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Showing posts from December, 2022

Tribute to President Muhammadu Buhari @80

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President Muhammadu Buhari first came into my orbit in December 1983 when he became Head of State of Nigeria. I was then just 22 years old, fresh from youth corp and working in the Chambers of Chief Gani Fawehinmi. He was this young handsome officer who walked tall and straight and hardly ever smiled. The same with his Chief of staff Supreme Headquarters, Major General Babatunde Idiagbon. The two of them were the most disciplined rulers Nigeria had and have had since memory serves me. They proceeded to govern with the rule of discipline, instituting WAI and issuing Decrees that were extremely rigid and that seemingly trampled on the natural rights of citizens.  As was expected, the civil society was not having this rule at all so the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) was at loggerheads with the Buhari regime and took a decision that no lawyer was to appear before any of the military tribunals that were set up to try corrupt politicians. That decision was controversial because the ethics o

A Manifesto without a corresponding action plan is useless

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Nigerian politicians are still not getting it! We are past or should be past the days of mere Manifestos and are or should be in the era of ‘Actionable’ manifestos, that is; Manifestos that have correlating Action Plans.  A manifesto is simply a written statement of the beliefs, aims, and policies of an organisation, especially a political party. Taken to a higher level of abstraction, a manifesto remains just a statement of intent and herein lies the quandary. We are past the stage of intentions, we need now political parties to state clearly to us their plans for each lofty or not-lofty intentions they have, otherwise their manifestos are as useless and worth not much more that the cost of the paper it is typed on. I have been stating this from onset that with the development strides of the current organisation in all areas of policies contained in laws and Executive Orders, infrastructure (rail, roads, sea ports and airports) Social Investment programmes that gave rise to a Ministry

Bits and Bites of Nigeria in the past 10 days or thereabouts

The Climate Change Hypocrisy: Why Nigeria MUST not ignore Coal  The UK will build its first Coal mine in 30 years in Whitehaven Cumbria it has been decided. The coal mine is expected to be an investment of £165 million, create 500 direct jobs and will emit a whopping 400,000 tonnes of greenhouse gases. Can you all smell the hypocrisy of the west and so called developed economies. The Vice President has called the West out on this double standards, same with Babatunde Fashola when he was Minister of Power, Works and Housing. Same with the Presidential Candidate of the APC, BAT in the famous "church rat" analogy. My take is this. Let them do 'them' and we do 'we'. What is sauce for the goose is definitely sauce for the gander. We have coal, let use use it to generate power or even to fire some industrial activity. Iran Executes a Protester by Hanging Iran has hanged a protester by name Mohsen Shakari. The legal justification for the death sentence is that the de

When will our youth learn that bullying does not go far? Examining Aminu and First Lady palaver

It is very very frustrating to have to deal with Nigerian youth nowadays. It is tiresome indeed! Sometimes I want to blame the quality of education many received, but from the point of view of a social analyst, that is just too easy an excuse and the evidence does not support this. It is the same quality of education that these youth claim entitles them to take over Nigeria, (Father Lord, have mercy). Same education they use in executing successful and unsuccessful 'japa' escapades. Same education they use in securing admission into higher institutions abroad. So, yes, we could demand that the quality of education at all levels be improved, but that will not bring the change in psyche of majority of our youth.  I believe that many of our youth lack moral training and discipline and without these qualities, education means nothing and integrity means zilch. Our youth lack an appreciation of how society works and that there is a sure hierarchical order of growth. The generality o