Saturday, 30 July 2016

AGAIN ON RACE RELATIONS IN THE US: Re: Former Marine Identified as Shooter of 3 Baton Rouge Officers


WHAT IF RAMBO WAS BLACK?

Now, another ex-marine Gavin Long, probably a drifter in the mould of Rambo, has done the same thing, taking on the law enforcement establishment. This is clearly bad news.
Why was the movie Rambo such a big hit with the public which, without equivocation, rallied in support of the mythical Rambo against the no-nonsense Chief of Police. For all the abuses to which he was subjected, was Rambo right at any stage of the saga to take the law into his own hands? The answer is a resounding no. Why then did the movie going public cut him so much slack? What I want to point out here is the clear ambivalence that exists in relating to the response of aggrieved US citizens to perceived or real injustices at the hands of the police.
Would the movie Rambo have resonated with the US movie going public if the iconoclastic one man wrecking machine of a character, Rambo, was portrayed as a black ex-marine? This line of inquiry just came to me as an inspiration as I was deleting some old news headlines.
The question now is, could Gavin Long have been just another Rambo, though black, deserving of our understanding based on whatever it was that pissed him off and pushed him beyond his personal tipping point? Far be it for me to root for him. However because we are in a society where everyone including a proven mass murderer like Dylan Roof is entitled to due process, I was just wondering if it is possible to temper the demonization of this obviously angry black man especially since no one has yet tried to walk a mile in his moccasins. I imagine that this would be very difficult in this season of Trump. The lynch posse is out.
This is just food for thought.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2016/07/17/reports-baton-rouge-police-officers-shot/87218884/

Friday, 29 July 2016

BUHARI COMMISSIONS ABUJA - KADUNA RAIL LINE. . . HURRAY!


I have written extensively on the potential for rail transportation, both on its own merit and the needed relief for the overburdened road network. Thank God for small mercies. The President Buhari administration has now thankfully completed an inland rail project conceived two administrations ago and commenced by the past one.
However, I am not one to heap praise on anyone for just doing his job. There is so much left to be done. In terms of modern planning, every single progress that can be achieved now by any Nigerian government can be deemed to be at least a quarter century belated. Why for example did the Obasanjo, Yar'Ada, Jonathan and finally the Buhari administration not find it worthwhile to put into service the Warri to Ajaokuta rail line that has been fully built ten years ago? We must be mad to have left that completed project go to waste. If we had our heads properly screwed on, we would have by now, 2016, completed the doubling of that standard gauge track and extended it to Lokoja and beyond to Abuja.
This new Abuja to Kaduna rail line being heralded would then remain what it actually is, a side show, a useful but overrated mass transit system. Who ever carries much of anything from Kaduna to Abuja?
To make matters worse, the government issued a statement a couple of months ago that the new Abuja to Kaduna rail line would be operated as a FREE service for sometime. There we go again. How long is "sometime"? The path to perdition is often paved with good (but stupid) intentions. The people a.k.a. masses of Nigeria never asked anyone for free services. How then did anyone come up with this strange idea? We are yet to recover from the self-inflicted injury of the fuel subsidy bazzar. I cannot recall the last time the federal government had a budget surplus.
The yet to be appointed minister of the FCT will find his or her effort to rid the streets of Abuja of beggars to be stumped by this free transport policy. We repeatably shoot ourselves in the foot, and later wonder aloud where the pain is coming from.

SECTIONALISM AS ROOT OF CORRUPTION:

If Jonathan, Why Buhari?
Like other Nigerians, I have closely followed President Buhari's public statements, slips, threats, body language and other posturing only to come to one inescapable conclusion. The mindset that Buhari has concerning Nigeria, the very baggage with which he has trudged along these past three decades, is impossible to eliminate, delete or eradicate. The man, winning the last election after so many tries, truly believes that God is on his side and hence can do no wrong. He is probably incapable of deep introspection or wilfully suspended the relevant faculty many years ago. Time is not on his side. He cannot learn current trends and ideas. Note his unhelpful commentary on the devaluation of the naira, even after the fact. For that we are still paying dearly as a nation.
I have lamented publicly that I sorely miss having more street-wise individuals like Atiku or Dangote at the helm, that is if we must have a president from the north. When misguided praise singers like Gov Aminu Masari hail Buhari, in spite of his missteps, they only make matters worse. My fear is that, despite our goodwill towards our president (out of enlightened selfinterest), we are non the less forced to watch him self-destruct. No citizen deserves that kind of punishment.

