Category: Opinion

  • DNA, japa and violence on Nigerian families

    “Nigerian families are currently facing excruciating struggles. And they come in various forms – economics, biology, science, bad governance at home, unemployment, abandonment of traditional values, and many more. It is no longer unusual to see families where a son lives or is in school in Canada; a daughter is going to school in the UK; a mother/wife lives in the United States; and, a husband/father, and one or two other children are home in Nigeria.”

    My last child, for now, will be 23 years old in December. He grew up calling me Daa. He learnt it from his two elder brothers and their mother. It started with my first child who couldn’t or rather refused to call me daddy. By the time he learnt to talk, which was pretty early, he preferred to simply say Daa. His mother, my wife, tried everything in the books including incentives, to make him say daddy but it just didn’t work. He would call me daddy one moment, and the next he would revert to daa. I didn’t mind it, and I prayed for my wife to let him be. So it stuck. Before the other children came my wife had joined her first son in calling me daa. So by the time other children came daa had effectively displaced daddy in reference to yours sincerely.The boys are now tweenagers (children in their 20s), and daddy has still not been able to displace daa. Instead some close family relations have since joined in calling me daa in spoken and written words. So how could anyone or anything undo bonds forged over years and decades? For some people it is as simple as tossing or flipping a flimsy coin. Not so for others.

     

    In 1958, a novel written by a Nigerian was published. It was written by Chinua Achebe. In his A Short History of Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, Terri Ochiagha said that ‘The publication of Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart was heralded as the inaugural moment of modern African fiction, and the book remains the most widely read African novel of all time. It has been translated into more than sixty languages, has sold over twelve million copies, and is a required text at the primary, secondary, and tertiary educational levels the world over’. Ochiagha said that Things Fall Apart was neither the first African novel to be published in the West nor necessarily the most critically valued but that its ‘enduring, larger-than-life iconocity has surpassed even that of its author’.

     

    In that book Okonkwo was the principal character and protagonist. The novel was set at a period of a clash of civilizations- that of the Igbo of Nigeria, and the English represented by Christianity. Okonkwo contrived to be a warrior and a weakling at the same time. He fought battles and won but eventually killed a child who called him father. And he killed him deliberately. The problem was that Okonkwo had a father who was a butt of his Umuofia community, and a son Nwoye, who he saw as not taking after him in masculinity and bravery. He was haunted by fear of being perceived as a weakling. He perpetually feared being defined by how his father was perceived, and how he regarded Nwoye his son as being feminine. And so Okonkwo ended up as a tragic hero.

     

    In chapter seven of the iconic book so much was said about Ikemefuna, the ‘slave child’ who called Okonkwo father. Here Achebe said that Ikemefuna had become like a son to Okonkwo though the child had been traded as part of a blood debt. The protagonist was extremely happy that Ikemefuna had been a good influence on his biological son, Nwoye. Recall that Okonkwo had previously felt that Nwoye was too feminine for his liking. Okonkwo was a warrior and a wrestling champion. Many years after Ikemefuna was traded as reparation to Umuofia by a neighbouring community which killed a young woman from Umuofia, the oldest man in Okonkwo’s community came visiting. He told Okonkwo that the village oracle had instructed that Ikemefuna must be killed for the good of Umuofia. But the old man told Okonkwo that he must not lay his hands on the boy who called him father. Okonkwo must have been shocked because he thought that the elders who gave custody of the child to him had forgotten everything about Ikemefuna.

    But he must not show weakness. So Okonkwo and a group of Umuofia men set a date and then set out on a journey with Ikemefuna during which he would be murdered. Along the way and on the strength of a pre-arranged signal, one of the men struck Ikemefuna with his machete. He missed his target. Understandably, Ikemefuna ran towards his ‘father’ ostensibly for rescue, refuge and safety. But no. Okonkwo drew his own machete, probably from its sheath and slew Ikemefuna, the boy who called him father. The men turned and returned to Umuofia. Immediately Nwoye saw them he sensed that Ikemefuna had been killed.

     

    I have gone to this length to draw parallels on family bonding and how easy or not it is to turn our backs on relationships of years and even decades. I used myself to illustrate how it would be virtually impossible to, under any circumstances or findings, turn my back on kids who have known and called me daa all their lives, and Okonkwo who would not flinch in using his hands to kill his child. It could be argued that Ikemefuna was not really his child. In the circumstance Ikemefuna could be regarded and classified as an adopted child. And in my Christian faith we, the adherents, are members of the family of God by adoption. So up until his death at the hands of his father, Ikemefuna was the son of Okonkwo. Could Okonkwo have done otherwise since the oldest man in Umuofia delivered a message purportedly from the community’s deity that the boy must be killed? What about the other part of the old man’s message: do not kill him by yourself? Beyond displaying masculinity, should Okonkwo have been part of the killing party, anyway?

    “Early this month Smart DNA which described itself as a leading DNA testing centre in Nigeria published its 2024 testings and findings in our country. The review period covered July 2023 to June 2024. It said that its data showed that 27% of paternity tests conducted at its centre came back negative.”

    Back to now. Nigerian families are currently facing excruciating struggles. And they come in various forms – economics, biology, science, bad governance at home, unemployment, abandonment of traditional values, and many more. It is no longer unusual to see families where a son lives or is in school in Canada; a daughter is going to school in the UK; a mother/wife lives in the United States; and, a husband/father, and one or two other children are home in Nigeria. The strain can be enormous and could have long lasting effects. In some cases families are permanently fractured if not outrightly destroyed. Fragments of destroyed Nigerian families litter the global landscape. And to think that families are the bedrock of every society and every country. In addition, many Nigerians are turning on traditional values and relationships. Many of us who dwell in urban areas no longer take our children to our ancestral homes for fear that they could come to harm. The fear could be real but I am minded to believe that it is often exaggerated.

     

    But the clearest of the present war on, and danger to, Nigerian families and especially couples is the fad of DNA testing. Absence of trust is primarily at the root of the increasing resort to the DNA to determine the biological relationship with a child. Yes, there’s also the reason of compulsion for DNA testing for families desirous of relocating to other countries especially in Europe and North America. But the truth is that if Nigeria provides an ‘opportunity economy’ and a measure of hope for its citizens especially the young ones, the quest to relocate may not have turned into a deluge that it has become.

    “The more troubling is DNA testing driven by the increasing lack of trust between couples over the biological relationship between father and child. We have to admit that some may not be true, but stories about sudden and acrimonious divorce are becoming rampant online and in real life. At the root of this development has been DNA test results that showed that the child or children who had called you father all their lives are not really from your loins.”

