Saturday, 25 March 2017

RE: WHEN THE NORTH MET

Going by certain historical records, written and video, one can easily point out certain areas of disagreement with the "founding fathers" of what is still referred to as Northern Nigeria. The late Ahmadu Bello, the Sardauna of Sokoto was just one of them. They had a singlemindedness of pursuing northern interests, to the exclusion of all others. Consistently pursued, the idea would have resulted in a very different Nigeria from what we have today. My objection and that of many have been the deeply entrenched ambivalence towards the Nigerian project. It has obviously not worked as the inheritors of the norther enterprise continued to cut corners aiming at personal aggrandizement.
Since the northern elite successfully pulled the religious and ethnic wool over the eyes of their people, they had no idea, that is until recently, of what hit them. Thus the Boko-Haram plague, which has been more than five decades in the making, has simply come home to roost. People like Paul Unongo have quite recently publicly accused southern political opponents of formenting Boko-Haram to torment the north. Really? That shows how far the northern elite is prepared to turn away from reality. How can the problems of the north, with which the rest of Nigeria is shackled, simply disappear if only we ignore them long enough?
On the economic front, I have in the past expressed the view that based on the existing structures, the north will make absolutely no headway even if ALL funds derived from the Niger Delta oil are handed over to the north. I alluded to the well known Resource Curse. Put another way, I had responded to a certain Ekiti State professor who posed the question, "Who said that the North is feeding fat on Niger Delta oil?" My conclusion was that while the north was feeding all right, it is not and CANNOT get fat doing so. That was not to say that the individual top dogs are not helping themselves. Just check out the billionaires list.
Some busybody American, writing in Foreign Affairs journal, had come to the strange conclusion that, among other things, southerners were not investing enough in the Nigerian north-east. As far as I know, no northern elite has countered that falsehood. I even proposed that all development projects in the north should be reserved for northerners, to be executed on an extended time frame of when they can arrange for the peaceful environment to do so. Strangely enough, a few northerners objected to that. What again do they want? I have stated on different platforms that not one of my grandchildren will risk life and limb, after the rigours of school, to go do a development project up north, a project in which the northerners themselves have absolutely no interest!
The security element whereby murder and mayhem of fellow citizens is regarded as routine, where the perpetrators are coddled by the governments, has been covered so much. I doubt if there is much new information to add. The fear is that people may soon resort to self help. Any belated involvement of the military may lead to mutiny and insurrection, a possible death knell for Nigeria, a nation that has existed almost only in paper.

FOR THE RECORD: YES, WE BROUGHT THIS ON OUR OWN HEADS

It had been stated much earlier in a similar setting that things must have become soooo bad in Nigeria for citizens to remember the Abacha years with nostalgia. The Nigerian president in that era did not find that comparison funny at all.
As we continue with the post mortem of the decision we made to elect Muhammadu Buhari as president, despite all the alarm bells ringing, the question then becomes: Were we crazy or what?
According to this editorial in The Vanguard,
"If APC had wanted to be taken seriously, it would have come up with a better presidential material than Buhari. There is something anomalous about a party whose mantra is change, recycling a 73 year old man as its candidate for the president of modern Nigeria. Buhari has little or no understanding of public policy. That is why APC will always come up with some excuse or the other not to have him participate in a debate with Jonathan. . "
We are all living with the consequences of our decisions in the 2015 presidential election. Even if only one third of the successes attributed to the Jonathan years by a patently partisan Vanguard Editorial Board was true, the mere promise of positive change by a stiffnecked, unteachable and tribalistic Buhari, for whom the Nigerian Civil war is far from over, would have been grossly inadequate for us to throw in our lot with him. We were warned but our righteous disenchantment with President Jonathan knew no bounds. Buhari became a fetish object, the objectification of a personality cult with feet of clay as it has turned out. Even a Juan Peron displayed some flashes of brilliance before leading Argentina down the path of perdition that lasted for decades. In the case of elected President Buhari, the disaster struck on day one. We all know for sure when this rain started to beat us. We asked for it.
This buyer's regret has been so energy sapping. Buhari's unrepentant and unrelenting praise singers, who see no evil and hear no evil, have proved incapable of engaging the rest of us, who changed our minds, in any meaningful debate. They have shamelessly disowned their own manifesto the moment we, the voters, demanded accountability. We only asked the Buhari administration to fulfill it's own promises. Nothing more. As it is now, to no longer love our darling Buhari is deemed treasonable. How sad. Only the truth will set Nigeria free.

FG DRAGS ITS FEET OVER CROSS RIVER STATE SUPERHIGHWAY PROJECT.

Development should have no boundaries. A question posed by an earlier comnentator regarding where the said superhighway was going to terminate and the answers that it elicits are completely irrelevant.
We are not talking here about the Ore-Ofusu(Ohosu) segment of the Benin/Shagamu Expressway, or indeed the Onitsha to Enugu and the Enugu to Port Harcourt Expressways which the last three Nigerian administrations for inexplicable reasons left in abject disrepair. What we have here is a situation where, in a bid to spur local development, the government and people of Cross River State decided to open up that hitherto forgotten corner of this nation(?). This is exactly the type of projects that the Chinese have been funding in several parts of the world, the Amazon basin, Nicaragua, Myanmar(Burma), the Asian Silk Road, even war-torn Afghanistan and Pakistan etc. Almost no adverse set of circumstances could seem capable of deterring them. How we love to drag our feet!
After taking care of the environmental impact concerns over putting such a road through the Oban Forest Reserve, this Cross River State government initiative is expected to boost the economic activities in the State including forest products , the Calabar Ports, and of course the Benue, Tarawa and Adamawa cluster that will then have a closer access to the sea. I can visualize major deliveries to the Mambilla Hydroelectric Project being most efficiently executed via this new corridor. For those who claim to be unaware of these plans and potential developments, they should look no further than the Lagos State government initiated development of the multi-modal transportation infrastructure expansion on the Lagos - Badagry axis. In Trumpian terminology, these projects are huge, requiring FG sovereign guarantees. That was the dilemma of the Tinubu/Fashola Lagos State administration. Then President Obasanjo, for political reasons, was playing the spoiler. The same obstructionism is what the Cross River State people are right mow experiencing. Even if the expressway was designed to end somewhere around Ugep or Ogoja, it is viewed as a worthwhile venture by its major beneficiaries. That the people of Cross River State have to justify themselves to some masters in Abuja, Kaduna, Sokoto, Lagos or perhaps Enugu is patently obcene. I felt very much diminished watching Cross River State elected functionaries pleading on television. It is against such knee-jerk overreach that the agitators for the political restructuring of this nominal federation are kicking. The strange thing is that the sun will freeze over before the other beneficiaries I mentioned above, in Benue, Adamawa etc, will understand on which side their bread is buttered and hence join the Criss River people in this unprecedented public spat with Abuja. We need such synergy and more.
Now that we are still on this topic, I invite readers to search for my earlier article querying the stated commitment of The Federal Republic of Nigeria to the very idea of THE TRANS-WEST AFRICA HIGHWAY. My answer was that it is definitely not. Let someone prove me wrong. This opinion is also available on my blog.

AUDU OGBEH, PLEASE MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS.

First, Minister of Agriculture, Audu Ogbeh has recently discovered the correlation between the poor transport infrastructure in Nigeria and the high cost of living and food in particular. And so he "invented" the railways as a solution to the logistics nightmare. . By the way, where is Rotimi Amechi?
Not yet done, Minister Ogbeh has again taken time off his very busy schedule of seminars and providing finance and farm inputs for this planting season, to bare his mind on the petroleum products supply chain. I never knew he had any expertise on refineries, modular or not. Ogbeh is certainly irrepressible.
Will Minister of Agriculture, Ogbeh, kindly mind his own business. I trust that he has enough on his plate as we speak.

