Monday, 13 January 2014

Nigerians need self-examination, not national dialogue

Nigerians need  self-examination, not national dialogue

Professor Chioma Kanu Agomo,  Former Dean of Faculty of Law, UNILAG
By Olakunle Olafioye
Of late many have expressed the view that women in Nigeria have benefitted more in the area of leadership in the current dispensation. But this is an opinion that has failed to excite Professor Chioma Agomo, a professor of Law and first elected female Dean of Faculty of Law, University of Lagos. To her, it is not enough to appoint more women into leadership positions. Such appointments, according to her, must be done on merit. And one way this could be achieved, in her opinion, is to create a level playground for everybody and allow the best candidate to emerge. Agomo, who describes what currently plays out as tokenism, speaks more on problems confronting the Nigerian woman and a host of other issues.
Going through your profile you describe yourself as someone who hates injustice and hypocrisy with passion. Unfortunately, these are two of the vices Nigerians have come to live with. How did we come about this twin-evil?
It is unfortunate that we are grappling with them. We can say it is part of the evolving society. I always say and I still maintain it that I was brought up in the village; I was born and brought up in the village. When I was growing up, injustice and hypocrisy were the exception rather than the norm but now they are the norms rather than the exception.  And why was it like that? It’s because of values, values of honesty, integrity, hard work, being your neighbours’ keeper and people were conscious of whom they were, the name they carried, the family they came from and the impact of their conducts on not just  on themselves, but also on their families. But nowadays all those things have been eroded. It is a question of money; it doesn’t matter how it is come about. People have always blamed the military for breaking down the wall and making people lose sight of what is important. The effect of that is that people’s rights are trampled upon. Honest people are now called fools. It is no longer a question of the end justifying the means but it is a question of the means justifying the end. What is important is that you’ve made it. It’s because, the society now gives you all the accolades, chieftaincy, you name it. So wherever I find it yes I hate it with passion and I consider it my duty to speak out wherever and whenever I’m opportune to do so. I hate hypocrisy; people pretending, you mean one thing you say another thing. I always tell people that when somebody is talking, look at the person’s eyes, mouth, face. This will tell you much more than what the person is saying because often people tell you what you want to hear. And of course unfortunately that is the bane of governance this day. People are sycophants; they are praise singers, they tell you what you want to hear.  Friends tell each other what they should hear, it may not necessarily be palatable but they know that, that is the right thing and if you heed it, it will make you better. That is why I also pray to God to surround me with people who can look at me in the face and tell me the truth. People will see what is bad and they will say it is good, then they will go behind behave like pig but before you they are a different person. So I hate it with passion because it tends to send wrong signals, especially when it is coming from those who are supposed to lead by example. What do you want to happen to those who are coming behind you?
We continue to blame the military for Nigeria’s woes even though the military left the scene almost 15 years ago. Does it mean these ills cannot be corrected?
Part of the problem of our society, the way I see it, is that people will always blame somebody. Do you know why? It’s because we don’t want to take responsibility for actions. People don’t want to change, people are too lazy. I read a book by Richard Wurmbrand. He’s a pastor who was imprisoned in Communist Russia and he talked of him being alone in solitary confinement below the ground.  So since he had no pulpit; no church to preach to, he started preaching to himself, talking as if he was giving sermon. He made a point that struck me. He said as a pastor, for example, he was used to visiting members of his congregation. He just realised that one person he never visited was himself and that struck a chord with me. It is easy for us to always visit other people; it is the fault of the military; our fathers have failed us, our mothers have failed us, this generation has failed us and we point at everybody but you. Have you taken time to visit yourself? Have I taken time to visit myself? It is not palatable. But if we are honest then ask yourself, “am I better than the military?”  When the chips are down what do I stand for?  I tell people that that is what you need to ask yourself.  They believe every Nigerian has a price. What do you really stand for? Is there a place that you reach that you say you can’t go any further? If you don’t ask yourself and you continue to blame somebody else, the society will get worse because we refuse to remove the log from our eyes but we are looking at the speck in other people’s eyes. I keep telling people that you and I are government; you don’t need a crowd to make a change. You as an individual where you are, I where I am should decide to be different. Decide to do the right thing; decide to play by the rule. My policy is, others may, I cannot. Another way I put it is, dare to be a Daniel. Dare to stand out; dare to stand alone and stand for what is right. You may be pilloried, you may be maligned, you may be lied against; people will turn the truth on its head but stand on the truth.  I tell people “you will not be there when people will be telling your story”. When you are there they will tell you what you want to hear but as soon as you are out of that place of influence it’s a different story. So we are all writing our stories. The answer is that because we always blame somebody and we continue to say it’s the military. Let’s even go back to 1999, somebody commented recently that the government we have now is even worse than the military.  Well I won’t trade issues or whatever, all I keep saying is that we are the same human beings, whether you are in khaki or  you are in agbada.  And I will say it wasn’t every military man that was corrupt; I wouldn’t like to believe that. Just like it is not everybody in the government now that is corrupt, just like the Bible talks of the days of Ahab, a very wicked king, there was an Obadiah who was able to ask Elijah, “Did they not tell you, my Lord how I hid 100 prophets and I give them bread and water when  Jezebel was after them too”. I believe we still have them in government; we may not hear about them. Wherever they are, they should ride on.  I love my country with a passion. I think Nigeria is a great country and I think Nigeria is the most endowed nation on earth, material resources, human resources, mineral resources, in any way you can think about, Nigeria is endowed. But we squander it and we will continue to squander it and God will be looking at us, shaking His head. But I don’t think all hope is lost.