    Early this month Smart DNA which described itself as a leading DNA testing centre in Nigeria published its 2024 testings and findings in our country. The review period covered July 2023 to June 2024. It said that its data showed that 27% of paternity tests conducted at its centre came back negative. The test results showed that one in four cases, “the tested man is not the biological father of the child”. Smart DNA went further to reveal what it called “interesting geographic and demographic patterns in DNA testing in Nigeria”. For instance, it found out that 73.1% of all tests were conducted in Lagos, with a “notable split between Mainland (67.5%} and Island (32.5%}”. Figures from some other states showed that 5.5% of people who requested a DNA test were from Oyo state, 5.3% from Ogun, 4.0% from Rivers and 3.5% from Delta state.

     

    Smart DNA then drilled down to the ‘ethnic’ distribution of their clients which it described as an “interesting dimension”. In this category the Yoruba nation accounted for 53% of tests, followed by the Igbo nation with 31.3%, with the Hausa far down at 1.20%. This distribution certainly does not reflect the ethnic dynamics of the country. But it may reflect cultural attitudes “towards paternity testing and genetic science across different” ethnicities in the country. Gender and age -related insights from the data showed that the majority of tested children (54%} were aged 0-5, suggesting preference for early paternity confirmation. There was also gender bias that aligns with the mentality of many Nigerians. More tests were conducted on male children (52.8%} while the data showed 47.2% for female children. About 88.2% of men initiated the first contacts with the testing agency and women 11.8%.

     

    The reasons for DNA testing varied but trust between and among couples was the dominant issue. For instance, almost 86% of tests conducted in this centre during the period under review, June 2023 to July 2024, were conducted for what was called ‘Peace of Mind’. This would suggest that the majority of those who sought DNA testing did so to confirm biological relationships for personal reasons rather than legal cases. Immigration DNA tests (11.5%) and Avuncular (DNA testing methods for biological relatives) tests (1.22%) accounted for the others. Smart DNA said that there has been a significant leap in DNA testing for immigration purposes in recent years. It said the observed increase in emigration reflected broader societal and economic shifts in Nigeria.

     

    As it is the raw data from Smart DNA which probably reflects findings from other DNA testing centres in the country should be concerning. The data could be likened to a bikini which reveals a lot of the female flesh but hides the most tantalising. The data showed increasing trust deficits between couples, partners, and parents, and the rising appetite for japa (the local parlance for fleeing from Nigeria by desperate citizens, both young and old. This desperation leads to family separations and sometimes permanent and irreparable fractures in households.

     

    The more troubling is DNA testing driven by the increasing lack of trust between couples over the biological relationship between father and child. We have to admit that some may not be true, but stories about sudden and acrimonious divorce are becoming rampant online and in real life. At the root of this development has been DNA test results that showed that the child or children who had called you father all their lives are not really from your loins. For the man it is a betrayal and a shame. Stories abound about footballers, athletes, entertainers and sundry personages who had raised and trained children only to find out very late in their lives, and mostly after retirement from the endeavours that brought them fame and wealth that the children that they had invested on were not their biological children. For some, remarrying and raising a new family was no longer viable. And keeping a family and relationship riddled with scandals was not tenable either. They are left between the devil and the deep blue sea.

    READ ALSO:https://dailynigerian.com/divorce-rate-nigeria-alarming/

    Anybody who wears the shoes will know where they pinch. No man should pray to find himself in that situation. But such things happen. What then should be our attitude when confronted. Two things readily come to mind. In parts of my Igbo nation (it could be the entire Igbo land), and probably elsewhere in Nigeria and Africa, a child belongs to the husbandman. In traditional Igbo settings, any child born under the roof of a husbandman is the child of the man even if the pregnancy was contracted from outside. It extends to the fact that if a couple divorced, and the woman remarried and bore children in her new home, the children belong to the old husband in so far as the dowry paid on her head had not been refunded. If this be the case no Igbo person who has any sense of tradition will seek DNA testing to ascertain biological relationship with his children. But the man becomes blameless if the revelation came out because of immigration requirements. Sadly, many Igbo men have since been separated from their age-old traditional practices.

    OTHER CLIME: https://www.forbes.com/advisor/legal/divorce/divorce-                                                    statistics/

    Secondly, love does not suddenly vanish on account of the betrayal of trust. No husband should take out the sin of his wife on his children. The children are blameless. Moreover, in my Christian faith, we are schooled to accept that we are all children of God by adoption into His family. So as much as it is humanly possible, the home should not be splintered on account of the betrayal of trust. Healing can take place with confession and repentance. The option of taking the children and driving away the adulterous woman may not suffice because merely seeing the children may remind you of what had happened. Because we are of blood and flesh this preachment would appear easier said than done. The problem is that even if you sack the woman and the children, you will still go to your grave a defeated and miserable man.

     

    For the sake of the cohesion of Nigerian families and the health of the society, this fad of a resort to DNA testing should be given a second thought. The saying may be wrong, but what you do not know will likely not kill you. Just pray and trust God that your partner is really your spouse. After all the Holy Bible says that he who finds a wife has found a good thing and also obtained favour from God.

     

     

     

  • The Gravy Party is Over Folks: Nigerians Must Abandon the Delusion of Riches and Accept The Pain of Economic Transformation

    1. This mythology that we are a rich continent because of our abundance of natural resources is a total misunderstanding of the dynamic and seismic revolution taking place in the global economy from a resource extraction, fossil-fuel dependent, industrial model to a knowledge-driven digital model.

     

    Only those economies that invest in their creative human capital will win the race while those who rely on the extraction of raw natural resources like we do face the natural resource curse and a future filled with pain and grounding poverty. One of the reasons, Tinubu is facing a lot of resistance and backlash is that he is dealing with a country that is still suffering the delusion of riches when it is infact a pathetically poor country, with 17th century infrastructure, primitive and near comatose manufacturing sector, with an economy built around the extraction and export of crude oil.

     

    Until we rid ourselves of the delusion that we are a rich country, we will not make a headway in accepting the pain it will take to reform, reposition and leapfront our economy into the 21st century, knowledge-driven digital economy. We already missed out of the industrial revolution. Most of our citizens still engage in open defacation, wiping their asses with corn husks, like we did as kids decades ago with no access to pipe-borne water, nor electricity, problems that were solved over a century ago. Yet we call ourselves a rich country.

    Former President Obasanjo is not helping our cause when he engages in the same ostrich with its head in the sand, blame game of externalizing our deeply rooted economy malaise on the west and its multilateral financial institutions like the IMF and the World Bank.

    In a recent speech in Kenya, the former President played the same playbook of blaming external forces for Africa’s economic disaster. He criticized the World Bank, accusing it of misleading African nations through its initiatives.

     

    The stark reality is that no one has forced us to go cap in the hand beggging for bail-out loan from this last resort, out-of-option lending institutions like the IMF and the World Bank. The fault lies with us and our vision-less leaders who wasted our oil windfall of the 70s on frivolities rather than invest it on economic transformational ventures. It is hard to convince the child of a once lucky lottery winner who blew his windfall that the party was over and that his parents are now dirt poor. That is the situation we now find ourselves, especially those of us who grew into adulthood in the heady decade of the 70s, when Gowon told us our problem was not money but how to spend and we went crazy with insane profligacy and wasteful spending.

