Sir Bernard Hogan- Howe |
The
London police chief has warned that Britons fighting alongside
the Daesh (ISIL) terrorist group in Syria and Iraq are on their way
back home and will become an increasing threat to the country.
This
warning should have huge implications for Ghana which has hundreds of thousands
of citizens in that country.
Sir
Bernard Hogan-Howe, commissioner of London's Metropolitan Police, said on
Friday that the battle-hardened militants who had left Britain to fight with
the Takfiri group had been “brutalized and militarized”, adding that they were
expected to return home as the terrorist group had lost ground.
“We
are now seeing Daesh’s sphere of influence being reduced in Syria and Iraq, and
it looks as though it’s clear that they will lose and the other side will win,”
he said. “Some of those people are going to come home and that’s the threat
that’s hanging there."
Howe
said the returnees include a “small army” of Britons who would put more
pressure on Britain’s counter-terrorism police and security services upon their
arrival.
"They
are the ones that we most have to worry about and it’s hard to predict when,”
he noted.
The
London police chief also warned that Daesh was continuing to lure more recruits
from the European countries.
British
authorities say that at least 800 UK nationals have traveled to Syria and Iraq
to fight alongside various Takfiri groups, regarding them as potential security
threats upon returning to the country.
Last
February, the European Union's criminal intelligence agency Europol said up to
5,000 trained members of Daesh were at large in Europe, adding that some 30,000
militants from over 100 countries have reportedly traveled to Syria and
Iraq since 2011 to join the ranks of Takfiri terrorist groups.
Daesh
terrorists are mainly operating in Syria and its eastern neighbor, Iraq.
Editorial
A JOB FOR KAN DAPAAH
The warnings are becoming louder with each passing day
and it is becoming increasingly important for Ghana to start planning on how to
deal with the effects of possible major terrorist attacks in Europe.
The latest warning has come from Sir Bernard Howe, the
Commissioner of London’s Metropolitan Police who says that the United Kingdom
could soon be hit by Britons fighting alongside Daesh.
Given the fact that hundreds of thousands of Ghanaians
live in the United Kingdom, this must be very worrying news.
First, Ghanaians could become targets of the attacks and
this could spark a huge exodus of people who may want to return home.
Secondly, the British people could start blaming
foreigners for their woes and Ghanaians could very easily become targets of
racist attacks.
Whatever the outcome of these terrorist attacks may be,
it could seriously affect the movement of people, goods and services.
We urge the national security apparatus to start
thinking about what could happen and how it may affect us now.
It may be too late tomorrow.
US IS NOT RICH
ENOUGH
Miccrosoft Founder, Bill Gates |
Microsoft
co-founder and philanthropist Bill Gates said it’s too early to dish out money
to needy people, though the billionaire accepts the idea of universal basic
income (UBI).
“Over
time countries will be rich enough to do this. However we still have a lot of
work that should be done - helping older people, helping kids with special
needs, having more adults helping in education,” he said, responding to
users’ questions during an Ask Me Anything session on Reddit.
UBI
is an idea to provide people with a regular allowance regardless of their
income or assets. The system can reportedly close gaps in equality, with an
individual’s basic needs covered with free cash, funded by massive taxes at the
top.
“Even
the US isn't rich enough to allow people not to work. Some day we will be, but
until then things like the Earned Income Tax Credit will help increase the
demand for labor,” the billionaire stressed.
The
Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) is a form of levy charged to lower-income
families in the US to boost savings, incentivize work and help people to escape
poverty.
The
idea of giving people money on a regular basis to increase social welfare has
gained momentum in some countries in recent years. Basic income was initially
proposed in the 1960s and briefly tried out in the US and Canada.
Finland
launched its own two-year long experiment on basic income in January. The
country’s authorities randomly chose 2,000 recipients of social assistance and
started paying them €560 a month per month. Canada and the Netherlands have
also announced similar experiments.
Last
year, the Japanese government announced plans to issue money ‘vouchers’ for
low-income young people to halt a significant decline in consumption within the
age bracket. New Zealand is also debating UBI.
Aiming
to reduce poverty India’s Finance Ministry is considering replacing the
country’s welfare programs with a basic income.
ACCRA IS CHOCKED
Map of Accra Metropolitan Area |
By
Lawrence Segbefia
New
figures released by the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) show that even though
the Accra Metropolis has the smallest land area, it is heavily populated with
establishments, followed by the Tema Metropolis.
According
to the Integrated Business Establishment Survey (IBES) I, released by the GSS,
a total of 177,152 establishments are distributed over the sixteen
districts in the Greater Accra region. The GSS defined establishments as
structures located at a specific place for economic purpose.
“Three
notable districts namely; Accra Metropolis, Tema Metropolis and Ga South
Municipal have significant numbers of establishments located within them. Among
these three districts, though Accra Metropolis has a smaller land area, it has
the highest number of establishments of 80,824, representing more than
two-fifth which is 45.5% of the total number of establishments in the region,”
the Project Coordinator for the report Mr. Anthony Krakah said.
He
explained that this was followed by the Tema Metropolis with 17,250 establishments,
which has the least land area and also has the country’s main harbour.
However,
the Ga South Municipal which has the largest land area among the three
districts had a total of 11,810 establishments.
Mr.
Krakah stated that even though Shai Osudoku is the district with the largest
land area in the region, it had the least number of establishments of 415.
“Sectorally,
establishments in the services sector are dominant with 149,512 followed by
those in the industry sector with 27,302 and institutional agriculture with
338,” he said.
“A
similar distribution pattern is observed at the district level, where about
eight out of every ten establishments operate in the services sector. Nearly
half of the services sector establishments in the region are located in the
Accra Metropolis with 68,333 and almost one-tenth in the Tema Metropolis with
14,545,” he added.
He
stated that Ga South Municipal had 10,079 of the services sector establishments
while the least number was located in Shai Osudoku district with 345.
He
pointed out that out of a total of 27,302 establishments in the industry
sector, almost half were located in Accra Metropolis with 12,311, while about
one-tenth were in the Tema Metropolis with 2,655.
