Archive for nigeriang

Art of fleeting moments

Art of fleeting moments

Why Art?

Art is a calling. I
had good grades in school and could have had my pick of courses at the
tertiary institution. Art was the last course people expected of me
with my grades but from a tender age I had always been inclined to the
arts. Though I had to embark on hunger strike as a 16-year- old before
my parents allowed me to study art, it was worth it then and to the
present. I simply followed my calling.

Training

I studied Arts and
Design at Auchi Polytechnic, Edo State. I specialised in painting and
illustration. The same year I was offered admission to study art at
Auchi Poly, the University of Benin also offered me admission into
their Geography and Regional Planning department from where I could
have moved to the Architecture department.

Medium

Oil, acrylic,
watercolors, charcoal, and pastel, there’s none I can’t work with, but
now I tend to use oil more. I had 40 works on display in a recent
exhibition, 28 of these were in oil paint and the rest, mixed media.

Influences

I really had no one
to look up to as a little boy but I had once read about a Russian
artist who lived in America and how he arrived at his own exhibition in
a private jet. The success story of Picasso also helped me make up my
mind about being a good artist. In Auchi, I became acquainted with the
likes of [Kolade] Oshinowo and others but they were basically teaching.
Yet I maintained this silent conviction in me that the story of the
Picassos of this world could also be mine.

Inspirations

A mood or a song, a
message from the pulpit may also inspire me to do an artwork.
Generally, things that happen inspire me but it takes those moments
that are so fleeting to get me going. I’m very concerned about the
content of my work though. And though I ensure that my works look good,
they might not be very beautiful. Nevertheless, art is like a woman,
you just don’t look at the beautiful face, you look at the inside too.

Best work so far

Each work to me is
like my child, my soul is in every work. I put a lot into my every work
and I like to think that is why my works sell.

Least satisfying work

There was this
particular work I did for a certain Alhaji Mohammed. I got a loan from
the bank to facilitate the making of the work, yet he took such a long
time to pay that the interest piled up. That is the only work I can
think of as a least satisfying project.

Career high point

I’ll say my first
solo exhibition held at Didi Museum, Lagos in 1991, my graduation from
art school with the best result and winning all the available prizes.
My first exhibition abroad and the fact that my work was well accepted
as far back as then make up my career high points for now. I still
believe I’ve not started though.

Favourite artist living or dead

In Nigeria, Ben
Enwonwu and Kolade Oshinowo. I respect both of them; Enwonwu for his
consistency and Osinowo for his paternal approach. Whenever we meet, he
will whisper to me, “I am proud of you.” Outside Nigeria, I once had an
exhibition with a German artist named Ted; I can’t pronounce his
surname, but I like his works and his person.

Ambitions

I want to get to the pinnacle of my profession and be known wherever
man lives. Yes, I want [to get to] the Picasso, Da Vinci and
Michelangelo level.

Go to Source

Obi Nwaegbe’s visions of the North

Obi Nwaegbe’s visions of the North

Obi Nwaegbe’s art
exhibition, ‘Tainted Visions: Nomad Series’, opened at the Omenka
Gallery on April 16. On display were about 25 paintings and drawings,
which the young artist was inspired to produce during his service year
in Northern Nigeria.

In the brochure,
the University of Nigeria-trained fine artist said that the “exhibition
as illustrated by the works on display, is a realistic approach to
documenting the lives of ordinary people living in a society basically
at subsistence level.”

Breaking news of the poisonous Chinese Milk scandal influenced the title ‘Tainted Visions.’

Remaining productive

Speaking at the
opening event, the artist said the Fulani nomads, who are the focus of
his exhibition, have a bold way of expressing themselves. “For me as an
artist, I think it was something that is worth putting down,” he said.

Capturing their
daily existence through sketches and photography “was not a very easy
process,” Nwaegbe admitted. After his service year in Nassarawa State,
the artist spent time in Kebbi State observing the Fulani nomads in
their natural habitat, something he described as “a really good
experience.”

The Fulani people, their cultures and their environment form the nucleus of his Nomad Series.

Some of the images
show the herdsmen at work, or at play. Others show women attending to
their daily chores or to their physical appearance. It also shows the
migrant group across generations. Nwaegbe’s featured works were in
Conte, Acrylic, and Charcoal media.

