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Wednesday 28 January 2015

A Profile of Nigeria's Presidential Candidates

ourtesy: http://www.yourbudgit.com/infographics/
aspirants-for-the-2015-elections-in-nigeria/
All the talk about the upcoming February 14 presidential
election Nigeria is about President Goodluck Jonathan
and Muhammadu Buhari. However there are 12 other
candidates contesting this election!
CANDIDATE PARTY
Goodluck Jonathan
(President)
Peoples Democratic
Party
Muhammadu Buhari All Progressives
Congress
Tunde Anifowose-Kelani Action Alliance
Rafiu Salau Alliance for Democracy
Alhaji Ganiyu Galadima Allied Congress Party of
Nigeria
Mani Ahmad African Democratic
Congress
Adebayo Musa Ayeni African Peoples Alliance
Chief Sam Eke Citizens’ Popular Party
High Chief Ambrose
Owuru
Hope Democratic Party
Oluremi Comfort
Sonaiya
KOWA Party
Chief Martin Onovo National Conscience
Party
Allagoa Chinedu Peoples Party of Nigeria
Godson Okoye United Democratic Party
Chekwas Okorie United Progressive
Party
The Candidates’ bios:
Goodluck Jonathan:
Goodluck Jonathan is the Presidential candidate of the
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). He is the incumbent
President and is seeking re-election. Jonathan assumed
office in 2010 after the death of former President,
Umaru Yar’adua. He was elected into office in 2011.
Muhammadu Buhari:
Muhammadu Buhari is the Presidential candidate of the
All Progressives Congress (APC). The former Head of
State contested for the office of President in the 2003,
2007 and 2011 elections. He emerged the candidate of
the APC in December 2014 defeating opponents which
included former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar.
Tunde Anifowose-Kelani:
Tunde Anifowose-Kelani is the Presidential candidate of
the Action Alliance (AA). He was born in Agbokojo,
Ibadan, Oyo state, on April 5, 1965. He earned a first
degree in Guidance and Counselling combined with
Communication and Language Arts from the University
of Ibadan and a Master’s degree in Personnel
Psychology from the same university.
He has also served as the National President, Junior
Chambers International (JCI), and Chief Executive Officer
of The Siegener Sabithos Nigeria Limited. He is a
member of the board of the Shooting Stars Sports Club
(3SC) of Ibadan.
Rafiu Salau:
Rafiu Salau is the Presidential candidate of the Alliance
for Democracy (AD). He is also the party’s National
Secretary. The 58-year-old holds a Senior Secondary
School leaving Certificate and believes that he is “the
best candidate” for the number one office in the country.
He has pledged to create two million jobs if elected and
also raise Nigeria’s foreign reserve to $200 billion.
Alhaji Ganiyu Galadima:
Ganiyu Galadima is the Presidential candidate of the
Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN). Galadima was
the acting National Chairman of the party before being
named its flagbearer of December 11, 2014. Galadima
has said that he believes strongly ‘in the need to end
impunity in Nigeria’.
Dr Mani Ahmad:
Mani Ahmad is the Presidential candidate of African
Democratic Congress (ADC). He has urged Nigerians to
think about their situation and those responsible and
vote for ADC for a paradigm shift. He also expressed
optimism at his ability to deliver if elected into office.
Adebayo Musa Ayeni:
Adebayo Musa Ayeni is the Presidential candidate of the
African Peoples Alliance (APA). He was the Deputy
Governor of the old Ondo State from 1990 to 1992, the
first civilian to hold the office during military rule. He is
from Emure Ekiti in Ekiti State. Ayeni has promised to
tackle corruption if elected into office.
Chief Sam Eke:
Sam Eke is the Presidential candidate of the Citizens’
Popular Party (CPP) and is also its National Chairman.
He is an accountant and a native of the Ikwuana Local
Government Area of Abia state.
He has attended the Pacific Western University, Janus
University and the state University of New York, all in the
US. Chief Eke has urged Nigerian politicians to shun
“politics of bitterness” and the “do or die” mentality and
also to refrain from gathering unnecessary wealth.
High Chief Ambrose Owuru:
High Chief Ambrose Owuru is the Presidential candidate
of the Hope Democratic Party. He is the National
Chairman of the party and has contested Presidential
elections twice.
Owuru, who is a lawyer, was arrested and arraigned in
2013 by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission
(EFCC) over an alleged N66 million fraud. Owuru has
described his party as “a new generation party of
statesmen who work for the future of our people.”
Remi Comfort Sonaiya:
Oluremi Comfort Sonaiya is the Presidential candidate of
KOWA party. She is the only female contesting for the
post. Dr Sonaiya, who was born on March 2nd, 1955,
holds a doctorate degree in linguistics and is also a
professor of French and applied linguistics at the
Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU).
She has said that she is running for Nigeria’s number
one office because she believes that an ‘ordinary citizen’
can do the job.
Chief Martin Onovo:
Chief Martin Onovo is the Presidential candidate of the
National Conscience Party (NCP). He is an engineer by
profession and holds degrees from the University of
Ibadan and the University of Houston.
Chief Onovo contested the 2011 Presidential elections on
the platform the Action Alliance (AA) in 2011. Onovo has
said that if elected into power, his administration would
use $9 billion to double power generation, transmission
and distribution in two and half years.
Allagoa Chinedu:
Allagoa Chinedu is the Presidential candidate of the
Peoples Party of Nigeria (PPN). According to the
Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Mr
Allagoa is 46-years-old and holds a Bachelor of Science
degree. His running mate is 35-year-old Arabamhen
Mary, a Secondary School leaving certificate holder.
Godson Okoye:
Godson Okoye is the Presidential candidate of the United
Democratic Party (UDP). He is a lawyer by profession.
Okoye contested the governorship elections of Anambra
State in 2010 and 2013.
Okoye has said that his vision is to vision is to “make
Nigeria secure and prosperous, through effective
governance to overcome [our] current educational,
security and power problems.”
Dr Chekwas Okorie:
Chekwas Okorie is the Presidential candidate of the
United Progressive Party (UPP). He is also the pioneer
National Chairman of the party. Dr Okorie was a close
friend to the late Odimegwu Ojukwu and was also one of
the founding members of the All Progressives Grand
Alliance (APGA) before his departure from the party.
Okorie has urged Nigerians not to vote for either the APC
or the PDP as they are both full of “recycled criminals,
former jail birds and corrupt and deceitful politicians.”
Courtesy: http://pulse.ng/politics/2015-elections-all-
you-need-to-know-about-your-14-presidential-aspirants-
id3419333.html

Photo of The Day:Power Play

Labaran Maku Is A Dangerous Boy-Ahmadu Ali

The Director-General of the Peoples Democratic Party,
PDP, Presidential Campaign Council, Ahmadu Ali, on
Tuesday said his party will make sure the former
Information Minister, Labaran Maku, fails for the rest of
his life for defecting to the All Progressives Grand
Alliance, APGA,.
Mr. Ali said Mr. Maku is a “dangerous boy” who the PDP
helped groom from nothing, adding that his defection will
cause a reduction in the number of votes the PDP will
garner in Nasarawa state.
The Director-General who stated this at the PDP
presidential rally in Lafia, explained that the former
minister benefited from the PDP-led Federal Government
only to defect to another party.
“ We have a young man who from nowhere was a Deputy
Governor of this state for four years, from nowhere he
was made a Minister at the federal level for six years; he
decided to leave the party for another party and keep
telling lies that by being in that party, he is helping us.
“He is only going there to reduce our votes. He is a
dangerous boy.
“We must make sure that now that he has shown his
colour, he will continue failing for the rest of his life
unless he retraces his steps back to the elders like us
and we will forgive him.”
Mr. Ali then urged the electorate in the state to vote for
President Goodluck Jonathan and other candidates of the
party at both federal and state levels.
Mr. Jonathan said lending such a support to the former
minister would amount to anti-party behaviour.
He, therefore, expressed his support for all the PDP
candidates in the state in the February 14 and 28 general
elections.
“We are told and everybody spoke about that the former
Minister of Information that is in another party and saying
that it is the President who asked him to go to another
party. Definitely I cannot play anti-party.
“PDP is my party and all those who want to help us
should come to PDP and work for PDP so that PDP will
be in control of Nasarawa State so that government of
PDP in Nasarawa State and the Federal Government that
will be in the hands of PDP and work together to move
Nasarawa State forward,” Mr. Jonathan said.
Also speaking, the President of the Senate, David Mark,
urged Mr. Maku to desist from dropping the name of Mr.
President in his quest to achieve his political ambition.
He advised him to apologise to the PDP ”if he is willing to
return to the party”, saying that the PDP would
wholeheartedly accept him into its fold.
“ People of Nasarawa State, don’t be deceived by any
ungrateful son of yours, who goes round saying he is in
another political party because Mr. President has put him
there.
“That is absolute lie, you must never believe it. We said
so few days ago and we are emphasising it again. And we
want to emphasise it; (the) President is body and soul
PDP.
“He can’t, therefore, put somebody in another political
party to be campaigning on behalf of another political
party.
“How can you be in APGA and be campaigning for the
PDP presidential candidate?
“Return to PDP with apology because before we even
take him he has to apologise to all the good people in
PDP.