IS IT THE BUY MADE-IN-NIGERIA CAMPAIGN OR "NIGERIA FIRST!" ?? IN ALL THINGS.

Exerpt:
"If talented engineers can't go to the U.S., they will stay in India.
"This issue of visas has always come up in the U.S. every few years, especially during election season," he said. "It's actually accelerated the development work [in India], because ... people are investing more to do the work here."
Nilekani cited his own projects for the Indian government as an example.
The Bangalore-born entrepreneur left Infosys in 2009 to run India's massive social security program, which is known as Aadhaar. As a result of the initiative, the vast majority of India's 1.3 billion citizens now have a biometric ID number that allows them to receive government services, execute bank transactions and even make biometric payments.
"It was built by extremely talented and committed Indians," Nilekani said. "Many of them had global experience, but they brought that talent and experience to solve India's problems."
Nilekani said the country's massive youth population is increasingly choosing to stay home and pitch in.
"It's India first," he said. "
Which way Nigeria?

THE DSS IN CALABAR HAS DEFINITELY GONE MAD. - THAT'S TYPICAL‎

I stumbled onto this sad development an hour ago. Much as I try to articulate an understanding of this event, (if ever such a thing is possible), I know for sure that I will NEVER get satisfaction and closure on this, until steps are taken to redress this situation and reduce the potential for recurrence‎.
The standard operating procedure has been for the leadership of our security agencies to explain away the criminal excesses of their underlings as over reach with no liability implied. Not even a slap on the wrist for those involved. If your boss did not send you on a reckless rampage, why should he get involved in the subsequent cover up? Top commanders in the Nigerian Air Force, Army, Police, DSS, NSCDC and even the Navy do this all the time. In some cases even the Police is the victim. Why? Because the military mentality with the implied and unquestioned impunity has not left our ruling elite. This has serious adverse consequences to which we are all witnesses. Our Military Academies is supposed to offer courses and orientation to remedy this situation. It is either they are taught by incompetent and previously compromised military brass not keen on changing this sinister mind set, or the civilian professors in the mould of such apologists like Isawa Elaigu are unconvinced about the primacy of civil law in any interaction between civilians and the military. It is clear that the academic offerings and staff have to be revamped. Anyone with a bad attitude, including the simple matter of referring to the rest of us as "bloody civilians" flunks out to go and look for another career. For goodness sake, our security forces belong to 'WE THE PEOPLE" and not to the officers and enlisted men that we offer the privilege to serve! If they do not like the subservient position implied by serving under civilian command, they have the choice to go look for other jobs. Or they can try unemployment for a change. Enough is enough.
I understand that a lawyer, representing the. Federal Government Girls' College, Calabar, the brutalized teachers, or both is in the process of suing for some damages (a measly N10m?) and other reliefs. That would be grossly inadequate. The DSS could easily use OUR OWN money to pay off that, while the rogue officers go scot free, get transferred to Jalingo or Birnin Kebbi to continue with the same life of brigandage.
Since the invasion of the FGGC campus in Calabar was not done in pursuance of even an illegal or irrational order, the perpetrators must be dismissed from the service while the traumatized victims proceed to bankrupt them to with a civil suit of say N750m. The lessons will surely reverberate across the whole of West Africa.

NEWSWEEK MAGAZINE ON 2FACE

Talk of silver lining.
The Nigerian Buhari administration, through the instruments of The Police, Army, Department of State Security (DSS) and all other agents of coercion at its disposal, has unwittingly done the popular singer a great favour. Imagine the publicity! In Newsweek? The youngman must be giddy at this development.
As regards the issues in contention, the world got to know about them in great detail. I would not be surprised if media houses like Aljazeera and CGTN (a.k.a. CCTV) dedicate full length documentaries to the remote and proximate causes leading to the protests. And how it panned out, including the rented pro-Buhari rally.
This whole nonsense would have been avoided if the government had simply let the protesters be. Now it is the no2 item on people's lips after the issue of Buhari’s health. Will the government learn from this debacle? I doubt it. It is so ossified in its ways. I pray that I am wrong.

I WILL NOT RESIGN - OSINBAJO

I do not care how Prof Yemi Osinbajo came to be the Vice President of Nigeria. However I have an abiding interest in what he says and does.
There is this gutter tale making the rounds to the effect that the Arewa elements in the ruling APC are putting pressure on Prof Osinbajo to resign his position in the likely event of (or even before) the passing of the ailing President Buhari. This development is quite strange considering that this administration had not as much as conceded that there was anything wrong with the president. We have been told time and again that he is as fit as a fiddle. That is until as recently as Sunday, February 5, 2017.
I find it unnerving that Vice President Osinbajo should descend to the level of joining in that discussion regarding his potential resignation. That he did so portrays a certain insecurity on his part. He is the big kid on the block and should behave like one. Any wavering on his part bodes ill for Nigeria and especially his immediate O'odua constituency.
I hate it whenever I find a reason not to be proud of my President or Vice President. Osinbajo should develop a spine for goodness sake. 

NDIGBO, JEWS OF AFRICA?

Only a deaf and blind can claim not to be aware of the recent resurgence of Igbo self-awareness that seems to run concurrently with the anti-Igbo hysteria in the Nigerian polity. From the mid-1940s till this date, no decade had passed without the flower of Nigeria’s unity, if there is any such thing, being watered by the spilling of Igbo blood. The strange thing is that the perpetrators and those looking the other way, including sadly the government, brusquely tell Ndigbo to "get over it." And the carnage continues.
It is also most bizarre that any reaction and/or protestations by Ndigbo especially in such manifestation as IPOB/MASSOB is deemed treason. Our compatriots have lived under the military for so long that, like Kayode Esho, (JSC) said, they have long forgotten what the rule of law looks like. You invade my homestead, burn my home and barn, murder my family and when I react you retort "treason." Somebody is definitely mad, and it is certainly not me.
In this environment marked by dark clouds over the nation, many commentators, including non-Igbos, have been weighing in on the past, present and (dismal) future prospects of Ndigbo in the Nigerian federation as presently constituted. I prefer the expression "The Igbo Predicament."
Which brings me to the following work by Dr Leonard Madu whom I regard as a sound Igbo apologist. Many different exerpts have been circulating in the social media for the past two odd years. I am belatedly paying some attention to it now that I had the name of the author to go on. This has enabled me to access links to several websites that have chosen to archive his work.
The theories that Dr Madu has been advancing are not new and are are not necessarily all compelling. However those who have a case or grudge against Ndigbo will be disappointed to learn that people with my mindset, arch-Igbo, do not need any proof, worthy of a Pythagoras, to identify with the positive traits of Ndigbo so eloquently potrayed by several writers that Madu quoted. In a previous article, dealing tangentially with devolution of power, I had dutifully pointed out for the wilfully ignorant or the uninitiated that Ndigbo will NEVER sit on the floor when they can afford a chair. That some detractors will regard that as pride beats me. I refer readers to two of the many reviews of Achebe's THERE WAS A COUNTRY that appeared on the Penguin publisher's website. Here I am refering to Ken Saro-Wiwa Jr and Noor Saro-Wiwa. One of them had taken on some critics who had bristled at the "unacceptable" level of Igbo triumphalism evident in Achebe's storytelling. Saro-Wiwa had deadpanned that that posture had been well earned. Not wanting to pick a endless quarrel with those for whom the only good Igbo is a dead one, or a slave or a wife, I had reserved until today, this recommendation regarding Achebe’s final hurrah. SIMPLY IGNORE THE BOOK BUT READ ONLY THE REFERENCES! You cannot come out of the endeavour the same as when you started. You cannot also do that in a hurry. I confess that I have been able to chew through only half of it, in more than three years!
Even if only ten percent of the ideas and "historical" data presented by Dr Madu proves to be both correct and verifiable, his work deserves serious attention in enlightened circles. Good thing that Harvard University Press has provided a credible launching pad.