Commenting on how
he managed to be productive in unfamiliar surroundings, Nwaegbe said,
“If you are waiting for the muse, you are not going to paint in a long
time.” The resulting works are a mix of reality and his imagination.

Investing in art

Recounting his
recent experience at the Africa Now Art Auction in New York, Frank
Okonta, who chaired Nwaegbe’s opening, said he was impressed to see
artworks by many Nigerian artists featured prominently at the auction.

“Don’t give up,”
the president of the Art Galleries Association of Nigeria (AGAN) said,
encouraging the artists to remain dedicated to their profession.

As an art
collector, Okonta advised the audience to invest in art. “There’s
plenty of money to be made from art. It’s good for you to start
collecting now,” because the value goes up, he said.

Bisi Silva, director of the Centre for Contemporary Art (CCA), could not help adding, “And you make a lot of tax-free money.”

Art patron Rasheed Gbadamosi and gallery owner Biodun Omolayo were also at the opening.

Nwaegbe’s message
for all who viewed the week-long exhibition was simple: “If you don’t
travel around, you don’t understand how different we are. There’s a
need for us to interact and understand each other.”

‘Tainted Visions’ (Nomad Series) was at the Omenka Gallery on Ikoyi Crescent till April 23.

Go to Source

Painting the thousand masks of Lagos

Painting the thousand masks of Lagos

The winner of the
Lagos Black Heritage Festival/Caterina de Medici painting competition
was unveiled on April 8, during an award dinner at the Civic Centre in
Lagos.

Kelani Abass
emerged winner out of 30 artists, who had been selected as part of a
competition themed ‘Lagos, City of a thousand masks.’ The competitors’
works had been exhibited earlier in the day at the Lekki-based, Nike
Art Gallery.

The Steve Rhodes
Orchestra dished out soul lifting and body soothing jazz tunes and
played at intervals for the duration of the occasion, much to the
delight of the audience.

The Lagos State
governor Babatunde Fashola, his deputy Sarah Sosan, visual artist Ondo
State Commissioner of Culture Tola Wewe, African-American scholar Henry
Louis Gates Jr, and filmmaker Tunde Kelani – were some of those at the
event.

From Italy with love

The annual
painting competition, which began 2002 in Florence, Italy, came to
Nigeria for the first time this year in honour of the festival. A
Nigerian, Olubunmi Ogundare had participated in the first Caterina de
Medici painting competition and was adjudged one of the best 10 artists
in the world.

African
representative of the Caterina de Medici Foundation, Foluke Michaels,
said during her speech that Nigerian artists participate actively on
the international level and are a force to reckon with. Samuel Ebohon,
winner of the 2009 Caterina de Medici international painting award was
also a Nigerian, Michaels noted.

She disclosed that
the 30 shortlisted artists were selected out of 108 who had indicated
interest in this Festival-based edition of the competition.

Chair of the 2009
award jury and also a consultant to this year’s Black Heritage
Festival, Wole Soyinka, had more to say about the judging of last
year’s entries. “The jury was totally different from those that conduct
the Nigerian elections,” he said. This was his way of saying he neither
influenced nor rigged the decision of the jury, which had comprised
people of diverse nationalities.

Behind the mask

Soyinka said some
people had come up to him asking why he chose to title the competition
‘Lagos, City of a thousand masks.’ He however explained that he had no
particular reason for the title but that it was just an expression.

“People say: Eko
gb’ole o gb’ole (Lagos makes space for the thief and the lazy) and I
think it is because Lagos wears so many masks. Like all works of art,
Lagos is a mystery.”

Commodore Sottani,
who started the Caterina de Medici competition in 2002, spoke next,
after a stimulating performance by female drummer Ara and her band.

Speaking in
Italian, with the assistance of an interpreter, Sottani was full of
praise for Soyinka and Michaels, who he became acquainted with at the
formation of the international painting competition.

Sottani said it
was his second time in Lagos. “I am happy to be in Lagos and I would
like that everyone here visit the beautiful city of Florence, Italy,”
he said. Sottani’s pronouncement and praise for his home country had
many in the crowd dreaming while others sniggered loudly, obviously
thinking of the tedious process of getting an Italian visa here in
Nigeria.