Monday 26 January 2015

Artwork of The Day

By Raji Bamidele

Sambo's Anti-Christ Outburst Against Osinbajo

At the Presidential campaign rally of GEJ/Sambo in Jigawa
state on January 21st, 2015, in the presence of President
Jonathan, Vice President Namadi Sambo stated in Hausa:
"Buhari ya dauko pastor a matsayin mataimakinsa kunsan coci
nawa yake dashi? Yanada coci 5000, don haka karku zabesu. "
The translation is - " Buhari has selected a pastor as his
running mate, do you know how many churches he has? He
has 5000 churches, so based on that, don't vote for them ".
Sambo used religious sentiments in his attempt to divide the
country and incite Muslims against Christians. Sambo also
said at the rally that the PDP is the most Islamic Party in
Nigeria because nobody can be more Muslim than him. He
said that his name is Namadi which is a derivative of
Namadina, meaning someone from the Medina in Saudi
Arabia. At the Rally in Jigawa State Sambo also stated that
he goes for the Hajj every year.
In his determination to whip up religious sentiments and
divisions, the vp stated at the Jigawa state rally that all the
security chiefs in the Jonathan administration are Muslims
and based on that, those alleging that Jonathan is
supportive of Boko Haram are not being fair. He mentioned
the names of some key ministers in the Jonathan
administration including Defence Minister, Aliyu Gusau,
NSA, Sambo Dasuki, Inspector General of Police, Abba
whom he emphasized are all Muslims. He also mentioned
all the Muslim ministers from Kano, including Aminu Wali,
Foreign Affairs Minister and Shekarau, Minister of
Education.
Sambo then asked if anyone could claim to be more Muslim
than him Namadi Sambo. Then he shouted Allahu Akbar
(Allah is great several times). To close his speech he recited
the AlFatiha, (The Opening, the first seven verses of the Holy
Quran, which for Muslims is the Mother of the Book, highly
revered by all).
Sambo's outburst against Christians and Pastor Osinbajo
would not surprise close watchers of political events in
Nigeria but it does reconfirm the outcome of late General
Azazi thorough and extensive investigation of Boko Haram
and in which he concluded that the PDP founded Boko
Haram and finances its terrorist activities.