AMERICA, THEIR AMERICA: MELANIA TRUMP PLAGIARIZED MICHELLE OBAMA


The evening started with a promise for drama, the first being the attempted revolt by the NEVER TRUMP Group, quickly squelched by the RNC convention chairman. We expect more action on this front. . .
And then how did it end? The revelation of the glaring lifting of complete passages from Michelle Obama's 2008 speech by whosoever in the Trump team that wrote Melania Trump's speech. Pundits are not going to sleep at all this night. Everyone is digging.
Meanwhile the Republicans are unusually quiet.

BLACK LIVES MATTER - Nigeria's Ms Opal Tometi


Did you know that OPAL TOMETI, co-founder of BLACK LIVES MATTER with Ms Alicia Garza and one other lady, is a Nigerian?
I don't care which passport this young woman carries, but one thing is certain. She carries our can do attitude, which is usually unleashed outside the constraining shackles of the gerontocrats who are holding Nigerians down in a pin-fall, to a new level.
Yes, I am closely following the current US election cycle. With the recent events in Dallas and Baton Rouge,and the history of Ferguson, Missouri, Sandra Bland etc, one must pay attention to the mischievous outburst of former New York mayor, Rudy Giuliani. Hence my return to BLACK LIVES MATTER, and our daughter Opal.
Meanwhile for anyone who thinks that I am letting off the US blacks with barely a rap on the knuckle, note that we Nigerians are all deeply involved. Please read up my "The Debt That Nigeria Owes Blacks." That would be instructive enough.

NDIGBO CONTRIBUTED TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF LAGOS, ABUJA. - OHANEZE ; SO?

The constitutional rights of Ndigbo in Lagos, Abuja or just about anywhere else does not in any way depend on Igbo contribution, 10, 30 or 60% towards the physical development of these metropolis. Hence harping ceaselessly on these percentages drags otherwise busy individuals into unnecessary disputes and arguments with our host communities which may find a reason to dispute such figures. The same applies to the regular exercise of estimating whether or not Ndigbo constitute 42 or is it 45% of the population of Lagos. The reaction of our hosts is often irrational, but we cannot stop them from feeling scared. Many of them would not take land at Ohanku in Ngwaland, even for free. Meanwhile the talk is that Ndigbo will not sell land to other Nigerians, which is not true. We have all learnt to live with this campaign of disinformation. We are adventurous. That are not.
It is amazing that the leading lights of Igboland somehow believe that the exodus of Igbo intellect, brain and business acumen has anything to do with Ndigbo not loving their homestead. Nothing could be further from the truth. The real cause has been the lack of business opportunities which in itself has been a result of longstanding deliberate political policy of those who strangely claim that there was "No Victor, No Vanquished " in January 1970. That is and remains a huge lie. I have worked in the East, and would never have relocated to Lagos decades ago but for the tug of the preponderance of business opportunities. Yes, I love Lagos, warts and all, but would most probably never have left the Enugu-Onitsha axis if things were different.
Lack of electrical power, abandoned road infrastructure, the dismissal of the concept of the 2nd Niger Bridge and the East-West Railway are all factors that led to the decades old abandonment of the East. While I would not recommend a total recourse to a well-earned persecution complex, it would do Ndigbo no good not to recognize those external factors that led to this current situation being decried by Ohaneze, Ndigbo Lagos, etc. To say that Ndigbo are their own worst enemies is not true. It is a huge lie.
For example, but for the exodus of our brightest and the best from Igboland, the multibillion Naira investments, school fees and businesses related to the education industry, in which our people excel, would have made an unimaginable economic impact on Igboland. Understandably we take our children along wherever we go together with teachers. Then we build schools in "foreign lands" to help bridge the gap in classroom availability. Note that this last observation is not an original of mine. Unfortunately, I cannot immediately recall who put it together.
As Ohaneze and all such Igbo socio-cultural organisations meet to put minds together, I recommend that the emphasis should no longer be on who has the loftiest sounding title, the tallest red cap, widest cow skin fan or the most intimidating Armada limousine. Each individual, in the privacy of his home, should interrogate himself thus: "Who among Ndigbo within my span of influence or control, better educated, brighter than me, can I recommend, to take my place in this coveted position for which I am currently hustling."
The problems confronting Ndigbo now go beyond ordering of goods, clearing and forwarding, ownership and renting of warehouse space and the typical wholesale and retail trade. We are experts here already. Who and who can discuss electrical power going forward 30years? Anyone? You cannot depend on Chief Emeka Offor who has enough on his plate, to do this for our people. This is my pet subject. I have never kept my views to myself. Meanwhile no one, and I mean no one, has ever asked me for any clarification. Jamborees of all the "Onwanetiloras" in the South-East, who actually shine on no one, will not get us nearer to the promised land. It is not unlikely that a good half of their deliberations is taken over by the dispute over who gets to break the kolanut.
What a pity!

WILL NIGERIA GO THE WAY OF VENEZUELA? - POSITIVE LESSONS FROM ANAMBRA STATE


There is this recent press release by Senator Ben "Common-Sense" Murray-Bruce, comparing Nigeria's oil induced Resource Curse with that of Venezuela, a country with the world’s largest proven petroleum reserves. Simply put, oil reserves guarantees absolutely nothing in a country of lazy bones. . Sen Murray-Bruce went further to ask Nigeria to find out whatever it is that Anambra State is doing right to keep its head above water despite the current stark economic realities.
The above reminds me of the article written by Dr Ike Okonta in the sad era of the abduction of Dr Chris Ngige during Obasanjo's dark rule. Okonta wrote that Anambra State was and remained the "lightning rod" of the whole of Igboland. The forces in control of the Nigerian polity, for reasons best known to them believe, rightly or wrongly, that to subdue Igboland, all you had to do was to subdue, disorganize and destabilize Anambra State. Whereas we are no longer the 1950s or early 60s, when everyone looked up to the Onitsha - Nnewi axis for guidance and leadership, this mindset remains unshaken that Anambra State call the shots, holds all the aces as regards Igboland. Hence the need to rein in it's citizens and leading lights.
One of the methods, which has been analyzed over and over again, has been the imposition by the likes of General Olusegun Obasanjo, of "Ofekes, Akalogholis, Anukaifufes" and other never-do-wells on Abambrarians for leadership positions. Names like Chief(?) Chris Ubah readily come to mind. Of course there are very many others, people who I know cannot hold a five minute enlightened discussion with me and others like me on ANY issue. Therein lies our predicament. The real tragedy is that "enemies" of Ndigbo, who have clearly no reason for such enmity, imagine that any meaningful progress can be made in Nigeria while striving to sustain such a clearly unsustainable statusquo.
I have had cause to make specific proposals to my personal friends up north and the nation at large about how to begin to address the huge gap in educational attainments between the north and the south. Not one person has to date responded to the issue of trying to replicate the amazing experimental results achieved by Dr Nicholas Negroponte of MIT Laboratories, USA. Dr Negroponte is the proponent of the One-Laptop-Per-Child Global Initiative. In a location in rural Ethiopia, with 98% illiteracy, cheap and basic tablet computers, then targeted to cost no more than $200 each, were dumped on kids. Of course, there were no teachers. There couldn't have been any in such an environment. I leave it for readers to google up what happened next. It is all out there!
Right now similar or more powerful tablets are available from the likes of Kindle for $50 or less. This is the point where I now invite the various money-miss-road billionaires in the north to find some relevance in their meaningless lives by siding with the hapless masses. No, I don't have to name them. It would be worthwhile recalling that Gen T Y Danjuma had lamented publicly at some point, that he was at a loss as to what to do with the yield from his unearned holdings in the oil and gas industry. Others are not necessarily more enlightened on this score.
I have often alluded to the relative quality of the Igbo developmental model. Ben Murray-Bruce has now backed me up. Other Nigerians have consistently ignored this fact to our common peril. However, let's keep the discussion now strictly on matters of education. We are all aware of the regular eruptions in the north of Nigeria, (which could be for just about anything), during which the Igbo nation has had to deal with the regular massacre of its people. Because of this, most Igbo would find it exceedingly difficult to rationalize the following point that I have shared privately over sometime now.
Whether we love the north or hate it and it's people, IF AND WHEN the northern elite finally decide to give universal education the proper pride of place, who do Nigerians imagine will provide the teachers? Sadly, it is the same south, especially Ndigbo. It is important that both the thieving northern elite and the angry southerners and Ndigbo realize and reconcile themselves with this fact. That is unless we have finally decided to head to our various separate tents, hence fulfilling Nnamdi Kanu and IPOB's long declared objective. That would still be ok. The only difference here would be that the Igbo teachers would need visas just like their Indian and Pakistani counterparts. I discovered that most southerners are livid when I bring up this scenario. Obviously they angrily fail to face reality.
There was a time money was easily appropriated from the Niger Delta and spent for procuring a few teachers from Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, Turkey, etc, for the benefit of the few northerners who bother or are coralled to go to school. This approach cannot work if we are talking about mass education. Moreover, in case some have not noticed, we have run out of money. The situation is not likely to improve appreciably anytime soon.
Let us return to the thesis of Sen Ben Murray-Bruce on the lessons that Nigeria can and must learn from Anambra State and Ndigbo. Also there is this recent analysis by Olusegun Phillips-Alonge: The Biafra Pandora Box. His conclusion was that yes, Ndigbo have serially proven that they can successfully take care of their own affairs, but are probably better off in a restructured Nigeria, the warning here being that Nigeria will certainly lose and stagnate if Ndigbo, the leaven of Nigeria's unity and economic vibrancy, leave the union. He was however doubtful about the peacefulness of the transition to Biafra.
Recently also, Tony Osborg writing on True Federalism warned that "Nigeria Must Not Let the Igbos Leave this Union,"
http://opinion.premiumtimesng.com/2016/07/11/173846/
With the above in mind, I will now conclude by returning attention to my earlier rebuttal to President Buhari's saucy question, "What do Ndigbo want?"
Read....Oduche Azih's Blog.....: Re: Buhari on WHAT DO NDIGBO WANT?
Exerpt: "Nigeria loves to beat about the bush! Ndigbo rightly feel that Nigeria is wasting it's time! Many Ndigbo, including the obviously minority MASSOB and IPOB are actually not interested in the Nigerian presidency, or the character occupying the seat.
More than two decades ago, speaking in private circles, I have had cause to lament the socalled "No victor No vanquished" mouthed with relish since January 1970. Nigeria would have turned out a better place if instead of deceiving ourselves, a war restitution of perhaps $1b (1970) was clamped on Ndigbo with the proviso that Ndigbo would be left alone to pursue economic activities with which to pay for it. Such an open legally based demand would have been in much better alignment with the popular sentiments hidden just beneath the surface. A win-win situation! Ndigbo would have been selling refined petroleum products to Nigeria, West Africa and beyond, with change to spare. Ndigbo would have successfully dragged the rest of Nigeria (kicking and screaming) into the industrial era. A fully domesticated armaments industry in Igboland, under the eagle eyes of the occupying Federal Forces would have made Nigeria, however configured, a powerhouse in this regard. The advantages of returning to Nigeria would be there for all to see. Economic progress all around. You don't have to try too hard to sell a good product."
I rest my case.

Friday, 15 July 2016

THAT AMUSEMENT PARK RIDE ACCIDENT IN ENUGU.


Hear this:
“But in this case, the children got panicked and attempted to get off the ride. Out of panic, PEOPLE(?) rushed even to the control consul to stop the ride and in that confusion, SOMEBODY(?) pressed the wrong button, which increased the speed. This made some of the already frightened children fell off the ride. . Etc ”
PEOPLE?
SOMEBODY?
Is it normal or standard that just about anybody ie PEOPLE, SOMEBODY, will have access to the controls of such a mechanism?
STANDARDS & SPECIFICATIONS
I wonder if we have any standards and specifications in Nigeria, meaningful or not, covering the design, operations and maintenance of amusement rides such as was involved in this fatal accident in Enugu.
As an engineering designer, my question is what exactly were the fail-safe features of the machinery.
Were there requirements for these features to be tested, regularly? How regularly? By whom?
Were these features standard, as in approved? What exactly are the standards?
Who established them? Are those standards and the qualifying authorities subject to peer or superior review? Etc, etc.
The thing that comes readily to mind is the sort of checks, approvals and tests routinely put in place for lifts/elevators in tall high rise buildings, and construction cranes. Or do the Original Equipment Manufacturers, Koni, Schneider, Otis etc make the rules as they go along? I wouldn't be surprised if we have all been riding all such contraptions at our own risk!
I will definitely revisit this issue on a broader front. I hope that I can count on my colleagues in The Nigerian Society of Engineers, NSE, to join in figuring this out. I say, Never Again. I will however leave lawyers to deal with the other matter of criminal and civil liability.
This matter is suddenly personal to me. Those dead kids were my nieces.
I am heartbroken.

