Tuesday, August 17, 2021

Nigeria: Abubakar Malami's Incredible Faux Pas

 By Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye

The best value sincere friends and associates of the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Mr. Abubakar Malami, can inject in his career now would be to ensure that he schools himself to always speak sparingly and recognise the need to regularly deploy more time and effort to benefit from informed legal inputs before responding to very serious issues. The office he occupies is such an important and strategic one whose submissions on legal controversies Nigerians can confidently rely upon. It is always very disheartening whenever his interventions on very weighty national affairs are easily faulted by Nigerians, including even street traders and roadside mechanics. 

  *Malami with the British High Commissioner to Nigeria, Catriona Laing

When the 17 Southern governors met in Asaba on May 11, 2021, and   announced a ban on open grazing behind which gun-wielding Fulani herdsmen had for several years now hidden to commit various atrocities like brutal rapes of women and daughters, wanton destructions of crops, maiming or killing of farmers and the invasion and razing of communities, AGF Malami had rushed out to describe the governors’ resolution as “unconstitutional” and “dangerous.”

On Channels TV, Malami pronounced: “It is about constitutionality within the context of the freedoms expressed in our constitution…For example, it is as good as saying, perhaps, maybe, the northern governors coming together to say they prohibit spare parts trading in the north.”

The magisterial carriage with which this obviously very pedestrian and preposterous intervention was delivered must have deepened the astonishment of many Nigerians. How can a “learned gentleman” (least of all the AGF) compare violent herdsmen who appear to derive hideous animation from wantonly destroying farmlands and visiting their owners with diverse destructions and violations to motor spare parts traders who peacefully hire shops from their owners, pay taxes to government and undertake their business in ways that do not inflict any harm on anyone?

Tuesday, July 27, 2021

Nigeria: Kanu, Igboho And Buhari’s Misplaced Priorities

By Charles Okoh

Surviving in Nigeria is now a herculean task. Poverty continues to spiral and hunger and general hardship are gaining geographical spread in exponential proportion and something urgent needs to be done to arrest this development. To say Nigerians are hungry would amount to stating the obvious. The prices of items in the market are permanently sky-bound.

*Buhari

To tackle these seemingly insurmountable hiccups would call for a multi-pronged approach where all hands must be on deck because to juxtapose excruciating hunger with the alarming rate of idle hands and jobless Nigerians, especially the restless youths, would lead to outcomes unimaginable. 

Recently, two women were lamenting the rising cost of living and the difficulty they go through to put food on the table for their families. These women both have jobs; one of them a civilian, and the other a naval personnel. With so much anguish on their faces, they lamented that it had become difficult for them to buy foodstuffs like yam, tomatoes, rice, plantain etc. What actually interested me was the expression of despondency on the faces of these women and one cannot but wonder if those with jobs are lamenting this way, then what is the fate of those without jobs at a time like this. 

Friday, July 23, 2021

Nigeria: If Only AGF Malami Would Learn To Talk Sparingly

 By Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye

The best value sincere friends and associates of the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Mr. Abubakar Malami, can inject in his career now would be to ensure that he schools himself to always speak sparingly and recognise the need to regularly deploy more time and effort to benefit from informed legal inputs before responding to very serious issues. The office he occupies is such an important and strategic one whose submissions on legal controversies Nigerians can confidently rely upon. It is always very disheartening whenever his interventions on very weighty national affairs are easily faulted by Nigerians, including even street traders and roadside mechanics. 
  

*President Buhari and Malami

When the 17 Southern governors met in Asaba on May 11, 2021, and   announced a ban on open grazing behind which gun-wielding Fulani herdsmen had for several years now hidden to commit various atrocities like brutal rapes of women and daughters, wanton destructions of crops, maiming or killing of farmers and the invasion and razing of communities, AGF Malami had rushed out to describe the governors’ resolution as “unconstitutional” and “dangerous.”

Monday, July 19, 2021

Indeed, This 9th National Assembly Is Irredeemable!

 By Charles Okoh

That the Nigerian National Assembly has charted its own course is well-known. That this otherwise bastion of democracy has opted to attach itself as an appendage to the executive arm of government is also well documented fact, but what is all the more troubling is how low they are prepared to condescend just to be seen to be subservient and yes-men to the executive. 

