Sunday, 19 May 2013

Why Prof. Ango Abdullahi Flunked His Test By Rudolf Ogoo Okonkwo



There are elders and there are elders. Prof. Ango Abdullahi is not an elder. A real elder does not pursue a rat while his house is on fire.
I needed to get that out of the way before those who excuse bad behaviors accuse me of abusing an elder.
In Nigeria, an elder is a washed up politician who is too old to be an ambassador and too young to spend his time making peace with his maker for all the iniquities he created. You see them all over Nigeria, east, west, north and south.
They call themselves elders yet their people keep drinking sand. Our people say that an elder does not stay home and allow a goat to give birth while still tethered.
The political history of Prof. Ango Abdullahi has not been an impressive one. The manner in which he treated students at Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, where he was Vice Chancellor from 1979 -1986 was horrific. Yet, Abdullahi’s voice is an important voice in the north. It has been for a long time. We dismiss it at our peril.
For seven years, as the vice chancellor of the most important university in Northern Nigeria, he helped mold opinions of many who are today running the affairs of Nigeria. He also had advisory role with various governments in Nigeria, particularly in the north. So if there is a mess out there, he was an integral part of it.
I have carefully followed the utterances of Prof. Abdullahi in recent times. When he presents written speeches, he often sounds articulate and thoughtful. But when he speaks to the BBC/VOA Hausa Service, or a newspaper/radio reporter, his faculty appears to have escaped him.
I must acknowledge that Nigeria has confounded the best of us. But in Abdullahi, the puzzlement is pathetic to observe. In a span of one year, he has sounded like a man having a national conference with the voices in his head.
On May 1, 2012, Ango Abdullahi gave a lecture at the International Conference Center in Abuja called: Nigeria 1914 to date – A Chequered Journey So far.” In Prof. Abdullahi’s assessment, the beginning of the Nigerian journey, the amalgamation of the Northern and Southern protectorates “was a great mistake.” Abdullahi wasn’t the first to say that and he would not be the last. He went on to ask Nigerian leaders to take steps to redress the “mistake of 1914.” News reports of that day did not specify what steps the eminent agriculturist recommended. The reports only mentioned that Abdullahi warned that, "delay would be late and dangerous". The only pointer to a solution was his suggestion to his audience to look at similar mistakes by the same British people who amalgamated Nigeria and how the mistakes were resolved with the splitting of India into three countries, India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, UK into United Kingdom and Northern Island and Sudan into Sudan and Southern Sudan.
Two weeks before, Prof. Abdullahi had told the Arewa Elder's Forum that the North was not benefitting from her union with the South and would therefore lose nothing if the forced union – amalgamation- of Nigeria was broken up. Prof. Abdullahi rounded his lecture by saying, “things are more likely to become complex in the future. Until the correct things are done, we cannot ignore these facts or we continue to pretend as our leaders that this is a passing phase. The question of a likely disintegration is not a too distant future.”
If anybody paid attention, Abdullahi had made a similar statement to the BBC Hausa Service on April 18, 2012. In advancing his theory that “No one is afraid of Nigeria’s break-up,” Abdullahi told the BBC, “But the southerners that are propounding dividing the country should know that it is also not something that the north will not want. We can be on our own; we have not seen what the north is eating that the south is not eating. That the north is keeping quiet doesn’t mean we don’t know what we are doing. We want peace and unity but no one can intimidate us, let Nigeria be divided, who is afraid if it is divided? We have nothing to lose, and have been on our own for long. We are on our own and not at the mercy of other people.”
Fast forward to April 14, 2013. At the third annual lecture of the Arewa Media Forum, Prof. Ango Abdullahi gave a lecture on, “Crisis of Leadership as a Source of Conflict in Nigeria: The Way Forward.” After over one year of sustained destruction of Northern Nigeria by the Boko Haram group, Prof. Abdullahi became introspective.
“I get angry when I hear northerners complain about what is happening in the country,” he said. “We created the problems. All the groups: ACF, Middle Belt Forum, Northern Union and recently, the younger ones have formed their various groups to speak for them. They said we have failed them. The last time I counted, we have about 16 groups speaking about the challenges facing the north. How do we grow? If we come together under one umbrella, the north will shock the world come 2015.”
“They said we have failed them!” Have you, Prof. Ango Abdullahi? Have you and your generation served the youths well? Did you prepare them for the 21st century?
We have to almost feel sorry for this man. In moments like this he must be wondering if he was losing his mind or losing his world. Not an easy place to be.
And then, Alhaji Asari Dokubo struck. And Abdullahi lost it completely.
In an interview with Sunday Vanguard, as acidic as Dokubo’s press statement was on the end of Nigeria without Jonathan as President, Abdullahi’s reaction betrayed what remained of his intellect. He complained about the performance of President Jonathan, grumbled about the idea that Jonathan ran for president in 2011 and then, he fell on the sword that Dokubo left for him.
“My reaction is that but for the fact that I am aware that Dokubo is a spokesperson for the corridors of powers, I would have ignored him,” Abdullahi said. “But my reaction now is directed to their leaders, elders, including the president, that if it is their feeling that this is the way things should go, I am saying, on behalf of the Northern Elders Forum, NEF, that they should start the crisis now because I’m putting them on notice that Jonathan will not be president in 2015. So they can start now and we in the North are waiting.”
No, professor. You don’t say something like that when tractors are still digging mass graves for scores of people who died in your backyard. You don’t put people who cannot read and write on notice. This renowned agronomist should know that you cannot plant cocoyam and reap cassava.
One can understand the limitations of people like Ibrahim Babangida, Sani Abacha and their likes. But the failure of intellectuals like Ango Abdullahi is unforgivable. Their inability to soar above the cloud enveloping their environs is the bane of African intellectuals. It is the same across Nigeria.
The government of Nigeria has failed all Nigerians- East, North, South and West. If there is any semblance of decent life in any corner of Nigeria, it is life created by Nigerians in spite of their government.
Abdullahi is just being disingenuous when he said that “the north is not afraid of a split.” He knows very well that the North is the only part of the country that can choose to leave the union today and nobody will raise an army to stop them. I must add that a move like that may be more palatable to Boko Haram sect than amnesty. In fact, I make bold to say that the north going its way will end the Boko Haram insurgence overnight.
But the north leaving the union is not what most Nigerians want, not even Ango Abdullahi. The despicable things others did to the North are many. But the despicable things that the North did to itself are more.
In ideological terms, this is how Ango Abdullahi flunked his test. Though it is universally known that 'with privilege comes responsibility,' Abdullahi embraced privilege without responsibility. Given the chance to choose between responsibility and privilege, Abdullahi chose privilege. In practical terms, given the chance to choose between state police and state of emergency, Abdullahi chose state of emergency.
It must be true: old professors do not die- they just lose their faculty. Listening to Ango Abdullahi bark and flap his wings make me miss my good friend, Wada Nas.
Saharareporters