ANOTHER INTERESTING ONE FROM MY ARCHIVES. . Thanks Facebook!

THISDAY - ARISE: THE EMPIRE THAT NDUKA OBAIGBENA BUILT
According to Sahara Reporters, "The source disclosed that investigation has so far not established a nexus between the funds paid to General Hydrocarbon and the alleged monies paid to NPAN members by (Chief Nduka) Obaigbena.
“There is so far no established trail of funds moving from General Hydrocarbon’s account and the NPAN account which should have confirmed the claim by Nduka that he received money from ONSA for onward delivery to NPAN members."
Obaigbena is nothing if not flamboyant. The question is what exactly does Obaigbena want. It cannot be money, since he apparently has what most of us will consider more than enough. It must then be power in one form or the other. The kind of connections that he relentlessly cultivates says it all. To what end one may ask. It obviously goes beyond the steady stream of photo - ops. Apart from the local champions Babangida and others, Obaigbena has found it absolutely necessary to drag in former US President Bill Clinton, former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair and a host of others to Thisday/Arise events. I am surprised that he has not yet found a way to drag in Christine Lagarde to offer dubious credibility to one other of his projects tinted with egomania. God have mercy on Nigeria!
About three years ago, when the Arise Television Network hit the airwaves in the UK and US simultaneously, I welcomed the development with a mixture of awe and muted admiration. At the back of my mind was the question "How on earth can he afford it?" At that time, the programme offering was scanty at best, helped along with YouTube based reporting easily accessed by interested viewers like me.
What got me seriously worried was a report culled from one of the other media houses where Chief Obaigbena was confronted with the same question that I asked above, in the absence of advertising revenue. He had blurted out, "I have deep pockets." My reaction then was "Really!" . This was an industry that had literally eaten the likes of Al Gore and his main sidekick Cent "Young Turk" Uygur at their CurrentTV, that is until Aljazeera was belatedly allowed by the broadcast regulators to come to the rescue.
So, exactly how deep was/are Obaigbena's pockets? Based on whatever was his original business model, Arise was clearly unsustainable. It thus needed to be propped up by all manners of machinations. Was graft liberally in the mix? I have a feeling that we are going to find out very soon. This current armsgate or Dasukigate scandal reminds one of the Igbo saying that when some poor or ordinary folks get to know how some people get rich, they wish to remain as they are.
The matter became clearer by the day. I normally hold some sort of court at The Lagos Country Club, Ikeja surrounded mainly by 45 to 55year olds. A good many of them, professionals, had done and still do business with Obaigbena and his vast business empire. The experience, as I am told, left a sour taste in the mouth. For those of us, ardent admirers from the sidelines, it is inexplicable how an apparently successful operation like Thisday will not pay it's journalists and other employees well and regularly. The most galling is this story making the rounds that Nduka Obaigbena unapologetically asks his top editors to GO FEND FOR THEMSELVES, whatever that means! Could this have been true? This was a response when one of the editors requested for a car to enhance his performance delivery.
In view of the above established facts, side comments, rumours and innuendoes, is it then any surprise that the oga-at-top at Thisday would collect money supposedly on behalf of The Newspaper Proprietors Association of Nigeria, NPAN? We are grateful that Chief Obaigbena has owned up. What remains is the logical explanation of what transpired. I am sure that right now he is working hard at it. We are waiting (in)patiently.
I must commend the management of The Punch Newspapers for promptly distancing itself from this sordid disclosure. Perhaps, Nigeria may yet be saved.

ANOTHER INTERESTING ONE FROM MY ARCHIVES. . Thanks Facebook!

THISDAY - ARISE: THE EMPIRE THAT NDUKA OBAIGBENA BUILT
According to Sahara Reporters, "The source disclosed that investigation has so far not established a nexus between the funds paid to General Hydrocarbon and the alleged monies paid to NPAN members by (Chief Nduka) Obaigbena.
“There is so far no established trail of funds moving from General Hydrocarbon’s account and the NPAN account which should have confirmed the claim by Nduka that he received money from ONSA for onward delivery to NPAN members."
Obaigbena is nothing if not flamboyant. The question is what exactly does Obaigbena want. It cannot be money, since he apparently has what most of us will consider more than enough. It must then be power in one form or the other. The kind of connections that he relentlessly cultivates says it all. To what end one may ask. It obviously goes beyond the steady stream of photo - ops. Apart from the local champions Babangida and others, Obaigbena has found it absolutely necessary to drag in former US President Bill Clinton, former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair and a host of others to Thisday/Arise events. I am surprised that he has not yet found a way to drag in Christine Lagarde to offer dubious credibility to one other of his projects tinted with egomania. God have mercy on Nigeria!
About three years ago, when the Arise Television Network hit the airwaves in the UK and US simultaneously, I welcomed the development with a mixture of awe and muted admiration. At the back of my mind was the question "How on earth can he afford it?" At that time, the programme offering was scanty at best, helped along with YouTube based reporting easily accessed by interested viewers like me.
What got me seriously worried was a report culled from one of the other media houses where Chief Obaigbena was confronted with the same question that I asked above, in the absence of advertising revenue. He had blurted out, "I have deep pockets." My reaction then was "Really!" . This was an industry that had literally eaten the likes of Al Gore and his main sidekick Cent "Young Turk" Uygur at their CurrentTV, that is until Aljazeera was belatedly allowed by the broadcast regulators to come to the rescue.
So, exactly how deep was/are Obaigbena's pockets? Based on whatever was his original business model, Arise was clearly unsustainable. It thus needed to be propped up by all manners of machinations. Was graft liberally in the mix? I have a feeling that we are going to find out very soon. This current armsgate or Dasukigate scandal reminds one of the Igbo saying that when some poor or ordinary folks get to know how some people get rich, they wish to remain as they are.
The matter became clearer by the day. I normally hold some sort of court at The Lagos Country Club, Ikeja surrounded mainly by 45 to 55year olds. A good many of them, professionals, had done and still do business with Obaigbena and his vast business empire. The experience, as I am told, left a sour taste in the mouth. For those of us, ardent admirers from the sidelines, it is inexplicable how an apparently successful operation like Thisday will not pay it's journalists and other employees well and regularly. The most galling is this story making the rounds that Nduka Obaigbena unapologetically asks his top editors to GO FEND FOR THEMSELVES, whatever that means! Could this have been true? This was a response when one of the editors requested for a car to enhance his performance delivery.
In view of the above established facts, side comments, rumours and innuendoes, is it then any surprise that the oga-at-top at Thisday would collect money supposedly on behalf of The Newspaper Proprietors Association of Nigeria, NPAN? We are grateful that Chief Obaigbena has owned up. What remains is the logical explanation of what transpired. I am sure that right now he is working hard at it. We are waiting (in)patiently.
I must commend the management of The Punch Newspapers for promptly distancing itself from this sordid disclosure. Perhaps, Nigeria may yet be saved.

