Monday, October 24, 2022

Liz Truss: Lessons For Nigeria’s Leadership

 By Ahanonu Kingsley

After steering the cause of a turbulent United Kingdom economy as Prime Minister, Liz Truss resigned from the exalted office she sought and fought very hard to occupy just some 44 days ago. It’s honourable that she saw the weight of the office, admitted her inability to deliver on the mandate, and resigned. Indeed, it reflected how she valued the nation above herself.

*Liz Truss

But then why did she become Prime Minister in the first instance when she knew she’d resign in just 44 days? Isn’t it a waste of time and resources, considering that the Conservative Party had to organise a long walk of campaigns and debates in the bid to shop for a replacement for Boris Johnson, who equally resigned just two months ago?

Does it not appear to be a calculated scheme to scuttle a candidate who appeared prepared and suited for the role? Erstwhile Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rishi Sunak, has a more realistic plan that captures today’s UK economic reality. He appeared more prepared for the position he sought and aimed to assume. But what did the establishment do? They whittled his soaring influence, decapitated his chance of winning, and brought in Liz.

Towards Universal Health Coverage In Nigeria

 By Fidelis Onyejegbu

May 2022 signifies a landmark in the healthcare delivery history of Nigeria as the National Health Insurance Scheme (2004) was repealed by the National Health Insurance Authority Act. The golden provision in the new legislation is that health insurance coverage has been made compulsory for all Nigerians and the country’s legal inhabitants. 

It is a laudable provision as it has provided a legal foundation for large scale uptake of health insurance coverage in Nigeria – a step toward the attainment of Universal Health Coverage in the country. The UHC connotes a situation where everyone has access to the health care services when and where they need them without any financial difficulty. The National Health Insurance Scheme Strategic Plan (2020-2030) stated that only about 4.2 per cent of Nigerians are covered under the Social Health Insurance.

Nigeria’s Political Structures Of Corruption!

 By MC Asuzu

There have recently been discussions in this country concerning Nigerian politicians who have no political structures and those who had them, as the veritable determinants of those who will be able to win elections in Nigeria and otherwise. It was a very interesting discussion indeed. But what kept coming back to the mind of some of us who are incapable of any partisan political persuasions and/or memberships and participation is this: what structures are the people saying these things thinking of?

What does political structures by a single politician mean? Is it individual politicians or the group of people who wish to work together under specific political ideologies that develop such political structures? These organisational groups of people are simply called political parties, is it not? So, when politicians are talking of personal political structures (but not those of political parties), it becomes necessary to examine what these people may be having in mind and what it is that they themselves really have done in those regards.

Sunday, October 23, 2022

#ENDSARS: Nigeria Must Demand Accountability, Justice

 By Osai Ojigho and Chuka Arinze-Onyia

It has been two years since young Nigerians protesting police brutality and corruption by the infamous Special Anti-Robbery Squad were violently attacked and killed by the police and military across the country, and yet there has been no accountability. This is despite the fact that there is ample and documented evidence of the gruesome brutality perpetrated on peaceful protesters by members of the security forces across the country. 

The brutal attack of protesters by the Nigerian authorities is part of a current trend of governments across the world attacking protesters in their bid to silence dissenting voices. Protesters in Cameroon, Senegal, and most recently, Iran, have been met with all sorts of violence and excessive force, and many have been killed as a direct result of the violence deployed by state actors.

Appraising Nigeria’s Healthcare Delivery

By Carl Umegboro 

In a civilized climate, this wouldn’t stir interest but in Nigeria, where public officeholders largely work contrary to public interest, it should. Recently, the Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo, underwent a leg surgery in a hospital in home-country. It was a departure from the flawed status quo. Over the years, at any slight ailment, people in authority fly abroad with public funds, which chiefly accounts why healthcare centres are left in decay. Osinbajo literally displayed leadership acumen. 

The message is simple – a prudent leader can’t live foreign, abandoning the led to their fate in home facilities. The action is a template that must be sustained for a turnaround. Government is about the people. This accounts why Section 14 (2) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, as amended, explicitly provides; “It is hereby, accordingly declared that (b) … the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government.” 

Hypertension, The Silent Killer!

 By Tom Frieden

High blood pressure, also known as hypertension, is one of the most common health conditions, affecting about 30% of adults in Nigeria. Uncontrolled high blood pressure leads to heart attacks, strokes and kidney disease, and kills 10 million people each year worldwide, making it one of the deadliest global health issues. 

Treatment for HBP is extremely effective for most people; taking proven, high-quality medications can add years to your life and make those years more enjoyable. But in Nigeria, less than 3% of people with HBP have it under control. Hypertension is called the silent killer because there are no symptoms; many people do not know that they have hypertension. Many of those who are aware that they have high blood pressure are not taking medications regularly. Medication for hypertension needs to be taken every day. 

Help For Flood Victims In Kogi, Bayelsa, Others

 By Moshood Erubami

The torrential downpour from  rain and its consequences have come against pre-warnings that the resultant flooding will destroy crops, houses, schools, and businesses including the losses of lives, with many injured and countless losing their livelihoods, while millions will be displaced.

The loud shout for immediate action on the effects of global warming and climate change and its consequences in flooding resulting from the climate emergency is now. It is most tragic and pitiable that most residents of the states ravaged by the flooding in Nigeria now pull up canoe boats in front of their houses to access the outside outlet to reach their various destinations while waiting for the government both in the state and federal, for actions that could bail them out of the condition and mitigate their affected economic and social conditions. The images captured of the consequential menace of the heavy rains are nauseating with men, women and their children largely affected with life-impacting consequences wading in waterlogged streets after the flooding.

Friday, October 21, 2022

Championing Rule Of Law At Home And Criminality Abroad

 By Owei Lakemfa

Only a quarter of the eight million Palestinian people live in the Palestine; one million in Gaza, 750,000 in the occupied West Bank and 250,000 inside Israel. The rest, or over six million, are forced to live outside with at least three million of them classified as stateless persons with no legal rights. Yet these Palestinians in the diaspora are hunted like rabbits by the Israeli state.

(pix: The loyal Nigerian Lawyer)

On September 28, 2022, two Palestinians were confronted in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia by four men working for Mossad, Israel’s intelligence agency. They snatched one of them, a programmer from Gaza while the second Palestinian escaped. The victim was then taken to a chalet where he was tortured and interrogated directly by two Mossad agents via video call.

The New Strait Times, Malaysia’s oldest newspaper published since 1845 reported that for 24 hours, the Palestinian was interrogated and beaten by his Malaysian captors whenever the answer he gave were not satisfactory to the Israeli agents.

ASUU Wins!

 By Tony Afejuku

By the time you read this, our public universities that our federal government’s intransigence caused to be closed for well over seven months may have been opened or are about to be opened.

Those who have seen the well above seven months of battle or of war between the FGN and ASUU as super serious contestation and deadly game of brawn and brain akin to those that can only be found in a play or a novel of tragic proportions might be happy to get to the end of the play or novel at last without pause.

Tinubu: Should Nigerians Really Shut Up?

 By Promise Adiele

Nigeria’s god of literature, Wole Soyinka, needs no elaborate introduction. His evident literary flourishes underscore a deep mastery of the English language which he eminently utilises to address socio-political conditions in his native Nigeria and across the world. He has, several times, confronted misrule, urging the economic weary, downtrodden masses to stand up against bad governance and reject the entrenchment of power monsters in the polity. In his globally acclaimed civil war memoir, The Man Died, Soyinka magisterially submits that “the man dies in all who keep silent in the face of tyranny.”

*Tinubu

By that epoch submission, the Nobel laureate encourages victims of feral exercise of power to speak up and not shut up because death is the comeuppance of timid acceptance of political and economic terrorism. Soyinka’s advice to the populace to speak up contradicts Bola Tinubu’s admonition that Nigerians demanding a new beginning from the present All Progressives Congress disaster should ‘shut up.’ Tinubu, the APC presidential standard bearer, was unmistakably direct when he recently encouraged his audience to tell those demanding a change of government in Nigeria to ‘shut up.’

Thursday, October 20, 2022

Liz Truss Resigns As UK Prime Minister

 


Liz Truss has resigned as the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.

She was only 45 days in office. This makes her the shortest-serving prime minister in the history of the UK.

In an announcement today (Thursday, October 20, 2022) outside 10 Downing Street, London, the official residence and office of British premiers, Ms. Truss told the British people that although she was stepping down from office, she would, however, “remain as Prime Minister until a successor has been chosen”

Her resignation today brings to a climax the serious crisis that had dogged her political authority leading to loss of confidence of most Members of Parliament of her own party and devastating crash in the country's stock market with tremendous pressure on the UK economy.