Timbuktu's Ancient Manuscript Under Threat

In June, Ansar al Dine rebels, who took
control of Timbuktu following a military
coup in Mali in March, started destroying
ancient tombs and libraries in the city,
some of which are UNESCO World
Heritage Sites. Before the destruction, a
preservation and study project started by
the South African and Malian
governments to save Timbuktu’s ancient
manuscripts for posterity was making
progress. Curtis Abraham reports on what
is being done to save the manuscripts
from further rebel destruction.
In the fabled Malian city of Timbuktu, West
Africa tradition dies hard. Africans here still use
the Niger River for their ancient fishing
excursions in locally-made canoes. The past is
very prominent in the present. The three great
mosques or madrasas (schools) of Djingareyber,
Sankore, and Sidi Yahya are a testament in mud
architecture to the city’s golden age.
During the 15th and 16th centuries, Timbuktu
was a fabulously wealthy African city. It was the
city’s key role in trans-Saharan trade in gold,
ivory, slaves, salt, and other goods – a trade
conducted by Tuareg, Mandé, and Fulani
merchants – which led to its prosperity.
With wealth came learning, libraries, and
universities. The city was perhaps the most
important centre of learning in sub-Saharan
Africa during the 15th and 16th centuries,
where scholars of religion, arts, and sciences
flourished. During this time, tens of thousands
of manuscripts were commissioned and
meticulously executed by African academics.
However, when the Moroccans invaded the city
in the 1590s, academics and most of their
writings were banished by the Moroccans.
Miraculously, a treasure trove of thousands of
manuscripts survived persecution – and is
presently lying untouched in trunks or has been
buried in the thick mud walls of mosques for
generations.
But now all this is in danger of being destroyed
and lost forever. A military coup in March this
year has opened a Pandora’s Box in the
northern part of the country. In late June,
Ansar al Dine Tuareg militants, who took
control of Timbuktu from their former MNLA
Tuareg allies, and whose aim is to create an
Islamic state across the whole of Mali, attacked
tombs of revered saints and scholars in
Timbuktu. These are places of pilgrimage.
Ansar al Dine’s strict interpretation of Islam is
akin to the Taliban in Afghanistan and the
Wahabi of Saudi Arabia where the worshipping
of shines (or the wearing of amulets to ward off
malevolent spirits) is haram or forbidden.
Destroying the past and future
The rebels used pick-axes and other
instruments to knock down the tombs of Sidi
Alpha Moya and Sidi Mukhtar. They also
destroyed the tomb of Sidi Mahmoud Ben Amar,
a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Timbuktu has 16
such sites
The rebels broke off doors, windows, and
wooded gates from Ben Amar’s grave and
burned them. They later set fire to the tomb
itself, and went on to attack and deface a 15th
century red wooden door in the Sidi Yahya
Mosque, one of the most famous mosques in
Timbuktu, as onlookers sobbed.
But the destruction did not stop there. The
Islamist fighters then destroyed two tombs at
Timbuktu’s famous Djingareyber mosque.
“The rebels are oblivious to the heritage of
Timbuktu, as we have just witnessed with the
destruction of a number of tombs by the Ansar
al-Din,” says Shamil Jeppie, director of the
Tombouctou [Timbuktu] Manuscripts Project of
the University of Cape Town, South
Africa. “These are the graves of people highly
regarded in Timbuktu and the region. Among
them are men who were both saintly and
scholars.
“The rebels may next focus on the manuscripts
with Sufi content – with which the libraries are
filled. It is strange to hope for any person or
group to be illiterate but in this case one hopes
that they cannot decipher the materials because
of their inadequate literacy in the language or
script of the materials. One hopes that they are
just not interested in the materials. If they are
interested in them then it should be to see that
they are cared for,” Prof Jeppied added.
But he was not alone in his condemnation of
the destruction of Timbuktu’s cultural heritage.
“I believe this is a tragedy for all of humanity”,
lamented Irina Bokova, UNESCO’s director
general.
According to the latest reports, the Ansar al
Dine rebels have not yet harmed any of the
priceless manuscripts but they are worryingly
close. They took over the new building of the
Ahmad Baba Institute, and computers and data
were reportedly stolen as well as vehicles
belonging to the Institute. But the reports said
the insurgents did not enter the rooms and
underground vaults where the manuscripts are
stored.
Major private owners of manuscript collections
are said to have hidden or packed their ancient
documents away for protection. Some may have
even smuggled them out to Bamako, the Mali
capital, or to neighbouring countries.
But this is not the first time these ancient texts
are being hidden because of armed conflict and
occupation. Some manuscripts were hidden
away for centuries under mud houses and in
desert caves from Moroccan invaders, European
explorers, and French colonialists.
The armed occupation and apparent cultural
destruction of Timbuktu by the Ansar al Dine
(they have vowed to destroy the tombs of all the
revered holy men of the city) come as a major
setback for experts attempting to translate,
digitalise and preserve these ancient texts.
South African project
One such project involved examining the
scientific contents of tens of thousands of these
documents. In 2003, a South Africa-Mali
Timbuktu Manuscripts Project was officially
launched as a bilateral cooperation agreement
between the two governments.
Their goal is to research various aspects of the
literature of the handwritten works of
Timbuktu – arguably the largest collection of
written artifacts in Africa. The project also aims
to train young African researchers in the
preservation, translation, and digitalisation of
the ancient texts for future generations.
Then in February 2006, “The Project on the
Search for Scientific Contents of the Timbuktu
Manuscripts”, an offshoot of the main study,
was launched as a joint collaboration between
the University of Cape Town’s Department of
Science and Technology (DST), and Bamako
University in Mali.
The aim is to unlock the scientific secrets of the
Timbuktu manuscripts, something which has
never been previously attempted.
The South African government initially funded
the project to the tune of R500,000 (about
$70,000 at the time). However, since the
occupation of Timbuktu by the Ansar al Dine,
the government of South Africa has remained
conspicuously silent about the desecration of
the sacred sites.
The expectation is that these fragile reams of
paper, some dating back to the 13th century,
may yield surprises not only in the field of
astronomy but also in the disciplines of botany,
medicine, biology, chemistry, mathematics, and
climatology.
The main ambition of the researchers is to try
and build as complete a picture of the status of
science studies and research during the ancient
Mali and Songhay empires as possible.
The project also hopes to investigate the extent
of the participation and contribution of African
astronomers to medieval Islamic scientific
culture.
“This project is important because it seeks to
reveal aspects of the history of science in Africa
that the world does not know about,” says Dr
Thebe Rodney Medupe, the chief researcher of
the project. “Until we thought of this project,
the common belief amongst scientists was that
Africans only began studying and participating
in science only recently after the arrival of
Europeans in our continent.
“We hope that the findings from our project
will revise all of that so that our continent can
get the respect it deserves, regarding its
relationship with science. The fact that right
now we can speak with confidence that black
people were studying mathematics and
astronomy over 300 years ago is something that
was unthinkable during my school days. The
common perception was that Black Africans
could not think or do science.”
The bulk of the Timbuktu manuscripts are
currently housed in the Ahmed Baba Institute of
Higher Learning and Islamic Research. While
most are in Arabic, some are in indigenous
languages such as Songhai and Hausa, written
using Arabic script.
There are also several volumes of catalogues,
and there may be up to 18,000 manuscripts!
Entries of the Ahmed Baba library catalogues
indicate the existence of 37 manuscripts that
deal with the topics of astronomy and astrology.
Medupe’s team also discovered 27 such articles
in the famous Mamma Haidara Memorial
Library. Furthermore, there are also 32
manuscripts on astronomy which have been
identified in the libraries of the Al-Furqan
Foundation, but no studies of the scientific
content of the manuscripts have been done
before.
There are also 25 private libraries in and
around the city of Timbuktu. However, only
eight of these are open to scholars. And out of
that eight, it is only the Mama Haidara
Memorial Library that has catalogued its ancient
texts.
Key questions
Some key questions that Dr Medupe and his
colleagues are hoping to answer by surveying
the thousands of ancient manuscripts include
whether or not the astronomers of Timbuktu
knew that the Earth was round. Did they also
suspect that they were living in a helio-centric
or sun-centred solar system? Did they have any
instruments for looking at the heavens? What
were their thoughts about meteor showers,
comets and eclipses? Was their mathematical
knowledge sufficient enough to apply it to the
study of the sky? Did they keep any records of
astronomical events?
One particular question the researchers would
like to answer is the possibility of a two-way
flow of scientific ideas between the known
centres of medieval Islamic science, such as
Baghdad and West
Africa.
Islamic science had its heyday during the period
between the 8th and 16th centuries AD. During
that time, most research in astronomy in the
world took place in Islamic Spain, North Africa,
and the Middle East. The knowledge resulting
from this era went on to benefit European
scientists during the time of the European
Renaissance. The source of this knowledge was
a combination of the translated Ancient Greek
science manuscripts, and original research by
medieval Islamic scientists.
The Timbuktu manuscripts are part of a much
larger collection of Islamic writings found
throughout much of West Africa. But such
documents are not exclusive to West Africa
alone. These ancient Islamic texts can be found
in areas of sub-Saharan Africa where Islam has
had a substantial impact on the life and culture
of the indigenous African communities it
touched. Such places include Sudan,
Mozambique, Tanzania, and Mauritania.
“The most amazing part of this is that the study
of Islamic science in the past in Africa may be
more widespread than we think,” says Medupe,
now an associate professor at the University of
North West, South Africa. “This is because, these
ancient manuscripts are found not only in
Timbuktu, but in many older cities in Mali, the
neighboring countries of West Africa, and all
the way to the east in Sudan and as far south as
Tanzania, I believe.”
Medupe and his colleagues continue to be
optimistic about finding further astronomical
data in the Timbuktu archives. Their optimism
is rooted in two known facts. First, until quite
recently, the stars dominated many aspects of
human life, providing vital information on the
time, changing seasons, navigation, and
complementing spiritual beliefs. This cultural
astronomy or archeo-astronomy is what
Medupe and his colleagues are hoping to find in
the Timbuktu manuscripts.
Second, it is well-known that Timbuktu traded
extensively with Muslim traders from the
Middle East. From the 8th century until the 15th
century, Muslim astronomers took over from
the Ancient Greeks as some of the most accurate
and innovative mathematicians and
astronomers in the world. Through the book
trade and regular interaction between these two
cultures, it is quite feasible that they shared and
discussed observations and discoveries about
the stars. They also developed and shared
systems of mathematics.
Facing Mecca
Unlike the early Christian church, whose
conservatism delayed progress in advances of
scientific understanding for many centuries,
because of teaching attitudes that were still
rooted essentially in Plato and Aristotle, early
Islamic investigations in astronomy, however,
were driven by two main religious practices.
The first was the requirement for Muslims to
pray facing Mecca, and to orient their mosques
in the direction of Mecca. This direction was
determined in some cases by using stars to
determine latitude and longitude for both Mecca
and the locality of interest. Then trigonometric
identities were applied to determine angles.
Secondly, there was the need to determine
proper times for prayers at sunrise, noon,
afternoon, sunset and evening.
Practical solutions to both of these problems
require the use of trigonometry, a section of
mathematics that was not known during the
times of Ptolemy, the Greek mathematician and
astronomer. Ptolemy did offer solutions to these
problems, but his methods were too
cumbersome, say experts.
Muslim astronomers, however, devised easier
solutions by inventing the cosine, tangent, co-
tangent, secant and cosecant functions of
trigonometry. The medieval Islamic
astronomers also improved on the astrolabe, an
instrument that was used to predict positions of
the stars and planets.
According to Dr Petra Schmidl of the Johann
Wolfgang Goethe-Universität in Frankfurt,
Germany, the Timbuktu manuscripts include
texts that discuss calendars and timekeeping,
which were written as poems.
“The interesting thing concerning pre-modern
astronomy and astrology as presented in the
Timbuktu manuscripts does not [just] concern
new discoveries and information not available
in other parts of the Islamic realm,” says
Schmidl, who also collaborated with Medupe
and Sharon Hawkes on the documentary, The
ancient astronomers of Timbuktu.
Schmidl adds that “the Timbuktu scholars deal
with astronomical and astrological problems
and questions, as well as methods and solutions
that modern scholarship knows from pre-
modern astronomy and astrology in other parts
of the Islamic realm.”
Discoveries so far
So what ancient astronomical data have the
researchers discovered so far among the
manuscripts?
“The preliminary investigations point to
connections with the western part of Muslim
North Africa, for example the Maghreb,” says
Benno van Dalen of the Institute of Islamic
Science in Frankfurt, who was also a
collaborator on the Timbuktu manuscripts
project.
“Western Islamic astronomy, for example from
Muslim Spain and the Maghreb, is in general
quite different from astronomy in the eastern
Islamic world,” Dalen continues. Between June
and October 2006, Medupe and his South
African and Malian colleagues translated 14
manuscripts, which covered the disciplines of
astronomy, geography, and mathematics. These
documents varied in size and are particularly
difficult to read since they are not punctuated,
and many have crucial pages missing, including
their front covers. Some have astronomical data
tables which are very important for historians
of astronomy. In manuscript number 3660, a
10-page document discusses orbits, division of
orbits, seasons, as well as foods and drinks to
be consumed every month.
In another document, Number 2458, a 31-pager
called “Illustration of a Poem by Mohammad
Bin Ali”, the author writes about, among other
things, days of the year, planets, lunar
mansions, the duration of planets in
constellations, and the source of moonlight.
Another document titled: “A Book about
Knowing the Situations of the Moon in the
Mansion” tells of ill fortune and bad fortune
lunar mansions, and hours and their
characteristics. Other manuscripts similarly
discuss planets, constellations, orbits, seasons,
the moon, sun, etc.
Among the treasure-trove of ancient texts is
document Number 3670. Written in 1723, it is a
copy of a commentary by Abul Abbas on a work
by Mohammed bin Said bin Yehya bin Ahmed
bin Dawud bin Abubaker bin Ya-aza, who came
from Suz (probably Morocco).
The researchers are in the dark about further
details of the author’s life. However, they
suspect that he lived or came from the area
near Timbuktu since he mentions Ahmed Baba,
the most famous scholar from Timbuktu in the
1500s.
The manuscript starts by explaining what
astronomy is, and what its uses are. Prof
Medupe’s expert Arabic translators give a direct
translation of what Abul Abbas thinks
astronomy is: “… it is also called Science of
Arithmetic. Because he who wants to know this
science must look at the sky to observe the
individual stars and to know their names. It is
called Arithmetic, because he who wants to
know it must learn Arithmetic.”
Abul Abbas then lists the uses of astronomy for
guiding people at sea, determining calendars
and determining prayer times. “These concepts
of astronomy are exactly as they are being
taught in classes of general astronomy today,”
says Prof Medupe. What is unusual about this
text is that it describes a geocentric or earth-
centred model of the universe in 1700s
Timbuktu 300 years after the Copernican
revolution, which placed the sun at the centre
of our solar system. The manuscript is a
testament to the fact that these early notions of
the universe (wrong though they are) were
being independently developed in sub-Saharan
Africa without European influence.
This particular document also includes precise
definitions of Islamic calendars, month, leap
year, etc. Furthermore, the author also gives
algorithms on how to determine leap years in
an Islamic calendar.
“I was reading Abul Abbas’s manuscript in
Timbuktu, without an astronomical book or the
internet for reference, so I decided to test the
accuracy of their algorithm for determining the
Islamic leap year by implementing it on a
Fortran (computer language] programme,” says
Prof Medupe. “Indeed the programme worked
well, and so these people were very
knowledgeable about the subject they wrote
about.”
The final chapter of Abbas’s text deals with a
description of a geocentric model of the
universe. This manuscript, which also contains
diagrams of planetary orbits, does not only
illustrate the well-known fact that Islamic
astronomy borrowed a lot from Ancient Greek
astronomy, but it also proves a far less known
fact that Africans living below the Sahara were
learning these ideas over 300 years ago.
Sadly, the Timbuktu manuscripts were already
in peril prior to the arrival of Ansar al Dine.
Climatic and environmental conditions in
Timbuktu (and the wider region) are quite
extreme, which combined, pose a considerable
threat.
Insects and other vermin that eat paper and
other materials, as well as poor quality paper
also contribute to the deterioration of the
manuscripts. Ironically, one of the rather
unexpected elements that the conservation team
has found is widespread water damage. Now
there is even a more menacing threat – the
Ansar al Dine rebels. As they continue their
occupation of Timbuktu, many of Mali’s
foremost researchers, conservationists, and
library owners have fled for Bamako, the
capital. This has left behind a void of skilled
and knowledgeable experts who know how to
handle the fragile manuscripts.
Several private libraries have also been locked
while portions of the manuscripts (as well as
other precious artefacts) have been removed
from the libraries and museums and hidden
away in private homes. The question is for how
much longer?

