Emene was too prompt and bears stark evidence of premeditation for lethal violence against the Igbo element on the part of the Commissioner of Police.
The invitation admittedly extended to the Army by the Enugu State Police Commissioner ahead of the deadly shooting at Emene was too prompt and bears stark evidence of premeditation for lethal violence against the Igbo element on the part of the Commissioner of Police.
This premeditation stems from the customary lack of
compatriot empathy often exhibited by some Northern Muslim security chiefs and
other ranks towards Igbos when it comes to law enforcement of this kind, even
when the target of such enforcement is, without regard to their numbers,
unarmed and nonviolent.
Tuesday, August 25, 2020
Nasir El Rufai And Wages Of Sin
by Yinka Odumakin
The
Nigerian Bar Association, in an audacious move and a very classic naming and
shaming act, has withdrawn its invitation to Kaduna State Governor, Nasir
el-Rufai, to speak at its conference following protests from some
lawyers.
The tweet on Thursday
announcing the decision read, “The
National Executive Committee of the Nigerian Bar Association at its ongoing
meeting resolves that the invitation to the Kaduna State Governor, H.E. Nasir
El-Rufai, by the 2020 Annual General Conference Planning committee be withdrawn
and decision communicated to the Governor.”
*Gov El Rufai and President Buhari |
A petition to stop the
governor started by a lawyer, Usani Odum, had garnered over 3,150 signatures on
Change. Org as of 4 pm on Thursday.
In a
separate letter titled, ‘Request to Withdraw the Offer of Platform
at the 2020 Annual General Conference of the NBA to Mallam Nasir el-Rufai,’
addressed to the Chairman, Technical Committee on Conference Planning, NBA,
Prof. Koyinsola Ajayi(SAN), some lawyers said the governor must not be allowed
to speak at the conference.
El-Rufai: Disinvited
By Sam Omatseye
So, some
avatars of liberty will say the Nigerian Bar Association railed against the
three Johns of thinkers: Locke, Mill, Rousseau. They invited him to their
conference only to disinvite him. The man salivated over an empty table. They
probably did that because the man has a sour tongue, a fratricidal impulse,
pitches tribe against tribe and, in the vexed issue of southern Kaduna,
El-Rufai has taken sides, and has anointed violence against peace.
This is not
the time to hold grudges against Malam Nasir El-Rufai. It is not the time to
say he, like Napoleon, suffers a small man’s syndrome, or that he pulled down
the homes of rivals. It is not the time to say his mind has not grown above his
height, and that he does not deserve to speak about who is a Nigerian.
*Gov El Rufai and President Buhari
Monday, August 24, 2020
NBA Had Also Withdrawn Maurice Iwu's Invitation
By Usman Okai Austin
In 2008, former Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission
(INEC), Professor Maurice Iwu's invitation as a Guest (not even a Speaker)
to the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA)’s Annual
General Conference (AGC) of that year was withdrawn because of a protest from a
cross section of Lawyers, due to his unremorseful and very poor handling of the
2007 general elections as the then INEC Chairman?
Do you
know that no sectional, partisan, religious or ethnic group threatened boycott
of the AGC as a result of the de-invitation of Prof. Iwu?
Elrufai
is not the founder of this country neither is Nigeria named after his father.
NBA only responded to public outcry and condemnation.
Enugu Massacre: Forget IPOB, They Are Ndigbo
By Aloy Ejimakor
A famous
Nigerian politician once said (in spirited defense of the Yoruba) that “before
I became a Nigerian, I was Yoruba”. And another one said: “We will write this
for all to read. Anyone, soldier or not that kills the Fulani takes a loan
repayable one day no matter how long it takes.”
The Yoruba has, in moderation, said his own. The Fulani has, in extremism, said his own. Let me now, as an Igbo, say my own, and here it is: Whoever takes the life of an IPOB member is taking the life of an Igbo and therefore will ultimately account to Ndigbo. It’s not a threat; it’s a fact.
