Wednesday, February 27, 2019

Debating the Political Sophistication of the Illiterate Northern Voters in Nigeria

There is a story trending or making the rounds in the social media, celebrating the political sagacity of the illiterate Almajiri/Talakawa/Fulani Voters in the core Northern region of Nigeria. The author is of the view that the transistor radio-carrying Abokis and the nomadic Almajiris or Fulani Herders are more politically informed than the educated Southerner voters. And I disagree. I will come back to that later. What is most vexatious in the piece is the theory that Southern voters "cannot or should not love Atiku Abubakar more than his Fulani tribal folks."
Mr. Atiku Abubakar is a Nigerian, first. The fact that he is a Muslim or of Northern extraction, though relevant, shouldn't be most compelling a consideration in the race. But it is, and that what defines us. That we are still giving premium to the ethnic or religious background of a candidate during campaign and election after more than fifty years of independence as one nation-state is a reflection of the emptiness of the major actors in our political system. If you are an achiever, the religion or place of birth of your competitors should be off the table, in that case, you would definitely have a lot to brag about and campaign on. Unfortunately, you don't have. And religion becomes a potent weapon.

It is unfortunate that Mr. Atiku Abubakar did not garner as many votes from his tribal folks in the magnitude of his main competitor in the race, President Buhari. Democracy is a game of numbers. And one has to win on the strength of vote counts. What the author left out is that the Educated Southern or Middle-Belt voters that he so derisively chided did not have safe access to the polling booths, in the likes of the free for all, opened, unhinged, and organized thumbprinting that took place throughout the core North. Whereas the majority of Southern voters who had undisturbed access to the polling booths did not have their votes counted and recorded, the so-called politically savvy Talakawas or Fulani Herders had their votes peacefully and painstakingly recorded to rhyme with the projections of All The President Men acting behind the scene.

To put it bluntly, there was an organized or manufactured chaos in the Middle-Bel and the entire geographical South calculated at undermining electoral strength of the main challenger, while the North experienced state-sponsored and state-supervised thumbprinting and manipulations of figures. Democracy does not grow on tribal irredentism. Neither does strict adherence to religious affinity during voting exercise as the culture is in the far North, a projection of sophistication or enlightenment. I beg to hold.
There is a bigger issue here. The so-called illiterate and politically savvy Northern voters, sorry to say, are just tools - the means of concretizing the race and religious cards perfected by Northern political and religious leaders over the years. And that borders on emancipation deficiencies, brainwashing, or mental slavery.
For instance, you told them that what is at stake in this election is the Quran or that their rights to worship supersedes every other fact of life, their education, health or social welfare package. And that the other guy is an infidel. They believed you and voted accordingly. My brother, it is not about love. It is not about political sagacity or enlightenment. It is about religion and it is about lies. And it is about the age-old phobia of Southern dominance of the Nigerian political system.
It is the height of electoral fraud for anyone to engage in the disruption of the voting process in certain areas of the country where his or her candidate is more likely to suffer defeat, while at the same time, facilitating the manipulations and embellishment of vote counts in areas where his or her candidate is most favored to win. So, concocting some convoluted ethnic-laced theories of love and sophistication to explain the defeat of the affected candidate is most disingenuous.
Given the disturbing nature of some of the videos that we have seen so far of the "state-sponsored peaceful rigging" in Borno, Kano, and Katsina States, it is NOT a misstatement to conclude that the Abokis, the Almajis, the Talakawas, and the Fulani Herders did not influence the vote counts on their own. As I said earlier, they were simply tools at the disposal of All The President Men. I can only explain their impacts on lies and gullibility.
So, the opinion that Atiku Abubakar suffered rejection in the hands of his Fulani tribal folks because they don't love him is, to say the least, ludicrous. They were made to believe that Atiku Abubakar isn't Muslim enough or that he is not even of Fulani extraction. How does the word "fikir" or "infidel" find its way to Nigerian election campaign vocabulary? It is to discredit the other candidate before the gullible uneducated, brainwashed masses. It happened to Chief Obafemi Awolowo.