Sottani thanked
the organisers for the opportunity to present an award to renowned
painter and textile artist, Nike Davies-Okundaye, in appreciation of
her contribution to Nigerian art at home and abroad.

The interpreter,
however, said Sottani was grateful for the award Davies-Okundaye was
giving to him – leading to some raised eyebrows in the audience.
Soyinka also received an award for excellence.

And the winner is…

The Nike Cultural
Troupe performed a beautiful Bata dance sequence, it was then time to
put down the wine glasses and applaud the winning artist.

Visual artists
Jerry Buhari and Ndidi Dike were in the jury that selected the 2010
LBHF/ Caterina de Medici award winner for Painting. The final 30 works
were displayed at various points in the large hall, with the
participating artists all eager to know if theirs would be the winning
artwork.

The fifth place
winner, Osagie Aimufia received a silver medal and a cash prize of
$5,000. Moses Zibo came fourth with a cash prize of $7,500 and a silver
medal. Folarin Razaq was happy as he ran upstage to receive his $10,000
prize and silver medal as the third place winner while the second place
winner went home with 15,000. Other participating artists took home
medals.

Kelani Abass, who
emerged the winner of the LBHF/ Caterina de Medici 2010 Painting Award
carted home a cash prize of $20,000 and the lone gold medal.

Abass had words of
thanks tumbling from his lips while two female ushers took the winning
painting round the hall for guests to get a good look.

“It was a tough competition and I am still amazed that my painting was selected as the winning work,” said the joyful winner.

Go to Source

Rivers to downsize workforce

Rivers to downsize workforce

The Rivers State government has revealed plans to downsize its workforce for efficiency in the system.

The state governor,
Chibuike Amaechi, who disclosed this in Port Harcourt on Friday during
an interactive session with civil servants, said that the system is
over populated and has no clear definition of schedule of duty.

The governor said
most civil servants in the state are redundant in their various places
of work “and end up roaming about during official hours.”

He pointed out that
modalities would be worked out with the labour unions to determine how
to actualise the plan to prune down the workforce.

“I must say that it
is worrisome to see that state civil service has a workforce of more
than 50,000, some of whom have no specific duties to perform,” he said.
“They only collect salaries at the end of the month; it is therefore
necessary to maintain only an effective number of staff.”

He directed the
Head of Service and the department handling the automated salary system
to ensure that only genuine workers are paid salaries.

Mr. Amaechi also used the forum to state that promotion in the state civil service would henceforth be based on merit.

He advised the
workers to update themselves through available training opportunities
in order to meet up with the changing trend in the service.

“The civil service is the engine room of government; its role is indeed vital to the success of any administration,” he said.

Read More stories from Source

ANPP says Mega Party Project is a mere ‘political talk show’

ANPP says Mega Party Project is a mere ‘political talk show’

The All Nigeria
Peoples Party National Secretary, Sa’idu Kumo, on Friday, chided
politicians for forming a mega party with the sole aim of defeating the
ruling People’s Democratic Party in 2011.

Mr. Kumo said that
the activities of the mega party had been more of “a political talk
show” that could not achieve the aim for which the group was formed.

He said that what the people needed to do to get PDP out of power was a well-defined and people-oriented political ideology.

“The problem with this country is that political parties are formed based on interest, and not ideology,” he said.

He said the ANPP
remained a vibrant opposition party that would not participate in any
mega party project, which, he said, would not succeed in removing the
PDP from government.

He appealed to
Nigerians to imbibe the culture of political tolerance and ideology to
save the country’s fledging democracy from total collapse.

The ANPP, he said,
had avoided open media abuse of rival political parties, and was more
interested in educating and sensitising the electorate on the need to
shun ‘money politics’ and embrace the politics of working for national
interest.

“Opposition is not all about abusing people,” he noted.

He, therefore, called on other smaller parties to join the ANPP to
build a strong opposition as “ANPP is the only strong opposition in
Nigerian politics with a standard structure to win election.”

Read More stories from Source

Groups oppose execution of prisoners

Groups oppose execution of prisoners

Last week, the National Economic Council, made up of state governors and federal officials, backed the execution of close to 300 prisoners presently on death row, purportedly to reduce congestion in the jails. But human rights groups and legal activists have been quick to oppose this.