*Lawan, Buhari, Gbajabiamila 

Last week, the Senate turned down the nomination of the garrulous nominee of President Muhammadu Buhari, Lauretta Onochie, as INEC commissioner to represent Delta State. The lily-livered Senate had been having sleepless nights on how to deliver what was an obvious decision without hurting the president. 

Stakeholders, including Civil Society Organisations, CSOs, and the main opposition party, the PDP, had staged a series of protests at the National Assembly against Onochie’s nomination by the President, arguing that she is a card-carrying member of the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC.

The North Is Bleeding While The Elites Are Fighting For 2023 Presidency

 By Buhari Olanrewaju Ahmed

The rate of poverty in the Northern region of Nigeria is quite unfortunate despite the abundant resources and human power in the region. 

The political and leadership failure represent the fundamental menace that continue to trouble Northerners whose only joy is that one of their own is in charge.

*Buhari Olanrewaju Ahmed

The instability of the Nigerian government has seriously damaged the educational system in the country. The numbers of students who have dropped out of school is alarming in the region, and this has paved way for the recruitment of insurgency because majority are unemployed.

The children of the ‘common people’ they refused to educate are now asking for a pound of flesh in return. Although some of these self-acclaimed elder statesmen in the North have always known that the calamities will consume them one day, they refused to turn a new leaf. 

Nigeria: Where is the 2014 Confab Report?

 By Dan Amor

In Culture And Anarchy, Matthew Arnold, one of the greatest social and literary critics in nineteenth century England, employs a delicate and stringent irony in an examination of the society of his time: a rapidly expanding industrial society, just beginning to accustom itself to the changes in its institutions that the pace of its own development called for. 

*Jonathan 

Coming virtually at the end of the decade (1868) and immediately prior to W.E. Forster’s Education Act, Culture And Anarchy phrases with a particular cogency the problems that find their centre in the questions: what kind of life do we think individuals in mass societies should be assisted to lead? How may we best ensure that the quality of their living is not impoverished? In this little book of about 238 pages, Arnold applies himself to the details of his time: to the Reform agitation, to the commercial values that working people were encouraged to respect, and to the limitations of even the best rationalist intelligence. 

Friday, July 16, 2021

From Wild, Wild West To National Inferno!

 By Uzor Maxim Uzoatu

A seemingly innocuous spark in an otherwise isolated part of a nation can change the course of history. 

Nigerian history as we have it today owes its shape to the handling or mishandling of the Action Group crisis of the early 1960s. The initial crisis led to a chain of events culminating in the Nigeria/Biafra war and the deeply polarized and wounded nation such as we have today.

*Awolow, Azikiwe, Balewa

“May you live in interesting times,” is a twice-told charge; and thus Chief Simeon Olatunde Oloko found himself through forces beyond his control to be in the epicenter as a witness of the events that reshaped Nigerian history. Born at Agodi in Ibadan, the author who studied at the esteemed London School of Economics and Political Science, and was called to the bar of Inner Temple in 1958, served as secretary of the pivotal Western Nigeria Development Corporation (WNDC) from the vantage point of which he lived through the manifold crises that bedeviled the old Western Region and Nigeria.

The Fallacy Of Herders-Farmers Crisis

 By Ikechukwu Amaechi

Former Lagos State Governor and chieftain of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Bola Tinubu, made a profound statement when he paid a condolence visit to the family of elder statesman and Afenifere leader, Reuben Fasoranti, in Akure on July 14, 2019. Fasoranti’s daughter, Funke Olakunrin, was gunned down two days earlier at Ore junction on the Sagamu-Benin highway, and her driver, Tayo Ogundare, said hooded men emerged from the bush to attack them.

*Buhari and El-Rufai 

Announcing the tragedy the same day, the then Afenifere spokesperson, Yinka Odumakin, blamed herdsmen for it. His claim was echoed by the deceased’s brother, Kehinde Fasoranti, who told journalists that policemen at Ore police station confirmed that his sister was killed by herdsmen.

Tinubu was not impressed and cautioned against stigmatising herdsmen. “I am extremely concerned about security but I don’t want stigma. I can go through history of kidnapping and we know how it started, where it all started. There are lots of copycats. How many years ago have we faced insecurity in this country and cases of kidnapping?