In the absence of a progressive agenda or a history of populist accomplishment that benefit the voters or your own people, pushing the race and religious cards becomes the most favored option.

The incumbent won because of the massive thumbprinting, inflation of vote counts, disfranchisement of eligible voters and purposeful disruption (gerrymandering by other means) of the electoral process as explained in the previous essays. Deploying race and religious cards during every Presidential election in Nigeria, repugnant as they are, are parts of our electoral process that must be discredited and condemned by all. You don't grow democracy on lies and state-sponsored electoral frauds. The exception suffices only in instances where they want a particular Southern candidate to win. Otherwise, it is a do-or-die affair. And it is evolving right now.

Conscientious Objector: My Final Verdict on the Nigerian 2019 Presidential Election.

Alex Aidaghese shared a post.
7 hrs
It is called ELECTION because the process gives the people the opportunity and rights rooted in birth or naturalization to ELECT a candidate of their choice. What you are seeing in the video that is playing below (which you must have already seen a thousand times), does not represent that process of expression. And there are hundreds of similar videos elsewhere in the social media that chronicle that show of shame on election day. In addition, seeing pictures of infants, lining up to vote, and actually voting, plus the calculated and selective vandalization of ballot boxes and harassment of eligible voters at targeted pooling units (gerrymandering), which expectedly culminated in massive cancelation of vote counts by INEC, I cannot in all seriousness call it a free and fair election. It is a farce, it is egregious, and it is a fraud. If it is a fraud, it is criminal, and not acceptable. We are better than the carnage and the bloodshed that took place in Lagos, Enugu, and Port Harcourt on the day of the Presidential election. If not now, I don't know when. Indeed, we want to grow our democracy, but what we have witnessed in the past few days do not represent growth or showcase improvements in our electoral process. It is not about APC or PDP. It is not about the candidates. It is about democracy and unhindered access to the Ballot Box that will credible outcome. 




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Best Ogunmu
This INEC is very incompetent, intact, it is a SCAM. Now I know why some of my Buharists friends always say they must win,that voting doesn't matter but the final announcements.
WHAT A SHAME!

SHIEKH GUMI ON THE PRESIDENTIAL POLLS

Alex Aidaghese shared a post.
17 hrs
I am sharing this story because of the glaring irregularities that marred the election.
SHIEKH GUMI ON THE PRESIDENTIAL POLLS
The 2019 presidential polls were manipulated from inception to collation. Don’t mention the card reader ruse. Thus, no two honest people argue about that. The only argument is that both sides did it.
Therefore, without denial of doing it, I conclude that the true loser is integrity and respect. It has finally sealed the tortuous history of Gen. Muhammad Buhari political career with the stain of embracing everything corruption if he’s able to clinch to power after a full term of exercising power with the slogan of fighting corruption. The real winner is thus the true diagnosis of the real corruption that has dampened the soul of the nation. Sheer hypocrisy is just in every quarter.
We Muslim are obliged to be honest to the core. “O ye who believe! stand out firmly for justice, as witnesses to Allah, even as against yourselves, or your parents, or your kin, and whether it be (against) rich or poor: for Allah should be more preferred than both. Follow not the lusts (of your hearts), lest ye swerve, and if ye distort (justice) or decline to do justice, verily Allah is well- acquainted with all that ye do.” Q4/135.
2019 presidential polls have exposed the deep rot in the seemingly conservative northern Muslim society. I was shocked seeing poor village women lined up receiving N500 note each with instructions to vote the ruling party. Under-aged voters everywhere. The minbar was used as a partisan political pulpit. Name it, it all happened and widely. Zamfara’s case is the most pathetic.
The president, INEC chairman, the security chiefs are all Muslims. This is disgusting that such a colossal rigging and incompetency will happen with their apparent collaboration or silence. Islam remains free of any obligation to all human malevolence.
The true winner in this poll is the opposition that was for long suppressed with the stigma of ‘looters’ and corruption. No healthy governance develops without good, effective opposition. Otherwise, the nation will drift to a one-party state of authoritarian dictatorship. We can see what is happening at present in Algeria, Sudan and our neighbors — Cameroon. Therefore, the reemergence of the opposition back in full force to the extent that the ruling party has to embrace full-blown corruption and rigging to retain power struggling with few millions of rigged votes is absolutely amazing and good prognosis of a better nation.
Truly Atiku Abubakar should be saluted for his dogged stand against authoritarian leadership tendencies. History will vindicate him for his efforts to save a nation on the brink. I, therefore, urge him to reject the fake results, no credit should be given to falsehood and seek redress in the court of law, the same way, the president did in his previous attempts, he knows better when injustice is served.
I call on citizens to conduct themselves with decorum and engage in peaceful dialogue and follow the laws to its reasonable conclusion.
One thing – for sure – is that this nation needs urgent restructuring. INEC needs an overhaul. And like in some countries, the chairman should be elected by members of the state assemblies.
I also call for the release of all political prisoners.
May Allah continue to protect us all from the evil of men and the unseen. Amim.