He
noted that Shai Osudoku district had the least number of establishments of 65
operating within its boundaries.
On
the distribution of establishments by type of legal organization, Mr. Krakah
indicated that within the region sole proprietorship was 141,963, partnership
12,181, and private limited company by guarantee 17,604).
“In
fact, eight out of every ten establishments registered as private limited
company by guarantee are located in Accra Metropolis with 11,518 and Tema
Metropolis with 2,919.
He
observed that the least proportions of sole proprietorship and partnership
establishments are in Shai Osudoku with 0.2% each.
“The
highest proportion of establishments operating as formal establishments in the
region was within the Tema Metropolis with 26.3%. This was followed by
Accra Metropolis with 24.2%, La Dade Kotopon Municipal with 13.3%,
Ledzokuku/Krowor Municipal with 13.0%, Shai Osudoku with 11.3%) and
Adenta Municipal with 10.2%.
Cuba Producing
Modern Electric Motorcycles
(Left) The new high-quality model is looking to dominate the market,
stated David Rodríguez, head of the Ángel Villareal’s sales department. Photo:
Ángel Freddy Pérez Cabrera
The
first 100, 60 volt LT 1060 electric motorcycles with a 1,000 Watt three phase
motor and produced by the city’s Ángel Villarreal Bravo Industrial Enterprise,
recently went on sale.
The
new model, able to reach speeds of up to 50 km per hour, is an improved version
of that previously produced by the factory. The motorcycle is also equipped
with a remote control security system, digital dashboard, and brake pads, among
other characteristics, according to Elier Pérez Pérez, deputy director of the
entity.
The
LT 1060, 5,000 units of which are set to be produced this year, with the
majority of components sourced from the People’s Republic of China, retail for
1,261 CUC.
The
director also highlighted that studies into the production cycle are currently
being carried out with other Cuban enterprises, in order to reduce production
costs. He went on to mention the possibilities of manufacturing the bike's
metal frame in the country, as well as chargers, electrical boxes, other parts
and accessories.
The
plant also produces wheelchairs, an item highly sought-after by the Ministry of
Public Health (Minsap) for hospitals and bed-ridden patients, manufacturing
close to 1,500 last year; a figure which should rise considerably this 2017,
according to David Rodríguez head of Ángel Villareal’s sales department.
The
facility will also begin production of other models of less powerful electric
and mechanical motorcycles, as well as more wheel chairs; of which the
enterprise has manufactured over 79,000 units for Minsap and the Cuban
Association of Disabled People (Aclifim), since 2007 when production began,
noted the director.
Ndi Igbo,
Leadership, Nationhood, the Nigerian Dilemma and Why We Are All Biafrans
Protocols
I
am delighted to be with you this evening to share with you this momentous
occasion of the 2016 National Convention of Anambra State Association
(ASA-USA), the umbrella organization of Anambra indigenes in the United States.
I
congratulate you on the milestone of your 15th annual convention and thank you
for finding me worthy to share my thoughts on the future of our country,
Nigeria. While this may be the state of Anambra convention, I believe, as you
rightly noted in your letter of invitation that it offers a platform to discuss
matters affecting contemporary agitations in all corners of Nigeria. That is
exactly what I will attempt to do during this address.
The
theme of your convention is, “Raising the Bars of Leadership to Maximize
Progress.” Nowhere is this more apropos than in Nigeria, and Ala Igbo, in
particular. Our country and people are in dire need of leadership and progress.
As the most populous country in Africa, the largest concentration of black
people in the world, Nigeria has let our continent and our race down. To
buttress this assertion, at a recent two-day summit on anti-corruption in
Abuja, a Kenyan, Prof Patrick Lumumba, a former Director of Kenya
Anti-Corruption Commission, pointedly accused Nigeria’s poor leadership of
being responsible for the continent’s failure to develop in many critical areas
of human development. And many years ago, Chinua Achebe, one of Africa’s very
best, remarked that the trouble with Nigeria is simply and squarely the failure
of leadership. I shall return to this.
I
am happy this event is coming in the month of our independence. It is equally
heartwarming that ASA-USA has taken up the challenge to intervene at this
critical juncture in our national existence by providing a platform to
interrogate the Nigerian reality of the 21 century. Your efforts are worthy of
emulation.
In the beginning
Exactly
fifty-six years ago this month, the Union Jack, the symbol of the British
conquest of the area that would later be known as Nigeria was lowered or so we
thought. It took just six years for the outcome of that colonial experiment to
unravel. Bitter rivalries among our comprador elite—civilian and military—and
the major groups in the country led to a costly thirty-month civil war in which
millions of our people died. In my opinion, it was an avoidable war.
Regrettably, almost five decades after that war, there have been, as there are
still low intensity wars—or agitations, if you like—going on around the
country. How did we get to this regretful situation?
To
understand the Nigeria of today, we have to go back to the beginning. Like
India, Nigeria could easily have morphed into three or more countries at
independence in 1960. It didn’t happen partly because the British colonialists
didn’t want it so and partly also because the emergent country was negotiated
in such a way that, in the words of historian, Prof. Yakubu Ochefu, in the
introduction to the book, Nigeria is Negotiable, “…the region with the least
democratic credentials ended up as the driver of a new democratic enterprise…”
Whether the historical trajectory of Nigeria would have been different if the
reverse had been the case is open to debate, but one thing is certain: that
process did not happen by chance; neither was it meant to be short-lived. I
have argued elsewhere that in Nigeria, the British colonialists went beyond the
pale in what colonialism was meant to achieve.
I have
yet to see any other country where the twin evils of colonialism—the rapacious
stealing and control of the resources of the “natives” and the psychological
conquest and denudation of everything that held a people together—was as
concretely manifest as it was in Nigeria. In Nigeria, it was “conquer, divide
and rule”. British colonialists ensured that they brought the territories
together while the people remained fiercely antagonistic to one another. Of
course, without the rapacious incursion of the British, chances are that the
different nationalities that were “conquered” to form Nigeria might not have
come together. They might also have come together in one form or another. We
may never know.