WHICH WAY AFRICA? - As a colonial sees it. From Oct 31, 2016 Facebook post:

If you are concerned about what is going on in our beautiful South Africa and African continent as a whole then you will cut your laziness about reading and read the following as it affects you wether you like it or not.
WHAT THE WHITE MAN TOLD ME by Thula Bopela
I have no idea whether the white man I am writing about is still alive or not. He gave me an understanding of what actually happened to us Africans, and how sinister it was, when we were colonized. His name was Ronald Stanley Peters, Homicide Chief, Matabeleland, in what was at the time Rhodesia. He was the man in charge of the case they had against us, murder. I was one of a group of ANC/ZAPU guerillas that had infiltrated into the Wankie Game Reserve in 1967, and had been in action against elements of the Rhodesian African rifles (RAR), and the Rhodesian Light Infantry (RLI). We were now in the custody of the British South Africa Police (BSAP), the Rhodesian Police. I was the last to be captured in the group that was going to appear at the Salisbury (Harare) High Court on a charge of murder, 4 counts.
‘I have completed my investigation of this case, Mr. Bopela, and I will be sending the case to the Attorney-General’s Office, Mr. Bosman, who will the take up the prosecution of your case on a date to be decided,’ Ron Peters told me. ‘I will hang all of you, but I must tell you that you are good fighters but you cannot win.’
‘Tell me, Inspector,’ I shot back, ‘are you not contradicting yourself when you say we are good fighters but will not win? Good fighters always win.’
‘Mr. Bopela, even the best fighters on the ground, cannot win if information is sent to their enemy by high-ranking officials of their organizations, even before the fighters begin their operations. Even though we had information that you were on your way, we were not prepared for the fight that you put up,’ the Englishman said quietly. ‘We give due where it is to be given after having met you in battle. That is why I am saying you are good fighters, but will not win.’
Thirteen years later, in 1980, I went to Police Headquarters in Harare and asked where I could find Detective-Inspector Ronald Stanley Peters, retired maybe. President Robert Mugabe had become Prime Minster and had released all of us….common criminal and freedom-fighter. I was told by the white officer behind the counter that Inspector Peters had retired and now lived in Bulawayo. I asked to speak to him on the telephone. The officer dialed his number and explained why he was calling. I was given the phone, and spoke to the Superintendent, the rank he had retired on. We agreed to meet in two days time at his house at Matshe-amhlophe, a very up-market suburb in Bulawayo. I travelled to Bulawayo by train, and took a taxi from town to his home.
I had last seen him at the Salisbury High Court after we had been sentenced to death by Justice L Lewis in 1967. His hair had greyed but he was still the tall policeman I had last seen in 1967. He smiled quietly at me and introduced me to his family, two grown up chaps and a daughter. Lastly came his wife, Doreen, a regal-looking Englishwoman. ‘He is one of the chaps I bagged during my time in the Service. We sent him to the gallows but he is back and wants to see me, Doreen.’ He smiled again and ushered me into his study.
He offered me a drink, a scotch whisky I had not asked for, but enjoyed very much I must say. We spent some time on the small talk about the weather and the current news.
‘So,’ Ron began, ‘they did not hang you are after all, old chap! Congratulations, and may you live many more!’ We toasted and I sat across him in a comfortable sofa. ‘A man does not die before his time, Ron’ I replied rather gloomily, ‘never mind the power the judge has or what the executioner intends to do to one.’
‘I am happy you got a reprieve Thula,’, Ron said, ‘but what was it based on? I am just curious about what might have prompted His Excellency Clifford Du Pont, to grant you a pardon. You were a bunch of unrepentant terrorists.’
‘I do not know Superintendent,’ I replied truthfully. ‘Like I have said, a man does not die before his time.’ He poured me another drink and I became less tense.
‘So, Mr. Bopela, what brings such a lucky fellow all the way from happy Harare to a dull place like our Bulawayo down here?’
‘Superintendent, you said to me after you had finished your investigations that you were going to hang all of us. You were wrong; we did not all hang. You said also that though we were good fighters we would not win. You were wrong again Superintendent; we have won! We are in power now. I told you that good fighters do win.’
The Superintendent put his drink on the side table and stood up. He walked slowly to the window that overlooked his well-manicured garden and stood there facing me.
‘So you think you have won Thula? What have you won, tell me. I need to know.’
‘We have won everything Superintendent, in case you have not noticed. Every thing! We will have a black president, prime minister, black cabinet, black members of Parliament, judges, Chiefs of Police and the Army. Every thing Superintendent. I came all the way to come and ask you to apologize to me for telling me that good fighters do not win. You were wrong Superintendent, were you not?’
He went back to his seat and picked up his glass, and emptied it. He poured himself another shot and put it on the side table and was quiet for a while.
‘So, you think you have won everything Mr. Bopela, huh? I am sorry to spoil your happiness sir, but you have not won anything. You have political power, yes, but that is all. We control the economy of this country, on whose stability depends everybody’s livelihood, including the lives of those who boast that they have political power, you and your victorious friends. Maybe I should tell you something about us white people Mr. Bopela. I think you deserve it too, seeing how you kept this nonsense warm in your head for thirteen hard years in prison. ‘When I get out I am going to find Ron Peters and tell him to apologize for saying we wouldn’t win,’ you promised yourself. Now listen to me carefully my friend, I am going to help you understand us white people a bit better, and the kind of problem you and your friends have to deal with.’
‘When we planted our flag in the place where we built the city of Salisbury, in 1877, we planned for this time. We planned for the time when the African would rise up against us, and perhaps defeat us by sheer numbers and insurrection. When that time came, we decided, the African should not be in a position to rule his newly-found country without taking his cue from us. We should continue to rule, even after political power has been snatched from us, Mr. Bopela.’
‘How did you plan to do that my dear Superintendent,’ I mocked.
‘Very simple, Mr. Bopela, very simple,’ Peters told me.
‘We started by changing the country we took from you to a country that you will find, many centuries later, when you gain political power. It would be totally unlike the country your ancestors lived in; it would be a new country. Let us start with agriculture. We introduced methods of farming that were not known I Africa, where people dug a hole in the ground, covered it up with soil and went to sleep under a tree in the shade. We made agriculture a science. To farm our way, an African needed to understand soil types, the fertilizers that type of soil required, and which crops to plant on what type of soil. We kept this knowledge from the African, how to farm scientifically and on a scale big enough to contribute strongly to the national economy. We did this so that when the African demands and gets his land back, he should not be able to farm it like we do. He would then be obliged to beg us to teach him how. Is that not power, Mr. Bopela?’
‘We industrialized the country, factories, mines, together with agricultural output, became the mainstay of the new economy, but controlled and understood only by us. We kept the knowledge of all this from you people, the skills required to run such a country successfully. It is not because Africans are stupid because they do not know what to do with an industrialized country. We just excluded the African from this knowledge and kept him in the dark. This exercise can be compared to that of a man whose house was taken away from him by a stronger person. The stronger person would then change all the locks so that when the real owner returned, he would not know how to enter his own house.’
We then introduced a financial system – money (currency), banks, the stock market and linked it with other stock markets in the world. We are aware that your country may have valuable minerals, which you may be able to extract….but where would you sell them? We would push their value to next-to-nothing in our stock markets. You may have diamonds or oil in your country Mr. Bopela, but we are in possession of the formulas how they may be refined and made into a product ready for sale on the stock markets, which we control. You cannot eat diamonds and drink oil even if you have these valuable commodities. You have to bring them to our stock markets.’
‘We control technology and communications. You fellows cannot even fly an aeroplane, let alone make one. This is the knowledge we kept from you, deliberately. Now that you have won, as you claim Mr. Bopela, how do you plan to run all these things you were prevented from learning? You will be His Excellency this, and the Honorable this and wear gold chains on your necks as mayors, but you will have no power. Parliament after all is just a talking house; it does not run the economy; we do. We do not need to be in parliament to rule your Zimbabwe. We have the power of knowledge and vital skills, needed to run the economy and create jobs. Without us, your Zimbabwe will collapse. You see now what I mean when I say you have won nothing? I know what I am talking about. We could even sabotage your economy and you would not know what had happened.’
We were both silent for some time, I trying not to show how devastating this information was to me; Ron Peters maybe gloating. It was so true, yet so painful. In South Africa they had not only kept this information from us, they had also destroyed our education, so that when we won, we would still not have the skills we needed because we had been forbidden to become scientists and engineers. I did not feel any anger towards the man sitting opposite me, sipping a whisky. He was right.
‘Even the Africans who had the skills we tried to prevent you from having would be too few to have an impact on our plan. The few who would perhaps have acquired the vital skills would earn very high salaries, and become a black elite grouping, a class apart from fellow suffering Africans,’ Ron Peters persisted. ‘If you understand this Thula, you will probably succeed in making your fellow blacks understand the difference between ‘being in office’ and ‘being in power’. Your leaders will be in office, but not in power. This means that your parliamentary majority will not enable you to run the country….without us, that is.’
I asked Ron to call a taxi for me; I needed to leave. The taxi arrived, not quickly enough for me, who was aching to depart with my sorrow. Ron then delivered the coup de grace:
‘What we are waiting to watch happening, after your attainment of political power, is to see you fighting over it. Africans fight over power, which is why you have seen so many coups d’etat and civil wars in post-independent Africa. We whites consolidate power, which means we share it, to stay strong. We may have different political ideologies and parties, but we do not kill each other over political differences, not since Hitler was defeated in 1945. Joshua Nkomo and Robert Mugabe will not stay friends for long. In your free South Africa, you will do the same. There will be so many African political parties opposing the ANC, parties that are too afraid to come into existence during apartheid, that we whites will not need to join in the fray. Inside whichever ruling party will come power, be it ZANU or the ANC, there will be power struggles even inside the parties themselves. You see Mr. Bopela, after the struggle against the white man, a new struggle will arise among yourselves, the struggle for power. Those who hold power in Africa come within grabbing distance of wealth. That is what the new struggle will be about….the struggle for power. Go well Mr. Bopela; I trust our meeting was a fruitful one, as they say in politics.’
I shook hands with the Superintendent and boarded my taxi. I spent that night in Bulawayo at the YMCA, 9th Avenue. I slept deeply; I was mentally exhausted and spiritually devastated. I only had one consolation, a hope, however remote. I hoped that when the ANC came into power in South Africa, we would not do the things Ron Peters had said we would do. We would learn from the experiences of other African countries, maybe Ghana and Nigeria, and avoid coups d’etat and civil wars.
In 2007 at Polokwane, we had full-blown power struggle between those who supported Thabo Mbeki and Zuma’s supporters. Mbeki lost the fight and his admirers broke away to form Cope. The politics of individuals had started in the ANC. The ANC will be going to Maungaung in December to choose new leaders. Again, it is not about which government policy will be best for South Africa; foreign policy, economic, educational, or social policy. It is about Jacob Zuma, Kgalema Motlhante; it is about Fikile Mbalula or Gwede Mantashe. Secret meetings are reported to be happening, to plot the downfall of this politician and the rise of the other one.
Why is it not about which leaders will best implement the Freedom Charter, the pivotal document? Is the contest over who will implement the Charter better? If it was about that, the struggle then would be over who can sort out the poverty, landlessness, unemployment, crime and education for the impoverished black masses. How then do we choose who the best leader would be if we do not even know who will implement which policies, and which policies are better than others? We go to Mangaung to wage a power struggle, period. President Zuma himself has admitted that ‘in the broad church the ANC is,’ there are those who now seek only power, wealth and success as individuals, not the nation. In Zimbabwe the fight between President Robert Mugabe and Morgan Tsvangirai has paralysed the country. The people of Zimbabwe, a highly-educated nation, are starving and work as garden and kitchen help in South Africa.
What the white man told me in Bulawayo in 1980 is happening right in front of my eyes. We have political power and are fighting over it, instead of consolidating it. We have an economy that is owned and controlled by them, and we are fighting over the crumbs falling from the white man’s ‘dining table’. The power struggle that raged among ANC leaders in the Western Cape cost the ANC that province, and the opposition is winning other municipalities where the ANC is squabbling instead of delivering. Is it too much to understand that the more we fight among ourselves the weaker we become, and the stronger the opposition becomes?
Thula Bopela writes in his personal capacity, and the story he has told is true; he experienced alone and thus is ultimately responsible for it