     

    Now we must face the lean season and we are having a difficult time facing that reality. We have an easy fall guy to blame for all our woes. His name is Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    Dr. Adewale Alonge is the President and Founder, Africa-Diaspora Partnership for Empowerment & Development (ADPED) Inc. Miami, Florida. www.adped.org

  • FINGERPRINTS By UGO ONUOHA

    ‘Where-ever law ends, tyranny begins,…’

     

    Captured hereunder are some thoughts of the British philosopher and political theorist John Locke in his enduring treatises in the 17th century. He wrote about the form of his world and power relations going back to almost 1000 years ago. Though he was a genius, he would still have been shocked, if he was to be alive today, to observe how his analysis about 800 years ago appears to still apply to many African countries including Nigeria. He was not a prophet in the classical understanding of that word. He was certainly not another Nostradamus who was said to have correctly predicted events that would happen centuries after his death. But Locke’s demonstration of future – thinking, for lack of any better description, was legendary.

     

    The Online Library of Liberty (OLL) in an entry about two years ago said of Locke: “Where-ever law ends, tyranny begins”. The thoughts continue by explaining that ‘The equality of all citizens under the law is a linch-pin of the modern notion of the rule of law in a democratic state. A revolutionary implication of this idea, well appreciated by Locke in the tumultuous 1680s, is that even rulers and their magistrates were also under the “sovereignty of the law”. Locke concludes that when any member of the state exceeds his legal authority or in any way violates the law, he ceases” to be a magistrate; and, acting without authority, may be opposed, as any other man, who by force invades the right of another’. Has Nigeria under the All Progressives Congress (APC) since 2015 not been ticking the boxes of descent to tyranny?

    “Not quite! Here’s a glimpse into the set up for 2027. Those who may dare to contest for the presidency will start with almost insurmountable handicaps. As we said the police chief will be Yoruba. The chief of army staff, Yoruba. Head of the secret police, Yoruba. The director – general of the national intelligence agency, Yoruba. Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Yoruba; customs comptroller-general, Yoruba; immigration, Yoruba; central bank governor, Yoruba, just to mention a few.”

     

    There was a viral post on WhatsApp recently which appeared to warn readers to worry about any society or country where any citizen who exposes crime is himself treated as a criminal. The post said that any country where that is the case, then the country can conveniently be said to be fully under State Capture. Yet, another recent viral WhatsApp message said something to the effect that nobody captures power and uses it for public good. Does that ring a bell? Does it not represent our unfolding reality?

     

    The process towards the capture of the Nigerian state by rogue rulers and their accomplices may have started since the beginning of this republic 25 years ago. But as it has become obvious today, the people who were at the helm of affairs earlier were benign rulers. In 2006, the eve of his term limit, the then president, Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo, was alleged to be plotting to rig the Nigerian constitution so as to remain in office beyond 2007. He has repeatedly and vehemently denied the allegation.

    But his henchman who was deputy senate president, the late Ibrahim Mantu, confirmed the existence of the plot while he was alive. He should know because he was the chairman of the constitution amendment committee in 2006. He told Premium Times newspaper in 2016, years before he died in 2021, that he would have laid down his life for Obasanjo to continue as president if he knew that the country would be so badly governed. At the time Mantu was interviewed, the All Progressives Congress (APC’s) Muhammadu Buhari was in power. And at that time Nigeria was not half as bad as it is today. We will leave it to the imagination what Mantu would have said were he to still be alive.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo

     

    Buhari was an affliction on Nigeria. He was the person who led those who have turned out to be barbarians to seize power in 2015 through a democratic insurgency. But the preceding statement gives too much credit to Buhari. It has since been doubly confirmed that the man from Daura is incapable of doing anything well except for nepotism and sectarianism. He is a rabid Islamist. In 2014/2015, Buhari could be likened to an Igbo saying of imanye aka nwata na-oku (jar) ka ndi ozo nwe efe busasia ihe di n’ime oku. It will be a struggle to find an English language equivalent for the foregoing. So let me try an explanation. A group of adults convinces a child to take cookies from the jar at home. Then they would subsequently capitalise on that to empty the jar. When the woman of the house or head of the household returns, the adults would claim that it was the child that took and ate the cookies. You probably have conspired with others to do something like this in your past life.

     

    “In the wake of what Nigerians are now experiencing in terms of impunity, Buhari, despite being a former general in the army, could be classified as an apprentice or wannabe tyrant. Under Tinubu the gloves are off. He is the head of the executive arm of government, and the de facto head of the national legislature. There’s no evidence that he has purloined the judiciary, suspicions notwithstanding.”

     

    Buhari was a failed military ruler between December 1983 – August 1985 when he was ousted by his colleagues in a palace coup. He failed again under the regime of the former head of state, the late Gen. Sani Abacha, who appointed him to head the defunct petroleum trust fund (PTF). That agency under Buhari was turned into a cesspit of fraud and corruption. Projects funded by the agency, which was created to equitably use proceeds from the removal of petrol subsidy for infrastructural development in all parts of the country, was disproportionately cited in one part of Nigeria- the north. The PTF stank so much so that Obasanjo initiated steps to probe the agency when he was elected president in 1999, but dropped the idea apparently in furtherance of esprit de corp. Like Buhari, Obasanjo was a retired army general. Buhari was not indicted. PTF was not probed. No sleaze was linked to Buhari. But it still speaks to what Nigeria was (and still is) that a man with such baggage was even considered, and then elected as president.

     

    In the wake of what Nigerians are now experiencing in terms of impunity, Buhari, despite being a former general in the army, could be classified as an apprentice or wannabe tyrant. Under Tinubu the gloves are off. He is the head of the executive arm of government, and the de facto head of the national legislature. There’s no evidence that he has purloined the judiciary, suspicions notwithstanding. Though it was no fault of his, what else would be the reasonable thing to believe in a situation where Tinubu was positioned to appoint about 50% of the serving 21 justices of the Supreme Court. The president recently performed an absurdity of administering the oath of office on a non-substantive chief justice of Nigeria. She may need to swear a fresh oath when and if she’s confirmed by the spineless senate. A recent study found that judges, the judiciary and sundry officers of our courts housed the highest number of bribe takers in Nigeria. So, the judiciary is there for the taking, if it has not already been captured.