Since we
don’t know, perhaps we are better off dealing with the reality of our current
circumstance. It has been said that prior to the coming of the colonialists,
pre-colonial nations, including the Igbos, had a well-developed and organised
socio-political system that was egalitarian. All that came crashing with the
advent of colonialism. Some people have argued that once that conquest took
place, those nations that existed before colonialism lost their right; not just
their right, but every right to assert themselves. It is the same argument that
has been canvassed to support the view that, “Nigeria must remain one
indivisible country”; that, “the unity of Nigeria is not negotiable”.
Another
theory is that Nigeria gained independence on a pan-Nigeria basis after decades
of pan-Nigeria anti-colonial struggle. While this is true in some regards, it
does little justice to the bigger picture of what transpired during the
colonial struggle and the period leading up to independence. Unfortunately, for
us, the nationalist forces already depleted and weakened, did not gain control
of the country at independence as happened in much of Africa. But the colonial
conquest can’t be a sane argument to deny people the right to
self-determination because if we do, it would amount to justifying illegality,
crime and injustice which were the essence of colonialism.
Unfortunately,
what this belief has spurred is the replacement of one form of colonialism with
another. It is this “domestic or internal colonialism” that is at the root of
the Nigerian dilemma. That is the basis for the various agitations across the
country. To say that much of the troubles of Nigeria are rooted in the colonial
structure that was bequeathed at independence would be a terrible
understatement. But, there is a limit to which we can hold the colonialists
responsible for our troubles. To continue to blame the British is to assume
that nations are natural creations. The argument I am making is that nations
come into being for various reasons and through different processes.
Of
course, we were handed an inequitable structure at independence that needed
serious reengineering. But what did we the inheritors of a disruptive structure
do with it? There was no way that structure would have evolved into a united,
peaceful and egalitarian nation. While the structure was flawed, the political
system of federalism seemed to have suited the emergent nation. Unfortunately,
the clash between structure and system would implode the nation sooner than
expected. It is in this crucible that the Igbo nation and other nations have
had to subsist.
Ndi Igbo in Nigeria
Like
other groups, the Igbos were engaged in the tripartite quest to seize the heart
and soul of the emergent nation called Nigeria. While their elite sought
political power at the centre, the mass, eager to unleash its potentials, saw
the entire nation, rather than a piece of it—not as an estate bequeathed to
them by their great-grand father—as a veritable opportunity. Some commentators
have tried to explain this “mass exodus”, attributing it to the desire to deal
with the challenge of high population density; others have wallowed in the feel-good
notion that Igbos are the Jews of Africa, whatever that means!
Once
it became clear that the “Pakistanisation” of Nigeria was not going to take
place, even if there were attempts to achieve that, the Igbos took the gauntlet
and the great dispersal began. It is important to note that wherever Igbos
found themselves, they tried to acculturate and excel. They were not afraid to
mix, to intermarry, to learn the local language and secure a comfortable life.
For those given to cynicism, this can-do spirit was more of a domineering
trait, a desire to takeover and control their hosts. There is the argument that
the Igbos did not extend the same goodwill that they received outside to
non-Igbos in their homeland. Whatever the facts, I don’t think it can fully
explain the so-called Igbo threat and, therefore, the anti-Igbo sentiments that
gained traction over decades. That sentiment would have severe consequences.
Then
the tragic events of January 15, 1966, happened and suddenly all hell broke
loose. For a people who had been scapegoated for a long time, it was a
convenient alibi to unleash mayhem on an entire race on a scale not witnessed
anywhere on the continent. That incident precipitated the civil war and changed
so many things, including the psyche of Igbos and their attitude to the
Nigerian idea and it still does to this day. For many, that war has not ended.
But this is not just an Igbo feeling. Even for those who declared “no victor;
no vanquished” the feeling that the Igbos were the people who wanted to “break”
Nigeria—and perhaps still want to—persists in official consciousness.
So
our people have spent the better of the decades after the civil war trying to
fit in, to reassure everyone who cares to listen that we can be trusted and
that we are not the unpacified and pathological secessionists that we have been
made out to be. We carry the forced guilt around with us. The bitter feeling
foisted on us by the state persists. But that civil war ended forty-six years
ago. It is high time we put it behind us. We should destroy this idea of
victimhood; we are not the only people who have suffered and are still
suffering “to keep Nigeria one”. Even if we don’t forget we must forgive. We
don’t have to prove anything to anybody. All we need to do is to support the
quest by patriotic Nigerians to create a country of equal opportunity and
justice not just for Igbos but for everyone who calls Nigeria home; a country
where your resourcefulness is unhindered; where your safety—like that of every
other Nigerian, irrespective of religious or ethnic colouration—is guaranteed
and protected.
In
a sense, Igbos can imagine themselves as the catalyst of a new dawn, the face
of a new Nigeria that must transform into an inclusive and egalitarian country.
You are scattered over the face of the country—and indeed across the
world—contributing your quota to the development of your host communities from
Aba to Zungeru, from Badagry to Yola, even if there are some of us whose
actions and activities have not been stellar. But while we wait on Nigeria to
get its act together, we have to put our house in order. After all, charity,
they say, begins at home.
It
is sad to point out that our political elite have failed woefully. Squeamish
and selfish as always, they have failed to read the mood of the nation and to
act in the interest of the majority of our people. For a mess of pottage or an
opportunity to be—in the words of Wole Soyinka—appendices to power, they are
ever ready to cut their people loose. Let me cite an example. Sometime in
January this year after I appeared as a guest at a programme that featured
ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo to mark the 50th anniversary of the January 15,
1996, a young man, a lawyer, approached me to discuss his plans to mark the
50th anniversary of the death of Nigeria’s first head of state, Gen. Johnson
Thomas Umunnakwe Aguiyi-Ironsi. I thought it was not only a brilliant idea but
a brave one. Even though I was extremely busy as I was in the middle of editing
my latest book, We Are All Biafrans, I volunteered to help out in any way I
could, including reaching out to potential supporters of the project. He told
me he had a few people in mind but that his challenge was how to put the
proposal together to make it acceptable. I immediately asked him to send me a
draft which he did. In a week or two, I was able to rework it to suit his
vision.
