Monday, February 17, 2014

Lawlessness as Law!



by Eze Eluchie

Two isolated oddities, happening contemporaneously in different States of our federation, typify the level of decadence and reign of impunity to which our contraption has fallen in the course of the past few years. These are:
1. The shutting down of a huge Shopping Mall at Iponrin, Lagos State on the orders of the daughter of a former Governor of Lagos State on account of purported disagreements between the aid daughter of an ex-Governor and owners of Shops in the Mall and an incredulous insistence that Shop owners at the Mall must register with a particular political party, and
2. The public shooting to death of an aide to the Abia State Governor - yes, you read right, 'aide to the son of a State Governor, apparently at the instigation of the son of the said State Governor!

I had actually shied away from commenting on these absurd events in the hope that as more details emerged, our worst fears will be disproved. Alas, owners of Shops at the Mall shut by ex-Governor Bola Tinubu's daughter whose loses continue to sky-rocket and the young widow and child whose husband/dad was killed courtesy of Governor Theodore Orji's brat, serve to give life to our sad reality.

More worrisome is the fact that these untoward criminal acts by these apparently not well brought up scions of our political rulers were effected either with the connivance or active collaboration of our Police and security agencies (who are ordinarily supposed to protect the public).

Unfortunately, the system will provide protection for these 'executive' urchins.

And we wonder why we are where we are and the rest of the world are where they are?


Picture: Injustice




Thursday, February 13, 2014

Pang of Statelessness


by Eze Eluchie



Failure of Texas (US) authorities to notify Mexican citizen, 46 year old Edgar Tamayo Arias, of his right to assistance from and access to Mexican Embassy officials in the US  at the time of his arrest, served to  dampen relations between the United States and its neighbor when the said Mexican citizen was executed in Texas on 22nd January 2014.

From the United Kingdom to China, India to Spain, and virtually all over the world, citizens of sub-Saharan African countries, particularly Nigerian, languish in various detention centers, with the arresting authorities not bothering to inform the arrested persons of their right to diplomatic assistance – often times, the Embassy of the sub-Saharan African country in those foreign shores only become aware of the incarceration of of their citizens via messages surreptitiously smuggled out prisons or shortly before an execution takes place.

Under the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, all foreign citizens ought to be informed, at the time of their arrest, of their right to diplomatic/consular assistance by their country’s Embassy.

Countless citizens of sub-Saharan states have suffered and continue to suffer, in foreign climes, as a result of the brazen non-compliance with international laws and an unwillingness and or inability of their countries diplomats to act in defense and protection of their citizens outside our shores.

Rather than address the root causes of the frolic of our youngsters to foreign climes for the proverbial ‘greener pastures’ or inquire into the validity of the legal processes which leaves our citizens incarcerated often times en-mass outside our shores, our Governments, over the years choose to embark on bogus ