By Chidi Odinkalu
“It was as if the football club wanted to regain through football what the Igbo ‘lost’ during the war.” – Segun Odegbami, MON
By Chidi Odinkalu
“It was as if the football club wanted to regain through football what the Igbo ‘lost’ during the war.” – Segun Odegbami, MON
By Lincoln Ogunewe
Security is the foundation for the existence of life that God has given to mankind. Nothing thrives in the absence of security and nothing grows. It is a big irony of life that security and its importance is only noticed in its absence. The situation in Imo State today and Ala Igbo in general gives credence to my assertion. Which way forward? Can the situation be reversed? The answer is Yes.
Every society respects the sanctity of life. Ala Igbo is not an exception. Life is such a sacred thing that religions and traditions abhor the taking of the life of anyone what more by violence. The Igbo culture ostracizes and banishes anyone that takes the life of his brother or sister. Today, Ala Igbo drips with the blood of her sons and daughters and all we do is stand and look helplessly. What has befallen Ala Igbo? What has befallen Ndi Igbo.
By Uzor Maxim Uzoatu
Quietude sits well with Professor Akachi Adimora-Ezeigbo, and calmness is the word for her, but the music was so compelling that she had to stand up and dance. The mellifluous music issuing forth from Gerald Eze and his Ichoku Ensemble put a smooth smile on the face of Prof Akachi and soft dexterity to her dancing steps.
*Professor Akachi EzeigboProf Akachi-Ezeigbo’s sister, Prof Chinyere Stella Okunna, who had been sitting beside the celebrant was held in rapt awe by the phenomenon.
The date, Saturday, February 11, 2023, stays unforgettable because of the birthday party observed for prolific award-winning author, Prof Akachi Adimora-Ezeigbo, at a comfy venue called Awka Window on America at Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, Anambra State. The personable Vice-Chancellor of the university, Prof Charles Okechukwu Esimone, was on hand to conduct the rousing opening ceremony to the event sponsored by Abibiman Publishing UK, James Currey Society and intervolving the creative literary giants of Nnamdi Azikiwe University.
By Levi Obijiofor
When you hear about economic hardships battering the citizens of a country, you need go no further to search, locate and understand what the experiences might look like. We have the exact situation on the ground in Nigeria. The current cash crunch across the country, impishly engineered by the Central Bank and aided by commercial banks, has paralysed human and business activities in Nigeria and pulverised the welfare of ordinary citizens. This is an unsolicited experience no one in Nigeria would like to relive.
There are visibly many players in the current
game of infamy playing out in the country. At the head of the mischief-makers
is Central Bank Governor Godwin Emefiele, closely followed by chief executives
of commercial banks, and supported by point of sale (POS) or point of purchase
(POP) vendors. They constitute the merchants of evil. They have made life
unbearable for ordinary people. More important, the CBN and commercial bank
officials must take full responsibility for the current economic instability.
Their reputation has been sullied but they do not care about reputation.
If you were a
bank customer in Nigeria and were asked to rank the following people and
professionals, in terms of unethical conduct and dishonesty, which of them
would top your list?
Would you pick the dishonest and unfeeling bank
manager, the corrupt police officer, the strong-willed army/naval/air force
officer, the dubious Customs officer, the morally despicable pastor or priest,
the heartless lawyer, the unlicensed and unqualified medical doctor, the junk
journalist, the crooked construction engineer, the callous nurse/midwife, the
licentious and lecherous university teacher, the devious trader or market
woman, the mechanistic carpenter, the unprincipled chef, the headline-chasing
newspaper editor and publisher, the fraudulent accountant, the histrionic
advertising or public relations manager, the coldblooded pickpocket, the
penny-pinching and amoral prostitute, or the duplicitous commercial vehicle
operator?
The persons
listed above are not exhaustive, but chances are that you might select the
pickpocket or prostitute as the vilest, most unethical, most dreadful and most
dishonest person. Your choice would have been made based on how these people
are perceived in public. Regardless of what happens, the point to keep in mind is
that person perception is often far from reality.
When a
similar study was conducted in Australia in 1996, the outcome was a rude shock
to everyone. The study requested respondents to rank various professions in
terms of how they were perceived for ethics, trust and honesty. Surprisingly,
newspaper journalists were ranked second from the bottom. That study revealed
for the first time a terrible image problem for Australian journalists, despite
the essential role they play in their society. In that poll, newspaper
journalists were ranked very low – they managed to beat used-car
salespersons.