What would you say is the way out?
It is not all about the military; it’s our refusal to sit down. You don’t need to sit down having a national dialogue. No! It’s you having a dialogue, self-examination; ask yourself, “What do I stand for?  Where do I stand?  People like to sit on the fence. Personal dialogue first and foremost, then look around you, your immediate environment, your family; charity begins from home. Start with yourself, myself, that is what is important.”
Still talking about injustice, it is always said that women are the major victims of injustice. And I still remember vividly that you were one of the leading voices in the case of one Aminat Lawal and Safiat in 2003 or 2004. Between that period and now, has there been improvement?
My honest opinion is that there is no improvement. Some years ago, I gave a lecture to medical students and they asked me to talk on sexual harassment, for example.  During question time people couldn’t come out to ask questions; they wrote it down for anonymity and the fact is that, those taboos you read in the newspapers are still happening to women, they are happening to girls. Sexual harassment, rape, domestic violence are all over the place. You will be amazed but because of the culture of silence, people don’t speak out. What you hear is just fractions of what happened. You know this issue of you can’t come and be washing your dirty linen in public and again hypocrisy; people will know the truth but they won’t speak the truth. This is what I call poverty mentality. I won’t say that there is much difference, it’s is still there because the society we are talking about has still not changed. We use culture to condone what should not be condoned we use culture to support injustice, we use culture to support maltreatment and subjugation of women. It is abnormal to treat a woman as less than human.  You are better off when you see her as your partner. You see your daughter as an asset, not an asset in terms of what fetches money in Igbo land. See her as somebody who can add value to your family. See her as somebody who has potential and should be given equal opportunities.
What is your take on the view that there are more women in government than we used to have in the past?
Is it still not tokenism? Is it on merit? When you give a woman an appointment, you go out to shout that you have appointed more women. What is the big deal? Have you given them equal opportunity to compete? Did you judge them objectively to ensure that the best person wins? My personal opinion, others may differ, is that not much has changed. It is just that sometimes people get tired of talking.
Nigeria remains a male-dominated society despite the impressive performances by women in leadership positions.  What would you identify as factors militating against women’s quest for leadership positions in this country?
That is a million dollar question. And that comes from the issue of culture. The man has always been the super-ordinate and then the woman, subordinate. Culturally, the man has always been in front. Initially women were not educated, not many. When you are in control of something, it will take God’s grace for you to let it go. That is why I said if competition is on equal terms, if they provide a level playground and the best person wins, things will begin to change. But there is no level playground. If you take politics for example, what we have seen here is politics of money, politics of influence; not many women can play that kind of game. Even in corporate governance, it is still the same networking type of thing. They can do millions of naira worth of business playing golf in a club where a woman won’t be.
The issue of child bearing also weighs against the woman. The woman is the one God has given the privilege to bear children and this weighs against her when it comes to taking her rightful position in the market place, in the boardroom, in politics etc. In work-place, for example, it will be used against her. People are reluctant to employ a young woman who is not married because when she gets married she will start having children and that will disrupt her work in the office. So, there are a lot of things that weigh against women. Women themselves are sometimes their own worst enemies.  “What does she have that I don’t have?” So you can say that the woman still has a lot of things stacked against her.
The judiciary, in recent times, has been accused of corruption. As a stakeholder in the academic sector, don’t you think there is a need to re-orientate our up-and-coming lawyers right from school?
The amazing thing is that, for example, as a law student, if you involve yourself in exam misconduct and you are caught, you will be barred for life from going to Law School. The legal profession is a profession that is built on integrity. It still goes back to what I said earlier about the individual. The judiciary is not worse than any other arm of the government. And I think the opinion is that it is changing. And now that the judiciary can speak out themselves; it is one thing denying what is obvious to everybody and then the people at the apex speaking out that shows that there is a change. If the person at the top say, “I recognise this as a problem and if you are caught you will face the music…” That is recognition and it is part of what I call re-orientation. Corruption is a hydra-headed monster. But remember, it takes a giver to have a taker. It is a two-way process. Whether it is in the judiciary or in the other arms of government, there are different forms of corruption, but it takes two to tango. Nobody can be corrupt if you don’t see somebody playing the other half. It is a question of wherever you are, recognise that there is a problem and be ready to find a solution.
You studied abroad and as a member of NUC accreditation panel, what is you assessment of the standard of education in Nigeria?
I was part of the team that accredited law programme in Ghana. My experience during the period showed that the standard in Nigeria is not as bad as we make it appear. It can be a lot better. There are a lot of things that are wrong with the system. But it is not the worst system. And, of course, you can’t compare it with the system in more developed countries like University of London, where I studied.
TheSun