    READ THIS: https://newdiplomatng.com/falana-writes-tinubu-wants/

    A democrat does not act in a manner Nigeria’s president does. Tinubu has no regards for Nigerians. He is contemptuous and disdainful of the people. He is a pseudo democrat. And this aspect of his life has been in the public domain for at least 25 years. A casual examination of his political trajectory in the last 30 years, and his stranglehold on the politics and the economy of Lagos state which he ruled between 1999-2007 will more than adequately tell the story. A Nigerian of Yoruba stock warned in the lead up to the 2023 presidential election that any ambition that was premised on emi lo Kan (Yoruba for it is my turn) was fraught with danger. He said that the concept was an open expression of the determination of the advocate to corrupt the system and purloin the outcome of the election. Though Tinubu was the exponent of emi lo kan in Nigeria’s political lexicon, he cannot be said to have stolen the presidency. All the courts in the country absolved him of any wrongdoing, and affirmed that the ‘Independent’ National Electoral Commission (INEC) correctly called the results of the presidential election. The only sore point is that the judgments happened during the period that the study we referenced earlier found that judges and other officers of Nigerian courts were the highest takers of bribe money.

    Tyranny is not an event, it’s a process. And the process as it concerns Nigeria was substantially set in motion during the eight years of Buhari. It is gradually becoming suffocating in this dispensation. Tinubu is at the head of it, and those working with him have become fast learners. The fact that the heads of the three arms of the Nigerian national government carry their share of baggage is not coincidental. Even the chairman of the ruling party is mired in corruption issues. It is not also a happenstance that the leadership of the three significant opposition parties – Labour Party, People’s Democratic Party, and the New Nigerian Political Party – are mired in problems and so unstable. APC is already firmly in the grips of Tinubu. For tyranny to get rooted and to fester, there’s a need to destabilise leading opposition parties. And that’s on course.

     

    The other day, Alhaji Sule Lamido, former governor of Jigawa state and a political gerontocrat, alerted the country that Tinubu is increasingly entrenching himself to make it impossible to remove him through the ballot in 2027. He was right. Unless something drastic happens, the chairman of the national assembly will be in office during the election in 2027. He is a Kept Man. Two helms men of secret security agencies were recently removed and replaced. One of the newcomers is of the ethnic stock of the president. The tenure of the in-coming substantive chief justice of the federation, Kudirat Kekere-Ekun, the president’s kinswoman, will run through 2027. If there’s any dispute from the presidential election, she will constitute the apex election tribunal, and probably head it. Whoever will be the INEC chairman in 2027 will be Tinubu’s lapdog. He will superintend another mago mago and wuru wuru election. The same can be said of the service chiefs. For certain, the police inspector – general will still be around given recent shenanigans with his tenure. Ordinarily and statutorily the police inspector – general should be out of office this month. He is also the president’s kinsman and was Tinubu’s aide-de-camp when he was the governor of Lagos state. Then add the issue of incumbency for a man who has no scruples in using state power for personal gain, then the picture of 2027 will be complete.

     

    Not quite! Here’s a glimpse into the set up for 2027. Those who may dare to contest for the presidency will start with almost insurmountable handicaps. As we said the police chief will be Yoruba. The chief of army staff, Yoruba. Head of the secret police, Yoruba. The director – general of the national intelligence agency, Yoruba. Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Yoruba; customs comptroller-general, Yoruba; immigration, Yoruba; central bank governor, Yoruba, just to mention a few. Many of these agencies are effectively in control of manipulating elections in Nigeria. For instance, the central bank warehouses sensitive election materials. The army and police escort materials and election staff. So everything is fixed. Only the God factor cannot be factored in at this time, or at any time for that matter.

     

    Tinubu is Nigeria’s usu biara orji ntagbu – locust, cankerworm and caterpillar. How ironic that Usu in Igbo is bat. Even usu will shrug at being batified. The president’s wife had boasted last year that their family was so blessed materially that they would have no need to be parasites on the country. The story is different. The truth is that previous presidents of the country who never laid claim to riches and stupendous wealth did not assault the commonwealth as the Tinubu family is doing. The president buys an aircraft which Nigerians do not know the cost. He hops into the craft and travels abroad while the country is reeling from energy crisis, acute petrol scarcity, and pangs of hunger of citizens. He buys an upscale bomb-resistant American Escalade Sport Utility Vehicle. It was procured from the public till but Nigerians do not know for how much. The regime spends money with little or no accountability, as if money is going out of fashion. And the money is borrowed. The lavish lifestyle of Tinubu underpinned by the concept of emi lo kan is happening at the same time millions of people are slipping below the poverty line. Despondency and despair have straddled the land.

     

    In this dispensation we operate many national budgets concurrently making tracking and accountability nearly impossible. The budgets on their own are problematic. Everyday we are assailed with budget provisions in strange places. It’s no longer abnormal to find allocations for the construction of culverts in the budget of the country’s space exploration agency. Nothing makes sense, and the president does not care. If he cares, there’s no evidence. Under Gen. Abacha, the then Anglican Bishop of Akure Diocese, in Ondo state, the Right Reverend Emmanuel Bolanle Gbonigi, described the former head of state as ‘thoroughly wicked’. But Abacha was a military ruler. What do we say of the country today?

     

    *It’s almost impossible to exhaust the perfidious activities of this regime but we will sign off here as the third leg of the trilogy which started two weeks ago.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • 2027 Election: Labour Party and Others self-destruct

    2027 Election: Labour Party and Others self-destruct

    Apart from the New Nigeria Peoples Party, other leading players at the last election except the ruling All People’s Congress seem to be imploding, all as a result of frenzied moves ahead of the 2027 general elections.

     

    For instance, both the PDP and the Labour Party, the first and second runners up at the 2023 presidential election have been neck deep in internal wranglings for no specific reasons other than the machinations of greedy party members to self destruct in favour of an individual’s ambition to conquere power in 2027.

     

    In an apparent redundant move the Labour Party has revoked the automatic tickets previously reserved for its 2023 presidential candidate, Peter Obi, and the Governor of Abia State, Alex Otti, for the 2027 election.

     

    The decision was made during the party’s National Executive Council meeting held on Monday, September 9, in Abuja.

     

    Following the meeting, the party’s National Working Committee, led by Julius Abure, announced that all party tickets, from the presidency to the House of Assemblies, would now be open to all qualified Nigerians.

     

    In a communique signed by the National Chairman of the party, Abure, and National Secretary, Umar Ibrahim, the NEC nullified the decision taken at the stakeholders meeting convened by Otti.

     

    The NEC insisted that there was no vacuum in the leadership of the party after “conducting its National Convention in line with its constitution, the Electoral Act and Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria on March 27, 2024.”