How Boko Haram can be defeated


By Max Siollun
The Nigerian military has struggled to
have any effect in the face of Boko
Haram’s intensifying attacks. But with the
right combination of military and non-
military, short- and long-term strategies,
the Islamist militants can be stopped, as
Max Siollun explains.
The casualties and suffering that have been
caused by the Islamist militant group Boko
Haram over the past five years are mind-
boggling. According to estimates, 12,000 people
have been killed, 8,000 thousand more have
been injured or maimed, and thousands of
innocent people have been displaced by the
conflict. Even more worryingly, around half of
those deaths have come in just the past year.
Nigeria is being haunted by the ghost of past
mistakes, and a gigantic coop of chickens has
come home to roost, though it is not as if the
country was not pre-warned. In the early 1980s,
northern Nigeria was rocked by a violent
uprising by an Islamic sect led by a
Cameroonian preacher known as “Maitatsine”.
4,000 people were killed and the commission
that investigated the violence reported:
“Because of the very wide gap between the rich
and the poor in our society…[Maitatsine’s sect]
were more than prepared to rise against the
society at the slightest opportunity.” The
commission advised: “This regrettable social
situation in our society ought to be remedied
immediately else it will continue to provide the
required recruitment potential for disenchanted
men…to rebel.”
The government did not heed these lessons. It
did little to address economic inequality or
religious extremism, leaving in place the
conditions under which Boko Haram could
emerge. The insurgency has flourished over the
past five years and the attempts to combat it
have largely fallen flat. With the right
combination of long-term planning and
execution, however, the Islamist militant group
can be defeated.
Tackling Boko Haram?
The methods deployed so far against Boko
Haram have had the same effect as pouring
petrol on an open fire. The Nigerian army has
been accused of mishandling the insurgency,
and any or all of: the indiscriminate use of
force, torturing innocent civilians, and being
reluctant to confront Boko Haram fighters.
The army might argue that there are mitigating
factors which hamper it. It is trained for
conventional warfare and peacekeeping
operations. Elaborate hostage rescues and
fighting AK-47 wielding Islamist biker gangs in
the middle of city centres are not its forte. Since
Nigeria has never experienced an insurgency of
this type or magnitude before, the army is in
the odd situation of being tested on the
battlefield first, and learning the lessons
afterwards. It has had to adapt to a new type of
war and learn on the job.
The terrain does not favour the army either.
The combined size of the three states in north-
eastern Nigeria worst affected by Boko Haram –
Borno, Yobe, and Adamawa States – is roughly
equal to that of Tunisia, or five times that of
Switzerland. Trying to hunt down militants
dressed in civilian attire, blended in with
millions of civilians in villages, towns, cities,
markets, and forests in an area that size with
only a few helicopters and aeroplanes is no
easy feat.
The army also faces operational challenges.
Some soldiers have complained of being under-
equipped and finding themselves outgunned by
heavily armed Boko Haram militants. More
accurately, the issue may be that the army is
incorrectly equipped for this type of conflict.
Earlier this year, Nigeria’s former Chief of
Defence Staff, General Martin Luther Agwai
astutely observed that: “Our military is properly
equipped to fight yesterday’s war”.
The federal government has been looking for a
silver bullet solution to crush the insurgency
with a single blow. However, they have
belatedly learned the same painful lesson that
the British learned with the IRA in Northern
Ireland and that America has been learning
with al-Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan
and beyond. As the former Minister of the
Federal Capital Territory, Nasir El-Rufai, once
commented rhetorically: “Tell me where in the
world military action alone has solved an
insurgency.” And as Agwai conceded, “You can
never solve any of these problems with military
solutions…It is a political issue; it is a social
issue; it is an economic issue; and until these
issues are addressed, the military can never
give you a solution.”
But if military force cannot stop the insurgency,
what else can be done? The often-repeated
mantra is that economic development is the
antidote to violent extremism. However, who
will invest in a region wracked by violence and
insecurity and in which militants destroy any
signs of development, such as schools and
mobile telephone masts?
Government indecision
The government’s strategy so far has appeared
to be schizophrenic at times, vacillating between
vowing to “crush” Boko Haram, pleading with
them to negotiate, and offering them an
amnesty. The government’s approach has been
of saying the right things but at the wrong time,
or of doing the right things but in the wrong
way.
Military force and negotiations are part of the
solution, not all of it. And an amnesty should be
the end of the conflict resolution process, not
the start of it. In April 2013, the government
made itself look weak and desperate by offering
an amnesty to Boko Haram without getting
anything in return, while it also demonstrated
the government’s myopia about the group,
which does not recognise the secular Nigerian
government. The offer was contemptuously
rebuffed. Boko Haram does not even respect the
authority of venerated Islamic figures in
northern Nigeria, such as the emirs. Boko
Haram has either killed, or tried to kill, emirs
and imams who criticised their violence. This is
the equivalent of Christian rebels killing priests.
It is not all a tale of mishaps though. The
government is learning, albeit belatedly, and
has made some tentative steps in the right
direction. The National Security Adviser Colonel
Sambo Dasuki (retired) appointed Fatima Akilu,
a psychologist, to work as the Director of
Behavioural Analysis and Strategic
Communication in his office. Akilu has designed
a programme called “Countering Violent
Extremism” which maps out a blueprint for de-
radicalising and rehabilitating militants,
preventing others from being radicalised, and a
communication strategy to counter Boko
Haram’s narrative. The syllabus for military
cadets at the Nigerian Defence Academy has
also been modified to give cadets training in
counter-terrorism.
Meanwhile, a volunteer civilian security group
known as the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF)
may have provided a template for community-
based security that can be applied elsewhere, if
refined. The CJTF is a cross between a
neighbourhood watch scheme and ruthless
vigilantes. Due to Nigeria’s massive ethno-
linguistic diversity, and the federal nature of its
security forces, police officers and soldiers are
often deployed in areas they have never been to
before and where they are complete strangers,
with no understanding of the local culture or
language. This makes it very difficult for them
to gain the cooperation or trust of locals. This is
where the CJTF can be of assistance. Although it
is armed only with rudimentary weapons such
as sticks, knives, and old rifles, the CJTF’s local
knowledge, and in some cases individual
knowledge of Boko Haram members, has
helped them “out” Boko Haram members to the
army.
The CJTF’s cooperation with regular security
forces has also helped deter attacks in
Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State and
biggest city in north-eastern Nigeria, and push
the militants out into more rural areas. In fact,
ironically, the CJTF’s success in Maiduguri may
have indirectly led to Boko Haram’s kidnap of
hundreds of schoolgirls in the town of Chibok
and elsewhere; with the CJTF present in
Maiduguri, Boko Haram moved out of the city
into more vulnerable areas with plenty of “soft
targets” such as schools.
Other political forums have also been
advocating good governance, economic
development, and education as solutions. These
are all noble suggestions, though it must be
noted that they will take years or even
generations to have effect. There is no bottle of
anti-terror pills that the government can get
from a chemist and force-feed to Boko Haram’s
fighters. Rather, it must drip-feed a cocktail of
anti-terror solutions into Boko Haram’s
ecosystem.
Iron fist in a velvet glove
The military alone cannot end the insurgency,
but it does have a crucial role to play. Military
force is the means that can be used to buy
enough “quiet time” for the government to
come up with permanent solutions. The military
must use enough force to either reduce the
frequency and intensity of Boko Haram’s
attacks, or pressurise it into considering a
ceasefire.
To do this, the intelligence agencies will have to
start by massively upgrading their poor
intelligence on Boko Haram. The evidence
suggests that Boko Haram has been more
successful at infiltrating the military than the
other way around.
Although Boko Haram acts like a ceasefire is a
non-starter, it is possible if the government
learns to speak the group’s language. The
concept of a Hudna (an Arabic phrase that can
mean “calm” or “cessation”) is a part of Islamic
jurisprudence recognised by other Islamic
insurgents, such as Palestine’s Hamas.
A Hudna can be a long-term cessation of
hostilities, lasting several years, which can also
be renewed. Given that the federal government
will never accept Boko Haram’s goal of an
Islamic theocracy within Nigeria’s borders and
that Boko refuses to subordinate itself to
Nigeria’s secular institutions, a long-term
Hudna may be a way of allowing both sides to
get what they want without losing face.
The government could propose a Hudna as a
temporary ceasefire or peace treaty, while Boko
Haram can claim it did not abandon its jihad
but sheathed its swords in a manner consistent
with its cosmology.
Right now though, Boko Haram has little reason
to consider a ceasefire. It has a large mobile
army, a massive stockpile of weapons and
ammunition, and controls several thousand
square kilometres of territory in north-eastern
Nigeria. The government must therefore create
its own bargaining chips to elevate its position
at the table. Leverage could come from taking
Boko Haram members alive as prisoners rather
than summarily executing them.
Prisoners would have strategic value as assets
that could be used to negotiate the release of the
hundreds of kidnapped children. Drying up the
reservoir of potential Boko Haram recruits
would also amplify the importance of Boko
Haram prisoners, by making their members
harder to replace.
The former British Chief of Defence Staff,
General Sir David Richards, believes that
“economic liberation” of the population is
critical in defeating doctrinal insurgencies. The
type of economic development that will
disincentivise young men from joining Boko
Haram though is not the typical Nigerian type
of grandiose white elephant projects that the
average man and woman care little about.
Instead, drip-fed investments on tangible
projects such as roads, water, jobs, and
electricity are more likely to undermine the
insurgents’ violent alternatives.
This war, however, must be fought not only on
the battlefield, but also by using the media and
educational establishments. The media, Koranic
schools and religious authorities have a key role
to play by challenging Boko Haram’s
interpretation of Islam, and by providing
alternate non-violent narratives. Nigeria must
also develop a counter-insurgency doctrine and
apply it uniformly across the military,
intelligence agencies, and teaching
establishments.
Ending this insurgency will also require a
regional solution. Nigeria cannot do this alone.
Nigeria is located in a “bad neighbourhood” in
which many of its counterparts, such as Chad,
Cameroon, Niger, and Mali are experiencing
insecurity too. Nigeria cannot expect to avoid
catching a cold if its neighbours sneeze, and
vice versa.
The morning after
With the right strategies, Nigeria can undermine
Boko Haram, militarily, economically and
psychologically. But the government must also
start preparing for “the morning after” today.
At some point, this insurgency will end and the
government will face difficult questions.
How will it re-house and compensate the
displaced people? What will it do about the
thousands of students whose education has
been disrupted by school closures and/or being
kidnapped? How will the victims who have
been raped, injured, or rendered orphans or
widows by Boko Haram react when they see
economic opportunities being given to people
who killed their family members?
One day, the same security forces that fought
Boko Haram may have to protect ex-militants
from score-settling attacks by their victims.
The short-term forecast for Nigeria is of more
bloodshed and violence between security forces
and Boko Haram. The long-term forecast is that
the insurgency can be terminated, but only by
thorough long-term planning, a robust military
strategy resolute enough to pressurise the
group, but flexible enough to rehabilitate
repentant militants, and creating space for
economic development. The solution to
Nigeria’s problem may well be bitter tasting
and slow-acting. But this anti-terror medicine is
one it will have to brace itself for and take.