In 2009, the minister of foreign affairs, Ojo Maduekwe, told a meeting of the United Nations Universal (human rights) Periodic Review that Nigeria has 227 prisons with a combined capacity of 47,815 inmates. Most of the prisons are overfilled with inmates who are mostly awaiting trials.

The governors’ decision appear to be a reversion of the semi-official moratorium placed on execution of convicts – with the last official execution dating back to 2002.

Death to the people

“It was agreed that those people who have been condemned should be executed accordingly,” said Theodore Orji, governor of the southeastern state of Abia, after the meeting.

The Nigeria Death Penalty Group (NDPG) has, however, faulted the governors’ decision. The group, at the weekend, urged the state executives not to implement their decision, asking them to follow universal trends against the use of death penalty.

“The statement of the executive governor of Abia State is in no doubt a threat to the country’s unofficial moratorium,” an official of NGPG, Chino Obiagwu said.

The NDPG is a loose network of groups and individuals committed towards the abolition of the death penalty in Nigeria, convened by Legal Defence and Assistance Project.

“Nigeria has ratified several other international and regional instruments, including (the) African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights and International Convention on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) providing for the abolition of the death penalty,” the group said. “Nigeria has not officially carried out any execution for a while due to the enormous pressure from the international community and the Civil Society Organisations against the use of death penalty as a form of punishment.”

An official of the Nigerian Prisons, who spoke in Lagos, said the announced execution might not help. “A large percentage of the inmates in the prisons are merely awaiting trials, with fewer of them condemned,” he said, under condition of anonymity. “This is an indication that executing the few might not necessarily profer a solution to the state of Nigeria prisons.”

Poor prisons

The NDPG however said the major problem leading to prison congestion in Nigeria is the lack of infrastructure and inadequate funding by the government.

“Most prisons in Nigeria were built in the 1960s and the Nigerian government has neither expanded nor built additional prisons,” Mr. Obiagwu said. “Again, the state has always been the cause of delays in the prosecution of persons charged with various offences leading to prison congestion.”

It however advised the Abia State government to “set up its Advisory Council on the Prerogative of Mercy to examine the cases of the prisoners on death row and make a recommendation on the suitability of commuting their sentences.”

Last Tuesday, April 20, 2010, inmates of Kaduna Prisons went on rampage, allegedly because of reports that the convicted former head of the Christ Praying Assembly, Reverend King, had been killed.

Two prisoners were also killed in the incident, during which some prisoners attempt to escape.

The jailbreak attempt was the second in less than two months, a problem which is said to have arisen from the congestion and poor amenities of the prison.

Some prison officials also explained that the prisoners were also not happy with the poor feeding arrangement at the prison and its overcrowded cells.

A report by Amnesty International shows that the 227 prisons in Nigerian have the following in common: congestion, dirt and inadequate medical and rehabilitation facilities.

As a result, many inmates fall sick and die before they are even tried.

Read More stories from Source

Justice Minister proposes policy to decongest prisons

Justice Minister proposes policy to decongest prisons

The Nigerian Governors’ Forum has been under severe criticism since it endorsed the decision taken last week by the Executive Council of the Federation (EXCOF) to execute inmates on death row so as to decongest prisons.

The decision has also attracted criticisms, even beyond the shore of Nigeria as Amnesty International, the global human rights campaigner, said any such step by the government at any level will be contrary to international legal commitments binding on Nigeria.

But the decision of the government to restart the execution of condemned criminals was taken as a means to easing prison congestion and reducing the overcrowding often seen inside the prisons walls.

New proposals for prison decongestion

However, the EXCOF decision may not really see the light of day now if the Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation, Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN), has his way with new reforms he is proposing to overhaul the system and decongest prisons.

Investigation by this correspondent has showed that Mr. Adoke wants states to build their own prisons. Also, he wants the decongestion programme to be a partnership between the Federal and state governments.

According to the Minister of the Interior, Emmanuel Iheanacho, a retired Air Force Captain who toured some prison formations in the Federal Capital City a week ago, the total prison population is about 48,000, of which over 30,000 inmates are classified as awaiting trial persons (ATPs).

