Thursday, March 27, 2014

Boko Haram, National ID card, federal allocations and the National conference?

Boko Haram, National ID card,  federal allocations and the National conference?

In honesty, the threat of Boko Haram to Nigerian is greater than that posed either by Al-Qaeda or by any other terrorist organizations to any other Nation. And this threat to Nigeria is neither because of the sophistication of this terror group nor because of their uncanny abilities to cause mayhem or destructions. These ragtag terrorist primitive bastards are successful in their scourge because of institutional failures, corruption, mediocrity and gross incompetence in the Nigerian society.

For example, how can a nation fight terrorism or terrorist when it does not have even an inaccurate head counter and identities of its citizenry. In Nigeria there is neither birth, death, national, local registry of the citizenry. The result of this one out of many institutional failures is that anybody is and is not Nigerian depending on the immediate circumstances and desires of the individual. Just by mere common sense, it is impossible to stop Boko Haram if its members like many Nigerians can assume any identity at any time and place of their choosing. Boko Haram will grow and increase in straight and assume any name and coloration as long as Nigeria remains one of the few countries in the world that cannot identify its own citizens.

A terrorist who appears Middle Eastern laden with explosives and AK 47s can walk freely across the porous Nigerian borders and within the Nigerian states parading self as citizen. And I ask, can we found somebody we know not of his or her existence, identity, name, height, complexion, familial? The answers is no; but when we do, it is by sheer luck and the security of a nation and of a people cannot be entrusted to luck and randomness. So credible head count backed with biometrics is an Imperative and Odimegwu should have been encouraged and supported and Governor Kwankwaso and his likes could have gone to hell.

Like Boko Haram, it is also criminal to allocate federal common fund on the bases of permanent fixtures, like the number, size of local government, states or area of land. Since area population is dynamic and constant state and local government creation is impracticable; congressional districts and or redistricting, or representation should be used to balance, compensate and remedy population shifts. As such federal allocation should be apportioned base on congressional districts in a local government or in a state.

If due to oppositions from the status quo the National Conference fails to  restructure Nigeria to regional system,  the need for an equitable state, local government creation, equitable congressional district apportionment and equitable federal allocation, makes National ID card backed by biometrics an imperative. Until such a time we secure reliable National ID card, for equity today, each of the existing 6 geo-political zones in the country should have 7 states and equal number of local governments; I am not a fan for the creation of more states or local governments per say, but I also recognize that existing state cannot be scraped for parity among the zones hence a 7 state per zone remedy is what is achievable now for equity and fairness among the 6 zones. If the North West zone insists on having an additional state then an 8 states solution per each of the 6 zones is advised.
After a credible national ID scheme has be achieved, and or true fiscal federalism adopted, more states, local governments may or may not be necessary since federal allocation, if any, will then be based on congressional districts (which in turn are based on actual population) in the  locality or state. Because population is a dynamic phenomenon, a headcount or census every eight to ten years must be conduct so as to adjust the number of congressional districts per area or per state. The number of congressional districts per states also accords a state its corresponding fair share of federal allocation and the number of congressional delegations for the federal house.

Under the current pseudo federalism in Nigeria today, federal allocation that is given on state and local government bases means that, the more states and or local governments a zone or state has the more money it gets from the center. The current state and local government partitions in Nigeria were all executed by Northern military dictatorial regimes and were skewed; as one would imagine favored the old Northern region. What were the bases or criteria for the creation of the existing states and local governments by the military dictatorships? No criteria whatsoever, perhaps I should say that the creation of the existing states and local governments were based on arbitrary war and peace time military strategy, expediency, nepotism, tribalism and or political manipulation. If military dictatorship is an aberration so are the political structures and partitions done by the dictatorships. Once again what were the bases for the creation of the present 36 state structure and 774 local governments? What if a local government depopulates to zero population due to natural or manmade disaster, would this local government continue to receive federal allocation just by the mere fact that it already exist even when it is inhabited by wild beasts only?