Two key ministers in her government have also resigned.

Full text of her resignation speech read today, Thursday, October 20, 2022

I came into office at a time of great economic and international instability.

Families and businesses were worried about how to pay their bills.

Why Buhari Must Let Nnamdi Kanu Go

 By Ikechukwu Amaechi

I am not a lawyer. But in writing this article, I spoke to learned friends who, in unanimity, held that President Muhammadu Buhari’s government has no legal beam to hang its jaundiced interpretation of the Appeal Court judgement that discharged the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, Nnamdi Kanu, of terrorism charges.

*Kanu

In a historic and courageous judgement, a three-man panel of the Court of Appeal, Abuja Division, on Thursday, October 13, discharged Kanu of the seven-count charge pending against him before the Federal High Court. The judgement, unprecedented in its audacity, faulted the process through which the IPOB leader was brought before the court to answer to a 15-count terrorism charge.

The Way Out Of Naira’s Deepening Woes

 By Faith Omoniyi

In recent times, Naira has been defined by its continuous downward spiral. The Naira has plummeted from $1/N198 to $1/N430 in the parallel market during the last six years. This increase equates to a 209% depreciation. The depreciation is due to a reduction in global oil prices, a lack of foreign currency income, and higher inflation in the country. The downward trend of the Naira is set to continue if proper economic measures are not in place. Increasing  Nigeria’s export potential and reducing the inflation rate are viable options for getting Naira back on track.

Overbearing weight on Oil
Low export potential is one of the causes of the Naira’s depreciation. According to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), in 2021, Nigeria’s imports exceeded exports by N1.94trn. Nigeria’s foreign exchange earnings are derived primarily from the export of petroleum. However, Nigeria still spends $14.95 billion on the import of petroleum products annually. Nigeria needs to build refineries to shelve this figure or collaborate with private companies like Dangote and BUA that are building refineries. 

Wednesday, October 19, 2022

The Major Threats To World Peace Today

 By Uchenna Nwankwo

No doubt, the ongoing Russia-Ukraine faceoff and the China-Taiwan imbroglio stand out as the most challenging problems and threats to world peace today. These are problems that test international diplomacy today, especially given the fact that they constitute major sources of international tensions involving the major blocks in world affairs.

*Zelensky and Putin

As Henry Kissinger (99), the erstwhile famous international diplomat and secretary of state in the President Nixon administration in the US is quoted to have observed:

We (USA) are at the edge of war with Russia and China on issues which we partly created, without any concept of how this is going to end or what it’s supposed to lead to.

Dele Giwa: The Assassination Of A Patriot

 

(Man Without Cant: A Funeral Oration - November 8, 1986)

By Ray Ekpu 

This is one moment in my life when words cannot adequately convey the enormity of my personal grief and the enormity of the collective grief of my colleagues and associates. This is so because Dele Giwa was not only a fine journalist, a devoted patriot and nationalist, but also an admirable leader of men. This is so because of the manner of his death. A man of high visibility, it is an irony of fate that he was hacked down in his prime, at the unripe age of 39, by the anonymous instrument of a parcel bomb, a phenomenon unheard of in the history of our country.

In a different circumstance, William Shakespeare was compelled to say that to praise what is lost makes remembrance dear. Since his assassination on October 19,1986, Dele Giwa has bathed in glowing encomiums poured on him by thousands of Nigerians and foreigners alike who have felt touched, deeply touched, by the termination of his life when that life appeared to be merely about to begin, and when his contributions to the country were invaluable. But no justice can be done to his memory or indeed to history if we should fail to say why he has loomed so large in the consciousness of Nigerians. 

Dele was a courageous man, warm, generous, and frank, sometimes frank to a fault. He lacked the inclination for pettiness or the inclination for discrimination on the basis of tribe, religion or class or social station or such other mundane impediments that put a wedge between one man and another. He was invigorating company, he was blessed with an abundance of humour, wit and wisdom, and he was able to get along in the most delightful way with people whose life touched his.

*The Four founders of Newswatch: Dele Giwa, Ray Ekpu, Dan Agbese, Yakubu Mohammed

In his public and private life he was a man who lacked cant and chicanery. He knew the meaning of loyalty, loyalty to principle, loyalty to friendship, loyalty to club, loyalty to country. He was not the kind of man who would vote one way in a committee session and vote another way at the general assembly for, he was consistent in his principles, and these principles sprang from the inner wells of his conviction.