Disruption of the Voting Process is Gerrymandering by Other Means!

Gerrymandering, as the culture is in America politics, is the deliberate and systematic tampering with electoral maps, with a goal to permanently expunging a certain group of voters, mostly African American electorates, from electoral districts where they could impact the total vote counts, or specifically, where they could stop Republicans candidates from winning an election.
In Nigeria, they don't tamper with the electoral maps. However, certain communities, cities, villages, and or polling units are invaded during an ongoing election to disrupt the process and jeopardize the outcome of the vote counts. Thus, Gerrymandering in Nigeria is the deliberate disruption of the electoral process at the Pooling Units and the indiscriminate vandalization or burning of voting materials and scaring away of potential voters by sponsored Thugs or Agents where a particular candidate is likely to secure the most vote counts. It is perpetrated, with a view to compelling the INEC to annul or cancel the entire votes in the affected units or districts.
Consequently, the affected candidate cannot benefit from votes that have been destroyed or declared canceled by INEC due to the chaotic situations manufactured by Thugs or Agents who are sponsored or sympathetic to a particular candidate. It is deliberate. It is purposeful. And it is Gerrymandering by other means. And that is the nature of the deprivations that Mr. Atiku Abubakar is contending with right now, especially in most of the states in the Middle Belt and the entire Geographical South. If Gerrymandering is condemnable in America, it must be condemned in Nigeria. It may be Atiku/Obi today, it may be you or your party tomorrow. In any event, it is the Nigerian democracy that is in peril.

Thursday, February 21, 2019

Nigerian Presidential Election: What You're Voting for on February 23, 2019.

A vote for him is a vote for the consolidation of Nepotism and all the accompanying ills that are humbling our unity and cohesion as a nation-state.

A vote for him is a vote for bigotry,  sectionalism, and ethnic chauvinism.

A vote for him is a vote for displacement, homelessness, joblessness, and ethnic cleansing.

A vote for him is a vote for the culture of "crumbs falling down from the Table" for some fortunate few (the Second-Class Citizens) he could tolerate.

A vote for him is a vote for  the escalations of the culture of the "Third-Class Citizenship Status" that you ignorantly hold and enjoy.

A vote for him is a vote for the bloodshed and insecurity that are eating away our fertile landscape. 

A vote for him is a vote for the selective persecution that defines his administration.

A vote for him is a vote for the polarization and debasement of the culture of esprit de corps ruining the Nigerian Armed Forces.

And why would you trust him with your vote, if he couldn't trust you or your brothers and sisters in uniform with a space at the High Table?

Granted, he has done exceedingly well in the transportation sectors. But, remember, dead men don't walk, don't drive. And the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) and the victims of marauding herdsmen have no need for mobility.

Where is thy sting? The Boko Haram sect is gaining more territories in the Northeast. And communities in Zamfara State and Sokoto State are paying taxes and pledging allegiance to foreign forces alien to our culture and flag. 

It's about your future. It's about your peace of mind. Your security. The education of your children. A sustainable income. Your inalienable rights over your land. And respect for one another, in the way will live and the way we want to worship. 