The Yoruba has, in moderation, said his own. The Fulani has, in extremism, said his own. Let me now, as an Igbo, say my own, and here it is: Whoever takes the life of an IPOB member is taking the life of an Igbo and therefore will ultimately account to Ndigbo. It’s not a threat; it’s a fact.
Tuesday, August 4, 2020
Mamman Daura Seeks ‘Competence’
By Lasisi Olagunju
The Afenifere reacted sharply; the North is
silent; the Ohanaeze spoke hard.
Leaders of the Niger Delta also kicked against Daura's executive order banning
zoning of the presidency. But what
can their puny noise do to a people who built their confidence on solid rock?
When a man whose lips rarely move decides to speak out, you had better drop all
you are doing and listen carefully. The man who spoke is not known to be a
flippant person.
Leader of
the 'unseen' persons ruling us, Alhaji Mamman Daura, spoke last week. He said
enough of turn-by-turn presidency for Nigeria. He decreed that North-South
rotation of the presidency of Nigeria should be dead; from 2023, the most
competent among contenders would be put in the Presidential Villa.
*Daura |
Saturday, August 1, 2020
How Greed Diminishes A People!
By Ugochukwu
Ejinkeonye
To a people addicted to the tragic luxury of
self-delusion, truth hurts so badly. But then, truth always refuses to go away.
It lingers around to perpetually taunt and haunt those that loathe and despise
its face.
And the truth we can no longer afford to deny today is
that anybody, in fact, any animal can rule Nigeria. I mean, even a bird or baboon
can become Nigeria’s president or governor. It is that simple! All it will
take, after all, is for the person to get a Prof Mahmood Yakubu and his band of
magicians at the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to announce
his “victory,” and that would be all. But if, for whatever reason, they fail,
the Supreme Court can be relied upon any day to perfectly deliver the mandate!
Ironsi: Nigeria, The Army, Power And Politics
BOOK REVIEW
Title: Ironsi: Nigeria, The Army, Power And Politics
Author: Chuks Iloegbunam
Year Of Publication: 2019
Publishers: Eminent Biographies,
Awka, Anambra State
Pagination: 300
Reviewer: 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."
– Oscar Wilde (1854-1900).
How do we begin a critical review
of a book on a personality such as Major-General Johnson Thomas Umunnakwe
Aguiyi-Ironsi? Many writers have been devoted to investigations of great events
and great leaders. Few have combined that devotion with the ability to write
effectively, amusingly, even brilliantly about those events and people – about
the great moments and the low moments, the great men and women and those who
were only interesting, entertaining or absurd. Chuks Iloegbunam combines
devotion to investigations with ability, as all who read this book will
testify.
Tuesday, July 28, 2020
Okonjo-Iweala, The WTO And A Naysayer
By Chuks Iloegbunam
If the
current controversy surrounding the search for a replacement for the outgoing
director-general of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), the Brazilian Roberto
de Azevedo, were not global and intense, it would mean that the position was
worth little more than a sinecure. Appointed in 2013, Mr. de Azevedo has served
notice that he will step down this August, a year before his term concludes.
Up came
eight candidates from all regions of the world, three of which are Africans:
Nigeria’s Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala; the former Kenyan foreign minister Amina
Mohamed, who previously was the chairperson of the WTO General Council; and
Abdel-Hamid Mamdouhm, an Egyptian lawyer who also had a stint as a senior WTO
official. Because the headship of the WTO is not geographically rotational, no
region of the world can claim it is its turn to produce the organisation’s next
D-G.
Monday, July 27, 2020
Rot In NDDC: Beyond Titillating Tales From ‘Port Harcourt Girl’ And ‘Uyo Boy’
By
Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye
Nigerians are fond of turning very
serious matters, even ones threatening the very life of their country, into
objects of jokes and laughter.
*Joi Nunieh and Godswill Akpabio |
And so, as President Muhammadu
Buhari’s anti-corruption posturing and
grandstanding which have for some years now been on life-support finally
breathed its last and was wheeled out for burial (without an autopsy), and the loud
attempt by some shameless pretenders to clean up the cesspit of corruption called the Niger
Delta Development Commission (NDDC) degenerates into a public trial of the
National Assembly, Minister of Niger Delta and the remorseless (mis)managers of
affairs at the NDDC, instead of there to
be a national mourning and grand coalition against graft and its perpetrators,
Nigerians are all over the social media and at various points of gathering,
demonstrating that they have only found in the calamitous development fresh
ingredients for juicy comedy skits and colourless jokes. What a tragedy!