Sunday 25 January 2015

The Actual Declaration of Bishop David Oyedepo

Bishop Oyedepo said: "All those opposing and are against
the peace of Nigeria, God would
open the gates of hell to them". Those were
his words.
But propagandists twisted his words.

Note:
I was in the service today. It was our
thanksgiving service today after the 21days
fasting period.

The Crime of Image-Laundering

Dear Ronke,

Inset:Buhari Refuses To Take off His Cap

I have been following several of your posts and arguments
to defend Buhari, but I would assume your Buharimania
stand should be reconsider within the following points:
By shutting down Ijora power station in Lagos and his
refusal to activate the Ashejire generating unit at Ibadan,
Buhari effectively destroyed industrial base of south-
western Nigeria and this eventually led to the surviving
industry relocating to Ghana and West Africa. Never mind
the epileptic Egbin,Ikorodu power station that is decorative.
As at now Buhari sees nothing wrong with the electricity
consumer in Southwestern Nigeria paying 55% of NEPA/
PHCN bill and the Arewa north paying virtually nothing for
the past 50 years. So much for piety and uprightness of
Buhari and his fellow Arewa travellers and their see no
evil,hear no evil stooges like OBJ, Tinubu, Rochas, Amaechi
etc from other tribes.
Alhaji Lawal Kaita is old enough to be an uncle to Alhaji
General Muhammadu Buhari, and both of them are from any
of the Arab emirates (republics) of West Africa but Buhari
did not condemned him when he uttered the treasonable
statement "We shall make Nigeria ungovernable
for...Buhari knows that Lawal Kaita is only articulating the
common beliefs of the elites of Arewa north anytime a
kaferi like Jonathan, Ironsi etc that are not Arewa's
candidate tried to soil the sacred GREEN WHITE COLOUR OF
(SAUDI ARABIA, NIGERIA and BOKO HARAM. Yes BH's flag
is the same Green & White) Shagari, Buhari, IBB, the
Abachas, Maitama Sule, Abdusalam, TY Danjuma,
Mohammed Marwa, El-Rufai, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi etc
never condemned this felonious statement. People are not
surprise because these same group of people who believe
fanatically in the upholding of Arab culture/interest pointedly
denied the manifestations of the following people for the
progress or otherwise in Nigeria and West Africa:
• MKO Abiola (The June 12, 1993 electoral tragedy)
• Ken Saro Wiwa and eight other Ogonis (execution)
• Obafemi Awolowo and other like-minded progressives
were denied their attempt to CHANGE Nigeria from ultra-
conservatism of the Arewa north to purely African socio-
political structure like that of Kwame Nkrumah's Ghana
• Alafin of Oyo in the 19th century was also denied the
leadership of the Yorubaland by the Dan Fodian, Fulani Arab
Jihadist ancestors of Buhari and co.
• Buhari never condemned the expulsion of Ghanians and
other non-Arabised tribes in West Africa (Ghana-Must-Go)
by his fellow Fulani Arab brother Usman Shehu Shagari
• Buhari promulgated War Against Indiscipline supposedly to
tidy up Nigeria but in reality was an instrument to cause
dislocation in
non-Arabised societies of Nigeria such as the banning of the
age old Onikiri culture (traditional hawkers) who are the
main source of security reporting to the elders of every
communities. But the same W.A.I. did not prohibit nomadic
Fulani cattle herdsmen from carrying on their age old
tradition of wandering illegally over other tribal lands.
Sacred groves and forests were violated and depleted by
uncontrolled grazing till now. Why weren't there restricted to
ranches as it is done all over the world? If the Onikiri
hawkers could be restricted on their own ancestral land,
then what right has the landless, rootless, ruthless nomadic
Fulani Arabs got to trample on other people's land
unrestricted?
• Buhari raided Awolowo's house at HIGH NOON with
impunity, and all the historical works of the history of the
Yorubas and
other tribes that Awolowo commissioned scholars to write
were taken away till today. On being challenged. Buhari
claimed IBB was responsible for the assault but till today he
did not condemned nor arrested IBB at that time.
I want to ask you Ronke, can a Leopard change its spot?
Would the Jews ever be sympathetic to their persecutors?
They say they will never, and you as a Yoruba lady is being
sentimental to a representative of a race that has been
causing carnage and upheaval throughout West Africa since
1804.
The man from Otuoke, Jonathan and his people have never
slaughtered the Yorubas and other tribes the way Fulani
Arabs have perpetrated and justified incessant killing since
1804.
The only thing you and any reasonable thinking person in
Nigeria and West Africa can do to honor the memory of
countless and needless bloodletting that is always coming
from Arewa north and the Fulani-Arab hegemonists (with
Born-To-Rule mentality) is to deny them the leadership of
anyland and organization in West Africa is remembrance of
countless killings of Yorubas, Beroms,Ogonis, Tivis, Igbos,
Efiks, Anangs, Chambas, Katafs, Gwaris etc.
I am a tribal woman who believes true politics is impossible
under amalgamation. All political parties are automatically
skewed to the advantage of Arewa north because of the
enforced federal character which ensures that sixty percent
of the posts and members are automatically reserved for
the most backward area in Africa, northern Nigeria. In other
words Nigeria's political leadership must never come from
the Arab emirates of Nigeria and West Africa because their
areas are the most backward.
Once upon a time, Buhari's sympathiser: OBJ asked a
former head of state Yakubu Gowon "what have you
forgotten in the state house that you want to go back to
look for" so the same goes as "What has Buhari forgotten in
the state house that he wants to go and look for?"
I await a respond.

When Love Stinks(1)

By Mr.Myrron 2015(All Rights Reserved)

I stood transfixed to the spot as I watched Alero make her
way into the lecture theatre, swaying her hips to the
rhythm of my heart beat. I was momentarily lost as I
watched her walk, I watched her silhouette emerge from
the early morning darkness, I wasn’t expecting her to
come to class that early. The sweat on my palms seemed
to defy the cold harmattan breeze the persistently poured
into the lecture theatre. I swallowed hard as I watched her
make her way gracefully to where I was seating. She wore
the usual smile that exposed her immaculately white
teeth. She walked with the confidence that built up the
tension inside of me. To me, Alero was easily God’s best
piece of creation. She had the right amounts of flesh in
the right places, her fair face seemed to make the sun
look dull when it radiated brightness, but the brightness
didn’t stop in her looks alone. She was among the leading
students in the class.
“Good morning Tom”
The sweet melody in her voice immediately jerked me
back from my reverie.
“Hey”
I muttered looking up, evidently tensed, I was sure she
could hear my heart now pounding with vicious ferocity.
“Good morning”
“How was your night?”
“It was really cold, but nice sha”
She said as she dusted the chair beside me to sit down
“ok”
I said, immediately going blank, I desperately searched
my rebellious head to see if I could get any viable topic
for conversation.
“ehmmm, did you enjoy last Thursday’s chapel service?”
I said immediately regretting the question. It was a
Wednesday morning . Tom! I looked at my crush trying to
figure out if there was any change in her countenance.
She retained her charming smile and top notch
composure, only that she was now sitting, staring deeply
into my eyes. My heart was now racing painfully, and this
girl didn’t look like she was planning to stop anytime
soon. I desperately looked around the cold, dark lecture
theatre desperately searching for anyone that could save
me from the mess I was in. she drew closer. I could now
feel droplets of sweat running through the ridge on my
back.
Right now I didn’t mind even the dean stepping into the
lecture theatre, I desperately prayed for anybody,
somebody to come, but the heavens were quiet, or were
simply delighted watching me go through this torture. She
placed her soft tender hands on my cheek and slowly
brought her lips closer. As her warm breath caressed my
skin that cold harmattan morning, my veins dilated and
some blood rushed to my face. Most of the blood went to
the auxiliary brain between my legs. As she drew closer,
my stomach started rumbling, as if in protest. Just as she
was about the plant the kiss, I let out an awful explosion
of fart. She immediately drew back, unsure of where the
noise was coming from.
Then it hit her.
I felt a push, then another tap, then a slight tap.
“Wake up, the lecturer is here!”
I looked up, and the blurred image before me slowly
became clearer. Then at once, I recognized her. It was
Alero, sitting right next to me. God! Why is this girl
everywhere? I looked up at the empty podium and I
realized that no one was there. Of course! She was
messing with me!
Right there, I wanted to pour out my feelings to her before
I get myself embarrassed again. I wanted to tell her that
right from the first day I saw walked into the lecture
theatre with that lemon green pleat skirt and a flowery top,
she had been all I could think of. As I seriously wracked
my brain to find the right words to express my undying
affection for this epitome of beauty, I started feeling a
familiar sensation in my stomach. Immediately I touched
her. Immediately she turned, My heart started its usual
race. The words disappeared from my head. Then finally, I
managed to speak
“Alero I…….’
Then It happened again. This time, it was not in the safe
privacy my dreams, it was in reality. Immediately, the
whole lecture theatre went quiet, and everybody looked
towards my direction. Immediately, I felt that familiar
sensation I feel anytime I get nervous. Then the
microphone jerked me back to reality….
“Young man, we are waiting for your answer!”
It was the cantankerous MAT121 lecturer. That didn’t help
the situation. I still let it out, loud and clear.