He
passed the new proposal to a former governor of one of the South-east states.
After many weeks of waiting, he received a favourable response to the effect
that the proposal was not only great but implementable and that he would get
back to us. Then the trauma began. For weeks, we didn’t hear from this former
“Excellency”. We were patient. When we finally did, Mr. ex-Governor informed us
that he was away and also needed to consult. He assured my friend that his
consultation had yielded fruit as the people he spoke with were interested in
the project.
We
thought we had something going and started making our own little plans. When we
didn’t hear from the ex-governor again after a while, I pressured my friend to
find out what was happening. He made several attempts. Then one evening, my
friend walked into the office looking sullen. He then announced the sad news:
that our fire-spiting ex-governor had chickened out. His reason: he was being
“watched”. I couldn’t understand it but I wasn’t completely surprised
considering that the treachery of the Igbo elite is legendary. I thought of a
Plan B to reach out to the government of Abia State, Ironsi’s home state,
considering that I know a member of the state executive council. That effort
met a brick wall. To cut a long a long story, July 29 came and went and
there was no whimper, not from the Abia State government, not from the
so-called Igbo leaders, not from the Igbo elite for whom that occasion provided
a real opportunity to interrogate the Nigerian reality.
Remember,
part of the reasons those who murdered Ironsi—some of them still very much
around and enjoying the fruits of their “labour”—gave was that he had gone
against the principles on which Nigeria was founded; that he sought to turn the
country into a unitary state, a treasonable offence by all estimation. Now,
fifty years after Ironsi’s death, is the country, whether under military or
civilian rule, not being run as a unitary state? Which of you gathered here
today remembers the Nigerian Army celebrating the 50th anniversary of the
assassination of its first supreme commander or the Nigerian state remembering
the country’s first military head of state? It was as if Ironsi didn’t matter,
as if he was a footnote in the history of Nigeria. He might as well be.
Unfortunately, the current Igbo elite that is largely devoid of mindfulness and
perception and propelled only by crass materialism has helped sustain this
notion. As a result, we can only remember or celebrate what our hegemonic
ruling class wants us to remember and celebrate.
The
attitude of our squirming ex-governor captures the essence of the Igbo elite
and their response to the Nigerian conundrum. But what are they afraid of? It
is their inability to take a principled position on Nigeria that has created
opportunity for the rising anxieties currently going on in Igboland and the
need to fill the yawning leadership gap in that section of Nigeria. And you
would also notice that as a people, we have for long not been able to raise a
charismatic and visionary leader around whom the entire Igbo would rally for
positive leadership. This is because the soul of our elite has been corrupted
by greed and self-enrichment. In fact, in his last interview with the Nigerian
Television Authority (NTA) before he passed on, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu,
put the absence of a rallying figure in Igboland to nothing but the unmitigated
love of money by the Igbo elite.
Nigeria’s leadership
conundrum
I
talked about Achebe and his view on leadership much earlier in this address. We
all remember his little book, The Trouble with Nigeria, where he observed that,
“The trouble with Nigeria is simply and squarely a failure of leadership. There
is nothing basically wrong with the Nigerian character. There is nothing wrong
with the Nigerian land or climate or water or air or anything else. The Nigerian
problem is the unwillingness or inability of its leaders to rise to the
responsibility, to the challenge of personal example which are the hallmarks of
true leadership.” It is difficult to disagree with Achebe. To poor leadership,
we could add corruption and we would have arrived at the twin evils that have
held Nigeria hostage for decades.
If
there was one thing Nigeria needed so much at independence, it was selfless,
visionary, and nationalistic leadership that would have helped in forging a
nation out of the contraption that was bequeathed to us by the colonialists.
The explanation for our current crisis can be found in the failure of our
rulers since independence to build a nation out of the disparate groups that
make up Nigeria.
Let
me bring this argument of poor leadership a little closer home. Look at the
states in the South-east of Nigeria and how charlatans, rogue godfathers and
scoundrels posing as statesmen, have taken over the political landscape. Like
their counterparts at the national level, they have left no one in doubt that
being in power is all about how to feather their nests. So, everywhere you go
in the streets of Owerri, Aba, Ontisha, etc., it is the same challenge: bad
roads, heaps of garbage, dilapidated schools and decrepit hospitals, where they
exist. Hopelessness and unemployment stalk the region while the youth have
nothing to look forward to other than a life of crime and desperation. Once
known for excelling in education, the region is gradually losing its coveted
position in this regard thanks to a leadership that has very little
appreciation of the value of education.
Alarmingly,
in a June 3, 2016, story, Daily Trust newspaper reported the following
statistics about education budget in Nigeria: “The southwest zone’s spending on
education for the year (minus Ondo State) is N178.41 billion (12.71 percent) of
its N1.4 trillion total expenditure. It is followed by the northwest zone which
earmarked N174.28 billion (15.53 percent) of its total budget of N1.12 trillion
for education. Only N85 billion (12.57 percent) of the northeast’s total budget
of N676 billion is allocated to education. The north central zone’s approved
budget for education is N101.71 billion (14.86 percent) of its cumulative
budget of N684 billion. The south-south region has a total budget for education
of N100.99 billion (6.25 percent) of its N1.6 trillion total budget. The
southeast’s states of Anambra, Enugu and Ebonyi have earmarked only N13 billion
for education. There are no figures for Abia and Imo states. The zone has a
combined budget of N490 billion.”
According
to the report, “Lagos is the only state in the country with three-digit budget
on education. It’s spending N113.37 billion of its budget on education. Its
expenditure is higher than the regional education budgets of the northeast,
north-central, south-south, and southeast. Other big spenders after Lagos are
Cross River (N53.01billion), Jigawa (N43.5 billion), Ogun (N40.1 billion),
Sokoto (N34.5 billion), Kaduna (N29.99 billion), Borno (N27 billion), Bauchi
(N26.7 billion), Kano (N23.65 billion) and Katsina (N20.68 billion).