Most Of The 150 Private Jets In Nigeria Are Owned By Fraudulent Fuel Importers – Falana



Falana-Femi
Human rights lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana, has said oil subsidy fund thieves own most of the 150 private jets in Nigeria.
He also said the ill-advice Nigeria had taken from the International Monetary Fund has encouraged corruption.
“I hope the Jonathan regime will have the courage to ask the IMF to name one country that has succeeded after implementing its anti-people’s prescriptions. There is no success story anywhere in the world,” Falana stated.
In his reaction to IMF’s recent call for the removal of fuel subsidy, Falana told Punch that the organisation had ill-advised the Nigerian government not to build refineries.
The IMF had urged the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan to remove subsidy completely to ensure fiscal adjustment.
Senior Resident Representative/Mission Chief of IMF in the country, Mr. Williams Rogers, recently insisted that the removal became necessary for planned savings in recurrent spending. He stated that Nigeria required public sector reforms.
Rogers also recommended that the Federal Government should mobilise non-oil revenues and strengthen oil-price rule and oil savings mechanism, while pushing for the maintenance of a tight monetary policy.
Falana, however, said, “Let the IMF be honest to tell Nigerians the cost of producing a litre of oil. You will be shocked. The IMF advised the government not to build new refineries, as part of the package of fraud to destroy the economy, even when it knew that the country needed to generate huge revenue from the sale of petrol refined locally.
“As the government needed to import fuel to augment local consumption, it enriched its cronies who engaged in fraudulent importation of fuel through fake mother and daughter vessels. Most of the 150 private jets in the country today are owned by fraudulent fuel importers.
“Last year, the IMF and its local lackeys claimed that the economy would collapse if petrol was not sold at N141 per litre. But with massive strikes and protests, the price was reduced to N97. Did the economy collapse? These are voodoo economists.”
Falana said IMF should have probed the foreign accounts where stolen funds are kept, including about $7bn made by oil thieves from the illegal business of selling stolen crude oil on the high seas.
He further alleged that the Federal Government had refused to reconstitute the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency “in order to sustain the fraud.”
The Senior Advocate of Nigeria accused successive presidents from the ruling Peoples Democratic Party of being responsible for the irregularities in the petroleum sector. He queried the basis for the establishment of Subsidy Re-investment and Empowerment Programme.
He said while the highest lending interest rate in the West was between three and five per cent, the IMF had allegedly insisted that it should be over 20 per cent in Africa. He added that the IMF and the World Bank allegedly conspired to impose the Structural Adjustment Programme on the economies of African countries in the 1980s. [Punch]