The Rise of Pastors’ Wives

110114F.Pastors-Wives.jpg - 110114F.Pastors-Wives.jpg

Pastors’ Wives

One of the great trends of the current century is undoubtedly the rise of the alpha female - that highly educated and motivated new breed of women. As wives to prominent pastors, no more are they rarely seen and never heard. Today, they have become more visible, more assertive and fashionable too. The dawn of the 90s, no doubt, triggered a new awakening for these women in the Lord’s vineyard. Some of the ‘mummies on the pulpit’ are young and fashionable. They also adorn beautiful jewelleries and top designers’ wears, and have evolved into role models to young worshippers who also want to attain similar heights on the ladder of high street fashion, writes LANRE ALFRED
Their fashion culture changed, so did their attitude to various other issues. Not that they have grown less subservient but they have become self aware of their status and in love with doing things their own way. And today, these pastors’ wives have become as prominent and conspicuous as their husbands, even elegant dressed than their spouses to the delight and amazement of their teeming congregation. Such pastors’ wives include Ifeanyi Adefarasin, Ibidun Ighodalo, Nike Adeyemi, Faith Amaga, and Tope Adeboye to mention a few. Time was, when every meeting of preachers brought words of another minister’s wife who was on the brink of mental and emotional collapse. The stress and strains of being a preacher’s wife, it was believed, were enough to stagger an Amazon.
Being a woman in the church, whether you are partnering with your husband in his calling or serving in your own leadership role, was and is still very challenging. While serving as mentors, counselors, advisors, and even cheerleaders, the preacher’s wife bears numerous responsibilities.
Everyone has an image in their mind of what they think a pastor’s wife should be. The trouble with this picture is that it has never been and never will it be accurate
Ministers wives and female ministry leaders face the same real-life struggles as their church members, but have the added stress of sharing in everyone’s burdens as well. They are held to impossible standards by those they serve.
However, through 2,000 years of Christian history, the role of the minister’s mate has changed, particularly in Nigeria where it continues to change rapidly. Variations of the preacher’s wife-role have often moved from caring companion to hearth keeper, to resident sacrificer, to spiritual sustainer, to ministry partner, to energetic helpmate, to institutional church leader and more recently, to deputy pastor. But whatever direction the minister’s wife’s role tilts at any moment of human history, it always involves a position of trusted support for the work of the ministry. And it is always an invaluable asset in the service of the kingdom.
One of the first places to begin the discussion on what the role of the pastor’s wife should be would be to look at her role from a scriptural standpoint. The New Testament does not describe a specific role for the pastor’s wife. Paul lists the qualifications for those desiring to be elders or deacons in I Timothy 3: 2-10.
The contemporary preacher’s wife in Nigeria, no doubt, epitomizes the best of the attributes listed by Saint Paul. Besides offering dependable support systems to their preacher-husbands, pastors’ wives in Nigeria are equally doing wonderfully well in the Lords vineyard. While some of them share the responsibility of evangelism and preach publicly with their men, others prefer to silently steer and co-ordinate affairs from the background, even though most of them are equally practicing pastors.
However, a common indicator binds these beautiful women in a wonderful sisterhood and admirable womanhood: They are pretty modish and attractive. Some of them are as hardworking as and even more popular than their husbands. They are very educated and are professionals in their own right. They spare no expense to look their best and when they step out, they are like models on the runway strutting the best and the most expensive from the world’s best designers, from shoes, jewelries, perfumes to exotic cars. They are very humble and lovable too. Most notable among these women include…
FAITH OYEDEPO
Faith Oyedepo is the wife of Rev. David Oyedepo, the founder of the Living Faith Church worldwide AKA, Winners Chapel. Faith Oyedopo has a unique style that has not changed for many years. She juggles between skirt suit and traditional wears. Though, she is a bit conservative in dressing, she spares no expense on her love for jewelries. She drives all the flamboyant cars her husband drives and she has no apology for living a good life. She and her husband are blessed with four children-David Jr. Isaac, Love and Joy.
ESTHER FOLASHADE KUMUYI
She is the wife of the General Superintendent of Deeper Christian Life Ministry, Pastor William Kumuyi. She was the administrator of the church in London before she became the first lady of the church. She is known to be a conservative to the core in fashion and general disposition. Her trademark however is her expensive hats. She is not a jewelry freak and she has been known to be a strong pillar, a visionary and a wonderful planner who complements the efforts of her husband.
MARGARET IDAHOSA
She is the widow of the popular late man of God, Most Rev. Benson Idahosa of the Church of God Mission. She is the presiding bishop of the church. She is one of the very few powerful and stylish female pastors Nigeria has produced.

BUKOLA OLADIYUN
She is the beautiful wife of the senior pastor/founder of fast growing, Christ Living Spring Apostolic Church (CLAM), Pastor Wole Oladiyun. Unknown to many, Bukola is the proprietress of J-Nissi Children School, Ogba and also the Director of Family Life and pastorates in the church. Bukola prefers cool colours for her apparels. Her eye pair of glasses is her trade mark. She is blessed with four children, Ayomide, Oluwadamipe, Imisioluwa and Inioluwa.
ROSELYN GABRIEL ODUYEMI
She is the widow of the late Rev. Oduyemi, the founder of Bethel Worship Centre for All Nations, a.k.a Wonder City. Since the death of her husband years back, the Cameroonian widow has been able to stand firmly and project the church. She is known to be a vast, articulate and an excellent preacher. She inherited her late husband’s estate and never shies away from enjoying the goodies he left behind. She has a fantastic dress sense from her clothes to her accessories.
ANITA OYAKHILOME
Anita Oyakhilome is the wife of Christ Embassy’s Chris Oyakhilome who is popularly known as Pastor Chris. Anita is the Director of the Christ Embassy’s International Office; she also heads the branch in the United Kingdom. Her husband is a popular televangelist who is known for his “Atmosphere for miracle” TV broadcast aired nationwide. Light skinned and very pretty, she has a fondness for luxury suits and matching accessories. Just like the husband, Anita is flashy. A mother of two, Anita spends more time in the United Kingdom where she is the Director of the Christ Embassy’s International Office than she does in Nigeria.
HELEN ORITSEJAFOR
Helen Oritsejafor is the affable wife of the President of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor. Light skinned and pretty, her love for wide brimmed hats is unparalleled and she has them in numerous eye-catching colours to match her outfits. Mama Helen, as she is fondly called, oversees the Eagle Heights Group of Schools, Eagle Heights Clinic, and an orphanage owned by the Word of the Bible Church, founded by her husband, Pastor Ayo.
IBIDUN IGHODALO
Ibidun is the beautiful and gorgeous wife of Pastor Ituah Ighodalo - a chartered accountant and former pastor of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) Christ’s Church Parish, Gbagada. She runs an event planning outfit, Elizabeth R. Her company plans the events of Nigeria’s high society. She is an elegant woman whose beauty is adored by many. The stunning beauty won the first maiden edition of the then Miss Lux contest.
NIKE ADEYEMI
Nike Adeyemi is the first lady of Day Star Christian Centre, Oregun, Lagos. The church that is headed by the couple has drawn thousands of Nigerian youths. The mother of three graduated from Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife where she studied Architecture. Pastor Nike, as she is fondly called by people, is a woman who is very visible in the ministry which is co-headed by her and the husband, Sam Adeyemi.
JUMOKE ADEYEMI
Pastor Jumoke Adeyemi is the first lady of Global Harvest Churches International and wife of popular Ibadan based Pastor Victor Adeyemi, who is also a brother to popular Sam Adeyemi, pastor of Day Star Christian Centre. Mama, as she is fondly called, is noted for her unique style of delivery on the pulpit. She preaches with great passion and illustration in an exclusive way. Pastor Jumoke holds a masters degree in Personnel Psychology from University of Ibadan. She is a mother of four kids, Charlotte, Jemimah, Sharon and Arnold.