Small spenders with less expenditure for education are: Ekiti (N1.5
billion), Kogi (N2.36 billion), Anambra (N3 billion), Taraba (N3.4 billion),
Enugu and Bayelsa (N4 billion each), Niger (N4.29 billion), Ebonyi (N6
billion), Gombe (N6.2 billion), and Zamfara (N6.96 billion).”
Nothing
could be more depressing. While the budget figures for education across Nigeria
are generally low, the situation in the south-east is quite pathetic. But if
you think this is shocking wait until you hear the story of the imperial
majesty, Rochas Okorocha, who rules as governor of my home state, Imo, where
civil servants have gone for months without salaries and pensioners are
collapsing and dying on queues just to receive what is due them, even with the
billions of naira bailout the state received from the federal government. The
alleged misuse of that bailout is currently a source of disquiet in the state.
This is how The Punch newspaper (April 23, 2016) reported the story: “N338bn
bailout: Benue, Imo diverted funds—ICPC report.”
We
should recall that the bailout fund by the federal government as announced by
the Vice President, Prof Yemi Osinbajo, who heads the National Economic
Council, is supposed to be a “loan repayable at an interest rate of nine per
cent over a 20-year period and it is ‘solely for the purpose of paying the
backlog of salaries’.” The report by the Independent Corrupt Practices and
Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) stated that, “Imo State applied for
and received bailout funds of N26, 806, 430, 000.00 from the Central Bank of
Nigeria (CBN) which were domiciled with two commercial banks namely Fidelity
and Zenith banks. In the course of analysis, it was discovered that some transfers
were made into certain Imo State Government accounts which are not related to
salaries and emoluments as follows: N2bn paid into a Government Account; N2bn
into an Imo State Project account; N2bn transferred into microfinance bank; and
a management fee of N21, 017, 810.00 was paid into an unspecified account.”
One
of the highlights of Mr. Okorocha’s first term in office was the destruction of
the central library—an iconic structure that served many of my generation and
beyond—in the city centre, replacing it with a personal cathedral. Last week,
The Sunday Sun (October 16, 2016) carried a story describing the condition of
the roads in Imo State. Quoting a resident from Umuguma in Owerri West Council
Area, the newspaper noted: “All the access roads in and out of the state have
collapsed. You can’t drive through the Hospital Road right now because it has
become a nightmare in this rainy season. The contractor hired to expand the
road has long abandoned it. Also, the other alternative access to Umuguma which
is a World Bank assisted project has equally collapsed. So, whenever it rains,
people are stranded.” We are doing this to ourselves; not the people in Abuja
doing it to us. The Owelle of the Universe, as Mr. Okorocha fancies himself,
has run the state as a fiefdom and only recently announced, according to a
report in Thisday newspaper, that he had yet to decide on his successor in 2019
amongst his loyalists whom he described as his true “children”, and that the
Imo people would know at the appropriate time.
That
is the nature of our democracy and what our people have to deal with. A man is
in power for eight years with nothing to show for his misrule and on his
departure, he appoints his chief of staff, son-in-law or anybody else he
fancies as his successor. It doesn’t matter what the people think or what the
polls say. I have been asked several times who should be blamed for this
development: the rulers or the ruled? Why don’t we hold our rulers in Igboland
and in other parts of the country to account? I think this is a legitimate
question. And we ought to. But there is also another question which is, how did
we end up with these kinds of rulers? The answer for me lies in the political
structure of the country. We have a system that is driven more by money and
patronage than anything else.
While
I agree that poor leadership and corruption are pivotal in understanding the
tragedy that is Nigeria, to focus only on these two issues would amount to not
seeing the forest for the trees. Undoubtedly, there is something wrong with, if
not the Nigerian land, but the structure of the country. There is a sense in
which the Nigerian dilemma throws up the kind of leaders we see in the
South-east and across the country. Elections are rigged. People have no control
of the process. These distortions—a product of our perverted structure—throw up
the likes of Okorocha and make it impossible for the people to truly have a say
in who governs them. My argument, therefore, is that we need serious devolution
of power so that people wherever they are in Nigeria will take their destiny in
their own hands, socially, economically and politically.
We
can only get the right leaders if we get our politics right and that itself is
dependent on a number of factors, including how equitable and just our country
is.
The crisis of
nationhood
It
was Kwame Nkrumah, father of modern Ghana and the country’s first prime
minister who popularized the saying, “Seek ye first the political kingdom and
all things shall be added unto you.” Nkrumah was referring to the importance of
decolonisation and self-rule as a prelude to the development of Ghana, nay
Africa. Much of the cohesion and inclusivity that Ghana enjoys today can be
attributed to his foresight. We can apply Nkrumah’s theory to the crisis in
Nigeria; except, in our own case, the refrain should be, “Seek ye first the
kingdom of nationhood and every other thing shall be added unto you.”
It
is the fact that we have been unable to forge a nation out of Nigeria that is
at the root of all our problems. The young Nigerian rising literary star and
author of the widely acclaimed The Fishermen, Chigozie Obioma, captured the
mood succinctly in an interview with Newsweek Europe recently when he noted,
“Nigerians do not believe in the idea of Nigeria because they know it was
somebody else’s idea.” If a nation is an idea—and I think all nations are—what
is the idea of Nigeria?
According
to the historian and philosopher, Chinweizu, “Nigeria is not a nation but a
noyau, i.e., a society of inward antagonism, one held together by mutual
internal antagonism, one which could not carry on if its members had no fellow
members to hate. And if we want to end the troubles of the Nigerians, we must
dig deeper to find the fundamental causes.” That is the idea of Nigeria—a
country built on mutual internal antagonism. Essentially, the country was
rigged to fail. But we can also recreate the idea of a nation whether it is its
arbitrariness, mutual antagonism, or shared hatred for one another. That is the
challenge that we all face.