It's about a father figure, the one who feels your pain, your anguish. The one who gives you cause to dream again. A dream of our founding fathers, of true Federalism, and of a better tomorrow where equal rights and Justice are no longer an illusion, but vested and celebrated.

It is about the values we share in common. Of a happy people, once celebrated by the international press as the happiest people on earth. Let's do it again, Nigerians. Let's rekindle that loud flame by Voting Atiku/Obi Ticket to Aso Villa on Saturday.

Long live Nigeria, and long live the good people of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Saturday, February 16, 2019

The Fear of Awo and the unMaking of Nigeria

The fear and resentment of late Chief Obafemi Awolowo, popularly known as Awo or Papa Awo, culminated in the estrangement of the Ilorin Province (Yoruba speaking part of the present Kwara State) and the Kaba Province (another Yoruba speaking part of the present Kogi State) from the old Western region.

What happened to the Ilorin Province and the Kaba Province in 2958, happened to the provinces later merged as Mid-West region, made up of Benin, Esan, Afemai, Urhobo, Ijaw, and the Ekas in 2963, following a convert political hatch job orchestrated by Zik and Balewa. This essay and the attached video shared by Adeyinka Grandson are preludes to the Next Debates, if Abuja fails to behave.

My Village, Ewohimi, was the headquarter of Eastern Ishan District Council. And we had it all. A a robust educational system that was free and compulsory, and a well-staffed Dispensary and fully equipped Maternity Ward that offered free healthcare service to all. We had about fifteen elementary schools, two Modern Schools and the prestigious Pilgrim Baptist Grammar School (PBGS). Only a relics of it survive the exit of our Province (the Benin Province] from the Western region.

These tribal regions or Provinces were removed from the Western Region in 1958 and 1963 respectively, not because Zik and Balewa love the people of the regions, but to punish Papa Awo and ultimately, curtail the spread of the Action Group (AG) phenomena in the Nigerian political power equations. 

Consequently, following the creation of the Midwestern region in 1963, the Awolowo (AG) Free Education Program that the Province enjoyed between 1952 and to 1963, disappeared. 

In a nutshell, Ilorin, Kaba, Benin, Ijaw, Urhobo, Esan, Afemai, and the Ekas were cut out of the Western region with one goal in sight: to dilute Awo's power base and erode the electoral strength of the Action Group. 

Why was the humongous Northern region left intact? How come Middle-Belt region was not carved out of the Northern region that was undoubtedly bigger than the Western region and Eastern region? 

Without any doubt, the sociocultural affinity, if at all, that exists between the people of the Middle-Belt with those of the North East and North West, pale into insignificant juxtaposed with those that exist between the tribes of the Mid-Western region as well as those of Ilorin and Kaba with those of the people in the now truncated Western region.

I am not a historian, but I interpret events based on my understanding of the underlying philosophy - the intents and motives of the actors. So, I see some senses in the views expressed by the gentleman in the video showing in Part Two, except where he referred to the Ibos as the enemies of the Yoruba. We should blame the estrangement of Ilorin and the Kaba people from their native roots in the Western region on Zik and Balewa, and not the Ibos.

It was all about the Awolowo Phenomena. The various Provinces, Districts and ethnic groups that were removed from the Western region, suffered massive social, quality health care delivery, and educational declined following their exit. Economic growth was out of the push factors. As a result, the now so-called politically emancipated tribes, became economically emaciated. 

Not done with the deliberate corrosion of Awo's regional power base, the Treasonable Felony Trial was engineered. Awo and some of his lieutenants were tried and convicted. The imprisonment and disappearance of Awo from the Western region, culminated in the disappearance of the Yoruba economic superiority that was previously outperforming those of Western Europe. And the coup came. And Nigeria died less than six years into its independence. 

Decades later, Awo told Dr. Yemi Ogunbiyi of the Guardian Newspaper, "Your Generation will not know Democracy again in Nigeria." That was about 30 years ago. I do not know how old Dr. Yemi Ogunbiyi was as at 2.30 am last night Nigerian time, when the Chairman of INEC postponed the Presidential election that was scheduled to hold today, Saturday February 16, 2019.