IS DANGOTE THE ONLY BILLIONAIRE IN NIGERIA?


Two decades ago, Alhaji Aliko Dangote was one person most of us loved to hate. He belongs to that small select group of Nigerians who had unfair access to government and government patronage. It has been said that behind every huge fortune lies a huge crime. That said, was Dangote the sole beneficiary of unrestricted access to Gen Babangida and all other heads of state after him? The answer is a big no. Where are the others?
I say this on behalf of the teeming masses. Whatever sins Dangote may have committed have long been forgiven him. The purgatory of the interminable board meetings, travels, financial and technical sessions that he routinely has to contend with is enough to kill four regular folks. Our Dangote inexplicably keeps going at it. The other Nigerian billionaires must think Alhaji Dangote to be really mad to take all that trouble when he can choose to take things easy. They know themselves. The public knows them. Hence I do not have to waste any time identifying them one by one. Physical and intellectual laziness is second nature to such characters. Pulling out their loot stashed overseas and investing same in productive ventures at home would involve risk and a requirement to WORK, a strange notion indeed.
Finally, I must point out that budding youth entrepreneurs do not create the quantum of jobs that a potentially growing economy, like Nigeria, needs in the absence of the Dangotes, MTNs, etc of this world. We need as many big players, both local and foreign, as we can cultivate. Apart from direct sales to the public, it is the demand from the big investors that often constitute the critical mass for the success of these youthful entrepreneurs that Emefiele covets. I doubt that the government and its nascent economic team understand these fine points.

SO, LAWYER WITHDRAWS CERTIFICATE CASE AGAINST BUHARI? WHAT NEXT?

We may never know what motivated the plaintiff to sue Buhari over this certificate issue. Now the reason for withdrawing the suit may even be much more obscure. As someone who voted for Buhari, albeit with misgivings, I would want to be convinced that my predident is less unsound than I or even his most trenchant critics would imagine. Did he or did he not obtain the equivalent of this barest minimum of a West African School Certificate? I too would want to know. If Buhari does not voluntarily clear the air over this matter, it is possible that this controversy may follow him to the grave. I don't like that. I blame his inner kitchen cabinet as Candidate Buhari for deciding that the certificate issue does not matter. I have always wondered if a president of northern extraction was synonymous with Buhari. With a all the PhDs strutting all over Kaduna, Abuja. Kano, Maiduguri, and Sokoto, the fixation on Buhari truly confounded me. We have so much work undone that we can do without this distraction. The APC is to blame for all this. The party owes Nigerian voters a sincere apology.

FG SCRAPS TENURE FOR PERMANENT SECRETARIES

Here we go again. Can someone please explain to simple ordinary folks like me what exactly is wrong with the tenure system introduced under the Head of Service Mr Steve Orosanye to the applause of all. This was meant to dislodge the many deadwoods entrenched in the service by previous administrations.
It would be interesting to find out who exactly is supposed to benefit from this return to the bad old ways. There must be consequences for the president whimsically tinkering with extant civil service rules. Todate no explanation has been proferred for the (initial?) 1-year extension granted Dr Shu'ara at the Ministry of Petroleum Resources.
And now this blanket repeal of a much hailed policy. Without doubt, change is the name of this government. It is possible that the Buhari administration is trying to extend the frontiers of the federal character principle by a new methodology.
One other thing. The claim that security of tenure of permanent secretaries (beyond the statutory 8years) will reduce corrupt practices is neither here nor there. As it is, the obscenely huge gratuity and pension that accrues to the permanent secretary cadre is a sure guarantee against poverty irrespective of the age of retirement. Corrupt practices, as in stealing of our commonwealth, are voluntary acts of will. Those who engage in them are typically not starving.