MARCUS GARVEY

Who has never heard the name Marcus Garvey? In my old neighbourhood in New Haven, Enugu there is a major sreeet named after him. It is however unlikely that the generality of OUR people, including those immersed in issues of Black Consciousness movement, know enough about his contributions to the aims for which the late martyr Dr Martin Luther King is well known.
My first exposure to Garvey was a few paragraph dedicated to him in the 1953 book, African Glory, written by the late Africanist, Dr DeGraft-Johnson. What I read was a more recent reissue of that great historical analysis of the Black and African predicament.
Why this my sudden interest in Marcus Garvey? I have just came across this news that there is a groundswell of opinion seeking a presidential pardon from the outgoing Obama administration for Dr Garvey who was unjustly jailed in 1923 and subsequently deported to his native Jamaica. Of course this did not squelch his activism in the decades that followed.
I have dug out a report on one of the earlier pushes for this pardon in the form of a press conference by his living son. All other reports and commentaries necessarily build on that.
As we step gingerly into a new Trumpian world it will be interesting to note the following quote from the report:
"Garvey was also controversial because of his "back to Africa" promotion and his campaign for racial separation, born of the conviction that whites would NEVER allow blacks justice." In the light of current realities, after nearly a century, can anyone blame him? Was Garvey a prophet or what?
What exactly do we have here?
"We" have taken back our country!

IS IT THE PEOPLE'S ARMY, OR THE ARMY'S ARMY?

The Editors at Premium Times referred to "the constitutional guarantee of civilian control of the army, etc"
I wonder how many otherwise educated Nigerians, even those warming their seats in the House and Senate, understand this simple concept. The way our people mindlessly defer to "our" military is most disconcerting. Does anyone treat his megadi that way? No.
These long years of military rule have done irreparable damage to our psyche. We still act like zombies. The late Kayode Esho, JSC, lamented in those days that a new breed of lawyers were coming of age, who had neither the experience nor a recollection of the rule of law, which has adversely limited their scope.
Let me take one final shot. Is the NYSC a military or paramilitary establishment? Neither. Granted the lofty goals of fostering national unity by scattering university educated Nigerian youth to far-flung outpost, it's overall objectives dovetails more closely with the functions of the National Orientation Agency and the Ministry of Information. A road walk drill for a forthnight, worthy of proud Boy Scouts, does not overnight turn the NYSC into a military establishment, which it is not. Can anyone then explain why we have retained the notion that the Director General of the NYSC must be a soldier, typically of a rank of Brigadier? This is intellectual laziness and mental slavery. Under the military, that posting was job-for-the-boys. We have no single good reason to retain that charade. A civilian must henceforth head our NYSC, if indeed we want to retain that setup.
God bless Nigeria.

DISTRIBUTED POWER GENERATION - THE WORLD IS DEFINITELY NOT STANDING STILL.