This opinion and the video you're about to watch, are preludes to the discussions coming up eventually if the politicians at Abuja fail to grow up. Because the voices and faces you gonna be seeing are not those of your usual bookish compromising Professors and greedy political careerists. This Presidential election is your last art to get it right.

Friday, February 15, 2019

What Would Atiku Do Differently? President Buhari, Asked Nigerians.

What Would Atiku Do Differently? President Buhari, asked Nigerians.

As a Vice President, Atiku Abubakar met this young Nigerian at a Seminar on Privatisation that he attended in London, England. The Vice President, seemingly impressed with his presentation, promised to reach out to him back in Nigeria. When the time came to recruit the DG of the newly formed Bureau of Public Enterprise, remembering the high-quality content of the paper delivered at the London conference by that young Nigerian, the Vice President tracked him down with the help of one of his subordinates. He had earlier promised to recommend him to President Obasanjo. And he did. Long story short, the man was recruited on the spot as the DG of the BPE, and told to resume work immediately. Operating in a pragmatic mode, they didn't border to ask for his CV and no letter of appointment was ever issued. It was an expedited process. This young Nigerian is not from Adamawa State, the State of origin of Vice President Atiku Abubakar or from Ogun State, the State of origin of President Obasanjo. Why was he chosen by the Vice President? Simple: The contents of his character (his presentation), and not his State of origin or tribe. His name is Nasir Ahmad El'Rufai, the present Governor of Kaduna State. And he is the author of the book under reference.

Please, see "The Accidental Public Servant" By Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai. Pages 68 - 71

The moral of this story is this:


  • Atiku is not the regular bureaucratic obsessed and bigoted politician. He is a detribalised Management Strategist. A Quintessential Businessman. A Prolific Talents Hunter. And a Result-oriented Team Builder. Above all, Pragmatism is his watchword, and certainly not NEPOTISM. He has a lot he would do differently, but talents hunting, especially, interest on the younger generations appeals to me the most in this candidate - Atiku Abubakar. It takes enlightenment to know the enlightened. And it takes audacity and genuine leadership traits to identify greatness in others, and go for them. Not everyone has a godfather.

Thursday, February 14, 2019

Governor Yahaya Bello and the Perversion of a Court Made Mandate.

Governor Yahaya Adoza Bello of Kogi State is one of the most dangerous and uncultured political leaders to emerge in the Nigerian political scene in recent memories. Socially and politically, he is unpolished, brute, and morbidly unhinged. His morbid fascination with vergence and crude jabs smack of opportunism and insecurity. He is the ultimate local champion and a can of worms -  a threat to national peace, religious tolerance, and a formidable obstacle to sustainable development in Kogi State.

Kogi State is a Gateway State, a Nigerian microcosm to boot. Given the antiquated state of the infrastructural facilities in the two major cities,  the state deserves a political leader who understands the rudimentary of urban development and renewal, as well as, the creation of new markets and the expansion of the existing ones. 

With a massive seafood industry made possible by the presence of River Benue and River Niger, coupled with its proximity to Abuja, Lagos, and Benin City, Kogi State ought to be the number one hot spot or stop shop for out of state migrants and property developers. 

The State is abundantly endowed with some very rare mineral/natural resources deposit that, if appropriately exploited, would catapult Kogi State to one of the top IGR earning regions in Sub-Sahara Africa. (I covered the state briefly in my "International Mining and Comparative Law" class in graduate school).

Governor Bello is young, and maybe, educated. Brash? Not all. My own my, that dude is to ghetto. He has a diabolical sense of pride. And most often, he threads the path of feuds and resentment, when compromises and handshake are most desirable. 

He is a Governor today by accident. He participated in the APC Gubernatorial Primaries and was defeated. He was the first runner-up. The gentleman who won subsequently picked his deputy in accordance with the provisions of our Electoral Act and the 1999 Constitution as amended. And both of them proceeded onto the campaign trail as a joint ticket.

On the eve of the election, but before the declaration of the winner, the winning candidate (the APC guy) died. Though APC, as a political party, was eventually declared the winner, there was no Governor-elect to take the Crown. And impasse developed.