Patience Jonathan denies meeting with APGA chairman in her bedroom



By 
Nigerian First Lady Dame Patience Jonathan has disassociated her self from ongoing crisis currently rocking the All Progressives Grand Alliance, APGA, saying that she never had any meeting with its chairman, Victor Umeh in her bedroom.
Dame Patience also debunked the rumour that she was supporting the factional chairman of the party, Umeh, saying that any report connecting her to the crisis is far from the truth.
The First Lady who reacted to the reports through her spokesman, Ayo Osinlu denied meeting with Umeh, and disassociating herself from the party’s ongoing crisis.
“We wish to state categorically that nothing is farther from the truth, as the first lady did not at any time meet with Chief Umeh on any account, least of all the crisis in APGA.
“She therefore takes strong exception to her being dragged into the mud-slinging between the war-lords of APGA.” Osinlu affirmed.
Continuing, he said that, the first lady “remains a strong advocate of the rule of law which serves as a guarantee to everyone, either weak or strong, and legitimately expect to benefit from justice and equity.”
“I would not be found in any activity or in the company of anyone seeking to pervert the course of justice, he added.
Victor Umeh had reportedly told some close associates on May 12 that he met with the first lady in her bedroom in the company of businessman, Ifeanyi Ubah, and Dan Ulasi.
Umeh was said to have spoken of how the First Lady reportedly informed them that the Acting President of the Appeal Court, Justice Zainab A. Bulkachuwa, is dependent on her and had agreed to help out as a condition for her being confirmed as the Substantive President of the Court.
DailyPost

Nigeria Must Remain United Despite Security, Political Challenges — Rev. Jesse Jackson



Jesse-Jackson1805
  • 2
     
    Share
May 19, 2013
American Civil Right Activist and former Presidential aspirant, the Rev. Jesse Jackson has said that Nigeria must remain united, despite the political and security challenges facing the nation at present.
He dismissed the doomsday predictions that the security challenges and agitations by politicians ahead of the 2015 Presidential Election would disintegrate the country, declaring that Nigeria must remain a One and United Nation.
Jackson, who was in Yenagoa as a Guest Speaker at the 2013 Isaac Boro Day celebration, said that the issues of terrorism was a global phenomenon and the people involved were killing innocent people to attract attention.
“But it should be known that when one has democracy, issues can be resolved through non-violent means. You can create a new leadership and take over leadership with the right message of change. You have the right to peaceful protest and the free press. So, you don’t need to kill somebody before you can be heard. You can be heard by simply sitting down and talking.”
He said, “There is problem in democracy when people can’t talk and be heard to change things. These people tend to speak in a voice that would be heard. When people fail to be heard and participate, it becomes a valueless democracy.”
Jesse Jackson noted that the reported deployment of drones and troops to troubled areas of the country was a decision that could be made by the President based on facts and intelligence available, but pointed out that the American example on the deployment of drones had not been palatable, “the country must spend more time on conflict resolution. You cannot put out the pains of the suppressed people in that way. You must resolved conflict with justice.”
According to him, “Nigeria must be determined to achieve a united Nigeria to achieve joy. That is a Nigeria decision. States have their place and traps have their traditions. But the ultimate protection should be one Nigeria. One Nigeria must be achieved for the country to achieve power. Nigeria must not disintegrate and must remain strong, with or without doomsday predictions on the acts of violence and terrorism, the issues must be resolve through negotiation and not separation. In America we had the South threatening to secede, but the President fought to keep the union.”
On the proposed Amnesty deal being dangled before the Boko Haram sect by President Goodluck Jonathan, Jackson commended the decision and insisted that the Amnesty must be made to work with the full conditions spelt out and fulfilled by both parties, adding, “I think the Amnesty must work and the conditions fully honored. Amnesty must involve the economic restitution, the jobs and the training.”
He also pleaded with President Goodluck Jonathan not to hesitate to return to the dialogue table with the Boko Haram sect if the State of Emergency declared in the three states of the North has achieved maximum target, wishing that, “I hope the country will soon get back away from the battle field and get to the negotiation table. In the end, it will be the bargaining table. It is not the battle field that wins victory. You cannot battle forever. You can bargain and resolve the conflict in the North. Bargaining does not mean weakness, fear but it means maturity and good thinking.”
News+Rescue

The Most Million-Dollar Homes Can Be Found In These States, According To Point2 (PHOTOS)



It seems that million-dollar homes are a dime a dozen these days. OK, maybe we're exaggerating, but with a growing number of people joining the millionaires clubbased on a Credit Suisse report, we wouldn't be surprised to see more prime real estate popping up. Which had us wondering, which states boast the largest number of million-dollar homes?
According to data provided by the Point2 Real Estate Group, they're exactly where you'd expect them to be. Click through to see the top ten states with the highest concentration of pricy homes.
Top 10 US States With Million Dollar Homes
1 of 11
Shutterstock
  • Next
 share
 tweet
10. Maryland
Total number of homes worth at least one million dollars: 59,517

Note: Point2 Homes took into consideration all the residential properties worth at least $1M. They adjusted the numbers by excluding vacant and/or seasonal houses.