     

  • ‘Where-ever law ends, tyranny begins,…’

    READ: The Nigerian Anchor tomorrow…
    The other day, Alhaji Sule Lamido, former governor of Jigawa state and a political gerontocrat, alerted the country that Tinubu is increasingly entrenching himself to make it impossible to remove him through the ballot in 2027. He was right. Unless something drastic happens, the chairman of the national assembly will be in office during the election in 2027. He is a Kept Man. Two helms men of secret security agencies were recently removed and replaced. One of the newcomers is of the ethnic stock of the president. The tenure of the in-coming substantive chief justice of the federation, Kudirat Kekere-Ekun, the president’s kinswoman, will run through 2027. If there’s any dispute from the presidential election, she will constitute the apex election tribunal, and probably head it. Whoever will be the INEC chairman in 2027 will be Tinubu’s lapdog. He will superintend another mago mago and wuru wuru election. The same can be said of the service chiefs. For certain, the police inspector – general will still be around given recent shenanigans with his tenure. Ordinarily and statutorily the police inspector – general should be out of office this month. He is also the president’s kinsman and was Tinubu’s aide-de-camp when he was the governor of Lagos state. Then add the issue of incumbency for a man who has no scruples in using state power for personal gain, then the picture of 2027 will be complete.”

     

    Quote from the concluding instalment in the trioligy by UGO Onuoha in THE FINGERPRINT serial.

    READ tomorrow.

  • For Ajuri, like Betta, Greed goes before fall

    For Ajuri, like Betta, Greed goes before fall

    The real reason Ajuri Ngelale resigned from his plum job as President Tinubu’s spokesperson yesterday is that he was about to be sacked.

     

    Ajuri, the 37 year old newsman, like Betta Edu, the former minister of Humanitarian Affairs, simply ate more than he could chew. But unlike his other youngster peer, Ajuri realised he had fallen out of favour of friends and foe alike and he took his own poison.

    Betta Edu, former Humanitarian Affairs Minister: Suspended for stealing allegations

    Facts emerging from the Villa indicate that it was the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Mr. George Akume that pressed the button that ignited the storm against Mr. Ngelale.

    It all started when Ajuri began to create offices and making himself the head like: Special Presidential Envoy on Climate Action, Chairman of the Presidential Steering Committee on Project Evergreen, Nigeria’s first green industrial zone, as well as  Secretary of the Presidential Committee on Climate Action and Green Economic solutions, which is chaired by President Tinubu.

    George Akume, Secretary to Government of the Federation (SGF) Complained about Mr. Ngelale’s power grabbing tendencies

    This move, apart from the SGF, angered many others, especially technocrats in the climate change movement who felt that Ajuri did not have what it takes to productively steer these engagements.

     

    This turned out to be Mr. Ngelale’s second major and last battle after the first, when he leveraged on his chubby relations with Deji Tinubu, the son of the president and Femi Gbajabiamila, the Chief of Staff to President Tinubu to clinch the job of Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, initially penciled down for Mr. Dele Alake.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    From the above incidents it can be said that, amongst other factors, two elements that hastened Mr. Ngelale’s fall from power were inexperience and greed. Upon ascendancy, Ngelale was found not to be a whiz kid in information management after all.

     

    Some examples include when, in September 2023, he made an incorrect announcement, claiming that Tinubu was the first African president to ring the Nasdaq closing bell.

     

    Another instance was when he declared, rather prematurely that the United Arab Emirates (UAE) government had decided to remove Nigeria’s prohibition on visas. The outcry from the media each time was especially embarrassing for the government.

     

    Ajuri simply didn’t fit the part as a topnotch professional to occupy the coveted office. As someone remarked, “Some of his press statements were simply childish,” referring to Ngelale’s social media post in which he claimed to have shattered the State House record for the most statements made in a single day. This happened on July 13, 2024.

     

    The end for Mr.Ajuri Ngelale, presidency revealed, came recently when he was asked to chose between special adviser to the president on media and publicity and special presidential envoy on climate action/ chairman, Presidential Steering Committee on Project Evergreen.

     

    Expectedly, he chose the former. This was however, declined as he was told that if he must continue function in that role then he must work under guidance of an experienced media master.

     

    From thence, Mr. Ngelale knew that the die had been caste and his job had gone. He had to resign.

    The lesson for Mr. Ngelale and others in powerful positions is to be mindful of the toes they step on. When you step on too many toes or ‘certain’ toes, you may loose your balance and fall.

  • Arm Your cranial Cavity Against Anti-Tinubu Information Warfare

    Arm Your cranial Cavity Against Anti-Tinubu Information Warfare

     

    As Nigeria Turns 63: No Quick Road To Nirvana

    Whether we admit it or not, there is a fierce information warfare competing to take hold of the jello (our brain) measuring 5.5 x 6.5 x 3.6 inches (about ten tennis balls) sitting in our cranial cavity. It is daily being bombarded by laser beam of misinformation, exaggeration, mis-attribution, propaganda, innuendos, insinuations, deep fake and outright lies. The goal is to manipulate our perception and control our behavior spanning from what we eat, buy, wear, our belief and perception of reality about our institutions and government.

     

    The human brain has not evolved enough to handle its bombardment with so much conflicting information at the same time. That is why confirmation bias has become its default operational model. Confirmation bias is the propensity of the human brain to acquiesce and accept as fact information that comports with and confirms pre-existing bias, no matter how absurd it is.

     

    It is almost as if we are at the early stages of losing our critical and analytical thinking skills. Most of us have surrendered our brains, thoughts and minds to AI generated algorithms to do the thinking for us.

     

    Sadly, the people behind these algorithms have obliged us by manipulating our minds.

     

    So when you read the above headline US Economist | Wednesday August 28, 2024, Economist Cartoons Tinubu Private Jet as Nigerians starve”, what comes to your mind. Did you think that the cartoon in question was released by “US Economist” a news organization or Steve Hanke a right wing Neoconservative economist who served under Ronald Reagan? What social media will not tell is that the latter is true. The entire story is based on a cartoon and about ten to fifteen words on X (formerly Twitter) by Steve Hanke, a John Hopkins professor who has made Tinubu-basing a cottage industry. Yet that story has been picked up by the usual suspects, the Tinubu-Hate group and blown out into a major news headline on Nigerian social media. That is the classic M. O. of propaganda and perception manipulation on social media.

     

    When did it become the fricking (don’t want to be vulgar) business of a White Neocon who probably has not set his feet in Nigeria ever to dictate to our president when he decides to replace the fleet of inoperable flight-unworthy aircraft in the presidential fleet? Of course these same bozos would be the first to castigate us as incompetent brutes should God forbids our president and his cabinet is incinerated in a rickety plane crash like they did when the Iranian president died in the same circumstance.

     

    Yes, these are indeed extremely tough times for our country and our people, but by golly we must not succumb our brains and our sovereignty to malicious outsiders who wish us no good and have contributed to our socio-economic and political downfall.

     

    Sadly, and because fake news and opinion journalism sell, old media newspapers like the Tribune, Punch and Arise TV among other have junked their journalistic pretensions and instead have hired highly talented opinionators (cloaked in the undeserved garbs of Journalists) to peddle beautifully crafted hateful opinions and perception-manipulations.