Earlier
in this speech, I alluded to the fact that Nigeria could have been three or
more countries at independence in 1960. It didn’t happen. So what we had was
what Ali Mazrui, one of Africa's most famous political scientists, described as
mega-Nigeria in a 2004 essay titled, “The Path to Nigeria's Greatness: Between
Exceptionalism and Typicality” to mark the 90th anniversary of the amalgamation
of Nigeria. According to Mazrui, “There are indeed certain attributes which
make Nigeria strikingly unique in Africa—setting it apart in configuration from
all other African countries.”
For
Mazrui, “The exceptionalism of Nigeria includes of course the huge size of its
population in relation to its neighbours. It is by far the most populous
country in Africa. This is a central aspect of the 1914 amalgamation. The next
country in size on the African continent is Egypt, and yet Egypt is only a
little more than half of Nigeria's population. Nigeria's exceptionalism also
includes the combination of immense human resources (youthful and potentially
gifted population) with immense natural resources (led by oil and gas). In
1914, Lord Lugard knew about Nigeria's palm oil. Nigeria's other oil,
petroleum, had yet to reveal itself. Perhaps it is also part of Nigeria's
exceptionalism that it has not just one pivotal ethnic group in a national
configuration but three. Uganda has one pivotal group, the Baganda. Kenya has
in reality two outstanding pivotal groups—the Luo and Kikuyu. Senegal's
outstanding pivotal group is the Wolof. Is Nigeria exceptional in having three
very large pivot ethnic groups, each with a dazzling record of achievement?”
Finally, for Mazrui, Nigeria is exceptional in having those three civilizations
(Africanity, Islam and the West) almost equal in power.
So,
why has this propitious exceptionalism not worked for Nigeria? It hasn’t
because the idea of Nigeria is premised on conquest; conquest of people and
conquest of resources. Essentially, it is Nigeria’s other oil, petroleum, to
use Mazrui’s words—rather than the desire to promote its exceptionalism—that
would define the idea of Nigeria. It was evident in the politics on both sides
of the civil war; we see it in the asinine comments about the origin of the oil
and who actually owns it. Then there are sundry other issues. There is hardly a
collective vision. As a people, we can’t even agree on what constitutes
corruption, for example, without it taking ethnic or religious colouration.
That in itself explains the level of the mindless corruption in Nigeria and why
we haven’t been able to conduct something as simple as a national census,
without goats and chickens raising eyebrows about the outcome.
Can
mega-Nigeria work? I think it can. Will it work? That would depend on
Nigerians. The idea of the Nigerian nation is one based on conquest by British
colonisers and sustained by internal colonialism. Almost six decades after
independence, we are still at the mercy of those who saw themselves as heirs to
the colonialists, who fancied the new Nigeria as their personal
barnyard—bequeathed to them by their forebears—rather than a collective
property. This hegemonic feeling of entitlement can only breed discontent and
tension. But, nobody or group should feel they love Nigeria more than other
groups. Or that they have a greater stake in this country than others. We can’t
build a united Nigeria under these circumstances. National integration can only
happen when we believe and accept that all parts of Nigeria are equal
stakeholders in the survival of the country. That is the only way we can
appreciate and respect each other and therefore create opportunities for a
collective attitude towards remaking Nigeria.
The Nigerian
dilemma: Is Nigeria negotiable, or why we should restructure
Over
the years, we have heard the rulers of Nigeria make definite pronouncements on
the structure and future of the country. How many times have we heard the
expression, “The unity of Nigeria is not negotiable” or “We fought a civil war
to keep Nigeria one.” Of course, when you hear these words, the question to ask
should be, for whose interest or benefit? The expression “Nigeria is not
negotiable” conveys a feeling that Nigeria is an eternal construct, your
perfect nation. But we all know that nations are not eternal constructs; neither
is Nigeria a perfect nation. So, if we agree that no nation—neither Nigeria nor
the country where we are gathered today, with all its strength and progress—is
perfect, why should it be a crime to attempt to interrogate our contemporary
reality?
The
issue of getting the Nigerian federation right or better still restructuring
Nigeria has become a very touchy issue, one that has thrown up all kinds of
wild ideas. Only recently, a former Minister of Education, former
Vice-Chancellor of the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, and member of the
Northern Elders Forum (NEF), Prof. Ango Abdullahi, was reported by the Punch
newspaper (August 31, 2016) as saying, “If Nigerians have found it difficult to
live together in peace, the component units should find it convenient to go
their separate ways,” adding that if the amalgamation of the country in 1914 by
Lord Lugard was a mistake, “each region should go separately”. How convenient!
We can see and feel the sarcasm dripping from Prof. Abdullahi’s posers. I am
sure the learned professor knows that Nigerians going “their separate ways” is
not going to happen, at least not the way he has posed the question. Not
because there are no Nigerians who want “each region” to go “their separate
ways”, but because there are those who still think it is their prerogative to
determine what shape or form that “separation” should take if and when it does
happen.
I
think the question Prof Abdullahi should have posed is, why have Nigerians
found it difficult to live in peace? He agrees that Nigeria’s unity is
negotiable which is comforting but his idea why we should have the negotiation
debate is quite troubling. Let’s hear him: “Yes we accepted Boko Haram for
those who described them as ‘Islamist terrorists’, fair enough; but what
about economic terrorists? In the Niger Delta, for example, people who came out
openly and said they’re avenging something and that they’re fighting to avenge
something, they’re worse than what’s happening in this country; they’re worse
than Boko Haram. If you’re not going to fight Avengers, then stop fighting Boko
Haram.”
Of
course, there is no denying—in Prof. Abdullahi’s world—the fact that “economic
terrorists” are far worse than “Islamist terrorists”. But I would say
terrorists are terrorists, whether “economic”, “Islamist”, “Christian”,
“Buddhist”, or “animist”. For me, crime is crime no matter the colouration,
except that in Nigeria’s Niger Delta, there is also a clear evidence of
criminal appropriation and neglect by the Nigerian state. So, how should the
citizens of the Niger Delta respond to such blatant injustice? My understanding
is that the militants of the Niger Delta are asking for a greater control of
the resources—and we can’t use the argument of how well they have managed what
they get currently to deny them control—in the area and therefore a greater
control of their environment. This position is tenable considering Prof
Abdullahi’s argument as reported in Thisday newspaper (August 31, 2016) that
the “ragtag boys” who were fed up with the things happening to them became
members of Boko Haram. Clearly, what is sauce for the Boko Haram gander can’t
be sauce for the Niger Delta goose!
