Friday, September 13, 2024
Governing Nigeria: Does The Economy Trump Politics? No, It Doesn’t!
By Olu Fasan
It is the age-old chicken and egg question. Which comes first: the economy or politics? That’s the question at the heart of this intervention, and it was triggered by two recent events. The first was President Bola Tinubu’s response to the call for a new Constitution. The second was Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala’s speech at this year’s Annual Conference of the Nigerian Bar Association, NBA, in which she called for a social contract for Nigeria. Everyone knew about those events, but few detected their logical fallacies. So, first, let’s recall the events.
Recently, in August, the highly venerated elder statesman Chief Emeka Anyaoku led a group of eminent Nigerians under the aegis of The Patriots to meet Tinubu at the State House and asked him to convene a constituent assembly to produce a draft people’s constitution for Nigeria.
Thursday, September 12, 2024
Kumuyi’s Bold Initiative To Change Society
By Banji Ojewale
Buried somewhere in the voluminous video vault of the Africa Independent Television, AIT, Lagos, Nigeria, is the recording of a rare live interview with Pastor William Folorunso Kumuyi, General Superintendent of Deeper Christian Life Ministry, DCLM. Hosted in the late 1990s by the popular Kaakaki early dawn programme, Kumuyi responded to a bouquet of questions that led to even more answers and views about his ministry, the Deeper Life Bible Church God used him to found, his outlook on life, and the controversy over genuine Christians watching the Television among other vexatious narratives of the day.
*KumuyiDeep into the interactive session, the unexpected poser came from a caller: "Sir, I have observed that you’ve not at all quoted from the Scriptures as you addressed some of the questions. I can’t also see that you have the Holy Bible with you. Now, Sir, that seems somehow strange for a great man of God, who is expected to tackle every issue by reaching into the Word of God and turning page after page. But you’re not doing all that. Doesn’t add up, Pastor!’’ (Please note that I’ve taken a literary license to paraphrase and expand the question.)
Wednesday, September 11, 2024
AfriSummit 2024: Uniting For A Healthier Africa
Uniting masterminds and industry leaders to shape the future of regulatory landscape in pharmaceutical sector of the African continent
AfriSummit 2024, an initiative by PRA Consultancy, organized by Hubplus Events in collaboration with Pioneers, will take place from November 3-6, 2024, at the Grand Nile Tower in Cairo, Egypt. This significant event brings together stakeholders from the pharmaceutical industry and medical device sector, regulatory bodies, and leading solution providers from across Africa and globally. It aims to drive the unity of healthcare regulations, enhancing access to safe, effective, and high-quality medicines.
Tuesday, September 10, 2024
Bola Tinubu And Sani Abacha’s Ghost
By Ugoji Egbujo
Recently, many have seen the ghost of Sani Abacha. And they have cried aloud.
After the annulment of the June 12 elections, chaos ensued. Gen Babangida stepped aside. As Shonekan’s Interim Government (ING) wobbled under the June 12 pressure, Abacha dispatched emissaries to Abiola who had dashed into exile. Abacha promised to restore hope. Nobody should have believed him, but being credulous from hopelessness, they said he was a man of his word. They hoped Abacha would renew Hope. Hope 93 was Abiola’s slogan.
No Food, No Fuel, No Power, No Forex, No Hope
By Dele Sobowale
“An army marches on its stomach.”
— Napoleon Bonaparte, 1769-1821; Vanguard Book of Quotations, p. 14, available online
Right now several millions of Nigerians’ stomachs are empty; and movement has virtually stopped. Unfortunately, it is not only the scarcity of food and high prices which are slowing us down, scarcity of all the things which make life worth living in the new millennium imperil us.
Fuel is scarce; and will remain so indefinitely. The Minister of Power is powerless and can seldom supply beyond 4,000MW per day. The Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, after the initial attempt to force down exchange rate, is now tired and bewildered.Friday, September 6, 2024
Nigeria’s GDP ‘Growth’ Is Anaemic; It’s Nothing To Celebrate!
By Olu Fasan
Trust Bola Tinubu, Nigeria’s self-assured yet bumbling president. He will claw at any piece of seemingly good news. Recently, when the National Bureau of Statistics, NBS, reported that Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product, GDP, grew to 3.19 per cent in the second quarter of this year, from 2.51 per cent at the same period last year, Tinubu was overly exultant.