Follow-up
studies have been conducted since that time but the image of Australian
journalists has not improved significantly. A study of Australia’s most trusted
professions conducted in 2021 showed that doctors were the most trusted,
followed by nurses, paramedics, firefighters, scientists, police officers,
teachers, pharmacists, pilots and veterinarians. The same study placed
journalists second to last (number 29), just one place ahead of politicians who
were ranked last at number 30.
In
the perception of the Australian public, journalists are still seen as
untrustworthy, dishonest and unethical. The underlying message is that
Australian journalists are not regarded highly by the public.
Each
society places a different value on its institutions. Consider the following.
In December 2000, the Japanese newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun, regarded as the
world’s largest selling newspaper, asked 2,000 people to list the institution they
trusted most. The prime minister was ranked last. That said a lot about the
extent of confidence the Japanese people placed on their politicians. Imagine
the kind of ranking President Muhammadu Buhari and his ministers would receive
if that kind of poll was conducted in Nigeria.
Still in December 2000, a Gallup Opinion Poll conducted in the United States about the most trusted institutions showed that the military were ranked top and television was ranked 14th.
I do not
believe that a similar poll to that conducted in Australia would produce a
similar result in Nigeria in terms of the image of newspaper journalists. In
Nigeria, the public image of journalists is yet to be tested officially through
a public opinion survey. But for bank officials and particularly university
lecturers who engage in frequent rounds of sexual harassment of female
students, a practice that has become widespread, we do not need such a test
because there is unassailable evidence that shows that the battered image of
university lecturers and bank officials is a direct outcome of their unethical
and dishonest conduct in their professional roles.
I am reminded
of what a recent female graduate of the Federal Polytechnic, Nekede, Owerri,
said on video while thanking God for her success that was also attributed to
the magnetic power of her sexual organ.
For a very
long time, we associated bank managers in Nigeria with honest and ethical
conduct. Whenever you wanted to complete an official form (such as public
examination form or visa/passport renewal form), you were directed to approach
a bank manager or a police officer or a pastor to initial that application
form. That requirement was based on the norms that existed and still exist in
civilized societies where the bank manager or pastor or police officer
represented in real terms an emblem of honesty, faith and good character.
In Nigeria,
the public no longer perceives the bank official as emblematic of honesty,
integrity, principles or values. In fact, the bank manager and other bank
officials are held in low esteem. They are demonised, derided, and portrayed as
the ultimate agents of corruption and everything loathsome in the society.
These perceptions are legitimate considering current experiences in which
citizens are denied access to the new naira notes that are hoarded by banks,
while members of the privileged class are given excess new notes.
It is evident that bank managers are key players
in illegal hoarding or stockpiling of the new naira notes. Investigations by
the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Independent Corrupt
Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), along with spot checks
conducted by CBN officials have exposed the collusion by banks to deny citizens
their right to access their money in the custody of banks.
Similarly, I
do not think university lecturers in Nigeria would stand the test of morality.
Some of them see their female students as a kind of collateral or reward they
should receive on earth.
Corruption
has eaten deeply into the souls of bank managers in Nigeria. The damage is
beyond repair. Nobody can fix the problem. Training and character building
based on ethical reorientation will not resuscitate the damaged character
profile of despicable bank managers and officials.
We cannot
fight unethical and dishonest practices by bank managers and officials of other
financial institutions. They are so deeply soaked in the ocean of corruption.
Corruption is widespread in Nigeria, a dysfunctional society in which there is
no law and order, a society in which people do things any way they like. In
that environment, no one is accountable to anybody. No one is responsible to
anyone. It is a country of “anything goes” in which the culture places a higher
value on wealth and property acquisition. That is the pull or inducement that
attracts bank managers and officials to continue to engage in corrupt
practices.
*Dr. Obijiofor is a commentator on public issues
By Kenechukwu Obiezu
If Nigerian politics had a single currency, language, sign language, or definition, it would be money. But very close to it would be the concepts of betrayal and opportunism.
To preclude political opportunism and fry the chances of its elite practitioners in Nigeria, the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria makes salubrious provisions to arrest the vice of cross-carpeting. However, with many of the politicians who have engaged in it over the years getting away with it, it appears that judicial interpretation and enforcement have failed to stop the scourge.
By Ugo Onuoha
On Thursday, February 9, South Africa’s embattled President, Cyril Ramaphosa, went to the country’s Parliament, braced heckling by the militant opposition Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) political party to declare that the country was in a ‘“national state of disaster.” So, what was the problem with that Southern African country? They have been grappling with energy, particularly electricity, supply crisis for about two years. Yes, two years.
*APC leadersThe country has been experiencing
load-shedding, read, power outages, where some consumers experience blackouts
for up to 12 hours in a day. A mere 12 hours.