I
don’t think Nigeria is working for millions of Nigerians across the length and
breadth of the country, except for those my good friend describes as incurable
swindlers in the corridors of power. If Nigeria is not working for majority of
Nigerians there is nothing wrong in querying why it is not working and then
proffering solutions. For the most part, when people call for restructuring
Nigeria, it has nothing to do with balkanizing the country. What the proponents
are simply saying is that let us get our political structure right; let us
build a truly federal and inclusive Nigeria. Nationhood is a shared vision. We can’t
be indifferent to the cries of injustice across the country because in the end
we are all victims!
Why We Are All
Biafrans
The
title of my book, We Are All Biafrans, has generated mixed reactions.
There are those like Prof. Chidi Odinkalu who in the review of the book
captured the essence of the title when he wrote: “Ingeniously, the author
converts ‘Biafra’ into a forensic tool for auditing the Nigerian state. The
outcome is not reassuring.” There are others who have taken me to task,
accusing me of trying to dilute the essence of the Biafran experience and
struggle. I plead not guilty to the latter charge. What is my take on the
Biafran conundrum? I believe in Biafra to the extent that it is an idea that
seeks to address the Nigerian reality of the 21st century. I do not
share the belief of Biafra as a geo-political entity partly because I don’t
think it is worth the while for anybody, man, woman or child. It might have
been a necessity five decades ago; today, it seems more like an anachronism.
In
a sense, we are all Biafrans. If you look across the country today, there is a
palpable feeling of disquiet, disaffection and complete resignation. There are
pockets of agitations everywhere you turn, from the quest of different groups
like Niger Delta Avengers (NDA) and the Movement for the Emancipation of the
Niger Delta (MEND) fighting for greater control of resources by the citizens in
the Niger Delta, the desire of Boko Haram to carve out a section of the country
as its caliphate, the herdsmen seeking “a right of passage” for their cattle,
the activities of the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of
Biafra (MASSOB), and the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB), to the Oodua
People’s Congress (OPC) and Oodua Liberation Movement (OLM), etc. I think it is
the same point Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, leader of the Biafran secession tried to
make in his post-civil war book, Because I am Involved when he noted,
“All over Nigeria, there is Biafra but that Biafra of today is ‘the Biafra of
the Nigerians and not the Biafra of the Igbos’; the Biafra of the mind not the
Biafra of the fields.”
The
young men and women who are protesting in the name of Biafra in the streets of
Aba, Owerri, Onitsha, Enugu—and in major cities around the world—must heed
Ojukwu’s admonition just as their fathers and uncles heeded his call almost
fifty years ago. The Biafran metaphor can, therefore, become a rallying point
for a renegotiated Nigeria. Like other Nigerians, Ndi Igbo have sacrificed for,
and put a lot into Nigeria to prove their stake in it. They ought not be
running away from it. Let me note, however, that I am not in any way seeking to
diminish the import of the agitations by groups who would want a restructured
Nigeria along ethnic nationality lines. Fundamentally, I believe in the right
of people to self-determination. But the proponents of a multi-nation idea must
also realize that our circumstances have changed; that Nigeria of 2016 is no
longer our fathers’ Nigeria; that Nigeria, as mathematician and author, Edwin Madunagu,
has so brilliantly stated, is no longer the sum total of its ethnic
nationalities.
The
question then is, what is to be done? I propose we go back to the basics
without the prejudices of the past. Nigeria gained independence as a federal
republic and one of the major principles of federalism—which is a system of
government usually adopted by multicultural and multi-ethnic nations to guard
against the fear of domination—is the devolution of powers. In explaining
federalism, using the United States of America as an example, Kenneth Wheare in
Federal Government, talks about the two levels of government in the US
being “co-equally supreme”. John Law in “How Can We Define Federalism?”, Perspectives
on Federalism, notes that a federal state is “a single state political
system in which there is a division of powers between two levels of government
of equal status,” while a federal union of states is “a multi-state political
system in which there is a division of powers between two levels of government
of equal status”.
The
important points to note here are, “two levels of government and equal status”.
Looking at these definitions, it is clear that what we have in Nigeria is an
aberration. Some people have described it as “feeding bottle federalism”
because the federal government has decapitated the states and made them overtly
dependent. In the end, neither the federal government nor the states are
accountable to anybody. In a way, this structure or system has engendered the
politics of “do or die” where you must control who sits in Aso Rock or
destabilize the country trying. Our governors, lacking ideas and indolent as
ever, in the fashion of Oliver Twist keep asking for more. Recently, the
governor of Sokoto State, Aminu Tambuwal, was quoted as saying that what the
country needed was not restructuring but an “urgent review of the revenue
allocation formula, to favour states and local governments”. He is not alone.
The Nigerian structure has thrown up and nurtured a bankrupt elite that has fed
fat on oil. And we can see it in the attitude of Tambuwal’s counterparts in the
National Assembly—our undistinguished senators and dishonorable
representatives—perhaps the highest paid legislators in the world. Even with
the billions of naira they collectively take home every year for doing
absolutely nothing, they are not content; and like ndi anyan ukwu that
they are, they steal directly from the masses in the name of passing the
national budget.