Photo of The Day

1. Survival on the streets of Lagos. Those Danfo buses and their perennial battery problem.Photo credit:Seun Idowu,Nigerian Nostalgia Project.

Friday 23 January 2015

The Legend of Nigeria vs. India (99-1)

Credits To The Unknown Writer
Virtually everybody born before the invention of
the internet must have heard the tale of a
nonexistent football match between Nigeria and
India that obviously took place in a parallel
universe and somehow we got to hear the gory
stories of that match.
Though there are many variations of the story,
every prevaricator seems to agree on a couple of
facts about this fictional football match. Each
storyteller agrees that;
1. This match ended with India scoring 99 goals
and Nigeria scoring just one goal.
2. Nigerians where unable to kick the ball because
the football kept turning to a lion (or something
scary) to prevent them from playing the soccer
ball.
3. The Indians later agreed that if Nigeria could
score a goal, they would concede defeat
4. Samuel Okwaraji scored the winning goal and
lost his life in the process.
5. FIFA banned India from soccer because they
used black magic in that very game
With the help of common sense (not that it was
absent back then), quick access to information
and the internet, every right thinking Nigerian has
come to realise that such a story should be filled
under “Blatant Lies”.
Why Did This Story Thrive For So Long?
Most people like to pass off this story as true with
the fact that no one has ever seen India in an
International Football Match. Since no one actually
saw India participate in most international soccer
games, this gave a little credence to the story.
India
Another reason this lie could thrive for long was
the fact that credible information was not readily
available at our finger tips. It not like every
Emeka, Audu and Ojo could visit Google in a
matter of minutes and tell our ominous fabricators
that they should stop spreading toxic lies.
And to be honest we have a tingling feeling that
this lie was concocted by an elder of a community
because, let’s be honest who questions the words
of the elders in Nigeria. Remember, what an adult
sees sitting down a child will never see even if he
consults Google, Siri or Cortana.
The Element of Truth In This Story
On the 12th of August 1989, Nigeria lost Sam
Okwaraji.
Sam Okwaraji was the player rumored to have lost
his life in that game when in truth he died during a
FIFA World Cup qualifying game against Angola in
the 77th minute.
He collapsed and died of cognitive heart failure.
May his soul rest in Perfect Peace. AMEN
So that is the only truthful thing about that story,
the fact that a Nigerian player died during a
football match. That’s it. The match was not
against India, we did not lose the match and as
you must have guessed, and there were no lions
either.
What Is The Deal With India Anyway?
India qualified for the 1950 FIFA world cup as a
result of the withdrawal of their scheduled
opponents. But the Indian football governing body,
the All India Football Federation (AIFF) decided
against going to the world cup, being unable to
understand the importance of the event at that
time.
Some of the Reasons shown by the AIFF included
the cost of travel, lack of practice time, team
selection issued and valuing the Olympics over the
FIFA World cup. It should be noted that FIFA
agreed to bear a major part of the travel expenses,
but it did not really help their decision making.
Was India Banned For Refusing To Play Barefoot?
No.
The 1948 London Olympics was India’s first major
international tournament, where a predominantly
barefoot Indian team lost 2 -1 to France.
Following the 1948 Olympics FIFA imposed a rule
banning barefoot play.
The belief that the Indian team refused to play
because they were not allowed to play barefoot is
not entirely true according to the then team
captain who said it was just a story to cover the
disastrous decision of the AFIF.
After the 1950 fiasco, India has never come close
to qualifying for the World Cup.
The reason you do not see India in World Cup
competitions is because they do not qualify
So Does The Indian Team Wear Soccer Boots?
Yes.
In the 1952 Olympics, the Indian team lost 10 – 1
to Yugoslavia (talking about taking a beating). As
a result of this magnanimous defeat the AIFF
made it compulsory for its team members to wear
boots
Is it Possible to win a match with a 99 – 1 match
margin?
Yes.
It is absolutely possible to rake 99 – 1 from a
single football match. Let’s take a walk down
memory lane and see how this is even possible.
Now allow us to digress.
The highest scoring soccer game was 149-0!
You’re probably wondering how a soccer team
could be so bad that they let 149 goals be scored,
but the truth is it was a form of protest. The event
occurred in 2002 after a 2-2 draw between rival
teams Stade Olympique de L’emyrne, or SOE, and
AS Adema of Madagascar, which resulted in the
referees awarding a penalty causing SOE to lose
the game.
During a match fixing debacle in Nigeria, the
Feeders scored 72 of their 79-0 victory in 45
minutes of play. Police Machine scored 61 of their
67-0 victory in the second half. At one point, they
scored four goals in a minute.
Arbroath won Bon Accord 36 – 0 in 1885. It held
the largest margin of victory in professional
football where both sides wanted to win.
So, yes, given the “right circumstances”, a team
could actually receive 99 – 1 beating without any
black magic whatsoever.