Like a bolt from the blue, Mr. Bello came into the scene to harvest where he did not sow any seed. He was defeated at the Primaries. Besides, his name was not on the ballot, either as a gubernatorial candidate or as a deputy.

The Court declared Yahaya Bello, who did not participate in the Gubernatorial race and was not on the APC ticket, elected. And was sworn in accordingly. Reason: he participated and came second in the Primaries, but the Deputy who shared a joint ticket with the deceased candidate did not participate. And I disagreed with that judgment then and today for two reasons. The Primaries has been overtaken by events. And two, his name was not on the ticket at the governorship stage. Therefore, at this stage, vesting rights cannot be supplanted.

The Primaries are normally conducted between candidates of the same political party. The Gubernatorial race is the real race. And it is between candidates of the various political parties, each fielding its own governorship candidate and the deputy, consistent with the provisions of our Electoral Act and the Constitution. These names are appropriately submitted to INEC within a specified time frame. That's all it takes for a mandate to vest following a winning vote counts. Not what happened at the primaries.

I strongly believe that upon satisfying the appropriate registration legal requirements, the joint ticket so formed, automatically enure to the benefit of both candidates - the Gubernatorial candidate and his Deputy. Because the Constitution and the Electoral Act have already given effect to that unison prior to the election and prior to the death of one of the candidates. 

The joint ticket, as well as the rights and privileges emanating from it or accompanying it has been so recognized by laws. The fact that they have not been declared the winners and duly sworn as Governor and Deputy Governor respectively is irrelevant. After all, Bello was not even on the ticket or on the Ballot. The decision, once again, in my humble opinion, was a miscarriage of justice.

Be that as it may, I must cut the Court some slack on the decision they took. Because the arguments and the case presented by the Lawyers who represented the unfortunate Deputy were completely different from the common sense arguments I put forward on this essay. It's all about the legal strategy - defining the case, framing the arguments, and finding the laws in the books to buttress your case. 

Here, it was a novel case - no laws, no statutes, and no precedents in the book. What was required, therefore, was a common sense and persuasive arguments on the part of the Deputy's lawyers.  The Supreme Court does make laws, called case laws. These are decisions not based on precedents, laws, or legislation, but on reasonable and informed judgment, and common sense.


  • So, it is the responsibility of the lawyers to urge the apex court to find reasons and wisdom in its lawmaking process, through case law pronouncements, and rule for your client - the Deputy. Because his name was on the ballot, on the ticket at the actual election. 

Giving the mandate to the one who left the scene at the Primaries is legally and equitably unthinkable. It doesn't make any sense. Unfortunately, those were not the arguments or case argued by the Lawyers who represented the Deputy before the court.

The Judge cannot help you to define your case. It is the facts and the issues you presented that define the trajectory of the case. Legal strategy comes first before the laws. The same reason Yahaya Bello is the Governor of Kogi State today is the same reason EFCC is losing most of its important cases in Nigerian courts. 

Governor Bello is a time bomb waiting to explode. Kogi State needs pragmatic thinking, internationally exposed, or business-oriented individual to run the State as a profitable organization. Not a local champion who is suffering from a persecution complex and unleashing political tension and manufacturing hostile business environment in his State and beyond. It's sad to see a guy who couldn't win at the Primaries, got elected by the court and now perverting the legal gift he got, and setting the clock back in a state that ought to be a leading light in industrialization in Nigeria.

Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Nigerian Presidential Election: Atiku Abubakar is a Major Break from the Past.

Atiku is a Major Break From the Past. Part One. 

This is the closest, after Papa Awo, that we have come as a nation-state to making a major break from idea deficit, stagnation of thought, and cluelessness within the leadership. It has always been about "entitlement" and "it is my turn to rule" within the rank and file of the Generals since the end of the Second Republic. It has never been about ideas, visions, or what is good for Nigeria and Nigerians. 

Jonathan was an accident of history.

Musa Yar'Adua presidency was a compensation for the death of his elder brother Major General Shehu Yar'Adua. Death robbed Shehu Yar'Adua the opportunity of taking over from Obasanjo. 