As a journalist, he was one of the greatest, living or dead, in Nigeria or anywhere. He was innovative, flexible and enterprising. He displayed tremendous dexterity in the handling of prose and he made words his handmaiden. He loved challenges and he proved that he was capable of handling great challenges and of overcoming such challenges almost effortlessly. He exhibited during his journalistic career that he was not only a man of great talent, but also a man of great courage.

He passed through trials and tribulations, subjecting himself to great personal discomfort in order to demonstrate his commitment to his profession and to humanity. There lies his greatness, for small men only think of themselves while great men think of humanity. For Dele, humanity was his constituency and his thoughts were painted on a global canvas.

Dele was a self-made man who rose from the obscurity of a humdrum existence to the pedestal of national and world prominence. But his prominence did not come by happenstance. It was not like the little nice parcel that he found on his table with a nice blue ribbon tied round it.

It wasn't delivered to him on a platter of gold or silver for, not being one who was born with a golden or silver spoon in his mouth, he knew the meaning of hard work.

He toiled relentlessly, assiduously, tirelessly, for everything he got and everything he was.

He believed in work as a logical necessity. Like Abraham Lincoln he believed that if God gave us two hands and only one mouth there is no reason why we should starve. In furtherance of his belief, he exerted himself everyday of his life for the accomplishment of higher ideals. For him work was as comfortable as sport. In fact, for him work was sport.

Although in his adult years he had his training in the United States, he did not come back to Nigeria behaving like a quintessential American. He picked and chose the good aspects of American life and converted these to good account. He was a Nigerian and he believed that if God in His infinite wisdom chose to plant him here God had a role for him. He played that role as devotedly as anyone, which is why in life and in death his contributions to the country have been much treasured as the public reaction to his assassination can testify.

His phenomenal achievements have been written on the tablets of our hearts.

It is apparent that Nigerians have come to appreciate that Dele did give rather generously his time, his talents and his thoughts to the building of a new Nigeria. The work is not yet completed.

His death must spur other architects towards greater commitment to the construction of the edifice of our dream.

Dele's death represents for us - his wife and children, his relations and compatriots, his colleagues and friends - the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune but our prayer ought to be that his ideals and his aspirations should not be interred with his bones.

If by his death he has watered the tree of our national survival, if by his death he has fuelled our desire to toil for a better Nigeria, then his death, painful, tragic, untimely, senseless though it is, would not have been in vain. That is the only way to give life to the dead and to give hope to the living.

Dele's death is death in the family, in the Giwa family, in the Newswatch family, in the Nigerian family and in the family of humanity. For us at Newswatch his family are part and parcel of us, and we are part and parcel of them.

His responsibilities to his biological family are now our responsibilities and we will ensure that his family do not suffer any deprivation as a result of his departure. That is our commitment.

We wish to renew our pledge, if a renewal is necessary, that we shall do everything in our power to ensure that his assassins, whoever they may be, are dug out and dealt with according to the law.

That is our commitment.

In death, Dele has acquired a larger-than-life image. For a man who lived in deed, and not in years, this must be so. And so his death makes us all who treasured his contributions, who treasured his battle against the annihilation of Truth, and who treasured his battle against the blight of Oppression, collective widows.

In the hearts of all of us who loved him and whom he loved - DELE HASN'T DIED – HE LIVES ON.

*Ray Ekpu, veteran journalist and eminent writer is former CEO of Newswatch Communications  

* Culled from Newswatch magazine of November 24, 1986.


RELATED POST 

Dele Giwa’s Assassination: 35 Years After

 

Tuesday, October 18, 2022

Damage Control And The ASUU Strike

 By Ernest Chukwusoro Igwe

Strike as a fundamental human right across all divides of human society is a form of protest against such vices as ill treatment, unjust practices, deviation from the norms and expectations, sadism, wickedness, denials, and not keeping faith with agreements. Strikes come in different forms and may include crying by little children; contrarian discussions and writings; partial or full withdrawal of services; insurrections and public protests; overthrow of governments through the ballot boxes, demonstrations, military coups, etc. Strikes as the means of addressing shortcomings and injustices do occur everywhere in the world, and Nigeria is no exception.