Tuesday, July 13, 2021

Soyinka: Celebrating Our Own Kongi At 87

 By Dan Amor

It was once the fashion to single out four men of letters as the supreme titans of world literature – Homer, Dante, Shakespeare and Goethe – each the embodiment of a great epoch of Western culture – ancient, medieval, Renaissance and modern. These four literary icons of all time remain secure; but idolatry of Professor Wole Soyinka as the prototype of the inquiring spirit and courageous intellect of modern man has been sharply appreciated in our time, especially as we pass beyond the more leisurely issues of the post-modernist era.

*Soyinka

The intensely contemporary character of his works has made him the tallest iroko tree in the post-modernist forest of global dramatic literature. Yet, the commencement, two weeks ago, of the Wole Soyinka 87th  Birthday Festival, which ultimately climaxes today, July 13, 2021, his date of birth, unfortunately doesn't seem to wear the official insignia of the Nigerian government especially because he has started telling them the truth about the Nigerian condition. But, it is expected, as Christ Himself says in Matthew 13:57, "A prophet is not without honour, save his own country and his own house."  

Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Suspicious ‘Hope’, Kanu’s Arrest, The North’s Duplicity

 By Chris Gyang

Governor Hope Uzodimma of Imo State is the typical Nigerian politician. With utmost dexterity, he has mastered the intrigues of survival in this most brutal and unconscionable trade. For instance, in 2018, Mr. Hope promptly dumped the PDP, his party since 1999 on which platform he served two Senate terms, and joined the ruling APC. 

*Kanu

He had realised that his prospects of becoming governor as an APC candidate were brighter than as that of the PDP. And, true to his reckoning, he later emerged as governor – even though it took a Supreme Court ruling to confirm his victory. Self-preservation and political survival is the name of the game. Apparently, Governor Hope had mastered it so well.

The day before the Nigerian government announced the arrest of Nnamdi Kanu, Governor Hope had advised his fellow Igbo people to support the Buhari-led Federal Government because, “After God in Nigeria, the next person is Buhari. He has the power to dictate where there should be light or not, and it happens.” The governor was widely condemned by Nigerians, some of whom dubbed his utterance as blasphemy for almost comparing Buhari to God.

Monday, July 5, 2021

Nigeria And The Threat Of A One-Party State

 By Dan Amor

Aside from the usual historical rendition that Nigeria became a political reality following the fusion of the Northern and Southern protectorates of the River Niger area in the interior coast of West Africa in 1914 by Lord Fredrick Lugard, a British military administrator, Nigeria actually adopted a Federal form of government in 1954. Even though still under colonial rule, party politics thrived in the country. 

*Buhari

The leading parties were: the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC) which stood for political democracy in its classical, individualistic form; the Action Group of Nigeria (AG) which stood for federalist democracy; the Northern Peoples Congress (NPC), which exemplified the modernization of traditional political authority; and its radical opponent, the Northern Elements Progressive Union (NEPU), which espoused egalitarian democracy. As a strictly regional party, the NPC did not threaten the Southern parties in their home regions. Since the Northern Region was said to have contained an absolute majority of the national population, (though a myth of the 1959 population census), the NPC could control the Federal government by monopolizing electoral power in the North. 

Friday, July 2, 2021

Tobacco: Silently Hiding Smokers In Graves

     By Mukhtar Garba Kobi

Tobacco was historically discovered by a European in the person of Christopher Columbus in 1492, initially, it was only smoked by high-class personalities during festivities but Columbus took it back to Europe where it gained recognition.

Smoking increased dramatically during world wars, it was supplied to troops for free mainly to boost their morale but later in the 20th century, it became less popular due to a rapid increase in its health effects. Several types of research were conducted and books published on the dangers of tobacco to health, some of which are Samuel Thomas in 1795, Benjamin Rush in 1798 and many more. World No Tobacco Day was celebrated on May 31 but not known to many due to poor campaigns.

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Whenever Buhari Tries To Be Smart, I Despair

 By Austin Oboh

More than a week after President Muhammadu Buhari spoke in the much celebrated interview on Arise TV, wherein he proffered his improvised solution to herdsmen and bandits’ attacks in states, I am yet to recover from the blatant dishonesty. The event has reinforced my belief that he is not truly willing to arrest the security crisis in the country. Whenever I come across the kind of argument the president made in that interview, I feel hopeless. And my sense of hopelessness about Nigeria is now particularly intense because I realise that nothing can be done about the situation if the man who reserves the privileging of the last word on security and defence is intentionally diverting people’s attention from the crux of the matter. 