With the current flawed divisionary indigenous acts in most states in Nigeria an Ibo man living in any other part of Nigeria outside Igbo land is counted as an indigene of one of the Igbo states, a stranger to his state of residency. So in states creation and or local governments creation such Ibo man should be assigned to an Igbo states and not to the state where he resides until such a time the regressive indigenous laws in the states are changed. But this was not the case when the present states and local governments were created by the Northern Military Juntas. For instance, Kano has 44 local government councils which perhaps took into account none indigenes living in Kano. However these none indigenes are not accorded ‘indigene-ship’ or security. So if there are 3000000 Ibos for example living in Kano and it becomes necessary that these Ibos move back to their states as is the case with Boko Haram attacks in the north, then Kano state would lose 3000000 residents but still keeps its 44 local governments; while the states where these Ibos relocated still maintain their twice less the number of local governments as  Kano State. This arrangement is not only unfair but also wrong and criminal. With this arrangement, Kano State has it both ways and there is sound legal ground to legally and politically challenge the current geo-political arrangement and partitions in Nigeria. This is an example of nepotism, tribalism, cronyism that the January 1966 rebels and Gideon Orkar group complained about, it still exists and in a worse form. South East zone have only five States and 98 local councils while the other zones have either 6 or 7 states and some have 188 local councils and the national cakes are given out on state and local government bases. Does anybody honestly believe that each of the three zones in the north is more populated than the Ibo population in Nigeria? This kind of injustice demands courageous leadership and unity of purpose. If civil disobedience, political, legal pressures, national conference fails to halt Igbo marginalization and disparity in federal to zone allocations, then social disengagement along with UN actions seeking Igbo autonomy should precede economic and political disengagement from the center. And this mass political movement will need courageous leadership, the type that is currently lacking in Nigeria and in Igbo land in particular.

The ongoing National Conference must recommend National Identity Card scheme backed with biometrics, an 8 to 10 year periodic national head count and a federal allocation based on congressional districts which in itself should be based on actual population of the human beings in the districts. As an example, every 400k to 600k people can make up a congressional district.

Monday, March 17, 2014

True, Gowon is good man, a victor of war but loser of the peace because he failed to prevent the war he won.

True, Gowon is good man, a victor of war but loser of the peace because he failed to prevent the war he won.

In as much as I blame Gowon for been responsible for the Nigeria/Biafra War, I think he was a good man and still is but at 30 years old, young and naive, not versed or inexperienced he self-assumed the enormous overwhelming responsibility of absolute leadership of the nation and he blundered and then plunged Nigerian into an avoidable civil war.

Yes, Nigeria won that war but it traded peace, progress and development for the battle win. Yet I give Gowon B minus for the manner he prosecuted the war. With the British military and government behind the curtain providing technical, strategic military advice and weaponry Gowon did fairly well in his prosecution of the war that he unnecessary birthed.

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Immigration tragedy: How we escaped death –Survivors