Last year, the country’s economic growth fell to 2.5%. This year, the projection is that it would shrink to 0.3%, the declines essentially boil down to South Africa’s electricity crisis. In parliament, Ramaphosa told South Africans: “We are, therefore, declaring a national state of disaster to respond to the electricity crisis and its effects.”
By Farooq Kperogi
I was awoken on this side of the world by news of the reversal by the Nigerian Supreme Court of Senate President Ahmed Lawan's primary election loss. I was already mentally prepared for it after the same Supreme Court affirmed Godwin Akpabio's fraudulent primary win a few days ago. It's a well-planned judicial choreography.
*LawanThe Nigerian Supreme Court is straight-up the most hopeless Supreme Court in the history of the world's supreme courts. The same Court violated common sense and the will of voters and gave us a "Supreme Court governor" in Imo State who never even pretended to have won an election.
By Ezinwanne Onwuka
It was in October 2022 that the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, announced its intention to redesign the currency, which it said was in the best interest of Nigerians to check terrorism financing, counterfeiting and imbalances in the fiscal space, and to enable the apex bank to take control of the currency in circulation.
*Buhari and EmefieleAs a result of the currency redesign, the CBN also set the maximum cash withdrawal limit via the Automated Teller Machines and point of sale, PoS, agents at N20,000 per day for individuals subject to N100,000 per week, instructing commercial banks to load only denominations of N200 and below into the ATMs.
By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu
In June 2020, Malawians took to the streets and the judges joined to resist the attempt by President Peter Mutharika to fire Chief Justice Andrew Nyirenda in order to enable him rig a presidential re-run. The people trusted the Chief Justice more than the president, so they got rid of the president in order to keep the Chief Justice. One month later, in Mali, an uprising began when an unpopular ruling party used the Constitutional Court to rob the opposition of its victories, eventually leading to the dissolution of the court and a military coup.
Judicial immersion in political disputes is hazardous and judges called upon to do it have a clear choice to either resist importunations that compromise their authority or canoodle with the politicians at the risk of irremediable damage to judicial office. Nigeria’s Supreme Court appears to have made its choice and the consequences are unflattering.
By Ayo Baje
“Always
remember that you are absolutely unique. Just like everyone else.” – Margaret Mead
What is this life all about, anyway? Why are we here in this world, for God’s sake? What lasting lessons does our all-wise, all-knowing, all-powerful, all –gracious and all-merciful creator want us to glean from the hustle and bustle, the grate and grind of our everyday encounters? What lasting lessons are we here to learn from the hands of history-for individuals, communities and countries? Let us begin with the common ones.
*BajeWhy, for instance, is there so much hatred, so much anger, crises, agitations, anxieties, selfishness, greed, graft, power-poaching and thorny matters all leading into wasteful wars, which are supposed to be clearly avoidable? But that is not all.
By Charles Okoh
To attain the age of 70 in Nigeria at a time when the life expectancy of Nigerians is about 55 years is worth celebrating. To attain the Biblical three score and ten, in a country where the stress levels seem permanently on the increase and other attendant stressors seemed arrayed to snuff out life from the people is more than enough reason to celebrate and give thanks to God Almighty.
It is not often that people get celebrated while alive. It was the famous Nigerian musical icon Patoranking who insists that he is celebrated in his hit song in local lingo; “Celebrate me, now when I dey alive…”
For veteran journalist and celebrated newspaper columnist, Ayo Oyoze Baje, who turned 70 years on Wednesday, February 8, it was an opportunity to celebrate a journalist who has remained undeterred and undaunted in his resolve to constantly lend his voice to the voiceless.
By Emmanuel Osadebay
Food security is an essential part of social wellbeing and social security, the absence of which results in health harms, severe social crisis, delayed development in young children and behavioural problems such as anxiety and aggression in kids through their formative years.
Due to food poverty, many Nigerians and households have difficulties accessing sufficient, safe and nutritious food to meet dietary requirements for a healthy life. The effects of food poverty are represented by a spectrum of severity, including the negative consequences on elections, governance and development processes. When people experience severe food insecurity for a long period of time, due to various reasons such as lack of food or fund, it affects them physically, mentally and psychologically.
By Nick Dazang
From colonial to contemporary times, students have played uplifting and progressive roles in our country’ storied existence.
Under the auspices of the West African Students Union (WASU), students were in the forefront of our decolonization efforts. In the course of military interregnums and interventions, students have fought gallantly against oppressive and anti-people policies. Even in the course of our democratic dispensations, students have been unsparing of governments whose policies were out of sync with the yearnings of Nigerians or which tended to reinforce suffering and failure.