*TinubuHis newspaper, The Nation, screamed on its front page: “Tinubu hails GDP surge, assures of stronger economic performance.” Surely, describing the anaemic and shallow GDP growth rate as a “surge” shows how Tinubu grasps at straws, denying reality. Interestingly, while Tinubu gloated about the GDP figure, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Nigeria’s two-time Finance Minister and current Director-General of the World Trade Organisation, WTO, lamented Nigeria’s perennially sluggish GDP growth rate at this year’s annual conference of the Nigerian Bar Association, NBA. So, who is right?
Monday, August 26, 2024
Nigeria: A Council Of Chaos…And A Questionable Vote Of Confidence
By Obi Nwakanma
A few weeks ago, newspapers in Nigeria reported that the National Council of State met, and the current president, Mr. Bola Tinubu, chaired it. For starters, I’m still unable to reconcile with the fact that a man of the quality of Tinubu would sit on a seat on which the giant Azikiwe sat. It is a travesty. Think about it dear country men, and you will see the incongruity; the tragic slide in our station as a people and as a nation. That picture alone tells us about the real tragedy of Nigeria.
*Council of State Members during one of their meetingsThe quality of national leadership; the quality of aspiration; the quality of insight; the quality of presence and carriage; the depth of preparation – one a thoroughbred all-rounder that embodied the highest human ideals which nature stupendously endowed in one body, and the other with a very uncertain past. I’m ahead of myself. But it gets much worse. Take a look at those who came to the Council of State meeting. You would see the picture of Nigeria and why it has failed as a nation.
Nigeria’s Food Crisis Gets Worse, FG Confused
By Dele Sobowale
“Drought: Kogi Govt; farmers
seek divine intervention.”
“Despite harvest, food prices remain high in Taraba.”
“Food crisis may worsen as flood
hits 10 states.”
“SEMA seeks govt help as drought
dry up crops in four states.”
“Why grains importation won’t happen soon, by stakeholders.”
Like a sudden heavy downpour and thunderstorm, destroying everything, the trope of bad news published on Monday, August 9, 2024, by newspapers, paint a grimmer picture of Nigeria’s imminent food prices this year.
Bola Tinubu: The Unravelling Of A Bigot
By Onyema Omenuwa
Bola Ahmed Tinubu
has been unravelled. As a bigot, that is. Eventually, and completely, it needs
to be added. And it is all due to the hypocritical kind of politics that he
plays, particularly in Lagos State where he holds sway as the alpha and omega
of politics. Significantly, his unrelenting and desperate quest to become the
President of Nigeria led to his unravelling. Though he has succeeded in that
regard, since he is today the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed
Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the success came at the great cost
of shattering the façade of progressivism that has all along defined his
politics.
Tinubu projects progressivism as his political worldview. But presently in Lagos State, the “Igbo Must Go” hashtag has become something of a mantra across social media platforms for the Yoruba residents of Lagos and their supporters. That is starkly anti-progressive by any stretch of imagination, and it is happening in Tinubu’s Lagos. “Residents” is used advisedly in this context because not every Yoruba in Lagos is an indigene of Lagos State or a “Lagosian,” as the indigenes of the state delight in describing themselves. And that is the irony.
Friday, August 23, 2024
Beyond The Seizure Of Presidential Aircraft
By Ugo Onuoha
Gracious and humane creditors? Or how else can we describe the gesture of Zhongshan Fucheng Industrial Investment Co. Limited who are on the winning side, at least for now, of an arbitration dispute with Nigeria. The company has a standing Paris court order with which it impounded three of Nigeria’s presidential jets.
They were grounded in France where two of the aircraft had gone for servicing. The third, a recently acquired Airbus, Nigerian president, Alhaji Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s latest luxury toy, was reportedly flown to France for retrofitting and sundry luxury upgrades to suit the status and taste of the ruler of the country which since 2019 has been designated as the global capital for the abject poor.
Only The Dead Protest In Nigeria
By Kenechukwu Obiezu
Protests may be no pills for the dying, but in Nigeria, they pilfer the dead, or at least, their dainties.
On August 1, Nigeria erupted in protests. The protests which pinched many states of the country hard, some harder than others, were over bread, but quickly bared deep-lying issues, braiding together knots of anger and despair over the state of the country.