*Buhari 

In that interview, President Buhari, who was supposed to give his opinion on the agitation for state police, as usual, went off on a tangent. He said he recently sent back two South- West governors who had come to complain to him about insecurity in their states. Deliberately or not, the president avoided stating his views on the agitation for state police – most observers would claim he was still on course; I don’t agree. 

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Chinua Achebe Prize For Nigerian Writing Endowed By Anambra State Govt

 
*Achebe 

To mark the 40th anniversary of the Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA) which Africa's greatest raconteur and novelist founded at the University of Nigeria at Nsukka, the Anambra State Government has endowed a one-million naira (N1 million) worth Chinua Achebe Prize for Nigerian Writing.

The Prize is to be administered by ANA founded in 1981. 

Monday, June 28, 2021

When It Looks Like Poverty Has Found A Home Here

 By Austin Oboh

When the United Nations World Food Programme recently reported that Nigeria faces imminent food crisis, owing mostly to insecurity in the North and other parts of the country, I suddenly remembered that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) had, in the last few years, spent massive funds on agricultural programmes nationwide, especially in the North. At some point, the Federal Government boasted that the country would soon be eating what it produces. I was profoundly happy about the prognostics of a better day, like every other Nigerian.

Because if there is anything I detest, it is the unexplainable habit of importing what can be produced here. I have never understood the madness, and never will. You can, therefore, imagine my sadness that what I feared all along was going to happen – that billions of laudable investment in food production might be lost to unaddressed social problems. It ought to have been clear to the Federal Government that a nation in war is a nation in crisis. So, where was the root of the government’s optimism when it was obvious to all, especially to those in power, that the state of insecurity in the country had reached such putrid state that nothing would be spared the foulness? 

But the Nigerian govt has always behaved like it is nothing to worry about – at least, official attitude betrays this. The Federal Government has been blowing hot and cold in its war against terrorists and bandits, threatening to crush them at some point only to turn round the very next moment and appeal to them to drop their guns, especially when it appears the criminals are gaining the upper hand.

You can call this the weapon of threat and blandishment. Nothing the Federal Government has done in its military campaigns against terrorists and bandits have made as much impact as to generate the kind of optimism government officials often express. I have personally long concluded that those in power, cushioned by their privileges against the reality, have never truly understood what the country is going through. That, possibly, is why they believe that food programmes would thrive and the Nigerian people would soon become self-reliant despite the raging wars. 

And in the same spirit of political naivety – which has been so much on display since 2015 – the Federal Government, on Tuesday, inaugurated another laudable programme which, however, is doomed to fail like others before it.

I am referring to the inauguration of the National Steering Committee (NSC) of the National Poverty Reduction with Growth Strategy (NPRGS). The development filled me with a mix of elation and sadness, because, again, I realised that it has no chance of making much impact. 

At the event, the president repeated his outlandish promise to lift 100 million Nigerians out of poverty in ten years, according to him, with a well-researched framework for implementation and funding, as though previous implementation and funding frameworks were perfunctorily designed. 

Now that I think of it, poverty reduction programmes by successive governments in Nigeria have become a tedious experience to me even though I cherish their cosmetic desire to improve the lots of the increasing millions whom they have helped impoverished. Government’s resort to such ad hoc solutions in the face of profoundly enduring social problems does in itself demonstrate a poverty of thinking or a blatant refusal to confront the bitter realities of our time. Before I am misunderstood, let me make it plain that I am not against efforts to cushion the impact of hard times on people; I only object to the habit of ignoring the root and treating the symptoms of a disease. 

The stop-gap measures called poverty reduction programmes, now treated as permanent measures in Nigeria, have been with us in the last three decades without intrinsically changing the social conditions of the same category of people for which the programmes have been instituted. So, it was a languid feeling of déjà vu for me on Tuesday when the Federal Government came up with its stampeded version of poverty reduction, or poverty pacification – an expression which appears more apt, for me, in this context. 