"Immigration tragedy: How we escaped death –Survivors

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As families of those who lost their lives in the tragedy that hit the Nigerian Immigration Services (NIS) recruitment in Abuja continue to mourn their dead, survivors have told their stories of figuratively walking in the valley of the shadow of death.
Scores of people died at the test centres nationwide on Saturday following a stampede during the aptitude test organised by the Nigerian Immigration Services. Among the dead were men, women, pregnant women and others.
Speaking of their close shave with death, Frank Temitope, graduate of Building Technology, Federal Polytechnic, Bida; Susan Nwankwo, graduate of Industrial Chemistry, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka; Oluchi Nwachukwu, graduate of Business Administration, Federal Polytechnic, Ede; Miss Oluwatosi Amoda and Mrs. Mary Ogida stated that it was a miracle that they came out alive.
Frank Temitope, who gave a vivid account of how the stampede started, said he died emotionally.
He said: “Physically, I survived, but I died emotionally. Whenever anything about Nigeria comes up again, I will never show up. Nigeria has failed the youths of this country.
I even saved a guy’s life yesterday. I was in front and people were pushing from the back. There was a culvert in front and the guy ahead of me while trying to jump, got hooked up.
“People were pushing and they were going to step on him. I was able to rescue the guy, but he might not use his legs anytime soon. Even my kneels still hurt from the injuries I sustained.”
Temitope said despite the death of seven applicants and over 40 that were rushed to the hospital, Immigration officers went ahead with the conduct of the test at about 4pm.
He stated: “We were told to come to the venue by 7am. We even got there before the time. They did not open the gate. It was one of the applicants that jumped over and opened the gate. The guy opened the gate because people were choking.
“He sustained serious injuries too while trying to open the gate. The Immigration officers were just there, looking. The stampede took place around 9am. It was like a sea of human beings. Even the test did not start untill 4pm. With people rushed to the hospital and many dead, the test still took place.”
In her account, Susan Nwankwo said she was saved by God’s grace. She said: “It is by the special grace of God that I am alive today. It was not by my own strength. If men who are strong could fall down and die and some collapse, how much more myself who is a woman? At a point, I was screaming.
“My friend who was in front of me could not help me. She was struggling too to save her own life. At some point, I did bite a guy in front of me. I was at the point of death. I just needed space to breathe. Although I did not know them, I saw dead bodies. I was scared. I saw some bodies inside the ambulance. I do not know if they were dead or not. I will never attend such an aptitude test again in my life.”
Oluchi Nwachukwu gave a similar account. She said what happened on Saturday could have been avoided.
According to her, “what happened on Saturday was an eyesore. It was an experience one wishes never to see again. Beside you, people were falling down and collapsing. They were shouting for help and there was no one to help them.
“You could not even help yourself let alone helping others. At some point, breathing became a problem for me. I had to raise my head so I could breathe. Even with my body size, I was floating in the air. My legs could not touch the ground. I was being tossed. It was a horrible situation.
“People’s original school certificates were being tossed around, like rags. Shoes, clothes and wristwatches were everywhere. The bad thing is that there was no help coming from anywhere. The Immigration officers were standing there and helpless, too. The crowd was just something else.”
Speaking from her hospital bed, a 2006 graduate of Mass Communication, Mrs. Mary Ogida, stated that the trauma was so much that she would prefer to hawk sachet water instead of participating in such recruitment again. She said she was taken into the mortuary with dead victims.
Her words: “I’m lucky to survive the stampede. I was rushed to the hospital in an unconscious state. They brought me to the hospital along the dead ones before they later discovered that I was not dead.
“The population at the gate was too much and when we were about to enter the stadium, instead of them to open the whole gates, they just opened one of them, to the extent that many of them climbed the fence, in an attempt to gain entry. You know the desperation to get the job.
“My case was pathetic because I was at the centre. People pushed me from every side, to the extent that I can’t breathe or retreat and before I knew it, I fell down. I was lucky that one boy built a wall around me to reduce the number of people trampling on me. I kept shouting: ‘I’m dead, help me.’
It was almost the same pathetic story for Miss Oluwatosi Amoda, who told Daily Sun that she thought she was dead after sustaining multiple fractures during the stampede.
“When I got there before 7.00am, I met a large crowd, but I have to push my way through. When I got to the front, I noticed that they have not opened any of the gates. We pleaded with them to open the gates so that we could go in and sit down inside, but they refused. When the crowd surged, some started climbing the fence and that was how the push started.
“We were held up in the situation until we were choked and suffocating. I thought I was dead until I woke up in the hospital. I tried to walk, but I could not. If I had known, I would not have even attempted going close to the stadium in the first place. I just finished my national youth service last year.”
Bilikisu, a sister to one of the dead victims, Mrs. Oyiza Yusuf, expressed grief that her sister died while trying to save her pregnant friend, disclosing that the death of her sister’s first husband in an auto crash was responsible for her looking for job after graduation in 2006.
She said: “I didn’t really have any premonition apart from the dream I had while taking a nap that morning, after calling her number without success. In the dream, I saw myself in a party where people were making merry. I saw people carrying well-dressed dead body, at the venue of the occasion.
“In the dream, I did not only refuse to eat but also left the party because I saw something very strange. I woke up immediately and started praying only for my phone to ring to inform me about my sister’s death.
“She was married for eight years without any child. The husband was a banker in Maiduguri until he had an auto crash while going back after his annual leave. My sister then joined us in Kano, but the Kano riot forced us to relocate to Abuja. In Abuja, she met and got married to another man and had a child for him about a year and eight months ago, only for her to die trying to save her pregnant friend. It was too heavy a burden for one person"

Friday, March 14, 2014

38-year-old caught with 18 human skulls in Ogun

"38-year-old caught with 18 human skulls in Ogun"