To make matters worse, the
Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) which should have moved in immediately
to clear the Augean stable is presently incapacitated by the crushing weight of
its own self-inflicted woes as its once ebullient leader is embroiled in
earth-shaking allegations of corruption and facing a panel set up by the
Minister of Justice who himself is equally struggling to ward off unrelenting
fingers pointing at him and raising weighty allegations of graft against him.
Monday, July 20, 2020
Adams Oshiomhole Was A Mistake!
By Ugochukwu
Ejinkeonye
Just
like the All Progressive Congress (APC) which was driven by very poor judgment
to ask him to pilot its affairs, there is no doubt that having Mr. Adams
Oshiomhole as the national chairman of the ruling party was a horrendous
mistake, which, by the way, should surprise no one, given that there is hardly
anything the APC has got right since 2015 when Nigerians naively (or, more
appropriately, blindly) stampeded themselves into inflicting
the malformed party on themselves.
*Oshiomhole |
But
Mr. Oshiomhole has not always been like that – a huge liability to the people
he is leading. As the president of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC), he was
admired by many Nigerians, including this writer. He had the facts and eloquence
as he confronted the government about the plight of the masses. He was often
unbeatable and it was such a delight to listen to him. I would recall that I
sometimes quoted him in my column, especially, during the Obasanjo regime. When
then he indicated interest to go to the Edo State Government House to function
as governor, he easily won the support of people, even beyond the state.
Tuesday, July 14, 2020
Is Nigeria A Country Of Morons, Imbeciles, Idiots Or All Of The Above?
By Bayo Oluwasanmi
It is no secret that Nigeria’s ruling elite are cruel,
amoral, unfit for the office they hold. They are all fucking morons.
Ironically, this hasn’t stopped them from becoming presidents, governors, ministers,
and what have you.
*Buhari |
Though the citizens are aware of their leaders’
flaws, they choose to be willfully blind, dumbed down and misinformed. Both
citizens and leaders are deficient in self-respect and courage. The oppressed
are afraid to rattle the cage of their oppressors.
9 Facts That Should Make You Buy Property In Ibeju Lekki!
1. Do you know that the only area you can
invest now and get over 500% returns on your investment in two years time is
Ibeju Lekki, Lagos?
2. Do you know that Ibeju Lekki is the
fastest selling and developing area in the whole West Africa?
3. Do you know that Ibeju Lekki will develop
much faster than Lekki Phase1, Victoria Island and others?
Friday, June 26, 2020
Will Herdsmen Plunge Nigeria Into Food Crisis?
By
Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye
One of the most worrisome
developments in today’s Nigeria is what appears like a firm resolve by the
Muhammadu Buhari regime to continue circulating the very distressful impression
that it does not know how to solve the endless aggression being unleashed in
different parts of the country by Fulani herdsmen who move and operate as if
there are no laws in the land capable of containing the menace of troublesome
people.
The soft targets of these herders
are usually harmless and toiling farmers whom they gruesomely slaughter in
their farms, and innocent villagers, whose homes, according to reports, they
invade mostly in the middle of the night and set them ablaze. When the people
are suddenly roused from sleep by the raging inferno and run out in confusion,
they are mowed down by the waiting assailants.
And despite the volume of media
reports on the gory occurrences, nothing usually happens: no one will be
arrested, tried and jailed. With no one raising a hand to protect or seek justice for them, the traumatized people
will weep and get tired, quietly bury their dead, that is, if they are able to
find their corpses and mourn them silently, probably, fearing that any noise
from them might offend their killers and bring them back for more bloody
exploits. Then they will leave their village and move elsewhere in the
neighbouring communities to seek shelter since their homes have been destroyed.
They have become refugees in their own country for no fault of theirs.
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