Here we have Bloom Energy! .
 Others are Redox Box, and many more. The US Department of Energy is not only involved, but deeply embedded in these undertakings. The Solindra debacle is but a footnote in this evolving story. When and how does Nigeria establish it's own planning for futuristic power technologies? Who and who are involved?
Having missed the boat regarding old technologies, it is our hope that Nigeria climbs on board as we survey this brave new world. Our Finance Minister, Kemi Adeosun, has recently been railing against the US EXIM, claiming to be both surprised and shocked that the Obama administration would no longer bankroll polluting coal-fired power plants. We signed the Paris Climate Change protocols, but still don't get it. . It is a crime not to have recognised when we missed the boat.
Can we start now?

BUHARI APPEALS TO NDIGBO FOR SUPPORT

The first stage or chapter or component in supporting Candidate Buhari was buying into his manifesto, followed by campaigning for him with varying degrees of intensity and commitment.
I have confessed on these pages to have supported and campaigned for Buhari but with limited commitment and a lot of misgivings. Finally I voted for him. We were offered no real choices. The arguments that I used were not necessarily original, having been shared by many others in the media.
Now we are in the mode of holding our leaders and President accountable. As an Igbo, what exactly does Buhari want of me again in the form of support? To lower my expectations, defer my demands, pull my punches or perhaps desist from further criticizing him? That would be most unrealistic. Tell me something else.

THE PROBLEM WITH THE BUY MADE-IN-NIGERIA CAMPAIGN.

There is a huge problem with the current Buy Made-in-Nigeria Campaign. And that is that it is a campaign. It shouldn't be. Only action counts.
"The buy Made-in-Nigeria campaign championed by the leadership of the executive and legislative arms of the Federal Government is a step in the right direction. It is a welcome development . . etc" So much for starters.
A situation where a 75 to 80 year-old former head of state, after having spent upwards of twelve years in office, finally identifies with his country by buying two pairs of shoes manufactured in Aba, is too little too late. Even the more substantive purchase of INNOSON automobiles by an activist senator does not immediately constitute policy. All the wasteful political actors who ran Nigeria into the ground are still hovering along the corridors of power. They fall into two categories, the few who know no better, and the vast majority who do not give a damn.
What do we do? Many things. But it is good to recognize how bad things have become these past two decades and more. And how things became so bad. And the implications!
I have in the past challenged our Northern elite and technocrats who occupied senior positions in the then viable textile industries for which Kano, Kaduna, Funtua and Gombe were known, and also the criminal smuggling enterprise called the Customs Service. The textile operations in the Lagos axis have never been insignificant, but have essentially met with the same fate. President Industries, Atlantic, Afprint, Bhojsons, Spaecomills etc. If perchance the government decides to procure say towels locally, where is Nitowels? Dead! As an undergraduate I could swear by my Daltex Tergal fabrics for my trousers. Can my children lay hands on that now? The answer is a resounding No!
I used to discuss the status and fate of the UAC owned African Textile Prints factory at Onitsha with the chief executive. It was all a sad story. How about Abatex and Asabatex? My neighbours in Ikeja, The Nigeria Textile Mills, went moribund so long ago, but is having a new lease of life as one of the polypropylene sack manufacturing operations of the ubiquitous Dangote Group. Others have not been so lucky. Meanwhile Nichemtex and other are barely hanging in literally by their fingernails.
I once referred to the military cum strategic implications of a vibrant automobile industry. Having killed off almost all that we jointly own, is it not a shame that the only ones left, the very stones that the builders rejected, are the Coscharis and Innoson auto assembly plants? It may be impolitic to remind Nigeria that these "belong" to Ndigbo. This doesn't look good. I am by no means discounting the Toyota, Nissan and Hyundai operations who appear more interested in having a foot in the door. However, the decision making there are outside the shores of Nigeria. In conclusion, why did we allow the Michelin and Dunlop tyre manufacturing facilities to close down? I am not interested in hearing stories. An army without a reliable supply of high quality tyres, especially in a time of mobilisation, is dead. Ask the Chinese who had to resupply on foot, donkey and buffalo back across the jungles of Burma and the Himalayas during the Japanese occupation. Thank God that Nigeria at present does not have any real threats. Otherwise we would have long folded up.
But for CNN, Nigerians would not have known that the Nigeria Airforce has been going in the dead of the night to procure brake components for it's grounded aircrafts from INNOSON. Now the army is trying out Armoured Personnel Carriers, (APC), made by INNOSON. The relationship between our defence establishment and the manufacturing private sector should by no means be sneaky. They should be overt, transparent and long term.
I do not want to return to my personal involvement in manufacturing items and components relevant to the electrical power industry. Enough has been said in previous writing. Surely my organization was not alone. I can go on and name many others in the membership of MAN that have fallen or rather been abandoned by the wayside. My reaction then and now is that LOCAL CONTENT is not what you talk about but what you do. I have been on a number of projects where my group was barely tolerated by the expatriate participants, only for my team to end up correcting the work signed off as correct by oyibo managers at Wilbros headquarters in Tulsa, Oklahoma. We taught them humility.
We had contributed to the construction of NLNG and maintenance design at PHRC. I have personally been involved in the pre-construction design of some aspects of The Bonny Export Terminal Project. True to type, I had opened my presentation by announcing to the client that the project itself, which was already at an advanced stage, was a hare-brained scheme. This opinion was despite my having made as extensive tour of the Bonny River midstream "export" platform. The facts on the ground were too compelling. As far as I know, that multi-billion Naira facility never exported anything. So much for planning.
Our activist Eze Onyekpere had continued, "Understanding these benefits and discussing them in an empirical manner will facilitate governmental, private sector and civil societal action in support of the campaign."
We seem to have forgotten that the new campaign to buy made-in-Nigeria products, welcome as they are, is strictly deja vu. We have over the decades laid more emphasis on the drama surrounding the anouncements, than on the things that matter. A cursory survey of my writings will show that my colleagues and I have always put our money where our mouth is. We routinely take on difficult assignments to the surprise of many clients and the consternation of the competition.
Our planners, if I can honour them with that appellation, often do not appreciate the damage done to the polity by subjecting almost all our development projects to design in foreign offices in London, The Hague, Seoul, Munich, New York, Houston, San Francisco or Los Angeles. Lee Kuan Yew woukd not have done that. (I refer readers to my eulogy at the passing of the late Singaporean prime minister.)
I know, because I worked in such locations. This leaves our home based engineers floundering outside the loop. I have written years ago about the fate that befell NETCO, the still-born Bechtel/NNPC engineering joint venture. I have gone ahead to ask the following question as the title of an article - CAN NIGERIA ADVANCE BY DOING ONLY EASY THING? Isn't that what all this talk of buy made-in-Nigeria is all about?
NIGERIAN PLANNERS' ROMANCE WITH TOOTHPICKS!
Which brings me to this which I hope will shock the readers. Stick a microphone in the face of an ignorant talking-head on this topic and he goes, with righteous indignation:
"Can you imagine? We even import toothpicks! Bla, bla, bla, . "
It does not occur to such that, yes, Nigeria SHOULD BE importing toothpicks, leaving that low end economic activity to our less endowed neighbours and trading partners. Meanwhile we should be busily engaged in high end value added activities, producing and rolling steel and aluminium, electric motors, transformers and pumps, high voltage cables, insulators and other engineering ceramics, tyres, car and truck wheels, alternators and kick starters, operating refineries for meeting our national demand for electrical grade copper. The list goes on and on. I will probably punch the next smart alec who mentions toothpick within earshot. We should be ashamed of ourselves. Such people have never been inside Dorman Long facilities or Nigerdock at Snake Island.
I am truly tired of the ignoramuses running Nigeria.

FOR HOW LONG WILL NIGERIANS TURN THEIR BACKS ON THE ABURI ACCORD?