on / in News vanguard newspaper
"BY DAUD OLATUNJI
ABEOKUTA — The Ogun State Police Command, yesterday, said it had nabbed a 38-year-old man, Adelani Ayomide, with a bag containing 18 human skulls.
The state Police Public Relations Officer, Muyiwa Adejobi, in a statement, said the suspected ritualist was arrested at 6:48am, yesterday, on Ado-Odo, Owode Road by policemen attached to a division in Ado-Odo-Ota Local Government Area of the state.
Adejobi said: “Policemen attached to Ado-Odo Division, while on a stop-and-search exercise along Ado-Odo Owode Road sighted a pedestrian, Adelani Ayomide, 38, of Ilaro, Ogun State with a bag containing 18 human heads.
“The suspect will be transferred to the state department of investigation, Eleweran Abeokuta, for discrete investigation.
“The Commissioner of Police, Ikemefuna Okoye has assured of a thorough investigation and that he will make sure the suspect faces the full wrath of the law and assist in getting other suspects in connection with the crime.”
Meantime, four Policemen have been honoured by Police Community Relations Committee, PCRC, in the state.
Those honoured yesterday, include Muyiwa Adejobi; Officer in charge of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad in the state, Ahmed Tijani, and two Police Officers at Agbara and Ogijo, Ayodele Sonubi and Toyin Afolabi, respectively.
Speaking at the event, which was held at Police Officer’s mess, GRA, Oke-Ilewo, Abeokuta, the state Chairman of PCRC, Chief Moshood Sule, commended the command and its officers’ performance in the state.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2014/03/38-year-old-caught-18-human-skulls-ogun/#sthash.GVcnDRA8.dpuf"

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Nigerians to own houses with N1.5m – FHA

"Nigerians to own houses with N1.5m – FHA"






An estate in Abuja
Low and middle income earners who are interested in having their own homes can now do so with N1.5m, the Federal Housing Authority has said.
According to the agency, interested Nigerians can have homes delivered to them based on their financial capabilities.
The Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, FHA, Mr. Terver Gemade, explained that the development was aimed at bridging the 17 million housing units’ gap in Nigeria.
He spoke on the sidelines of the handing over of the affairs of the Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development to Mrs. Akon Eyakenyi in Abuja on Monday.
Gemade said, “We are targeting the middle income earners this time around and we want to ensure that even low income earners can own their homes. We are going to be specific in our target to ensure that the homes are affordable, decent, durable and sustainable.
“Of course, home ownership will be assured by biometrics. We will ensure that we get your biodata and it will be one thumb-print to one house. Since we are encouraging home ownership, it does not matter whether a big man brings his villagers to come and thumb print because at the end, the villagers will own homes.
“We will make the houses as low as N1.5m, N2m, N3m, N4m and upwards. The N1.5m is for the studio house; what you call the self-contained; and I can assure you that I can give you that for N1.5m.”
Gemade said the FHA was looking forward to developing large expanses of land in towns across the country, adding that the pilot scheme had commenced in Abuja.
He said, “This is to ensure home ownership to Nigerians and this will be replicated in major cities across the country. There has been so much pressure on infrastructure in most places in the country.
“Therefore, you need to develop new towns where you can relieve the older towns the pressure on their infrastructure. And the new towns will be sensible, more decent, accommodating and peaceful for the existence of mankind.”
On the payment plan, the FHA boss said the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria was set to give out mortgages to interested persons
He added, “You will recall that the primary mortgage banks recapitalised last December and we have many of such banks now that have enough liquidity to give as mortgage. Also, remember that the Nigeria Mortgage Refinancing Company has been inaugurated and the FMBN is also doing its own by providing an e-card.
“The e-card helps you to know how much you have contributed over the years so as to take advantage of the development.”
Earlier in her address, Eyakenyi stated that she would ensure that the housing deficit in the country was tackled headlong.
“We will deploy all government resources that we have to bridge the housing gap,” she said.
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There are times death of something is preferred to the existence of the same, disunity preferred to unity.

"Northern leaders, elders lament state of region" sun newspaper 3/11/14



In our cyclic world, death gives birth to live as in plants and planets and disunity gives birth to unity as in wars and formation of Nations; evidently, there are times death of something is preferred to the existence of the same, disunity preferred to unity.