     

    Let me repeat once more that there is a vicious information warfare to turn the Nigerian citizens against its government and in the process decapitate the Tinubu regime and our hard earned albeit frustrating democracy and turn the ethnic group against one another. Sadly this phenomenon has become a global epidemics. Most national security agencies from the CIA, FBI and M-6 have set up sophisticated anti-propaganda units to confront this menace. It would be criminal negligence if the Nigerian government does not set up similar unit in the country. Fake news have led to ethnic and racial massacres from Bangladesh, to Indian and across Europe. Mischief makers will call it descent into authoritarianism and infringement of the freedom of speech.

     

    Information has been weaponized and no responsible government will sit by indolently while the country security and sovereignty are been threatened by information warriors. Yes, we must defend vigorously defend our fundamental right to freedom of speech, but w will all be risking it all if we allowed evil doers to hide behind the veil of free speech to destabilize our country.

    We must jealously guide, armour and insulate your ten tennis ball jello (brain) against the misinformation and outright manipulation.

  • Oil is Indeed the Devil’s excrement: It’s Stench Is Choking Up Nigeria

    As Nigeria Turns 63: No Quick Road To Nirvana

    Juan Pablo Pérez Alfonzo, the prominent Venezuelan politician and one of the founders of OPEC, in the early 70s called petroleum “the devil’s excrement” that always brings trouble—waste, corruption, consumption: our public services falling apart and debt. How I wish he could wake up from his grave to see the devastation of his native land, Venezuela my homeland, Nigeria, he would shake his head in shock how apt and in fact understated his prediction was.

    The stench of oil, specifically, the high price of one of its refined products, petrol, is literally threatening to choke the life out of my ancestral homeland, Nigeria. It has set the country’s social media on fire and threatening to do same to the regime of the newly elected President Tinubu, who removed the corruption-infected oil subsidy scam.

    The data below which is making the round on social media compares the selling price for PMS (petrol) across different countries apparently to justify the price hike. Assuming that one can even verify the reliability of this data (there are different grades of PMS in the U.S. for instance, and prices vary from state to state and in fact from one station to another on the same street. Due to local regulation and standards, in Carlifonia petrol can cost twice as what obtains in Texas. The data shows that PMS price in the US is about twice what we pay in Nigeria.

    However while the proposed minimum wage in Nigeria is equivalent to $43.75 a month at the current exchange rate of Naira 1600 to a dollar, the minimum wage in the U.S. which also varies from state to state is $7.25 per hour for federal minimum wage for covered nonexempt employees. In Carlifonia the minimum hourly wage hovers around $16. The bottom line is, comparing PMS prices across nations is a meaningless venture.

    In many of these countries unlike Nigeria, the public transport infrastructure is so advanced that many people don’t even drive.

    With our poor public transport network, the ridiculously low wage in our economy, and our over-dependence on fossil fuel dependent road transportation to move commodities across the nation, the price of PMS is unsustainably high. It is a drag on our economy and a major driver of our high inflation.

    Our challenge is that we can’t work our way out of the high price of PMS with the corruption-ridden oil subsidy scam. We have got to increase our refinery capacity. While Dangote coming on stream is a great first step, we cannot depend on another monopoly for the supply of arguably the most critical factor in our economy, petrol and diesel.

    By the way as Dangote himself has proclaimed publicly, the refinery wouldn’t have happened without the visionary leadership of Tinubu, himself an oil man having worked in the industry before. We need to give the man Tinubu some credit.

    Solving our petrol problem would not be easy nor quick, but we must have some faith in and give this 15 months old presidency time to work through it.

    Although, the uninformed has been howling about NNPC acquisition of a major petrol distribution company two years ago, with NNPC poised to be the main distributor for Dangote petrol, this all is making some sense now. The petrol marketers are a powerful cartel which is adept at price manipulation and price gouging. Have you noticed the almost coordinated rolling sale of PMS by different petrol stations in your neighbourhood? Most of them close shop when PMS is available in NNPC stations. With NNPC acquiring more petrol stations and with its exclusive right to Dangote petrol, there is a distinct possibility to finally break the back of the oil marketer cartel. However, more refineries need to come on-stream to address the supply-demand-price equilibrium conundrum in the Nigeria petrol supply chain.

    This coupled with massive investment in public transport infrastructure especially rail line and solution to our energy infrastructure, our power generation and distribution infrastructure, the prospect for economic revitalization of our country should improve substantially. However, all of these prospect goes down the tube if we throw the baby out with the bath water out of frustration. If we allow those vested and entrenched interest who have fed fat on our dysfunction andwho wish our country no good to decapitate the Tinubu presidency and our hard earned albeit imperfect and frankly frustrating democracy. Ww cannot allow people to fly the Russian flag again as a form of protest in our country.

    We must understand that there can be no gain without pain. We didn’t get to this economic Armageddon in one day and it will take time, pain and sacrifice to dig our way out. We the grown-up who enjoyed the bounties of petrol-dollars in the 70s and who contributed in one way or another to our country’s perilous condition, should complain and whine less and make one last sacrifice to bequeath to our children, grand children and future generation, a country they can at least have an opportunity to salvage. We have made a mess of our country. We have put our parochial tribal interest above the mission of building a strong virile nation. We have complained about corruption until it is our countryman who is caught or it is our turn to dip our hands in the treasury and we end up doing worse than the people we once condemned.

    We can heap the blame for global warming and every other problem that confronts our country on Tinubu’s 15-month regime all we want. It won’t solve our problem. Neither him nor anyone possess the magic wand to solve all the problems that have been built up through decades of misgovernance and corruption.

    He is not to blame for all the governors mismanaging the huge revenue allocations they are now getting. He is not responsible for the price gouging by the market women and the corruption that has become endemic in the Nigerian moral fabric.

    Our problems are multidimensional, multigenerational, of both poor leadership and incorrigible followership.

    Our poor leadership is a reflection of us the people. We cannot ask of our leaders that which we the followers neither possess nor can give.

    Leadership is a two-way street. Yes, the leaders can set the tone and lead by example but the system sets the limit of what is doable. We have set up a dysfunctional corrupt system, powered by a plagiarized constitution imposed on us by the military, in a multi-ethnic, multi-religious country that is constantly engaging self-destructive war of ethno-hegemonic advantage rather than what is best for the country.

    Until that system is totally demolished, and Nigerians sit at a round table to decide if they wanted to live together in a harmonious country where common national interest trumps narrow parochial tribal hegemonic supremacist objective, there is little hope for our country.

    Those of us who think they can perform miracle within the dysfunctional corrupt, nepotistic system we have created should quit their armchair pontificating business and throw their hat in the ring. Talk is cheap, governing a nation as complicated and dysfunctional as Nigeria is tough. Managing any group of Nigerians is tough as nail. Look at our socio-cultural associations and large families all bedeviled by conflict, power-tripping and divisions. Many Nigerian churches and cultural groups in the U.S. and Europe end up splitting into factors over leadership tussle, many ending up in courts for resolution. So extrapolate that to managing a country like Nigeria where each other ethnic group sees the other as enemy.