Have our leaders considered the advice of Jim Yong Kim that dealing with poverty is a much more serious affair than constructing financial drains? The former World Bank president saw the matter more broadly as a factor of economic growth. “We will never be able to end poverty,” he said, “unless economies are growing.” 

Now, this opinion directs our attention to the need to look more directly at critical systemic factors embracing security, infrastructure, financial policies, education, justice system, and health – all of which are in varying phases of dysfunction at present. Why do we have to continually drive resources into superficial projects which only promise temporary relief for a few when, indeed, what is needed is to resolve the hydra-headed crises in our country today? 

Consider, for example, the dilemma in the agricultural sector already alluded to. According to a recent report by the World Food Organisation, Nigeria faces imminent famine as a result of insecurity in most parts of the country which has made farming hazardous. 

Why would the Federal Government continue to spend colossal funds on projects that would not resolve the complications in those areas mentioned, knowing too well that the gains would eventually be vitiated? Insecurity, darkness, and bad roads are the biggest challenges and causes of poverty in Nigeria. Whoever resolves these resolves the poverty that the people have known for ages and which has currently reached its most pathetic point. 

I am not unmindful of Buhari’s promise concerning the new programme but my argument is that these programmes have become effete in Nigeria on account of the endemic tendencies that hold progress hostage – the toxic environment of insurgency, banditry, and regional turmoil. What the Federal Government ought to do in the circumstances is not to assume that the country’s state of anomie will give way for ad hoc programmes to succeed. This is wishful thinking. The government must, as a matter of urgency, reinforce its war against insurgency and banditry and then initiate the process of addressing the socio-political upheavals in some parts of the country with the aim of restoring peace for progressive schemes to succeed. 

The present government’s insistence on political rigmaroles has jeopardised the economy despite all the efforts so far made. A new World Bank report says that Nigeria under President Buhari will lose the economic gains it made in the last decade at the end of 2021. 

“By the end of 2021, Nigeria’s GDP is likely to approach its 2010 level, thus reversing a full decade of economic growth,” the bank in its new report said. 

The World Bank’s projection comes as Nigeria strives to recover from the multiple recessions that hit the country in 2016 and 2020. 

The bank, in the report, said that there would be a constant decline in the country’s GDP per capita despite recovery from recession, projecting the country’s population to grow faster than its economy. 

The bank further predicted that despite the country’s gradual recovery from the 2020 recession, Nigerian masses would continue to suffer the adverse effect of the economic downturn. 

While applauding President Buhari for taking bold steps to reform the country’s deteriorating economic condition, the bank advised the government to deepen its recent reforms that allow private sector investment for speedy economic recovery. 

Apart from the COVID-19 pandemic, the controversial fiscal and monetary policies of the Buhari administration and the Central Bank were also largely blamed for the recession. 

So, here we are – the land of the poorest but ironically the country with the most extravagant government in the universe – striving to erase poverty by consolidating it. The more the Federal Government sets up schemes, ostensibly to improve the people’s lives, the deeper they sink into deprivation and squalor. Has the government ever realised this? How come, as the years roll by, Nigeria and her people depreciate and degenerate despite countless schemes targeted at empowering them?

Isn’t it time we stopped fooling around with schemes which look like they were hatched in the Academy of Lagado (courtesy, Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels)? They are just drainpipes and possibly some ephemeral relief to a miniscule patch of the earth. Now, it all seems as if poverty has found a comfortable home in Nigeria. The socio-political morass here is benumbing. I have lived long enough in this country to know what I am complaining about. I was born, bred, and (unfortunately) battered here. So, let no one tell me about what I already know.

Even as I make my observations, I am aware that economic experts hold the view that poverty eradication programmes could significantly impact on the lives of the beneficiaries, but what am concerned about here is the overall effects on the masses? I would rather have a government that adequately funds education, pursues equality and justice, addresses all social ills in the society, including lopsided appointments, and realistically drives infrastructural development to a government that selectively dishes out handouts. 

*Oboh is a commentator on public issues

Why Does Buhari Oppose Restructuring, Support Open Grazing?

 By Tony Eluemunor

How on Earth could anyone explain President Muhammadu Buhari’s recently advertised opposition to the massive calls that Nigeria be restructured? And does anyone know the exact reasons why he supports Rural Area Grazing Reserves (RUGA)? 