Yes, I agree the North is undergoing tremendous political change that would eventually and naturally decimate its hegemonic strangle hold to national unity, progress and development. The wanton destruction of lives and properties by Boko Haram in the North is barbaric and condemnable. However Boko Haram insurgency has little or nothing to do with the demise of the inorganic unity and cultic fraternity among the North’s many ethnic nationalities. Because nothing last-ret forever, because human commitments albeit inorganic commitments pales over time, the diminishing unity among the North’s many ethnicities is but natural and a good omen for national unity, progress and development. Yes, the declining and eventual death of the intra-North unity otherwise the North’s Elites Unity Club would be the beginning of the end of the old order and the beginning of a new hopeful and splendors one. This would mean the end of the relevancy of the North’s elite political Club and its strangle hold on Nigeria, the end of this Club’s strangle hold on human capital in the North. This end would usher in a new order in the North, the Serfs, the Alma Jiri and common people’s order.
It is self-evident that this North’s unity if it did exist was nothing but North’s Political Elites Club whose sole aim and achievement was the segregation and maintenance of a class society in the north in particular and in Nigeria at Large. Before independence the north was more backwards than the other major regions and since after independence and with over 38 years of leadership control and dominance the north is still backwards and more than ever before. Statistically, there are more illiterates, poverty, ignorance, serfs, Alma Jiris, death, hunger, disease, and hopelessness in the North today than ever before. These questions; where is the North’s unity; for what use, purpose, value and end was the North’s unity; are therefore dying for recognitions. If reason, logics is the guide, if the taste of fofo should be in the eating, shouldn’t the so many downtrodden citizens of Nigeria of northerner extraction and Nigerians at large at this time demand the death of North’s unity, if this unity had only delivered, poverty, abjectness, death, ignorance, under=education, corruption, national decay, decadence, and hopelessness to the overwhelming majority in the north and in Nigeria at large?
Truth is that, outside the brief era of the independent fathers, there has never been true unity or true intra-regional unity, neither in the north, nor in the South West nor in the South East. What Nigeria have always had in the regions are congregations of tribal and inter-tribal elite political clubs whose ideology is Class Segregation, and by-any-means-possible the modus operandi. So Nigerians in the north, and South should not only wish for the death of these cultic political elite clubs but must unify and bludgeon them to death wherever they exist because nothing good has come out of any them. It is unarguably true that the death of these self-serving intra-tribal, regional political elite clubs would foster National, unity. Let’s try true national political club with all Nigerians, the haves and the have-nots included. The ideology of ‘God first, Islam second, north third and the rest’ has not worked and would never work if we truly aspires for that perfect Nigerian Union.

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

The Lord so loves the United States that He did not give her President John McCain


The Lord so loves the United States that He did not give her President John McCain

 

Folk do you remember McCain's war mongering during the Republic of Georgia and Russia confrontation in 2005 or thereabout, the Libyans' war on Gaddaffi 2yrs ago, on the uprising in Yemeni, on the Egypt uprising, on the Tunisia revolution, on the pullout from Iraq, on the pending pullout from Afghanistan, on the ongoing insurgency in Syria and now on the Ukraine Russia skirmish? “My friends” imagine how many wars US would be fighting today if this Senator was elected president. This Senator would have with his careless war ‘mongerings’ pushed US into unnecessary and avoidable wars.  

 

The bible says that the people asked Jonah for miracle while miracles abound around them. Thank God Almighty, it was miracle, and His plan that McCain remain in the Senate building and not occupy 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Nigeria and its Igbo conundrum

"Nigeria: A century of lies" vanguard newspaper 2/3/14



Nigeria and its Igbo conundrum

The truth is that Igbos by their very God given nature are radicals and like the Saxon they neither have kings, nor are they beholding to tradition, nor to religious dogmatism, nor to feudal class system. It is historic as well as a contemporary fact that every change, any significant progressive change in human history; just name the change, one would see the radicals behind it. It is not exaggeration to foretell that
Nigeria developmental leap intrinsically connects with its Igbo participation and leadership. It is no surprise that since after the civil war that the Hausa/Fulani and Yoruba have been in charge what Nigeria and Nigerians have witnessed is total decay in every aspect of societal development.

 

They say the taste of fofo is always in the eating. The Nigeria fofo that have been fashioned by the Hausa/Fulani and Yoruba leaderships since the 1960s has been an abysmal failure. The Nigeria ship has been captained by the due of Hausa/Fulani and Yoruba captains and the results are back and we all know the scores because we are all the victims of their poisonous fofo. The Nigeria ship has been dooming since 1970 and the captains of this ship must take responsibility for there mediocrity and incompetence. These failed captains must step aside for the radicals, the Igbos to lead. Nigerians must remember that insanity is defined as prospecting different result for the same course of actions.

While Igbos are radicals beholding to no religion, to no traditions, Hausa/Fulani are Islamic feudals that behold to religion, while the Yorubas though exhibit progressive ethos are too traditional, self-centered and not pragmatic enough to bring wider societal developmental changes. Nigeria for any meaningful radical breakthrough must call on its radicals, the Igbos. These are the gospel truth and we must deal with them in honesty and truth and for posterity otherwise we will continue to run round the Hausa/Fulani - Yoruba designed and led circular path
of religion, hedonism, traditions and stagnation.