    Dr. Adewale Alonge is the President and Founder, Africa-Diaspora Partnership for Empowerment & Development (ADPED) Inc. Miami, Florida. www.adped.org

  • We feel Betrayed, Joe Ajaero, NLC President

    We feel Betrayed, Joe Ajaero, NLC President

     

    Joe Ajaero

    JOE AJAERO

    We are filled with a deep sense of betrayal as the federal government clandestinely increases the pump price of premium motor spirit (PMS). One of the reasons for accepting N70,000 as national minimum wage was the understanding that the pump price of PMS would not be increased even as we knew that N70,000 was not sufficient.

    We recall vividly when Mr. President gave us the devil’s alternatives to choose from: either N250,000 as minimum wage (subject to the rise of the pump price between N1,500 and N2,000) and N70,000 (at old PMS rates), we opted for the latter because we could not bring ourselves to accept further punishment on Nigerians.

    But here we are, barely one month after and with government yet to commence payment of the new national minimum wage, confronted by a reality we cannot explain.

    It is both traumatic and nightmarish.

    Yet, when we told government that it’s approach to resolving the fuel subsidy contradictions was patently faulty and would not last, it’s front row cheer leaders sneered at us, saying we did not understand basic economics .

    But if truth be told, this act of betrayal is consistent with the character of this government. We recall the assurances we were given by the leadership of the National Assembly on the 250% tariff hike, that it had been dealt with and there was no need to openly engage the Minister of Power who was at that meeting.

    Instead of the promised reversal, the rate has since been jerked up further putting more Nigerians and businesses in jeopardy.

    The combined effects of government’s ferocious right -wing market policies brought Nigerians and Nigeria to their all-time low and led to the End-Hunger/End Bad Governance protests.

    Rather than make amends, government arrested and hounded into detention some of those who took part and some of those who had nothing to do with these protests, charging them with criminal conspiracy, subversion, treasonable felony, terrorism financing and cyber crime with an intent to overthrow the government of President Tinubu.

    The police and other security agencies have since been on rampage terrorising the citizenry in pursuance of government’s agenda of muzzling lawful dissent.

    In brazen pursuit, they have defamed and libeled not a few individuals.

    They have gone as far as appropriating the statutory roles of the Ministry of Labour and Employment in resolving trade dispute matters and issues considered outside the jurisdiction of the security agencies.

    That the government is on rampage in the face of stifling conditions of living is an understatement but we promise Nigerians that we at the Nigeria Labour Congress will not be cowed into submission. Together with civil society, we brought about this democracy when some of the actors in power today were conspiring with the military on how to perpetuate their hold on political power.

    When the State and the security forces picked on us in a hybrid war, we had our suspicions. We knew they were up to something sinister and needed to distract/divert our attention or possibly frighten or weaken us before they came out with it so that we would not have a robust response.

    Now that they chickens have come to roost, we were right in our suspicions. However, we want to let Nigerians know that the clandestine/surreptitious increase in the pump price of PMS is the first among the equally sinister policies government has up its sleeve.

    On our part, we stand resolute with the people and will neither be distracted nor intimidated by the government or its security agencies.

    We insist that government cannot criminalise protests or basic rights in the domain of the citizenry.

    Accordingly, we demand the immediate:
    1). Reversal of the latest increase in the pump of PMS across the country;

    2). Release of all those incarcerated or being prosecuted on the assumption of having participated in the recent protests;

    3). Halt the indiscriminate arrest and detention of citizens on trumped up charges;

    4). Reversal of the 250% tariff hike in electricity;

    5). Stop to the hijack of the duties of the Ministry of Labour and Employment;

    6). End to policies that engender hunger and insecurity;

    7). Halt to government’s culture of terror, fear and lying.

    We are guided by our belief in our country and the need to secure and sustain its sovereignty, integrity and welfare of the people.

    In the coming days, the appropriate organs of the Congress will be meeting to take appropriate decisions which will be made public.

    Comrade Joe Ajaero is the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC)

     