By Ejike Anyaduba
It is becoming evident by the day that the February 25, 2023, elections will be decided by factors other than party affiliation. Psychological attachment of voters to parties may have some influence on the run of victory, but will do little to help its cause. The strength of victory will be decided by a contestant’s convincing power, his performance rating, diligence and the subtle manner in which he handles the people’s emotions in this trying time.
More than that, the performance of each candidate will be a factor of perception and of grace that transcends mundane efforts. Yes, it will be a tough election, and it is already bearing signs of disruptive change that may leave the self-assured vacuumed of confidence and grossly diffident.
By Uzor Maxim Uzoatu
The greatest surprise of the political season in Nigeria today is without question the almost overwhelming presence of Peter Obi. The man has teeming admirers and unappeasable antagonists, but either-or, he can hardly ever be ignored.
*Peter Obi arrives Ilorin Airport (February 6, 2023)A journalist’s duty is to almost always wade into every subject in popular focus, no matter how controversial – whence my decision to write on the Peter Obi phenomenon. I am not interested in doing a piece on his political campaigns of today – I would rather go to the past, in 2008, when the man surprised me in no small measure.
By Charles Okoh
There can be no telling the measure of pressure faced by Nigerians at a time as this. What is not in doubt is whatever the intent of the presidency in pursuing the redesign of some currencies, the discomfort Nigerians suffer now, if nothing is done about it might as well get to a level where the people can no longer bear the pains and inconveniences any more. At that stage, nothing is predictable.
In spite of repeated denials by Godwin Emefiele, that the naira redesign is not political and not targeted at any politician, the reaction of the members of the National Assembly and governors, especially of the APC, suggest that, indeed, there may be more to it than meets the eye.
By Sunny Awhefeada
These are mad and dangerous times for Nigeria and I must concede that we never saw this coming. Not even the famed prophets envisioned the calamities now buffeting us as a people. Nobody foresaw or warned us. Those among us who lay claims to clairvoyance are largely charlatans who think about causes and effects of actions and offer surmises which they call predictions.
That is why they always turn around to tell us they were misquoted, quoted out of context or point at what they claimed they told us, but they never did. Charles Dickens’ Hard Times tells of a time of acute social insecurity and how the people were impoverished and pulverized. Like other narratives by Dickens, the novel mirrors the grim, dark and dreary side of life in a manner considered to be exaggerated.
By Ebele Orakpo
Women more productive, less
corrupt – Mr. Peter Obi, LP presidential
candidate
Women have
empathy, very brilliant and can multitask – Barrister Efe
Anaughe
There have been calls from various quarters for women to be given more space in leadership and decision-making positions if Nigeria must move forward. According to the proponents, women are better managers of resources and homes hence, they are called Odozi aku (wealth managers). They are mothers, wives, housekeepers and home makers so if given the opportunity, they can build up Nigeria and make it an envy of other nations, as well as manage judiciously, her abundant human and material resources .There had also been talks of 35% affirmation for women which the different political parties have not been able to meet.
By Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye
As President Muhammadu Buhari prepares himself for a happy return to his comfortable country home in Daura, Katsina State, after nearly eight years in office where he posted what is widely adjudged as far below average performance, a 19-year old, tender, innocent girl named Leah Sharibu remains a hapless, pathetic, unspeakably traumatized captive of Boko Haram terrorists, obviously, under the most dehumanizing conditions.
*Leah Sharibu
Given what has, reportedly, been the horrible experiences of young, beautiful girls like Leah who have been captured by these terrorists, one is really scared to imagine the extent of savage violations she might have been subjected to for over five years now! It is heartbreaking that she hardly gets mentioned again these days, especially, by those whose job it is to rescue and bring her home to her grieving parents and siblings!Has Nigeria woefully failed Leah Sharibu then? Has President Buhari who may have her age mates as grandchildren forgotten her? Has he given up hope of ever bringing her home again to her heartbroken parents? Will he leave her in the horrible den of terrorists as he happily retires to the comfort his home and family in Daura in the next few months?
By Ikechukwu Amaechi
In the twilight of the Olusegun Obasanjo administration, a drama played out in the Red Chamber of the National Assembly as senators squared up in a crunch tenure elongation. The day was May 16, 2006, one year before the end of Obasanjo’s constitutionally guaranteed maximum eight years of two terms. But Obasanjo didn’t want to leave, hence the need to amend the Constitution with an open ended-tenure.
As pro-tenure elongation senators plotted
their third term agenda, anti-Obasanjo forces also arranged their cards.
On the day of the second reading of the Amendment Bill, the Senate President, Ken Nnamani, called out his colleagues one after the other and his predecessor, Adolphus Wabara, became the starboy.