The Man In The Church

As Told By Royver

I don’t know how to tell this story, so I’m just going to tell
it and leave it for you to figure out because I’m tired of
thinking about it and I want it out of my system. My name
isn’t necessary, it’s just enough to let you know I used to
sweep the Catholic Church down the road every Tuesday
and Thursday for the past two years. I do it as a kind of
penance for my sins; I don’t know…it kind of gives me
grace. I feel peace doing it. I’m a four hundred level
medical student so you don’t think I’m some bum with
nothing better to do than sweep churches. I don’t belong
to any church group and I’ll be the first to tell you that
sweeping gives me asthma attacks. So why do I do it?
Like I said, it makes me feel peaceful. Gives me grace.
Anyway, enough of me and on to the real issue here.
Going to church every Sunday is okay for most folks. The
bible did say to keep the Sabbath day holy and all that.
There’s nothing wrong in going to church only on
Sundays. I do it myself. The Tuesday and Thursday thing
is usually done after the mass. But it is on these days
that I meet the strangest of people.
There’s the girl that comes every Tuesday and kneels
before the Blessed Sacrament, crying her eyes out and
holding a picture of her family. I know because I have
spied that picture more than once when sweeping close to
her. Guess she’s got family issues. There’s the guy who
comes to the church soon after mass and sits beside the
statue of Mary only to open his engineering textbooks and
project works. He’s been driven out countless times by
the parish priest but he always finds a way to sneak back
in when he thinks no one is looking. I guess he needs
supernatural help in his studies. I don’t know if it works
for him though.
There’s the old woman who comes for mass without fail
and then kneels in front of the altar until she goes to
sleep. Literally snores. After about thirty minutes she
wakes up, makes the sign of the cross and goes home.
Dunno what that is about. I guess it’s between her and
God.
There are pious people and pious looking people. There’s
the girl who comes and prays real hard after church only
to go outside and put on flashy makeup and head for
class, always on skimpy and very sexy attires. There’s the
guy who says extra prayers while I sweep past him and
then when he thinks no one is looking he drops some
spare change into the box for the poor.
So many characters. But this story is not about any of
them.
There was this guy I noticed right around three months
ago. He came to church when the mass was over, when
the church was completely empty and then he entered the
church. I knew he was doing something there but I could
never really catch him at it. The moment I came in he
would either go out and wait until I finished sweeping and
left for lectures or if it looked like I was going to stay
longer, he would give up and go home. If any of the other
characters I mentioned was in the church, he would stay
outside until they left. He was very persistent and never
ever missed a Tuesday or Thursday. I couldn’t tell whether
he came on other days or not and I didn’t have anybody to
ask. I noticed he would come in looking a little gloomy and
down in the dumps and then leave feeling recharged,
relieved, happy. But I was quite sure the happiness wasn’t
from prayer. He looked…there isn’t any other way of
saying this…high. Like he was high on some drug.
Whenever he came out his eyes would be wide open, his
nostrils flaring, his breathing faster and he would grin at
all and sundry and then move on his merry way. I began
to suspect there was more to it than met the eye with this
customer.
One day curiosity got the better of me and I decided to find
out what Mr. Super happy was up to. I came to church as
usual when the service was about rounding up, waited for
them to finish, then began to sweep out the church. I
made sure to wake the old woman sleeping at the altar
and she thanked me and went home. I inspected the
statue of Mary and luckily the engineering student as
nowhere to be found today. I swept out the church and
went outside and sure enough he was there, the mystery
man, waiting patiently for me to leave. I nodded in
greeting at him and he reciprocated with a small smile. I
then proceeded to start sweeping outside the church. My
plan was to keep sweeping around until he felt I wasn’t
noticing and then I would sneak into the church and
observe him.
As soon as I moved some distance off to the back of the
church, sweeping like my life depended on it and raising
not a little dust, my suspect went inside. I waited a little
bit, timing it just right because I knew from experience
that he spent an average of fifteen to twenty uninterrupted
minutes in the church before he was done. I gave him ten
minutes during which time I had inhaled enough dust to
make a vacuum cleaner jealous. I started wheezing a little
bit but I kept up the good work, making sure he thought I
was very busy. And then I dropped the broom and tiptoed
back to the entrance. If I walked right in he would see me
instantly so I went on my knees (hey, I was really
curious!) and crawled on my belly into the church, using
the side pews to hide me from being seen.
I was still on my belly and crawling towards the altar when
I heard the sweetest sound. It was like a choirperson was
singing somewhere, probably from a music device the
man was carrying but the voice were so clear and
beautiful that I had to assume the device was really high
tech. The sound was sending sweet shockwaves through
my body and I made up my mind there and then to ask
him to transfer it to my phone after I was done spying on
him. As I got closer, the voice became louder and then I
had the eerie feeling that it was not coming from a music
device, it was being sung live. I raised myself to my knees
and peeked over the pew.
Think what you like, but I’m telling you right now that guy
was standing on air. I mean he was literally standing on
nothing a few feet above the ground, his two hands
clutched to his chest and his mouth open wide. He was
the one doing the singing and from the altar a light was
shining towards him. I blinked once or twice in case it was
a reflection from the sun outside or something, but no.
That light was coming from the altar! I didn’t know when I
let out a small cry of alarm. The guy turned around
startled and I saw his mouth and eyes were filled with
light.
I got to my feet and ran faster than I had ever run in my
life. I ran through the door like a bullet, not screaming, not
having enough breath to scream, not realizing I was
having a full blown asthmatic attack. Not until I collapsed
near the fence of the church from sheer exhaustion and
lack of oxygen. The air just couldn’t get through to my
lungs, my chest was so tight. I raised my head and looked
around to see if anyone could help me…and saw the guy
standing in front of me. I couldn’t even scream though I
was scared silly.
He smiled and knelt beside me and put his hand on my
chest. Immediately my lungs opened and cool wonderful
air flowed in. I breathed in once, twice and soon I was
alright again. I sat up and gazed at the man in front of me.
He didn’t look so frightening anymore and the light had
gone from his mouth and eyes.
“You nearly scared yourself to death there.” He said.
“Don’t you know better than to sneak up on people?”
“I’m sorry sir.” I said immediately. He laughed.
“It’s okay. I’m just glad you are alright.”
“Are you, like, an angel?” I asked.
He smiled again.
“You have a good heart. Keep up the good work. The Lord
really appreciates it when you do things for him from the
depth of your heart and not because you are being forced
to do it.”
“Okay.” I said. I didn’t know what else to say.
“I have to go now. Tell Eunice to call home tomorrow and
tell Matthew that if he wants to pass he has to return
those books to their owners.”
“Okay.” I repeated.
Then he strolled to the church gate, his hands in his
pockets and entered a bus and was gone.
I didn’t even ask his name or number.
The next day I went to church. I waited until the girl with
the family picture came into the Blessed Sacrament and I
went to her.
“Excuse me please, are you Eunice?” I asked.
She looked at me curiously.
“Yes, do I know you?”
She had a nice smile when she wasn’t crying so much.
“Em, I was told to tell you to call your home today.”
Her eyes widened. “By who?”
“One guy like this. Sha call home.” I said and moved
towards the statue of Mary where the engineering student
had settled in for his early morning study.
“Matthew?”
The guy nearly jumped out of his skin. “What?”
“I was told to tell you that if you want to pass you have to
return those books to their owners.”
Matthew looked at me for a few seconds. The next thing I
knew he was on his feet and had me by the collar of my
shirt.
“Who are you?” He shouted. “Are you calling me a thief?”
I was about to respond when we both heard a loud cry and
we turned around to see Eunice on the phone crying and
kneeling and shouting
“Praise God for healing!” Then she cut the call and ran
towards me. Matthew released me as she fell into my
arms and hugged me tight.
“God bless you! My father and mother are going to be
alright!” She smiled through happy tears. “Who are you?”
“Me?” I gasped. “No, I’m not the one…there was this guy
yesterday…”
“You must show him to me tomorrow!” She shouted and
the parish priest appeared from the hallway. Matthew was
looking at me strangely. Suddenly he picked up his books
and things and hurried out of the church. The parish priest
sent me and Eunice out as well and shut the door.
The strange man never came back. I came the next day
with Eunice to see him, no show. I came the day after that
and the day after that day but till now he has not returned.
Eunice and I are currently in a relationship. Don’t laugh,
I’m trying to keep it as godly as possible but my goodness
she is wonderful wife material. She's so kind and caring.
She makes me so happy and we study wonderfully well
together. She’s an accounting student by the way. I have
a feeling that she’s going to be a big blessing to my life
and we are going to share a future together.
I guess I just want to say, Thanks bros.
Thanks, God.

A Psalm For Ekelemechi (who passed away on the fourteenth of January)

A good friend and a senior in the Law Faculty passed on,today. I pay tribute to him with this poem,written January 14,2015 AD

A Psalm For Ekelemechi
(In Loving Memory)

What is it to die
To spring a river from the eye?
There is a lovely myth
That it is quicker than sleep

For swiftly we glide from life
Without having to say goodbye
Inconvenient for our dream
Swiftly we glide
So swift.

It is said a star
Falls for the fallen
It is the haunt
of the ghost of memories past

To the harvester who loves
unripe fruits
Are you happy now?
You have stolen our precious
Not a trinket but a treasure
Surprise is your chiefest weapon

But why so soon
in the tender bloom of youth?
Before Ekelemechi's glory became reality
Yours is no victory
It reeks with the rain of innocent blood

Ekelemechi
You are irreplaceable
on God's green earth!
The life of this great man remind us-

"We can make our lives sublime
And,departing, leave behind us
Footprints on the sands of time."

I shall not cease to sorrow
For I will not see you
on the morrow
We shall meet again
when we all awake on that day

Bedtime Ekelemechi
Good friend;
on the breast of Jesus
Find rest.

The Wages of Impunity(The Nigerian Military)

Inset:The Burial of Late Colonel Francis Fajuyi,Military Governor of Western Nigeria.

Lt William Walbe and Major Danjuma were moles for the July
28 1966 Counter Coup/Mutiny (led by Lt Colonel Murtala
Muhammed) inside the Supreme Commander's (General
Ironsi) security detail.
Instead of securing their principal, they compromised him and
Col Fajuyi in Ibadan essentially delivering both of them to
angry NCOs who murdered them.
July 28 1966 was a continuation of the lawlessness of Jan 15
1966 were many NCOs and officers committed murders that
went unpunished. I believe the impunity of those 2 ghastly
days cemented lawlessness in the nation's psyche. Many
people know who committed the acts of murders yet actors
were never brought to justice.
A young Lt Buka Suka Dimka was one of the key actors of the
mutiny. He tried to murder his commanding Major (Samuel
Ogbemudia). Ogbemudia was tipped off about Dimka's intent
by Col Hassan Katsina and Abba Kyari (see how complicated
things were?) and Ogbemudia fled in a vehicle provided by
Katsina and Kyari. Dimka pursued Ogbemudia from Kaduna to
Ondo. Ogbemudia slipped away into the bush from his
assassins yet Dimka was never punished by the army (to my
knowledge).
Same Dimka would go on to murder Murtala Muhammed (the
July coup leader) about 10 years later on February 13 1976.
Lesson: life is sacrosanct and murderers must be brought to
justice. When murders and crimes go unpunished society will
suffer for it.

The Story of Dr. D.K. Olukoya

The Story of Dr. D.K. Olukoya
A True Life-Story
Dr. D.K. Olukoya had a father(I bet everyone should know that.The great servant of God wasn't begotten by the Holy Ghost.)And his father had a friend who was crazy about America.He was middle aged but he wished to visit God's own country before he was called to glory.He wished his aaccident of birth hadn't brought him to Nigeria.His chance came when he won a visa lottery to visit the land of his dreams.He grabbed the next flight against the advice of his wife and children.They didn't want him to go for he was quite old. He said no!
He got to America in winter.It was bitterly cold and his body found it hard to adapt to the climate. He spent all his savings moving from one hotel to another and buying clothing made of cotten and thick wool.Just to be warm.He wanted to see America-The Statute of Liberty,US Capitol Building,the birthplace of Abraham Lincoln,even the Waldorf Astoria Hotel. He was so consumed by this passion that he paid no attention to his depleted money.Then trouble struck-He became stranded.And the hotel proprietor kicked him out. He became a wanderer looking for food to eat but no money to buy.Some white folks took pity on him and gave him cheese and milk;others,money.Giving his change of fortune,he could have breathed his last.He was a man of dignity in the native land of his birth;Nigeria.
One day,his wandering took him to a town which was densly populated by black folks.There he met,Nigerians.Great was his joy!They gave him food,accommodation and promised to find him a job.
"Are you ready to do the kind of work we do?"
They wanted to be sure.
"Of course, "said he:"I am strong and kicking."
Ko si wahala.
They took him to where they worked.It was a tall and forlorn building;with only a door leading into it.What kind of work did this people do?Baba began to wonder.The answer came,swiftly, saving him from much thought. One of the men bent low and dragged out a steely shelf built into the wall.One the shelf lay a white man,naked and stone dead.Another man proffered a helping hand.They were taking the corpse to a room from which Baba could hear the hum of shower.These men washed dead bodies.
Baba fainted away.
When the German owners of the Morgue discovered that the latest job-applicant brought by the men had fainted,they became furious and sacked every Nigerian working in the morgue.What is the moral of this story?