SADE OLUKOYA
Sade Olukoya is the beautiful wife of Pastor Daniel Olukoya, the General Overseer of Mountain of Fire and Miracle Ministries. She is blessed with a beautiful and unique voice that thrills the church audience and she also authors so many books. She is blessed with a son. Like Pastor Kumuyi’s wife, she is also conservative when it comes to her dress sense. She does not wear earrings neither does she wear any form of jewelries. What she cannot do without is her hat. Most times, she can’t complete her attire without a matching hat.
EVELYN JOSHUA
Evelyn is the adorable wife of the General Overseer of the Synagogue Church of all Nations, the popular pastor, T.B Joshua. She is beautiful no doubt but her modest nature enables her to shun the frill and thrill of luxury and affluence. There is no gain saying that the husband is one of the richest in the evangelism world but that does not translate her into being ostentatious.
IFEYINWA ADEFARASIN
Ifeyinwa is the pretty wife of Pastor Paul Adefarasin, the General Overseer of the House on the Rock. A former beauty queen during her undergraduate years at the University of Lagos, motherhood has not taken the shine off her.
NKECHI ANAYO-ILOPUTAIFE
Victory Christian Church’s Nkechi Anayo-Iloputaife was thrust into the limelight after the gruesome murder of her husband, Bishop Hayford Anayo Iloputaife in 1995. Apart from mesmerizing her congregation with her biblical teachings, she also makes an impression on them via her assorted collection of high-end designer suits.
NKOYO RAPU
Nkoyo Rapu displays an enviable stature and style akin to that of her husband, Pastor Tony Rapu. Her style regimen earns her a place on the list of best dressed public figures.
ROSEMARY ODUKOYA
Former Miss Rosemary Simangele, a South African was thrust into the limelight a few years ago when she wedded Pastor Taiwo Odukoya of Fountain of Life Ministries and husband of the late Pastor Bimbo Odukoya. Previously based in the United Kingdom, the South African is well versed in the knowledge of fashion.
BLESSING AGBOLI
She is a co-pastor and wife of the founder of the Victorious Army Ministry as well as a lover of all things bright and beautiful. Expensively dressed at all times, top on her list of fashion accessories should be her jewellery which she has in abundance.
YEMISI ASHIMOLOWO
Yemisi Ashimolowo is the First Lady of KICC, acclaimed to be the largest and fastest growing church in Western Europe. Through regular meetings and special events, Pastor Yemisi actively reaches out to the individual woman of God through the following ministries: the ‘Successful Wives’ (married women), the ‘Ladies-in-Waiting’ (single women), the ‘Mothers-in-Waiting’ (wives believing God for the fruit of the womb), the ‘Positive Parents’ (single mothers) and the ‘Senior Sisters’ (mature women of God – aged 50 and above). Pastor Yemisi is married to KICC Senior Pastor Matthew Ashimolowo and she is the proud mother of two sons Tobi and Tomi.
BISHOP PEACE OKONKWO
Bishop Peace Okonkwo is the Resident Pastor of the Headquarters Church of The Redeemed Evangelical Mission (TREM), and Proprietress of the Word of Power Group of Schools. She is married to Dr. Mike Okonkwo MFR, the Presiding Bishop of TREM and they are blessed with a daughter, Uche.
ThisDay