Why execution won’t decongest prisons

According to the school of thought opposed to execution, the huge number of prison inmates who are awaiting trial, most of whom are too poor to afford a lawyer’s service, is the main reason to blame for prison congestion.

Findings by NEXT showed that the Legal Aid Council has only about 100 lawyers to cater for the needs of more than 30, 000 awaiting trial perosns, as against the about 870 death row inmates, including women and juveniles, currently populating Nigerian prisons.

Before now, two expert groups had been set up by the former president, Olusegun Obasanjo, to reform the prison system and deal with the problem of overcrowding in prisons. The groups, the National Study Group on Death Penalty, established in 2004, and the Presidential Commission on Reform of the Administration of Justice, established in 2007, both recommended a moratorium on executions because the criminal justice system could no longer guarantee fair trial at all time.

The recommendation resulted in the establishment of a nationwide Prisons Decongestion Programme in 2005 to reduce the number of ATPs in the 227 prisons formations and satellite prisons and improve the country’s slow criminal justice system.

Objectives of FG’s programme

FG’s prison decongestion programme seeks to address the lack of legal representation for indigent accused persons by engaging a large number of private legal practitioners, over 3000 Solicitors to undertake the defence of such persons in courts in the 36 states and the FCT.

Statistics obtained from the Ministry’s monitoring mechanism for the programme indicates that over 47,956 inmates have so far benefited from the programme.

Documents obtained at the AGF’s office showed that as at December 2009, out of the total number of 47,956 cases farmed out, a total number of 11,833 cases have been completed, 7,711 accused persons granted bail, while 28,412 cases are still pending before the various courts in the country.

Amending the Constitution to decongest prisons

Adoke’s proposals seeks to overcome the various blames for overcrowding, which include laxity in police investigation, needless court adjournments, poor state of prison facilities, and diversion of funds meant to achieve the planned reform in the past.

For example, about N8 billion was alleged to have been spent on the programme, without a commensurate profit during the time of the former AGF and Minister of Justice, Michael Aondoakaa (SAN).

First, Mr. Adoke, who has not disclosed the financial cost of his proposals, has proposed a second stakeholders’ summit to discuss amendment which will place prison issues in the concurrent list of the Constitution, “so that states can build their own prisons.”

“This will largely help in decongesting prisons because over 70 percent of the inmates in the Federal prisons are persons accused of having violated state laws. (T)he Federal Ministry of Justice is committed to the successful implementation of this programme and will continue to partner with the private bar and other stakeholders in the criminal justice system in order to improve the state of Nigerian prisons and restore the dignity of the inmates,” Mr. Adoke added.

The AGF’s proposals to the FG include: the possibility of amending sentencing procedures in courts, the possibility of going into funding partnership between the FG and states, a comprehensive overhauling of Nigerian prisons with IT facilities for smooth access to information on inmates, restricting external solicitors to cases in areas of location to reduce logistics problems, and continuous liaison with relevant government agencies.

Others are: the possibility of the Ministry (either alone or in partnership with NGOs) undertaking to pay the fines imposed on indigent convicts, introduction of non-custodial sentences, the monitoring of counsel performance for appropriate sanctions for poor performance, increment in the programme’s budgetary outlay to cover outstanding cases, and the involvement of local and international donor institutions, even as the Ministry of Justice remains the programme coordinator.

Read More stories from Source

PDP rift widens as Nnamani, Odili and others are suspended

PDP rift widens as Nnamani, Odili and others are suspended

The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) was yesterday thrown into
further disarray after the National Working Committee (NWC) of the party
announced the suspensions of the former Senate President, Ken Nnamani, and 28
other members of the PDP Reform forum.

The meeting of the National Working Committee coincided with the
PDP Reform Forum’s meeting, in which the former Senate President addressed over
2000 people in Abuja.

The NWC meeting considered the recent uprising by the reformers
and expressed its surprise at the refusal of members of the party, operating
under a group called the PDP Reform Forum, to appear before it, despite
extensive invitations to them.

Earlier in the day, the Reform Forum had their own meeting in
which they had accused the PDP leadership of having failed in the past three
years to move the party power.

In a statement signed by its National Secretary, Abubakar Kawu
Baraje, the party said it is of the view that the concerned members had
adequate notice but declined to utilise the opportunity granted them by the
invitation to explain their roles.