The nine-month-long – February to October 2022 – strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universities in Nigeria (ASUU) has taken the cake in the recurring decimal of strikes in Nigerian universities. Most Nigerians, especially members of ASUU, believe that these strikes are totally avoidable and, even where started, could be nipped in the bud by government’s quick intervention.

Sadly, it has always been alleged that the selfishness and short-sightedness of bureaucrats such as Ministers, Permanent Secretaries, Director-Generals, Directors and other members in the relevant Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) relish in ensuring the prolonging of such discussions due to selfish and unpatriotic reasons.

Monday, October 17, 2022

Ekwueme: The Democrat Who Gave Abacha Red Card

 By Uzor Maxim Uzoatu

The soft, gentlemanly features of Dr. Alex Ifeanyichukwu Ekwueme belie the heart of steel inside the late first ever Vice-President of Nigeria. Back in 1998, Nigeria’s Head of State, General Sani Abacha, had perfected plans of transmuting from a military leader to a civilian president. Abacha got all the five existing political parties to adopt him as the sole presidential candidate. 

*Dr. Alex Ekwueme

Ekwueme met with his fellow politicians, 17 from the North and 17 from the South, that became G-34. As the chairman of G-34, Ekwueme took charge of forwarding a letter to General Abacha, warning him not to ever dream of turning himself into a democratic president. It was akin to giving a red card to a murderous dictator by an unarmed civilian. 

Many Nigerians waited with bated breath, believing that there was no hiding place for Ekwueme and his group of crusading politicians. Then Abacha suddenly died. And soon after, the winner of the June 12 1993 presidential election, Chief MKO Abiola, whom Abacha had kept in captivity also died. General Abdulsalami Abubakar, who took over after Abacha’s death, announced a 9-month transition to civil rule programme. 

The Ekwueme-led G-34 decided to turn into a political party that became People’s Democratic Party (PDP). Alhaji Isa Kaita came forth with the suggestion that Ekwueme should be named as the presidential candidate of the party. Ekwueme said he would only accept the nomination if it came through an all-encompassing democratic process. That is the essence of Ekwueme – a democrat through and through. 

Stealing Nigeria!

 By Obi Nwakanma

All things bright and beautiful; all creations great and small; all things bright and wonderful, Nigeria ruins them all. This is a twist on the song many of us sang in the Nursery and Primary Schools of yore. But the last twist was first made to it by the late eminent historian, and one-time Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ibadan, Professor Tekena Tamuno, during his convocation address at the University of Ibadan in the late 1970s.

What he saw sitting down, many of us had not then seen standing up. But the auguries were there. Nigerians could recognize the handwritings on the wall. In the decades that I grew up and have experienced Nigeria, and I’m just rounding the first half of my fifth decade on this beautiful earth, Nigeria has always presented a challenge. 

Youth And Audacity Of Noble Rage

 By Alade Rotimi-John

Youth by nature believe they are naturally endowed to take over from the generation preceding theirs. Their impassioned attacks for change often put them on a collision course with their elders even as they tend to oppose all forms of paternalism.

Many of them visibly participate in affairs and events of the moment, applauding what they consider to be right and denouncing what they perceive as wrong. They are immensely appreciative of the pedagogical value of their alter ego teachers or instructors. They imagine that the real authority for their consciousness is located in the unyielding principles imparted to them by their bolus magista who often give them a fund of unclassified and, sometimes, unrelated knowledge for projected ideological combat.

Concerning Buhari’s National Honours 2022

 By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

At the beginning of August 2022, President Muhammadu Buhari constituted a nine-member National Honours Nominations Committee with a four-year tenure. It is chaired by Alhaji Sidi Muhammad Bage, the senior judge who resigned from Nigeria’s Supreme Court in 2019 to become the Emir of Lafia in Nasarawa State.

*2022 National Honour: Buhari decorates Lawan 

The Minister for Special Duties and Inter-Governmental Affairs, George Akume, inaugurated the committee on September 16 with the mandate “to screen and select eminent Nigerians and friends of Nigeria, who have contributed to the development of the country.”

In what would have been a record of unprecedented efficiency in the annals of such committees, a list emerged a mere fortnight later of recipients of national honours. Among the recipients, it listed the Emir of Lafia, himself the newly inaugurated chair of the National Honours Committee, for one of the highest honours – Commander of the Federal Republic (CFR).