Sokoto APC crisis: Two sets of executives emerge


All Progressives Congress
A governor and his predecessor lead separate factions of the party
by Abdoulaye Kay
Barely 24 hours after the Governor Aliyu Wamakko-led All Progressives Congress, APC, issued a statement naming members of the party’s Sokoto State Interim Executive Committee, another set of interim executives has been named by a rival faction in the state.
A second APC faction led by ex-Governor Attahiru Bafarawa met and presented, Monday, its own interim executive committee.
A statement signed by the Secretary of the Bafarawa-led Committee, Lawal Faru, said members of the committee were drawn from the political parties that merged to form the APC, including the ANPP, CPC and the ACN.
“After due consultations with stakeholders of all our merging parties that include All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), and Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in Sokoto state, His Excellency, Alhaji Attahiru Dalhatu Bafarawa, APC leader has approved the constitution of the Sokoto state Interim Executive Committee of our great party as per the harmonization of our legacy parties are concern,” the statement read.
The Interim Executive Committee members approved by the Bafarawa faction include Abubakar Sanyinna (ANPP) as chairman; Lawal Faru, Secretary (CPC); Nasiru Kalanbaina (ACN), Treasurer; Yusuf Dingyadi (ANPP), Publicity Secretary; and Nasiru Asara (CPC), Organizing Secretary.
However, the National Interim Executive Committee, in a letter No. APC/NHDQ/GEN/24/013/82 dated January 7, 2014 and signed by Tijjani Tumsah, its Interim National Secretary, had approved Governor Aliyu Wamakko’s request to nominate members of the State Interim Committee to be headed by former Minister of Youth, Inuwa Abdulkadir.
“I write to acknowledge receipt of your Excellency’s nominees for Sokoto State Interim Executive Committee (IEC) with Barr. Inuwa Abdulkadir Esq as Chairman.
“I encourage your Excellency to consult and also select members to fill in the remaining Offices of Secretary, Treasurer, Organising Secretary, Publicity Secretary; taking into consideration the other merging parties,” the APC National Secretary said in the letter.
PREMIUM TIMES learnt that based on the approval letter from the national secretariat of the APC, Mr. Wamakko named Musa Maitafsir (PDP), Tukur Alkali (PDP), Bello Goronyo (PDP), Ahmed Aliyu (PDP), Usman Danmadami (ANPP), Abbas Gandi (CPC), Sidi Aliyu (ACN) and Harande Mahe (DPP) as other executive members.
The APC factionalisation in Sokoto is reminiscent of what is happening in other states, particularly states where former governors elected on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, decamped to the APC.
Mr. Wamakko, as well as governors of Kano, Rivers, Kwara, and Adamawa joined the APC due to crisis in the Nigerian ruling party.
PremiumTimes