A DISCARDED PIECE OF THINGS FALL APART(The piece that was never published)

It was no rumour that the white men were imposing chiefs on the natives. An osu from Aninta had been made chief of his village and the surrounding clans.The elders rejected the choice of the whitemen unsheathing opposition-the nature of things weren't hidden from them,and an efulefu couldn't be their lord.But the osu who was called Aroma viewed his installation from a different perspective. He saw it as a clear mandate;given to him by God,to avenge himself and his fellow osus on the freeborns.
He said to them,"the stone which the builders rejected has become the headstone of the corner-This is the Lord's doing and it is marvelous in my eyes..."
And while the elders rained vituperation on him,he laughed mirthlessly and vowed to chastise them with snakes and scorpions.The native policemen(Kotma of The Ashy Buttocks) he deployed to arrest offenders who had committed an offhence against the whiteman's govern ment were all osus.These offenders were the lords of the clan who had made human sacrifices to the gods of the land and had refused to pay their taxes.They were starved and whipped every morning and night, and sometimes made to eat their own feaces.They became Aroma's houseboys, fetching firewoods and water from the stream and farming the lands Aroma had confiscated. It was humiliating that this wasn't done in the day time when the blanket of night couldn't shield them;and they had to contend with the profane gaze of women and children.
In Umuofia Ezeudo was famous for his undying love for the palm-wine gourds.He was another efulefu,though a freeborn, who,at forty;couldn't boast of a land on which to farm.He had his own special palm-wine tapper who brought him several gourds every day.Ezeudo had a case to answer in the assembly of rulers. His bosom friend,Chukwunonso had accused him of bedding his wife. While the trial was in progress with a large crowd watching, the district officer called.He was accompanied by two or three whitemen and a native interpreter surrounded by a protective ring of soldiers.Through the interpreter the ummuna were told that the whitemen's king wished to speak with their chief.
This utterance caused quite a lot of stir among the natives for it was said that the whitemen tricked important and powerful men just to imprison or exile them.Besides the ibos had no king.The ummuna didn't wish such a fate upon any of them so they shouted that Ezeudo be handed over to the mercy of the whitemen.
"Let him go with them," they cried:"He is our chief!"
Ezeudo was led away, weeping disconsolately and pleading for mercy.Umuofia had made a costly mistake.It was on an oye market day when he returned to Umuofia.He came to the market,accompanied by a dozen men,and carried in a hammock. The men who went before him had gongs which they beat repeatedly.
"What's wrong?" The people asked.
"People of Umuofia;behold your chief!"
People jostled to have a better glimpse of "the chief."It was no other person than Ezeudo.
Ezeudo the efulefu.
His carriers put him down and he crossed his legs,and one of his men proceeded to read the warrant making him a chief. There was an air of authority about Ezeudo.He wore khaki shirt and shorts and a pith helmet and carried a short staff.
"It is Ezeudo!"
The market went crazy;and picking up stones,pelted Ezeudo and his entourage. They turned round and fled. The following day Ezeudo and his men were found building a native law court on a land which belonged to Okonkwo.Witnesses came to inform Obiereka.He summoned the men of his household; whose hands were strong in combat,and they went to challenge the osu who thought he had guts.Ezeudo had anticipated their coming for they walked into the firing range of trained rifles. Obiereka and his men were helpless.If they dared lift their machetes, bullets would fly.Chief Ezeudo was reclining on a chair and while the work on the native law court continued,he swigged wine straight from his gourd and invited Obiereka to drink with him.

Wednesday 14 January 2015

Buhari Executed My Father But I Will Still Vote For Him-Lawal Ojuolape's Son

I am not a card carrying member of the APC or PDP, and I
do not have a vote in this election cycle. I was also not
paid to write this and I am also sure this article will not
generate a nationwide traction to determine where the
pendulum swings in the February elections. The only
motivation is that I take pride in the unity and
development of Nigeria and I am nothing sitting on the
fence.
In addition to the aforementioned, my father was one the
three young men executed by General M Buhari (rtd), the
presidential candidate of the APC with a retroactive law
some 30years ago. Yet, I HOPE.
The forthcoming February Presidential election is
different from all other elections we have seen since the
advent of democracy in 1999. The Presidential election
has never been aggressively contested, but that has
changed in this cycle, thanks in large part to the leaders
that formed the APC and a more aware electorate. The
electioneering process has not changed much, with the
top two political parties relying solely on politicians. The
caliber of politician that makes up the Presidential
campaign council, for me, is often an indication of how
the candidate governs once (s) he becomes President.
Mediocre politicians are given the nod to occupy and lead
sensitive political and public institutions ahead of their
colleagues who understand and know what it takes to
govern and deliver social goods to the larger populace.
This traditional way of campaigning and electioneering is
partly responsible for the failure we have witnessed in the
last 12yrs (with focus on the presidency) but it seems
this is about to change.
For the first time in our 16years of democracy, the caliber
of politicians I see around the APC candidate, General
Mohammad Buhari, gives me hope that something might
actually change if he wins.
The chance of a Babatunde Fashola being the chief of
staff to a President Buhari excites me because the two
term serving governor of Lagos understands the issues
and he comes across as a policy wonk. His political
experience as Governor of Lagos state will also come in
handy in getting policies formulated, passed through the
National assembly and implemented to ensure a
utilitarian social good. The office of Chief of staff to the
President is a very important one because it serves as
‘the power behind the throne’, in saner climes, and the
slim chance of a BRF leading that office inspires hope.
I am almost certain that Oby Ezekwesili’s name would
pop up when the time comes to fill sensitive Ministerial
post in a Mohammadu Buhari presidency given her
closeness to Nasir elrufai (The next governor of Kaduna
State) and his closeness to a potential Presidential
Buhari. The slim chance that the woman Japheth
Omojuwa once proclaimed as the ‘Mother of the Nation’ –
for her lead role in the noble BBOG movement – leading a
sensitive Ministry as the Petroleum or Education Ministry
Inspires hope.
EKITI’s loss could be Nigeria’s gain in a Buhari
Presidency. I have not seen any Nigerian; military or
civilian dissect the problem and possible solution to the
boko haram insurgency as Kayode Fayemi did during the
interview he granted on 60 minutes with Angela. His
grasp and succinct explanation of the different strands of
boko haram shows that if given a chance he could make
a real impact and formulate a comprehensive policy that
can help tame these monsters that have ravaged parts of
the NE unabated. His understanding of civil – military
relations indicates he is capable of leading the Ministry of
Defense with gusto. The slim chance this might happen
also inspires hope.
In the words of Babatunde Fashola, President Jonathan
fired the hardworking and performing Bolaji Abdullahi as
sports minister for political expediency. The slim chance
that he could make a return to continue his good work in
that ministry in a Buhari Presidency inspires hope.
These individuals and many more I did not mention are
not saints but they inspire hope because of their track
records in public service and for some accidental reasons
majority of them are in the APC. They represent
examples of quality leaders Oby Ezekwesili refer to when
she wrote thus;
“For each of these countries, the stage was set for
commencement of their economic transformation from
Low Income Country (LIC) status to Upper Middle Income
Country (MIC), MIC or close to MIC respectively by the
advent of quality leadership at both their political and
public institutions that in turn resulted in high public
sector efficiency. At the epicenter of this efficiency was,
and remains, the investment in leadership of the kind that
drove a national vision which placed education, intellect,
values, reward for only strenuous effort and hard work at
the centre of their development strategy. Once the public
sector was set aright, it freed up the private sector and
the rest of society to aspire to perform at their maximum
possibilities.
You don’t have to agree with the aforementioned, but
empirical study proves it to be very true.
The very first sign of a potentially bad government is the
caliber of politicians that surrounds a candidate during
electioneering – pay-back time is inevitable and its
negates the utilitarian calculation that supports the
provision of social goods for millions of my compatriots
against the few PCC members and their cohorts and that
is what the PDP represented in 2011 and now. I am sure
there are quality leaders in the PDP but POTFRON has
shown nothing but a lack of will to put such a team
together. That in addition to an abysmal performance for
6yrs makes me see hope in the APC presidential ticket.
Political will is a necessary tool for the economic
prosperity of every country, democratic or otherwise. A
historical analysis of the Nigerian state has shown that
the political will that serves as a catalyst for economic
prosperity and development has been lacking. Our
problems – I won’t bore you by listing them, as well all
know what they are – are solvable, oh yes they are!!! To
solve them we have to commit and vote for the
potentially best team in February.
The majority voting bloc in Nigerian can neither read nor
write, hence, the onerous task of educating our brothers,
sisters, mothers, fathers, uncles, aunt and close friends
rest on the shoulders of those of us that are educated.
We have to inspire hope in them about this team and
convince them on the need to vote the Buhari/Osinbajo
ticket.
The Buhari/Osinbajo ticket and all the potential
‘technocratic politician’ that comes with them for me is
the best team this time around. They represent a recipe
that will take us from the brink, and lay a solid foundation
for a better and solid tomorrow. We need radical
monetary, economic, and political reforms and the
transformation agenda of the last six years is nothing but
a mirage and joke we must and should not continue with.
History is replicate of countries that are prosperous and
those that are beginning to prosper. The foundation of
such prosperity is laid on; Infrastructure – like the
interstate road system that Germany invented but which
the U.S have mastered; massive funding for science and
technology which has been manipulated as responsible
for India’s growth; a virile public-education system that
encourages the study of science and math. Borrowing
from the words of CNN’s Fareed Zakaria, we have to
download and modify the killer apps that have proved and
are still proving to be working for prosperous countries –
competition, modern science, the rule of law and private
property rights, modern medicine, the consumer society
and work ethic. These apps can be downloaded and
modified to suit the Nigerian experience and these lads –
Buhari/Osinbajo and their team – have the requisite
political will, experience and or knowledge to deliver. They
simply are the best team and we have to join hands with
them irrespective of our reservations to make their dream
a reality so that our dreams can be a reality.
The Presidency should be a great dynamo producing
fresh ideas; the force of those ideas as they resonate
across the nation is a pretty safe gauge of an
administration’s intention and vitality.