As has become customary, the murderous Islamist group, Boko Haram,
attacked three churches in Kaduna state on Sunday, leaving death and
destruction in its wake. Also, in what is becoming a saddening routine, youth
affiliated to the Christian faith carried out reprisal attacks on nearby
mosques and many innocent Muslims got caught up in the ensuing violence.
Friday, June 22, 2012
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Death And A Mourning Nation
Before that Dana plane crashed into
a tenement building in Iju-Ishaga suburb of Lagos, Nigerians died in the
hundreds every day. They died on the road, victims of bad roads or the
highwayman’s bullet. They died in their homes, bodies riddled with bullets
fired by armed robbers. They died in churches and mosques, victims of those who
say evil deeds can be used to achieve godliness. They died across Nigeria,
untimely and unpleasant deaths, victims of a government’s insistence on
continuing paying lip service to progressive social development.
While some of these untimely
taken belong to the class people have come to believe are elites, the larger
percent are masses, the new age commoners, without renown beyond their
immediate environment, these ones are not mourned by the nation. No media
adverts extol their qualities, no social media buzz is generated around their
pictures, no websites are created to tell about their lives and the deep pain
their passing wrought on those they left behind. Nothing is heard of them other
than the wailing of relatives and friends, and that too is soon muted as the
world winds on. While the government habitually gives last warnings to those
who kill the masses and promise to fix the roads that mangle their flesh and
suck their blood, the dead are buried, sometimes in mass graves, their deaths
in vain still, unknown in life, silent in death.
However, these are the nameless
dead, the ones without keys to the fabled rainbow’s end. Their fate is not for
those who could zip around in airplanes. For these ones, the passing is loud,
with a nationwide call to tears.
It is common street knowledge
that planes are not for the poor, even those who eat three solid meals with
meat to spare have nothing to do with it. For many of us, it is a privilege to
travel from Lagos to Abuja on a plane. Why not, the cost of a one-way ticket is
more than the national minimum wage. So it is a testament to the privilege and
position of the victims of the Dana Air crash, at least those on the plane
proper, that the buzz generated by their fate remains at giddying heights, or
how else would fellow elites and wannabes mourn the passing of their peers?
Saturday, June 9, 2012
Democracy: An African burden
English: The King of Swaziland Mswati III at the reed dance festival 2006 where he will choose his next wife.. Deutsch: Der König von Swasiland Mswati III bei dem Reed Dance Festival 2006 (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
Uneasy, they say, lies the head that wears the crown. That adage, apt for a time when kings were a law unto themselves, when they had the power over life and death, still finds strong expression in this age.
These days, kings, except they are of Middle Eastern or Asian stock (let’s add Swaziland to the number), are largely without the powers to decide the fate of a nation. The powers that made them all-powerful in the past now reside with the commoners; or so it would seem.
Nations, having shed that feudal system that perpetuates the lordship of one family over the whole generation after generation, have now generally embraced the one that allows people to have a say on who rules over them. People now have the liberty to put their views to vote and the purview to remove a leader that is not working up to par—in an ideal scenario. Democracy, the system of having a say in the selection of one’s leaders, in its ideal sense, is one that cannot be faulted.
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Tuesday, June 5, 2012
A black Sunday in a Nation already in darkness
The first news of a suicide bomber attacking a church during Sunday service was not strange or overly surprising, not in a nation already used to bomb blasts and the attendant casualty rate. The second news, of a plane ramming into a Lagos suburb, was more alarming and elicited more than the resigned “not again” that greeted the first. With social media abuzz, two things struck me: The plane crashed in Iju Agege and the proximity of my house from the scene.
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Sunday, May 27, 2012
The General, GEJ Voltrons and Hyperboles
I used to
admire General Mohamadu Buhari a lot. In him, I saw an Incorruptible Nigerian,
whom given the chance, could rid our country of its greatest challenge—corruption
in high places.
My view of
Buhari’s incorruptibility remains unchanged, but in view of his actions and
inactions in the wake of the crisis that followed the April 2011 elections, I
do not consider him qualified to air ideas about Nigeria’s snail paced crawl
towards political and economic emancipation from the brigands that now hold her
captive.
Buhari, I
have said before, lost all rights to talk when elder statesmen are called upon,
just as he has lost the goodwill that has ensured he returned time and time
again to compete for that exalted but oft raped position of this nation’s
president. While I still say that Buhari did not ask his supporters to take to
the streets and slake their rage on innocent Nigerians, doing nothing to call
them to order painted him in colours that are not so different from those he
was seeking to oust.
Anyway,
this post is not really about what the man did, or didn’t do, after the
elections last year. This post is about what the man is doing now and what he
intends to do come 2015. Buhari as he is wont, warmed his way back into
national consciousness by declaring in no small words that come 2015, naija
masses will revolt if INEC does not allow for free and fair elections.
Hmm...here we go again, was my reaction when I saw
reference to the statement on twitter, knowing the dams would soon burst and
all hibernating GEJ Voltrons, as tweeps call them, would awake and be up in
arms. My, my, was I right? Reno Omokiri, a young man most armchair activists
like myself have come to expect the most uncouth behaviour possible in the
course of defending his government pay cheque did not disappoint—kind of
reminds one of pre-activist FFK’s brashness. Reno attacks on Buhari’s audacity
to attack the hallowed PDP machine signalled other hibernating voltrons into
action and the battle to ‘call Buhari to order’ was on in earnest.
While I
think the PDP, and GEJ’s camp, are right to defend themselves if someone
wrongly accuses them of wrong doing, in this instance they are absolutely
wrong.
Why?
Simple.
First:
Because Buhari, though he might have accused them of rigging elections in the
past, was only warning of the fall out of any attempt to rig the 2015 ballot. Second:
Other, both highly and lowly placed, Nigerians have issued similar warnings in
the past, and no one bothered to send out the verbal attack dogs.
I think GEJ
is still missing the whole point of being president. He has to understand that
as president he is number one and therefore the first target when things go
wrong, and also the first when praises for things being done right are dished
out.
Also, most
of the technocrats drafted into government to help this unassuming man navigate
foggy landscape of government-citizen relation are still dozing in the zombie
days of military dictatorships, where any and every ‘his/her Excellency’ is
sacred. Gaddem! This is a democracy, no matter how flawed, and people should be
allowed to have opinions. I think it would serve GEJ and those who purport to
speak for him to stick to the substance of opinions, not insinuations and hyperboles.
For PDP and
its supporters: you may have ruled naija for the past 12 years, but you are not
Nigeria and do not represent the masses. It is not given unto you to react to
every statement from perceived political opponents as if you are Nigeria.
For Buhari:
you lost your chance when it was clearly there for the taking. Go home, rest
and advise younger protégées on how to take political opportunities. Also, talk
smart, you are no longer in the army.
For the
naija people: it is coming again, and we are losing ourselves once again to
that sectional divide. When did Boko Haram stop being a PDP invention abeg? We
need to wake up and smell the beans before it burns once again.
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