Don’t remove Tukur as PDP Chairman, Adamawa group tells Jonathan


A group of leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, in Adamawa State, has urged President Goodluck Jonathan to ignore calls for the removal of the party’s National Chairman, Bamanga Tukur.
The group in a statement made available on Monday in Abuja and signed by Umar Ardo, its coordinator, also condemned reports of a vote of no-confidence purportedly passed on Mr. Tukur, by some members of the National Working Committee, NWC of the party.
The group said it disagreed with the reasons given by the people calling for the ouster of Mr. Tukur.
“We recall with grave concern the same antics employed by the same members of the NWC, then led by Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola, to reverse the dissolution of the Pro-Nyako Kugama-led EXCO in Adamawa State in January last year, thereby undermining the very authority of the NWC itself and creating the basis for the current distrust between them and the National Chairman,” they said.
They also said they viewed the current act as another attempt by the same reactionary forces that then tried to undermine the political standing of the National Chairman and in the process almost wrecked constitutionalism in the party’s affairs.
The same forces, they said, were at it again; this time, trying to foster needless constitutional crises on the party in an election year on the altar of personal animosity and ego-driven avowed opponents of the National Chairman.
“It is a well-known prophetic saying that a house divided against itself will surely fall,” they added.
The Adamawa PDP pleaded with the President to see the current action of the members of the NWC as an act principally aimed at dividing the house and not uniting it.
“They failed then on Adamawa; they will fail now too, on Nigeria,” they said.
They also called on the president to take note of the fact that opposition to the PDP was mainly coming from the Hausa-Fulani core North, to which Mr. Tukur belonged, adding that many of them were still holding on to the PDP on account of Mr. Tukur’s leadership.
“The removal of the Chairman and the politics of his replacement will indeed unlock several chains of events the final outcome of which no one can fathom for the party,” they warned.
Defection not due to Tukur
The Adamawa PDP said those who left the party did not do so on account of the National Chairman but on account of the peculiar irreconcilable local politics in their constituencies.
“The chairman is merely a convenient excuse,” they said.
They said Mr. Tukur was duly elected in the party’s national convention and his removal will only further denigrate the party’s standing on the sanctity of elections and constitutionalism as the basis of holding elective public office in Nigeria.
Such denigration, they said, would create in the populace a rejectionist tendency towards the party that could adversely affect its electoral fortunes in 2015.
“We therefore appeal to the president not only to prevail on all the key national organs of the party to see reason and protect the National Chairman’s Office, but he should also call to immediate order these reactionary members of the PDP’s NWC to henceforth put the interest of the party above all other considerations. Their accusations against the National Chairman are lame and deceitful, and the dose of medicine they prescribed is far more deadly than the ailment being suffered,” they said.
OsunDefender

Friday, 3 January 2014

Edo: 3 Killed In Renewed Cult Clash


cult-war
Renewed cult war between the Eiye confraternity and the Black Axe in Benin, Edo State has led to the death of three persons.
The cult war was said to have started near Oba market over issues of ticketing between members of a task force alleged to have been engaged by the state government and another group in the same area believed to have been engaged by Oredo council.
Eyewitnesses confirmed that three persons, one in Erunmwense area off Ekenwan Road, another by Lucky Way in Upper Mission road, a third near Ogbe area and another near Ogida, were found dead.
It was learnt that one of the dead just finished his Masters degree programme from the University of Benin.
Meanwhile suspected cultists, Monday, attacked The Nation newspaper reporter, Mr Ben Ogbemudia, along Eke Street, in Upper Sakpoba Road, in Benin City.
Trouble was said to have started for Ogbemudia when the hoodlums ordered him to repark his car which was near his wife’s residence.
According to him, he had reparked his car in the sandy street when the suspected assailants in a Nissan Almera marked Edo DGE 382 AA with three occupants identified simply as Emwanta, Adult and Osaretin attacked him and inflicted a deep machete cut on his left hand.
He was later rushed to a private clinic and later reported the incident at St Saviour’s Police Station.
InformationNigeria

Pope Francis condemns fundamentalism, urges setting an example over proselytizing

By Eric W. Dolan


Pope Francis via AFP
 
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Pope Francis recently urged the faithful to understand reality by looking at it “from the periphery” in order to avoid becoming fundamentalists.
Francis meet with 120 superiors general of men’s religious orders at the Vatican in November. His comments were published Friday by La Civiltà Cattolica, a Rome-based Jesuit weekly.
“I am convinced of one thing: the great changes in history were realized when reality was seen not from the center but rather from the periphery,” the pope said.
To look at something from the periphery, the pope explained, meant analyzing reality through a variety of viewpoints, rather than filtering all experience through a centralized ideology.
“It is not a good strategy to be at the center of a sphere,” he said. “To understand we ought to move around, to see reality from various viewpoints. We ought to get used to thinking.”
“I often refer to a letter of Father Pedro Arrupe, who had been General of the Society of Jesus,” the pope continued. “It was a letter directed to the Centros de Investigación y Acción Social (CIAS). In this letter Father Arrupe spoke of poverty and said that some time of real contact with the poor is necessary.”
“This is really very important to me: the need to become acquainted with reality by experience, to spend time walking on the periphery in order really to become acquainted with the reality and life – experiences of people. If this does not happen we then run the risk of being abstract ideologists or fundamentalists, which is not healthy.”
La Civilità Cattolica noted that Francis expressed similar sentiments in his Evangelii guadiumregarding globalization.
The world needs to move towards unity without embracing centralism and crushing individualism, he wrote in the document, which was published in November.
“Here our model is not the sphere, which is no greater than its parts, where every point is equidistant from the centre, and there are no differences between them. Instead, it is the polyhedron, which reflects the convergence of all its parts, each of which preserves its distinctiveness.”
Francis also encouraged the leaders of men’s religious orders to “wake up the world.” He said the Church should grow through “attraction” rather than proselytization.
“Be witnesses of a different way of doing things, of acting, of living! It is possible to live differently in this world,” he said.