*Buhari

What exactly did the President have in mind when on Saturday, June 19, 2021, he said in Kaduna (through a representative) that “those calling for restructuring are afraid of partisan politics”? He spoke that Saturday as a Special Guest of Honour during the Launch of Kudirat Abiola Sabon Gari, Zaria Peace Foundation which took place at Ahmadu Bello University Hotels, Zaria, Kaduna State. I hope he does not believe that once a man has been elected President he becomes a national teacher that can’t go wrong? 

Nigeria: How Not To Gag The Media

 By Dan Amor

It is a sad story to tell but telling it we must. Before the advent of the present "democratic" dispensation, Nigeria was literally run by buccaneers who plundered the nation’s till into private use and built empires over the painful anxieties of the oppressed people. Upon assumption of office, the present crop of leaders (since 1999 till date) promised to make Nigerians put the pains of the past behind them as they were poised to embark on massive people-oriented programmes. 

Consequently, therefore, Nigerians who had long been living in penury and deprivation felt that the only option left to them was to hope for better days ahead. This is more so as the beauty of any government is its ability to bring together human and material resources and use them for the uplift of society. It would be recalled that during those dark days in our nation’s annals when the military usurped the polity to breaking point, the Nigerian media stood firmly on the side of the people. 

Thursday, June 24, 2021

Mister President, There Is Hunger In The Land!

 By Ayo Baje

“As of April 2021, the inflation rate was the highest in four years. Food prices accounted for over 60 per cent of the total increase in inflation. Nigeria’s economic growth is being hindered by food inflation, heightened insecurity, unemployment and stalled reforms”. – World Bank Report. 

*Buhari 

Talk is cheap. But walking that talk is what truly matters for effective leadership. For instance, Nigerians have over the recent years discovered that some of our top political leaders are far removed from the harsh economic realities on the ground. They make fanciful promises during electioneering campaigns only to disregard or jettison them soon after mounting the pedestal of political power. 

Anambra 2021: An Appeal To The Mass Media

 By C. Don Adinuba 

 1. With the nomination on Wednesday, June 23, 2021, of Professor Chukwuma Charles Soludo, an internationally recognized economist, reformer and erstwhile Central Bank governor, as the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) gubernatorial candidate in the November 6 election in Anambra State, the campaign for the governorship election has, for all practical purposes, started. The campaign is expected to be issues-based, free of rancor and violence, as in the last two gubernatorial elections in the state. The APGA gubernatorial nominee has always been widely regarded as the shoo-in. 

C. Don Adinuba

2. The mass media have a huge part to play in the quest to make the November 6 vote exemplary. However, the reports by a section of the Nigerian media on the statutory measures towards the elections have been anything but assuring. A mainstream newspaper, for example, claimed three days ago that APGA would be disqualified from the forthcoming gubernatorial election because, as it claimed, it did not notify the Independent National Electoral Commission of the special ward congresses held on June 15, 2021, to choose ad hoc delegates to the June 23, State Congress, at least 21 days before the event. The newspaper based the speculative report on a letter purportedly written by an INEC officer claiming that it was not notified of the congresses. The INEC officer states nowhere in the letter anything concerning disqualification. Are some journalists now campaigning for INEC to be vested with the power to disqualify candidates and parties arbitrarily long after the courts have stopped such arbitrary actions? 

Tuesday, June 22, 2021

Nigeria: Population Boom In Economic Doom

By Jerry Uwah

Nigeria is sitting on a ticking population time-bomb. President Muhammadu Buhari passively acknowledged the danger ahead in his incoherent and inchoate broadcast on Democracy Day when he listed “galloping population growth rate” as one of the reasons why government could not provide jobs for Nigeria’s army of restless youth now being recruited into armed robberies, kidnappings, banditries and bare-faced terrorism. 

Ironically, the president was curiously silent on how to tackle the dangerous population growth that is now partially responsible for the breakdown of law and order in the land. The population time-bomb has started exploding. It is partially responsible for the obdurate security crisis that has placed Nigeria on civil war footing. 

Nigeria probably has the highest number of children of school age out of classrooms because of the population boom in economic doom that makes it impossible for government to provide enough classrooms for the millions of children qualifying for seats in primary and secondary schools.