The party stated that the decision to dishonour the invitations
to appear before it is a calculated attempt to disregard lawful directives of
the party in order for them to continue to ridicule it, contrary to Article
12.1 of the PDP Constitution.

The NWC then invoked Article 21.4 of the party constitution to
suspend Mr. Nnamani, Aminu Masari, Onyema Ugochukwu, Adolphus Wabara, Peter
Odili and 24 other members of the PDP Reform Forum.

The working committee added that the case would be referred to
the National Disciplinary Committee for further action.

At odds with party
leaders

But Mr. Nnamani, who is the Chairman of the steering committee
of the Forum, stressed the need for better organisation of the ruling party in
the interest of the entire country.

“The party must tolerate other people’s views and not some
people sitting down and dictating how things should move without minding
others, which is anti-democracy,” said Mr. Nnamani, as he addressed the
2000-strong audience.

Nnamani said some state governors were invited by the group to
discuss the “nose-diving” status of the party but because of their selfishness
and their fear that such a gathering could lead to a change of leadership
structure, they refused to turn up.

The former Senate President regretted that the party has
seriously derailed from the ideals and goals of the founding fathers, such that
today, all the grand visions of the party have virtually vanished and nobody is
talking of providing meaningful governance and improving the living standard of
Nigerians anymore.

He said the umbrella under which hid before had disappeared
owing to lackluster and inept leadership of the party.

Former Minister of Education, Chinwe Obaje, said reform could
never be a negative trend in any progressive society, but a necessary change of
attitude that must be embraced by those in positions of authority. According to
her, reform is a continuous process which no human organisation must derail
from to ensure progress.

Inept leadership

Mrs. Obaje said the mission of the forum was not to pull the
party down but to campaign for good polity within the party.

Doyin Okupe said, without reform, the party would not last based
on its current structure and leadership. “PDP leadership is totally and grossly
inept,” he said, adding that most of the problems within the party were caused
by the overbearing power of the governor’s forum.

The former governor of Taraba State, Jolly Nyame, said he
supported the group and was ready to associate with it. “You don’t have to be
in power before you can be a reformer,” he said.

The former Organising Secretary of the party, Dahiru Umar, said
that more than N4 billion was left in the party account for the current
leadership to execute the building of the party’s headquarters in Abuja, but
noted that nothing had been achieved with the amount.

Some members of the group who attended the meeting were former
Senate President Adolphus Wabara, Amanga Nimi, Adamu Waziri, Rochas Okorocha
and Iro Dan-Musa.

Read More stories from Source

Rotational presidency is a delusion

Rotational presidency is a delusion

Junaid Mohammed,
national chairman of the People Salvation Party (PSP) , speaks on
Nigerian leaders, next year’s elections, and the possible candidature
of Aliyu Gusau and Ibrahim Babangida. Excerpts:

On Ibrahim Babangida

Sincerely
speaking, I don’t have a view and this is quite unlike me. This is
because I have not been able to hear from him the reasons he wanted to
come into electoral contest, and why now? If, for whatever reason, IBB
decides that the country now needs him, or is it the usual empty
rhetoric of ‘my people asked me to come and contest and I’m merely
answering the call of my people?’

I think it will be
very disingenuous for a man who was out of power under the
circumstances he left to now come back and say ‘my people want me to
come back.’ Where were his people when he was forced to leave in 1992?
I’m concerned about the number of retired military officers who believe
they have a divine right to come and govern Nigeria. I know Olusegun
Obasanjo believed in that and that belief was encouraged in a very
substantial way by IBB himself.

I want IBB to
speak for himself, which will justify his coming to be the president of
Nigeria. I would now ask the question, what is it he left behind that
he wants to come back to? That is not to say I believe the nation
should do to him what he did to us, the first and second republic
politicians, when he banned us from participating in political
activities without anything against us.

Now is the time
for him to realise what it meant to have dealt with people in a very
shabby manner. But beside that, I believe he should be allowed to
contest and let the people of this country decide whether he is going
to be a worthy successor to the likes of Obasanjo, Yakubu Gowon,
Murtala Mohammed, and others.