Also, remember, following the death of Abacha, when IBB and his fellow retired power brokers decided to assuage the Yoruba tribe for Abiola's crucifixion, they went for one of their own - Baba. And Baba went for Buhari in 2015. Unfortunately, nepotism, infirmity, and mental impairment vanquished that esprit de corps culture of our retired generals.

If not for his death, President Musa Yar'Adua would have permanently retired the unwilling retirees of the uniforms and put a permanent end to the mistrust and ethnic divides that are hamstringing our cohesion as one nation-state.

Coming from a privileged background and the younger brother of an influential retired military officer, he knew first hand that the south is treated as a conquered territory. He knew of the absence of equal rights or equal opportunities in the disbursement of our national wealth and our natural resources. 

And He knew at the time that the people of Niger Delta aren't getting their fair share of the oil wealth. From the Ministry of Niger Delta to the Amnesty Program within two years, he was ahead of the pack and he was, no doubt, a major break from the status quo. And there was peace in the land. But it didn't last long. Death came too soon. 

Today, you have another chance to break from the past and embrace a digital future - a future where every one of us, in spite of our tribal, cultural, or religious differences, can feel a sense of belonging. 

To my friends and family members, lets rally round the Atiku/Obi ticket because the ticket represents that digital future. A future where reviving and escalating the audacity of Musa Yar'Adua, of his One-Nigerian philosophy, together with the vision, team spirit, and the audacity of hope of Papa Awo are the norms rather than the exceptions. 

Like Papa Awo, Atiku knows the issues; otherwise, he would not have been able to dissect and articulate them. He is interested in solutions, not excuses or "my hands are tied" escapism.

Think about that, Nigerians. Think and remember the answer Mr. Atiku Abubakar and President Buhari gave when they were asked the same question on how to revive our educational system. Atiku articulated what his administration did when he was the Vice President. He identified the problems they encountered. And he articulated what he is going to do differently if elected. 

On the other hand, President Buhari, confronted with the same question, digressed into the three levels of government and power structure, thereby holding the Local Govt Councils responsible for our educational decay. He couldn't identify what he has done or what he would do differently. Please, don't forget, ASUU is still on strike.

The difference is clear enough, Nigerians. To those of you who are still undecided, please watch the video of the interview again and again. Atiku is prepared. It is about the audacity of hope, of vision, and the way forward. Please, give him a chance to reform and move Nigeria forward. Enough of excuses and blame games. The idea speaks volumes. And he has them in abundance. Please, remember that. He is a major break.

Sunday, February 3, 2019

Ethnicity and Religious Bigotry: A Presidential Voyage on False Narrative.

The President and his Men cherish  the virtues associated with a race-blind and religious neutral administration, but they nevertheless remaining recalcitrant embracing those virtues in totality and putting them into effect in the course of their management of the affairs of this great nation-state, Nigeria. Since his assumption of office as the Executive President, President Buhari has been having difficulties trusting Nigerians, except those from his ethnic background as well as those who share his faith. 

Take a look at the enumerated names on his speech appearing shortly after this intro, and ask yourself how come his appointments over the years do not reflect that microcosm eloquently dissected in his speech. Where is the Igbo Catholic or Lawyer or Strategist within his security team today? None of them he could trust now as he did when he was chasing the mandate.

His speech writers must be living in a different planet. That they are just realizing now that there are other tribes and cities outside of Daura and Katsina smacks of deceit and intellectual fraud. Simply put, President Buhari and his speechpeech writersriters are not the right Teachers to teach Nigerians how religion and ethnic questions are corrupting our political system and undermining our cohesion as one nation under God. 

The speech does not match his conduct in office as President. In sum, the President and his speech writersriters are pushing a false narrative.  The portrait of his Service Chiefs as a group, put a lie to his treatise. You know what is right, but you don't do it. You preach about what ought to be the norms, but you don't practice it. And as Fela Anikulapo Kuti would say, "Teacher, don't teach me nonsense."

Please, find below, the speech, as culled by his Press Secretary. 