I love it when I can lay no claim to originality, the implication being that I am not trying to sell something new. In my writings over the years, I have had cause to refer to the article by Nkem Ossai in The Guardian more than two decades ago. In it, Ossai lamented that when most Nigerians endeavour to chart a way out of their frustration, they borrow liberally, chapter and verse, from THE ABURI ACCORD. Strangely they stubbornly refuse to identify the source or even acknowledge that the document EXISTS.
It was laughable that only recently, "enemies" and other detractors of Buhari’s spokesperson, Femi Adesina, had to call him out because of his prior widely publicised endorsement of The Aburi Accord. I wonder when people will acknowledge that the truth does not change according to our mood, whims and caprices, the weather or who occupies Aso Rock.
I was going through a commemorative article by Aniebo Nwamu in TheCable.Ng, on the historic event at Aburi, which led me to Dr Philip Emeagwali's emeagwali.com website. I am offering up Emeagwali's post below without further commentary, because none is needed.

Announced in January 2017


ABUJA RUNWAY CLOSURE UPENDS AVIATION PLANNING.

ONLY IN NIGERIA! 

Let me quote the Minister of State, Aviation Hadi Sikira extensively on this matter of the imminent closure of the Abuja Airport runway,
“Structurally speaking, all the four levels are gone. It’s not the top layer we’re talking about here. It’s total repairs. The work-at-night repair approach has been in place for 14 years. The runway has outlived it’s lifespan. It was commissioned in 1982 and had a lifespan of 20 years. So, it has gone bad and has been patched for 14 years. If we don’t fix it now, it’ll shut down itself. * * *
"Same happened to Port Harcourt Airport,” he recalled.
For the last comment, I offer the Honourable(?) Minister my congratulations!
Una do well! . Seriously.
Why on earth did the same thing happen earlier in Port Harcourt? It has been proven time and again that these people have no sense of shame. Nigerians within the political circles will insist, following the Peter Principle, to rise unrestrained to the point where their incompetence, unfitness for office, is glaring. Running an airport system is not exactly the same as running NASA or SpaceX. Far from it. That said, the operators must be both knowledgeable, competent and committed. We have never had that here. Both master and servants are perennially wanting.
Has nobody ever heard of the expression "multiple redundancy" routinely applied by every plant operator in Ikeja and Agbara industrial?
Do we need a constitutional conference to mandate the design and construction of a second runway at Nnamdi Azikiwe Airport, Abuja?
Who and who sit down to discuss the strategic consequences of the many glaring omissions in our hare-brained decision making processses. Is anybody home?
Perhaps we should line up Chikwe, Fani-Kayode, Stella Oduah and Chidoka to explain to us serially what they have been doing in the name of planning all these years.
Finally, I recommend that some flights should be diverted to Enugu. As for reinforcing the security in and around every hamlet on the route from Kaduna Airport, I can tell the minister straight away that I personally cannot put my life at the mercy of his watery promises, especially in the light of current events in Kaduna. He and his boss should concentrate on pacifying that unfortunate part of this cursed federation. We had assumed all along that the Boko-Haram infestation in the North-East is the worst problem on our hands this decade. How wrong we are.

WHY NOT TO ALLOW THE NEW GOP-WHITE NARRATIVE TAKE ROOT.

In his recent article in Newsweek, in a section titled Disbelief, Cas Mudde stated:
" . . in the U.S. the dominant media narrative is that (white) people didn’t vote for Trump’s core populist radical right agenda—of nativism, authoritarianism and populism—but merely protested their “ economic pain.”
Meanwhile the hardcore conservatives gloat and say the exact opposite. The middle ranks of the conservative movement here try to sustain a semblance of sanity. They go with the above liberal (mis)reading of recent political outcomes and try not to frighten the confused liberals into rallying to undertake urgent, bold and strategic remedial actions to contain the present reality. If and when the liberals come to their senses and see the current standoff exactly the way the far right sees it, (Winner takes all; take no prisoners!), then a full fledged war will be on our hands. It promises to be messy.
The conservative war horses, wishing to entrench their new won positions on the battlefield, would want that the liberals delay their response for as long as possible allowing them to consolidate. That is exactly why a Trump surrogate who has neither met nor spoken with him in four weeks will boldly endeavour to walk back a statement he made on network television an hour earlier.
Mudde continued. "There is no doubt that 2016 was a bad year for liberals and liberal denial has not made it any better. Moreover, being in denial ensures that liberals will be unable to withstand and overcome the consequences of 2016 in 2017 and beyond." . Truly the new conservatives who are steamrolling the Obama establishment would, in their own interest, love the liberals to stick to that laid back mindset.
Now that Donald Trump has won the election it seems that it is about time we took Hilary Clinton's advice. Campaigns are over folks! Take Trump at his words. What you see is what you get. The GOP foot soldiers, who relish in reminding Americans and the world that Trump is authentic and unscripted, now routinely bend over backwards to distance Trump from himself. This is most bizarre. Trump is Trump and must be Trump. The recent humiliation visited on Newt Gingrich should be a lesson for both conservatives and liberals alike. For example, does Trump still want to drain the Washington DC swamp or not? For goodness sake ask Trump if you can get close enough to do so. You will however do well to ignore Priebus, Conway, Sean Spicer, even the VP-elect Mike Pence or indeed any other pretender who claims to know what Trump is thinking. This includes the likes of outsider wannabes like Rudy Giuliani. Everyone is now Trump's unpaid psychoanalyst. David Corn of Mother Jones, speaking on MSNBC's Last Word on Tuesday night, January 3, 2017, said as much in so few words. This is important at a time like this when even Trump himself doesn't know what he thinks or means.
Writing in their column THIS COULD BE AWKWARD, in cnn.com, John Blake and Tawanda Scott, presented a detailed analysis titled: How Trump's victory turns into another 'Lost Cause'
They wrote as follows:
. . following "Donald Trump's recent victory, some of his supporters celebrated by flying Confederate battle flags from pickup trucks and waving them at rallies.
"But Trump's victory may mark the resurgence of the Old South in another more sinister way: The return of "racial amnesia."
RACIAL AMNESIA
"That's what some historians are saying as they watch a familiar storyline emerge. Trump's triumph is now being roundly described as a revolt by white working-class voters; racism, sexism and religious bigotry had LITTLE (Caps mine), if anything, to do with it.
Blake and Scott continued, "It was an audacious historical cover-up -- to convince millions of Americans that what they'd just seen and heard hadn't really happened. It worked then, and some historians say it could work again with Trump.
"It's already happening again," says Brooks D. Simpson, a leading Civil War historian who teaches at Arizona State University. "A lot of people are saying we're going to have to unite behind the new guy and forget what he had to say. People who feel that they are part of those populations targeted by Trump are going to be told by whites to get over it." Really?
Honestly it shouldn't be that easy. The foundation of what we do tomorrow is often laid by what we say today and how we say them. The Trump legacy is almost fully set down in concrete EVEN BEFORE HE TAKES OFFICE! . Yes, that is unprecedented. As it is, Donald Trump has succeed in laying so many landmines that will require some serious effort to defuse. Where can one find the will? In Congress? That is very doubtful with all the gloating going on.
DID WHITES REALLY VOTE OBAMA INTO POWER?
At this point some analyst have found it necesssry to revisit the supposition that white America had voted solidly for President Obama in 2008 and 2012. Did they? Let's check this out.
Studies have shown that "Some white Americans have felt that their physical and psychological space was being invaded by the demographic changes embodied by Obama. It's why one historian wrote a recent New York Times column entitled "Without Obama There Would Be No Trump."
The almost one decade long Birtherism and rejection campaign run by Trump with the barely concealed connivance of the GOP leadership was in the fulness of time embraced by the Republican rank and file, with a few crossovers from the outer fringes of the Democratic right. Why then should anyone now try to distance the GOP from a method that has worked so remarkably well?
According to the opinion column, "Those who say white voters can't be racist because they elected a black president twice are ignoring another inconvenient fact: Obama was elected DESPITE opposition from white voters, political scientist Cornell Belcher told Vox in a recent interview.
He said whites didn't put Obama in the White House. Obama grabbed only 43% of the white vote in 2008 and 39% in 2012. "The majority of whites did not elect Obama, and that's the wolf at the door," Belcher told Vox.
"The vast majority of whites did not support President Obama and President Obama won back-to-back majorities, and that caused the realization of their power waning. Mitt Romney ran up a higher score among white voters than Ronald Reagan when Reagan had a landslide in 1984." Romney still lost. Oh boy, these barbarian are not just close to the stockages. They are within the walls. . Something had to be done. There is no denying the sense of urgency during this last campaign cycle. It would be adding insult to injury if Black America and other minorities allow themselves to lose sight of what just happened.
The above data clearly suggests that whites had rejected Obama by voting for the "other" candidates 57 and 61% in the two elections. Without claiming to offer any insight into the matter of low overall voter turnout, I dare claim that the continuation of the "whitelash" ultimately led to a predictable result now being sold both as a surprise and a reaction by rust-belt whites merely protesting their “ economic pain.” Nothing could be further from the truth. Of course Hilary Clinton, purported vehicle of Obama's third term, paid the price.
The above analysis explains why it became possible and even easy for the whole white political establishment on the fringe right to unite the rest and stymie the implementation of the Affordable Care Act, appropriately named Obamacare by its opponents. Hatred for anything Obama, required that they ignored the vast majority of poor and middle-class whites, the target beneficiaries of that piece of legislation. It has yet to dawn on them that unless we return to the 1890s, which some look back on with nostslgia, there will always be more poor Whites than Blacks and or Hispanics. It is a simple matter of demographics.
We should therefore all fasten our seat belts and try our best to enjoy/survive the ride. The year 2017 will be incomplete until when Trump proves incapable, (or perhaps unwilling to invest expensive political capital) to push ahead with some of the extreme (but highly popular) promises he made to his base on the campaign trail. I expect his long-suffering supporters (call them misguided at your own peril) to hit the streets. I imagine that even in the new Trump world, campaign promises should have consequences. I leave Congress to worry, about foreign affairs, if it so desires.