As Politicians In Power Lie And Cheat
By Adekunle Adekoya
“Politics is the only profession where you can lie, cheat, and steal, and still be respected.” — Mark Twain (1835-1910)
Today, I am helplessly wallowing in self-pity and pity for my fellow compatriots as I ponder the state of affairs in our dear country. We don’t have another country, do we? Why are our politicians hell-bent on destroying this country as they pursue self-interest instead of the common good?
Thursday, August 22, 2024
Chinweizu: How To Make Igbos Leave Lagos
*Chiweizu
Dear Igbo-must-go Campaigners,
“Yes, I agree with you that Lagos should be for its Yoruba
indigenes. And the South-west should belong to the indigenous people of the
region.
So, let’s get practical and cooperate and make our shared desire happen,
peacefully and as fast as possible.
“Please, note that Igboland, to which Igbos would return from Lagos and the
South-west, has a part in the South-south and a part in the South-east.
“Kindly
get President Tinubu to facilitate the process by doing the following:
Joe Ajaero: NLC Presidency Under Tinubu’s Watch
By Ikechukwu Amaechi
Five days after Comrade Joe Ajaero, former General Secretary of the Nigerian Union of Electricity Employees, NUEE, and Deputy National President of the Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, made history as the first NLC President to be elected unopposed at the 13th National Delegates Conference in Abuja, on February 8, 2023, I sat down with him in Lagos for an exclusive interview.
*AjaeroStill basking in the euphoria of his victory, he was hopeful and bullish as he discussed the labour movement, what Nigerians should expect of his presidency and the impending 2023 elections. He was analytical and measured.
MUSIC: "Let It Flow" By Ugochukwu Innocent Obi
This is
what the artist says about this song:
“This is a deep spiritual worship song which
unites the spirit of man with the Holy Spirit. The song will drench your soul
and quickly link your mind to the Spirit where righteousness and many graces
abound.…”
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Listen, Share and VISIT the Youth Page to listen to the previous albums. Then, Subscribe, so you would be notified each time a new album is released...
Nigeria Made Dangote A Colossus, It Must Now Handle Him Wisely
By Olu Fasan
Aliko Dangote, the richest man in Africa, is a product of the Nigerian state. By deliberate policy choices, the state made Dangote Nigeria’s foremost oligarch with presidents on speed dial. However, recent rifts between Dangote’s oil refinery and the Nigerian National Petroleum Company, NNPC, as well as the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority, NMDPRA, not to mention the raid on his business headquarters by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, suggest that all is not well with the long-running relationship between Dangote and the state. Yet, having turned Dangote into a commercial Leviathan, the state must now wisely recalibrate and manage the relationship.
*DangoteTo be clear, Dangote was not born poor. He was born into wealth and became a millionaire very early in life. However, his transition from a millionaire to Africa’s richest man would not have happened without a leg-up from the state, without special favours and preferential treatment from the Nigerian state. To this credit, Dangote himself admits this. Before we come to the refinery saga, let’s tell the fascinating story, as Dangote himself narrated it.
Tuesday, August 20, 2024
Tajudeen Abass: A Dutiful Speaker At Work
By Owei Lakemfa
As a young man, I quite often heard the Latin phrase: “Vox populi, vox dei”, meaning: “The voice of the people is the voice of God”. Democracy, whatever the brand, is supposed to uphold this.
*Bola Tinubu and Tajudeen AbassBut the Nigerian people might be too busy to speak; too hungry to talk. Under such circumstances, they need to remain silent. But who better to speak for the people than the National Assembly? That is why parliamentarians are assembled: to speak for their otherwise preoccupied constituents.
Monday, August 19, 2024
MUSIC: Ugochukwu Innocent Obi Drops Another Album!
"You Alone"
You Alone Are Worthy Of My Worship
Tinubu And His Black Beast
By Ugoji Egbujo
On his way to Equatorial Guinea, Tinubu rode in a gleaming new car to the airport, leaving tongues wagging. A glamorous, armoured black Cadillac Escalade reminded many of the NPN days. Such a show of opulence in the immediate aftermath of the hunger protests seemed an act of defiance. He startled the public.
Tinubu preaches austerity, but makes no effort to curtail lavish public expenditure. A commentator said the car was the hardest evidence of his aloofness. But more patriotic people may argue that a man who leads 200 million people and who has just secured a vote of confidence from the people that matter is at liberty to thump his nose at disgruntled elements.