Stats: Point2 Homes
ADVERTISEMENT
×


Achebe Should Have Never Written “There Was A Country” — Soyinka



wole-soyinka
  • 4
     
    Share
May, 19, 2013
Soyinka says Achebe’s last book was a mistake.
Nobel laureate, Wole Soyinka, has given a rare portrayal of his late friend and respected novelist, Chinua Achebe, disputing an often referencing of Mr. Achebe as the father of African literature.
He also picked holes in Mr. Achebe’s last work, There Was a Country, which turned out the author’s most controversial.
In an extensive interview with news website, Saharareporters, Mr. Soyinka said while Mr. Acehbe’s place in history as a celebrated storyteller was “definitely assured”, referring to him as the father of African literature was either “literary ignorance” or “momentary exuberance to which we are all sometimes prone”.
“Those who seriously believe or promote this must be asked: have you the sheerest acquaintance with the literatures of other African nations, in both indigenous and adopted colonial languages?” he asked.
“What must the francophone, lusophone, Zulu, Xhosa, Ewe etc. etc. literary scholars and consumers think of those who persist in such a historic absurdity? It’s as ridiculous as calling WS father of contemporary African drama! Or Mazisi Kunene father of African epic poetry. Or Kofi Awoonor father of African poetry. Education is lacking in most of those who pontificate.”
Chinua Achebe
Chinua Achebe
Mr. Achebe’s funeral is scheduled for next week at his hometown in Anambra state amid controversies between his family, and associates over the involvement of the Nigerian government in the preparations for the event.
Mr. Soyinka said he had no opportunity to discuss Mr. Achebe’s last work, There Was a Country, with the author before he passed; but said he wished the book, which sparked controversy, was never written.
“Unfortunately, that chance of a last encounter was missed so I don’t really wish to comment on the work at this point,” Mr. Soyinka said of a planned meeting with the late novelist after the book’s release. “It is however a book I wish he had never written – that is, not in the way it was. There are statements in that work that I wish he had never made.”
Since its release, the book has drawn a series of critical reviews; and fueled an intense, mainly internet-centered row between the Igbo and the Yoruba over Mr. Achebe’s characterization of the Yoruba leader, Obafemi Awolowo, as amongst those who helped inflict mass deaths and suffering on the Igbos during Nigeria’s bloody civil war.
Mr. Soyinka admitted the Igbos were victims of genocide prior to the war; but said both sides committed atrocities during the war, in remarks that seemed amongst his most frank public impression of a former friend and colleague, and the war controversy.
He however said the Igbos must remember that they were not militarily prepared for the war, a point, he said, he raised with late Biafran leader, Odumegwu Ojukwu.
“The reading of most Igbo over what happened before the Civil War was indeed accurate – yes, there was only one word for it – genocide,” he said.
“Once the war began however, atrocities were committed by both sides, and the records are clear on that. The Igbo got the worst of it, however. That fact is indisputable. The Asaba massacre is well documented, name by victim name, and General Gowon visited personally to apologize to the leaders.
He denied there was a real conflict between himself and Mr. Achebe, J.P. Clark and Christopher Okigbo, fueled by the desire to dominate the rest in the writing art.

News+Rescue

Savannah Nash, 16, Dies During Her First Solo Drive; Believed To Be Texting (VIDEO)



Like most 16-year-old girls, Savannah Nash couldn't wait to get behind the wheel once she got her driver's license.
Her first solo drive turned out to be her last.
Nash, who turned 16 last week, got permission Thursday afternoon to drive to the grocery store in Harrisonville, Mo., to pick up items for the family dinner.
Her vehicle slammed into a tractor-trailer on the way, and she died at the scene, according to WAFB-TV.
Investigators said the crash occurred when Nash turned left into the path of the truck, which was unable to brake in time, KMBC-TV reported.
A family member of Nash's died at that same location years earlier, her uncle told the station.
Investigators said they found an unsent text message on Nash’s cell phone, and believe texting and driving was a factor in the the crash, the Democrat-Missourian newspaper reported.
There was a text message that was on her phone, however it was not sent yet,” Sgt. Bill Lowe of the Missouri State Highway Patrol told Fox4KC.com. “That is a probable contributing circumstance to the crash. That’s all part of the investigation.”
A vigil for Nash was held Friday at Harrisonville High School, where she was a freshman, a repeat honor roll student and Future Farmers of America competitor, KansasCity.com reported.
HuffingtonPost