NO, WE ARE NOT RACISTS. WE JUST WANT OUR COUNTRY BACK!

Today, Tuesday December 27, 2016, a member of Trump Transition Team, Anthony Scaramucci corrected the anchor on MSNBC's Hardball with Chris Matthews as follows.
"You don't say just Trump but President Elect Trump."
This is serious. I cannot believe that a group of unrepentant racists and scaremongers who have called Barack Obama all sorts of names, anything but President Obama, will bristle that a television anchor, in the heat of a discussion, forgot to add the title President Elect whenever the name Trump is mentioned. With Birtherism and all the many obstructionist movements of the past eight years almost stripping the US presidency of all respect because the wrong person was occupying the elevated position, many had assumed that we are confronted with a new normal. What then is the hurry in appropriating imaginary respect due to to a president elect when the incumbent is still being daily treated with such disdain?
Trump’s rabid supporters will undoubtedly continue to worship at his feet. That their entitlement. However it may take the better part of his tenure for them to come to terms with the snake oil that they have just been sold. So long as he doesn't start the Third World War, we shall survive anything that he does.
The GOP leadership is something else. They wanted the White House by any means fair or foul. My favourite expression has been "Pact with the Devil." I stand by it. Now comes the hard part. It is easy to give a monkey a drink. Getting back the cup is easier said than done. That is the predicament facing Mitch McConnel, Paul Ryan and others, whether they publicly own up or not. Meanwhile the likes of Newt Gingrich are fully expired, essentially yesterday's men. Perhaps it is time to bring back the Eric Cantors and Jeff Bushes of this world to start the rudiments of a rescue mission. The US needs that. They will probably find John Kasich good company.
Did anyone hear what Carl Paladino ranted today to a newspaper about President Obama and the First Lady? He later commented that the well crafted insults were deliberate, neither a mistake nor a slip of whatever. This is another member of the Trump Transition Team. The statement was so obscene, not worth repeating here, that even the Trump Team had to immediately disown him. Is that for real? Is anybody fooled? I doubt it.
I am amazed that some people whose great grandparent, escaping famine and/or persecution, arrived in North America with not as much as a goat, now talk glibly about taking their country back. From whom?
The Native Americans?
What nonsense.

NIGERIA STILL ON THE BEATEN PATH

26 December 2016
Today, December 26, 2016 is another holiday, and extension of Christmas. It is Boxing Day. Honestly I cannot explain the full import.
I am so grateful for one thing though. That is that I read the following lament by Dr Pius Adesanmi only today. . Walai, if I had read it hot off the press, it would have completely messed up my joyous Christmas spirit. We thank God for small mercies.

Eight years ago I made my first visit to Ghana in an effort to introduce the novel concept of broadband last-mile delivery over electric power lines. We had no immediate plans to see the Ghana Minister of Energy. When the issue was mooted, we were in conference with the head of Ghana Telecoms regulator. Small matter it turned out. A meeting was arranged and we found ourselves in his very unpretentious presence thirty hours later. Not in Nigeria.
It has been well documented that those who have empty heads are strangely enough not in a hurry to try to remedy the situation. Hence the average Nigerian legislator will keep quiet while Nigeria burns but will open up to vent on issues that he knows absolutely nothing about, like how to solve Nigeria's power problems.
Library, real, virtual, etc? Why bother? Whoever in this clime got ahead by being truly knowledgeable and ahead of his peers and constituents? There is a name for such people. Either troublemakers or "too-sabi." Nigeria hates such with a passion. I wonder then why we still complain when the misfits that we allow in government lead us exactly nowhere. No surprises here.
Thanks Pius for putting your observations here. Let's hope some will benefit.

TRUMP ON NUKES

In the current political climate, anyone who cites the following report, dated August 03, 2016, will be roundly derided by Trumpites as scaremongers.
Let's fast forward. What did the Donald say today, December 22nd? The US, counter to the progress achieved over the past three decades in Strategic Arms Limitation Treaties, will now remove the lid and launch a full scale nuclear arms race "until the world comes to its senses.". Really? Pheew! This coming from the same man who sees nothing wrong with a nuclear arms race around the whole Pacific rim. . These are going to be very interesting times.
I wish Donald Trump has access to the papers of the Kennedy era Secretary of Defence, Robert McNamara, during whose tenure the concept of MAD, Mutually Assured Destruction, was coined. Unfortunately his historical horizon hardly goes beyond the last praise or insult he got.
God deliver us from Trump!
We can probably take care of the Chinese and Russians ourselves.

WHO WILL DRAG BUHARI OUT OF THE TRENCH, . TELL HIM THAT THE WAR IS OVER?

Another Lone Voice Crying in the Wilderness on NNAMDI KANU:
Let's remind ourselves. The last time oldman President Buhari went on medical tourism, it had to do with his ears. If the London doctors did a good job for the millions of Naira that we plunked down on the table, then the general must hear this. He must hear the bugle blow announcing that the civil war a.k.a. the Biafra-Nigeria War ended a log time ago. His friends who are still alive should drag him kicking and screaming out of the trenches where he has been living these past 46years. It is so sad.