What he is saying
about the youth is also an indictment about what he has said before. He
unilaterally disqualified most of the qualified politicians in this
country. The fact of the matter was that when he banned the old breed,
he did not do it in the interest of the nation, and when he is now
calling the new breed names, people are bound to suspect if there is
anything new he learnt. Even though he was unjust, I don’t believe we
should met out injustice to him because two wrongs don’t make a right.

On Aliyu Gusau

I want you to
quote me, he is barely literate. If he likes, he can sue me because I
can bring out his record from primary to secondary school and to
Nigeria Defence Academy (NDA). The Emir of Gwandu, Mustapha Jokolo, who
grew up in the same household with Aliyu Gusau, has said in an
interview with a Lagos newspaper that the man was never trained as an
intelligence officer; he was just put there by late Shehu Musa Yar’Adua.

I’m not aware whether Aliyu Gusau or anybody else has come out to deny that this is a matter of record.

If these are the
kinds of characters who come out and believe they have the right to
govern alongside IBB or Muhammadu Buhari, then there is a danger to
Nigerian democracy and that danger cannot be wished away by either IBB,
Buhari, T.Y Danjuma, Obasanjo, or Aliyu Gusau. It has to be addressed
by Nigerians themselves.

On Obasanjo and corrupt leadership

On the issue of
corruption, again I want us to be very cautious. Unless you have a
determinant measure that can practically measure the level of
corruption under Obasanjo, Yar’Adua/Goodluck, and level of corruption
under IBB or others. I’m not in a position to say corruption was less
or more or otherwise. Because frankly speaking, this concept of
corruption is quite intimately related to the issue of the resources
available to the country. Such as the issue of Gulf war windfall, which
is yet to be resolved; and I want IBB as a friend to come and address
this issue. As far as I’m concerned, you can only measure corruption by
the measure of affluence or wealth of those who have gone into
government and come out. If you look at the problem we had, the
constitutional crisis and the June 12 debacle, I’m not aware that IBB
has come clean with the matter. But I can say with due humility he has
come clean to me. He has told me about three times how he regretted the
turn of events over the two party systems, and over the issue of Abiola
and the crisis which affected the country. In assessing a government,
you have to assess it at various levels. Corruption then and now have
become institutionalised. Now that Obasanjo is out of office, everybody
knows that he is the most corrupt leader Nigeria ever had. Obasanjo was
a lot more corrupt than IBB.

Role of military in politics

The state of
things now is more of an indictment on the military than the political
elite. Whenever a soldier stages a coup in this country, they always
claim civilians were corrupt, irresponsible, or not patriotic. The fact
that money is, today, the sole determinant of public office and the
soldiers see themselves as the only people who have the money,
indicates that soldiers stage coups because of money, and not for any
patriotic reason. When they went out to bring Obasanjo out of prison,
the first thing they did was to get billions for him, from both local
and foreign sources, for them to oil the machinery that is called the
PDP, and that is how they won the election. So, the only reason why
they are in politics today is because they have the money in abundance
that they can use to buy votes and create confusion in the country.
Tell me one soldier who can say he has anything to offer above any
civilian.

On the political situation

No, it is not a
helpless situation. It is just the political class that is helpless and
hopeless. They were accused of playing monetised politics now that the
soldiers are ahead with that game. Why is the political class not
coming out to say we are not corrupt, these are the people who are
corrupt? In a nation which, since independence in 1960, have had over
30 years of military rule. If the country is in a mess, who are you
going to blame proportionately? But I agree with you, the civilian
political class is hopeless.

The leader Nigeria needs

We need a tough
son, who would make sure that the country’s laws are obeyed and who
will make sure we have a revenue allocation formula, which is realistic
and gives every Nigerian a fighting chance to get education, and to be
competitive in the labour market. We need someone who can make sure
that some of the ills of the society, such as illiteracy, corruption,
diseases, and poverty are eliminated.

The leader we need
must be the kind of leader who will have confidence in the Nigerian
state. He must be the kind of leader who will say there are certain
things to be done, but cannot be done by the system of capitalism which
we operate. And people who are in leadership positions must not use it
to enrich themselves, and I believe that is not too much to ask from a
Nigerian leader.