Religion and Ethnicity a Smokescreen For Corrupt Practices

- President Buhari

President Muhammadu Buhari has described as “bloody nonsense” the penchant of some Nigerians to hide under the canopy of ethnicity and religion to perpetrate injustice and corrupt acts.

Hosting his former staff who worked with him during his tenure as military head of state (January 1984-Aug 1985) on Sunday night at the State House, Abuja, the President added that recourse to the smokescreen of religion and ethnicity “is just corruption, pure and simple.”

To justify his thesis, President Buhari went down memory lane, drawing lessons from his electoral battles at the courts in 2003, 2007, and 2011, where those who ruled against him were Muslims from the North, but those who defended him were Christians from the South. His words:

“I was recently forced to talk to somebody I respect a lot about Nigeria. I said in 2003, when I started out, complaints about presidential election used to start from the Court of Appeal. 

The president of the court then was my classmate in secondary school for six years. Himself, myself and Shehu Musa Yar’Adua, were classmates. My lawyer, Mike Ahamba, was Roman Catholic and an Ibo man. My first witness was in the box. Ahamba said he needed the register of voters in certain constituencies and states to prove that votes were just allocated, and not true reflection of what existed in the constituencies. He asked them to record his request and sign. They did so.

“When they came to give judgment later, the matter was not mentioned at all. In the panel was another Roman Catholic and Ibo, who raised his hand and said, this is what Buhari’s lawyer had said. Did we write to those constituencies and states to submit the register? If so, why is it not in the judgment? They just shut him up. He had to write a minority judgment. Of course, he’s now our Ambassador in United States of America.

“I petitioned the Supreme Court. Who was the Chief Justice? A Muslim, probably a Fulani, from Zaria. After 27 months, we went. Ahamba addressed the court for 2 hours and 45 minutes. They went in, came out after about 45 minutes, and said they were proceeding on vacation the next day. They were away for three months, making it 30 months in all. When they came back, they dismissed the case within 45 minutes.

“In 2007, they repeated the same thing. Who was the Chief Justice? A northerner and Muslim. After 18 months, they dismissed the case.

“The third time, who was CJ? A Muslim, Fulani man from Jigawa. After 8 months, he dismissed the case. This bloody nonsense about Nigeria on ethnicity and religion is just corruption, pure and simple. Wherever we find ourselves, let’s pray to God that we maintain our faith. That’s all we have.

“I try to do my best, and pray to God to help me. May God Almighty give us the ways and means to continue to do our best for the country. Whatever religion we follow, let’s do it seriously, as finally, we would appear before God. Whether we believe it or not, it will happen. So, we better continue to behave ourselves.”

President Buhari described the reunion and interactive meeting as an “emotional one” for him, as he had not seen some of the people since 1985, when the military regime he headed was toppled.

Commending his former Aide-de-Camp, Alhaji Mustapha Jokolo, who used his initiative to put the parley together, the President equally commended his former Number 2 man, Major General Tunde Idiagbon (now deceased), whom he said, showed uncommon loyalty and courage. His words:

“He was in Saudi Arabia, performing the hajj, when we were removed. The Saudi king said the coup was not just against us, but also against him, since Idiagbon was praying with him.

“He asked him to send for his family to join him in Saudi until it was clear where I was. Idiagbon said no, I want to go back, Your Majesty. If they kill him, let them kill me also.

“He joined the next flight and came back. I think there’s no way you can describe such loyalty, such courage. May his soul rest in perfect peace.”

Alhaji Jokolo said though the departure of the former staff from government was “unexpected and disappointing, if not regrettable,” the affected people recall the ugly experiences today, “not with bitterness because individually, they had since moved on with their lives, though painfully aware that they were victims of misplaced aggression.”

He added: “The fact that among us today are highly respected Royal Fathers, businessmen, captains of industry, lawyers and other specialists in the professions, and a university professor, speaks volumes that God is good and that values of discipline and perseverance that we imbibed under Your Excellency’s tutelage had not been in vain.”

Femi Adesina

Special Adviser to the President

(Media and Publicity)

January 21, 2019

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I am not a Sportswriter, commentator, analyst, or enthusiast. I am a Lawyer by training, and I have a passion for crafting public policy sta...