Clearly,
in a proper federation, it is not the responsibility of the federal government
to create local governments and sustain them neither should the states be
dependent on the federal government. Perhaps, it is part of Nigeria’s
peculiarity that the federal government micromanages the states and has a say
in everything from primary education to primary health. In 21st
century Nigeria, with all the trauma of traffic congestion, states are not
permitted to build railways; aviation, including airports—though states like
Akwa Ibom, Delta and Imo have built theirs—is still the exclusive right of the
federal government just as is election of governors, their deputies and members
of state houses of assembly. The same rule applies—according to the
Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999—to insurance,
incorporation, regulation and winding up of bodies corporate, control of mines
and minerals, including oil fields, oil mining, geological surveys and natural
gas, patents, trademarks, trade or business names, industrial designs and
merchandise marks. The Police—even if much of its funding and support comes
from state governments—and pensions, prisons, public holidays are all under the
exclusive control of the federal government.
So,
it is not just that the federal government is glad spoon-feeding the states, it
has effectively blocked their path to development. There are those who think
Nigeria has always been run the way it is today. We only need to go back to the
1963 constitution to know that things were quite different in the past. Even if
we don’t necessarily have to go back to that era, we can borrow considerably
from it to unleash the creative potentials of Nigerians. Some people might
argue that this is not possible considering how the states in Nigeria came into
being. But again, that is part of the problem and the peculiarity of the
Nigerian experience. Much of the distortion we see today is emblematic of the
internal hegemonic proclivities of the Nigerian state, built and nurtured by
the military—the armed wing of Nigeria’s hegemonic power blocs—and sustained by
their civilian collaborators in the last fifty years. It is perhaps only in
Nigeria that the military not only imposed dictatorship and elevated corruption
but changed the structure of the country where they held sway. It was in
defence of this hegemonic agenda that ex-military dictator, Ibrahim Babangda,
annulled Nigeria’s freest and fairest election held on June 12, 1993. That
election was won by Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola from Ogun State,
south-west, Nigeria. Six years after the annulment, the military would foist
another ex-military dictator, Olusegun Obasanjo, also from Ogun State, on
Nigerians in the name of democracy. We would need to dismantle this iniquitous
structure if we want to build the new Nigeria we, our children and
grandchildren deserve. We need to promote the idea of community government
where power will return to the people.
Whether
we will win that battle is another thing, but I think it is worth fighting for
because the alternative is not pleasant!
Conclusion
In
conclusion, I would like to quote Prof Ochefu again: “As a country on its
‘third missionary’ journey to a truly democratic nation, the fundamental
questions of nation building that began over 100 years ago have not been fully
and or properly answered. The corporate existence of the country has been
formally broken once and pronounced broken once. It took a horrible civil war
to restore the entity when it was broken and an equally brutal attempted coup
when it was pronounced…We must collectively negotiate to ensure that we retain
the map but change the way we exist under that map.”
I
share Prof Ochefu’s viewpoint. Without an equitable federation, we are wasting
our time as a people. Nothing will work, not education, not health, not
infrastructure, because as the lawyers say, you can’t build something on
nothing. Some people will tell you that the question of Nigeria’s unity or
nationhood is settled. Those that the current structure favoured at
independence were happy to maintain it. And they still do as I speak. Then, of course,
there are those on the other extreme of this debate who erroneously think that
restructuring is a silver bullet, that it will solve all of our problems. And
this is exemplified in the rise of ethnic nationalism across the country. So,
to some extent you can understand the apprehension, even if it is not
justifiable, of those who say they are opposed to restructuring.
Restructuring
for me is just the first step in the tortuous road to nationhood. That is the
mindset that will propel us to the new Nigeria of our dream. We can only make
progress as a people when we agree that we are one people—even if we have
different histories—dedicated to a common vision and future. We need to fight
new battles in Nigeria but not the battle of Biafra or any other ethno-religious
arrangement. It is good that you have created this platform. We need to engage
our young men and women; we need to get them off the streets waving flags and
back to the classrooms, factories, and functional institutions. We need to end
the carnage in Igboland. We need to say never again! We have had enough killing
to last us a hundred generations.
As
Nigerians living outside the motherland, you need to be involved because as
things stand currently, you may not recognize your villages when next you
decide to come back home. Many of us left Nigeria frustrated, hoping things
will change one day. That is not going to happen unless we engage the homeland
effectively. The existential crisis in Nigeria is real. Let me reiterate the
point made earlier in this presentation. Nigerians do not believe in the idea
of Nigeria. Every Nigerian—including those who purport to lead us, either in
public office or otherwise—who has the opportunity wants to hedge. I don’t know
how much longer a country with this national mindset will survive.
For
some, the civil war mindset still prevails; it is still them vs us. We have to
end the civil wars that are literally and figuratively raging across the
country. We have to realize that we are all in this together and if we fail, we
will collectively be victims.
I
think a good starting point would be the release of Nnamdi Kanu, leader of
IPOB, and other political prisoners in the country and put in place proper
mechanism for genuine national reconciliation and dialogue!
Thank
you for your time.
This speech was a keynote address by Chido Onumah,
author of We Are All Biafrans, on the occasion of the 2016 National Convention
of the Anambra State Association (ASA-USA), Dallas, Texas, USA, October 21,
2016.
Are you tired of seeking loans and Mortgages,have you been turned down constantly By your banks and other financial institutions,We offer any form of loan to individuals and corporate bodies at low interest rate.If you are interested in taking a loan,feel free to contact us today,we promise to offer you the best services ever.Just give us a try,because a trial will convince you.What are your Financial needs?Do you need a business loan?Do you need a personal loan?Do you want to buy a car?Do you want to refinance?Do you need a mortgage loan?Do you need a huge capital to start off your business proposal or expansion? Have you lost hope and you think there is no way out, and your financial burdens still persists? Contact us (gaincreditloan1@gmail.com )
ReplyDeleteYour Name:...............
Your Country:...............
Your Occupation:...............
Loan Amount Needed:...............
Loan Duration...............
Monthly Income:...............
Your Telephone Number:.....................
Business Plan/Use Of Your Loan:...............
Contact Us At : gaincreditloan1@gmail.com
Phone number :+44-75967-81743 (Whats app)
I prefer to spy on my kids https://9spyapps.com/whatsapp-spy/
ReplyDelete, it helps a lot, especially if you're far away from them. It is important to supervise children when they are in their teens, as they can not take the most correct decision, after which they will regret about it.