On rotational presidency

I don’t believe in
rotational presidency. I have been a critic of it since 1978. Because
it is not democratic, it is nonsensical, and is always subjected to
intervention by forces over and above the political system or the
political class. For example, when they had the system under National
Party of Nigeria (NPN), which delivered Shehu Shagari as president,
they didn’t envisage the termination of his presidency unceremoniously
in 1984. Which means that the system simply disappeared. What we have
now in Umaru Musa Yar’Adua is an invalid president who is incompetent,
lazy, and indolent – who cannot do anything and who has been pretending
to be governing Nigeria for the last three years. If what we had in
1984 was a military intervention, what we now have with Yar’Adua is a
divine intervention. Since they don’t have control over military and
divine intervention, what is the need of deceiving ourselves that
zoning and rotation works. Who is fooling who? It does not work and it
has created crisis anywhere it was tried.

And people who are in support of it cited the example of
Switzerland. Switzerland is not a federation. It is a very small
country, less than the population of Kano. So I don’t know the reason
for it. To pretend that Goodluck Jonathan is going to pretend that he
is not going to be interested in the presidency is to delude oneself. I
don’t believe in deluding myself in politics or in public life.

Read More stories from Source

ABUJA HEARTBEAT: The Charm for the Chair (II)

ABUJA HEARTBEAT: The Charm for the Chair (II)

As the year rolls
to an end, many chairs will be vacant and will need to be occupied in
2011. Some weeks ago, two chairs became vacant within 48 hours of each
other, when two senators were extinguished by Death’s mighty sting. We
may not have evidence, but tongues are wagging as to why two senators
from the same state would die, virtually on the same day.

The attraction for
these chairs, the juiciness of these portfolios, and the temptation for
these seats, are definitely provoking others to procure charms, juju,
and voodoo – whether physical or spiritual – that will leave a lasting
damage, probably worse than Haiti or Rwanda.

Earthquakes do not
just happen, in spite of the scientific explanation. There is always an
abundance of spiritual connotation. Now, it is beginning to go beyond
individuals.

Even in Jos, we
have heard that some groups have been charmed by the chairs that belong
to another group, and they want to occupy these by force or
systematically take over the entire middle belt. It may be rumour, but
to every rumour there is always an element of truth. If in doubt, check
your mirror.

Certainly, we would
unearth a can of worms if we try to follow the river of cash flow out
of the Nigerian official establishments, and some people believe access
to this cash is their birthright. Hence, they stake their claims to
these juicy chairs, offices, or portfolio. The very annoying evidence
is that inspite of all they have stolen and stashed away, the level of
poverty, suffering, and stagnation of the mass of people in their area
is stupefying.

In fact, they are
the actual cabal. They recycle themselves and their children, and will
stop at nothing to extinguish even a distinguished soul that stands in
their way. They are ready to use aircraft, witchcraft, and even ‘mammy
water’ to annihilate the presumed enemy. The bible says one shall chase
a thousand and two shall chase ten thousand, pardon my allusion. Now if
one person can kill another because he feels his chair has been
threatened, what will happen if one section feels that their attractive
chairs are being threatened? Does somebody remember the meaning of
genocide or maybe war?

Unfortunately, the
presumed enemy is the entire nation that has been reborn and we are all
collectively saying, NO MORE RESERVED SEATS. It is a thing of shame to
hear someone say he is from an educationally backward state or, to put
it more diplomatically, an educationally challenged state and so, if
called to apply for a position and he scores 35%, he will be given the
job, ahead of others who scored 90%, because we have to follow the laws
of Federal Character. How can we ever progress in such a circumstance?

We need to make a
deliberate effort to kill the charm of the chair before it lures more
people in search of more dangerous charms for these chairs. To these
die hard charmed-chair seekers, government is the only business they
know. They want to continuously sit on juicy chairs where they can
direct the river of cash to flow into the lake of selfishness, greed,
and avarice in their backyards. And continuously produce zombies that
they have brainwashed into believing that ‘there is no blessing in
education’, whereas their children are attending the best schools in
the world, training to become owners of oil blocks, and/or control the
financial institution. They do this to ensure that they can keep the
charm for the chair in their family forever. Even the music of
rebranding, they have become deaf and dumb to.

Power is not a family heirloom. Do your best and leave the rest.

These chairs are for all of us, and only the best should sit on them so that we can all move forward.

Read More stories from Source