Joe Conason | Rich Catholics Threaten Pope Francis - Because He Frightens Them


JOE CONASON ON BUZZFLASH AT TRUTHOUT
FrancisPopeIf anyone wonders whether Pope Francis has irritated wealthy conservatives with his courage and idealism, the latest outburst from Kenneth Langone left little doubt. Sounding both aggressive and whiny, the billionaire investor warned that he and his overprivileged friends might withhold their millions from church and charity unless the pontiff stops preaching against the excesses and cruelty of unleashed capitalism.
According to Langone, such criticism from the Holy See could ultimately hurt the sensitive feelings of the rich so badly that they become "incapable of feeling compassion for the poor." He also said rich donors are already losing their enthusiasm for the restoration of St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan — a very specific threat that he mentioned directly to Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York.
Langone is not only a leading fundraiser for church projects but a generous donor to hospitals, universities and cancer charities (often for programs and buildings named after him, in the style of today's self-promoting philanthropists). Among the super-rich, he has many friends and associates who may share his excitable temperament.
While his ultimatum seems senseless — would a person of true faith stiff the church and the poor? — it may well be sincere. And Langone spends freely to promote his political and economic views, in the company of the Koch brothers and other Republican plutocrats.
Still, a pope brave enough to face down the mafia over his financial reform of the murky Vatican Bank shouldn't be much fazed by the likes of Langone.
Yet Langone has reason to worry that the Holy Father is in fact asking hard questions about people like him. Indeed, he could serve as a living symbol of the gross and growing economic inequality that disfigures the American system and threatens democracy.
As a leader of the New York Stock Exchange, he was largely responsible for the scandalous overpayment of his friend Richard Grasso, the exchange president who received nearly $190 million in deferred compensation when he stepped down. Although New York's highest court eventually upheld Grasso's pay package, it was a perfect example of the unaccountable, self-serving greed of Wall Street's elite.
Anything but repentant following the revelation and repudiation of the Grasso deal by NYSE executives, Langone told Forbes magazine in 2004: "They got the wrong f—-ing guy. I'm nuts, I'm rich, and, boy, do I love a fight. I'm going to make them s—- in their pants. When I get through with these f—-ing captains of industry, they're going to wish they were in a Cuisinart — at high speed."
He embarked on a furious vendetta against Eliot Spitzer, who had fought to recapture Grasso's millions as New York attorney general. And when Spitzer was forced to resign as governor in the wake of a prostitution scandal, Langone's public gloating seemed to indicate that he had played a personal role in exposing his enemy's indiscretions. He particularly hated Spitzer for attempting to punish and curtail the worst misconduct in the financial industry.
While Langone passionately defended the outlandish grasping of the super-rich like his friend Grasso, however, he has displayed far less indulgence toward workers, especially those struggling to support their families on poverty wages. Until just last year, he was a director of Yum! Brands, the global fast food conglomerate that includes Taco Bell and Kentucky Fried Chicken among its holdings — and that spends millions annually to hold down the minimum wage and prevent unionization of its ill-paid employees and farmworkers.
What all this adds up to is hundreds of millions of dollars in questionable compensation for financial cronies, but not a dime more for low-income workers. It is exactly the kind of skewed outcome Francis means when he speaks about today's capitalists, "the powerful feeding upon the powerless," and the need for renewed state regulation to bring their burgeoning tyranny under control. He is talking about Langone, the Kochs and an entire gang of right-wing financiers.
"How I would love a church that is poor and for the poor," Francis said not long after his election to the papacy. This could be what he gets — and that might not be so bad, for the poor and for all of us, Catholic or not, who love justice.
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