  • Political malpractices and governance malfeasance

    By
    UGO ONUOHA
    “But Nigeria’s president moves around as an Emperor of a rich Gulf state with a N5 billion yacht, a N2 billion custom-made, armour-plated and bomb-resistant American Escalade Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV)- fit only for a monarch or for the leaders of the first world superpower countries such as the United States, Russia and China.”
    LAST week the presidency said in a statement that Nigeria’s president, Alhaji Bola Ahmed Tinubu, would be travelling to the People’s Republic of China in the first week of September. Unless something has changed in our comprehension of the English language, the first week of September will ordinarily mean between Sunday, September 1 to Saturday, September 7.
    For a fractured presidency this understanding does not apply. Now let’s quote aspects of that statement issued by his media adviser, Chief Ajuri Ngalela.
    “His Excellency, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, will depart for the People’s Republic of China, most specifically, Beijing, from nation’s capital (Abuja) within the first week of September, to engage in a series of meetings and activities with immediate and future benefit to the Nigerian economy and the Nigerian people”. However, 48 hours before the start of the first week of September, the president hopped into his jet, in the ‘nation’s capital’, and left the country.
    So, as you read this, Tinubu is reportedly already in China meeting with his counterpart, President Xi Jinping, or visiting big corporations in that Asian country, or interacting with the chief executive officers of companies that boast trillions of dollars in assets. Unlike my wife, I have not been to China, but stories abound that China is, in some respects like New Zealand – a world away. But the import in the conflict in the presidency’s statement and the early departure without further clarification is that the disdain of Tinubu for Nigerians extends to those who directly work for him. It could also be that he chose to leave early so as to savour his new but old (pre-used) super luxurious N250 billion widebody A330 Airbus presidential jet.
    READ ALSO: https://www.mondopoli.it/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Misery-                          Index-Worsens-Poverty-in-Nigeria-final.pdf
    I concede that it will not be uncharitable for any reader to read mischief into the monetary value I have, on my own, assigned to the ‘new’ presidential bird. For a start there was no proper and conventional appropriation and provisioning for the Airbus jet acquisition in the 2024 national budget. It was just bought so that our president will not die in an aircraft crash given that the Boeing Business Jet (BBJ) in the presidential fleet, 19 years old, had become unserviceable and prone to annoying downtimes which embarrass the president and the country in foreign lands. The $150 million USD purchase price for the Airbus was a product of conjecture by the media. It is the same for the $50 million allocated to retrofit and upscale the jet to fit the status of a feudal president. Depending on who you ask, we have between eight to 10 aircraft and choppers in the presidential fleet of a poor country led by a poor president who soaks garri and eats groundnuts for lunch according to Vice President Kashim Shettima. This diet inside a presidential jet will be a spectacle worth beholding.
    As usual the president and the regime he heads do not deem it fit and proper to account to Nigerians on how they came about the aircraft; where it was sourced from; when; and, for how much? All Nigerians were told, and grudgingly so, by a low-level presidential staff on the social media, was that the aircraft was snapped up during an auction, and paid for through a now veritable slush fund called service wide vote. The service wide vote can be likened to the notorious security vote, a channel through which heads in the executive arms of government use to steal money from the public till. The notoriety of the abuse of this budgetary provision was unearthed in a research paper published in 2019.
    The research work conducted by Messrs William Smart Ekong, Sunday Effiong, Charles Effiong, and, John Ogenyi Oboh under the title ‘Use of Service -Wide Vote (Contingency Budget) for National Development: Evidence from Federal Ministries, Departments And Agencies in Nigeria’ revealed that government ministries and agencies, and even the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) abused the service wide vote “to the tune of over N4.17 trillion between 2004 and 2018 due to non-compliance with rules governing the use of the vote”. The researchers, after observing that the abuse had stunted and blunted national developmental objectives of the vote, proceeded to make recommendations to help police the vote including allocation of 5% of the annual budget to service -wide-vote, regular replenishment of releases from the vote, obtaining approval from the National Assembly before releasing funds from the vote, roll over of unspent funds, prosecution of corrupt MDA officials, and avoiding those sharp practices that “will make the use of the service-wide-vote ineffective in achieving national developmental objectives”.
    “But Nigeria’s president moves around as an Emperor of a rich Gulf state with a N5 billion yacht, a N2 billion custom-made, armour-plated and bomb-resistant American Escalade Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV)- fit only for a monarch or for the leaders of the first world superpower countries such as the United States, Russia and China.”
    Two things confront us in the findings and recommendations of these researchers, two of whom were said to be of the University of Calabar in Cross River state. First, there’s no evidence yet that the five year – old study which was published in the Research Journal of Finance and Accounting 10(10): 45-62 found favour with Nigeria’s rulers. Secondly, the scholars may not have envisaged that this country will be burdened with a national assembly that is completely beholden to the executive arm of government. But it does not really matter because it is not beyond Tinubu and his cheerleaders to argue that the acquisition of a N250 billion jet in an opaque manner was one of the reasons for the creation of the service-wide-vote. This is what you get when a ruler is brazenly contemptuous of the people.
    Meanwhile, Nigeria’s population is currently put at anywhere between 200-250 million. Since nobody knows the country’s population for sure, we are bound to rely on projections, conjectures and guess-estimates. About two years ago, Nigeria’s National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) found that not less than 133 million people were dimensionally poor – food poor, health poor, education poor, housing/shelter poor, potable water poor, sanitation poor, etc. Since May last year, many more Nigerians have dropped into the category of the dimensionally poor in the wake of the no brainer economic policy options of the extant regime, with the figure unofficially put at over 150 million citizens.
    “He described Tinubu as “arrogant, ignorant, and incompetent” for prioritising flamboyant lifestyle and luxury travel amid ongoing economic struggles in Nigeria, where according to him, inflation rates were reportedly as high as 114%.”
    Nigeria has consecutively remained the global capital of poverty since 2019 when it inherited the dubious tag from India. By the way, India is about six times the population of Nigeria. But Nigeria’s president moves around as an Emperor of a rich Gulf state with a N5 billion yacht, a N2 billion custom-made, armour-plated and bomb-resistant American Escalade Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV)- fit only for a monarch or for the leaders of the first world superpower countries such as the United States, Russia and China. The stark and painful difference is that these other leaders drive vehicles made in their countries. But Tinubu luxuriates in an Escalade made by Cadillac, the luxury division of General Motors, a jet manufactured in France, and a yacht of unknown origin.
    Except for the yacht, none of the luxury acquisitions of the president has the regime found the need to tell Nigerians how much they cost the taxpayer. And this is because Tinubu has an abiding disdain for Nigerians. And other government officials have copied him. Why bother when there are no consequences for being contemptuous of Nigerians. At the weekend, one American economist reportedly said Tinubu was an insufferable and ignorant person. But I wager that Tinubu knows what he is doing. Steve Hanke is a professor at Johns Hopkins University. He described Tinubu as “arrogant, ignorant, and incompetent” for prioritising flamboyant lifestyle and luxury travel amid ongoing economic struggles in Nigeria, where according to him, inflation rates were reportedly as high as 114%. This is about three times the figure given by the NBS. He appeared to suggest that the NBS inflation rate was a product of fiction. The message is that the world is taking note of the choices of the ruler of an underdeveloped and debt-ridden third world country.
    Tinubu’s supporters who are to be pitied are wont to point us to other countries where people, according to them, are going through struggles and a cost of living crisis. They also point to some luxuries enjoyed by such leaders. But not once would they acknowledge that no two situations are the same. They won’t tell us that global poverty has since taken permanent residency in our country. Let’s illustrate with one example what a sensitive leader who finds himself leading an economically challenged country will do.
    Keir Starmer is the new UK prime minister. Last week he told Britons and others that his first budget due next month “is going to be painful”. He said that he had no other options but assured that only those with the broadest shoulders will “bear the heavier burden. Starmer said his choices were limited because his administration inherited a £22 billion black hole as well as a”societal black hole”. But before Starmer warned about the sacrifices he would call on the people to make, he first started with himself and the privileges of his own office as prime minister. He announced that a £40m VIP helicopter contract used extensively by his predecessor Rishi Sunak for local travels will not be renewed when it expires by the end of this year. He said it will be in keeping with his promise when he sought the vote of the people to undo “14 years of rot” and profligacy under the Conservatives. Starmer is of the Labour Party.
    PLEASE READ: https://nairametrics.com/2024/08/30/tinubus-1-trillion-gdp-                                 target-will-not-be-possible-in-5-years-bismarck-rewane/
    Sunak had used the government – funded helicopters on several occasions while he held sway, even when it was obvious train travel would have been almost as quick and convenient, and certainly cheaper for some of the expensive trips with the chopper. Starmer’s action could be derided as cheap populism but no leader, except in Nigeria, has a right to ask for understanding and sacrifices from the people while he immersed himself in sickening luxury. Signaling, that’s what Starmer has demonstrated. And to think that the UK belongs to the first world. But here, Tinubu whose country may not even qualify to be designated as a third world country lives in a fortress renovated with billions of Naira before he moved in last year, glides in a N5 billion yacht, rides inside billions of Naira worth of a foreign made SUV, and junkets around the world in a foreign manufactured presidential jet on the excuse of wooing foreign investors.
    There’s no doubt that world leaders look at him with scorn, knowing that every of the luxury items he uses were shamelessly acquired with foreign loans. And some of these lending institutions are domiciled in the countries of those leaders where he goes to show off. Tinubu is like that arrogant king in the Igbo nation who struts about in the market square to impress people but did not realise that his royal gown was smeared with feaces. Who will tell Tinubu this truth? But will he listen?
    *Incipient tyranny and unfolding imperial presidency will, other things being equal, form the concluding part of this trilogy next week.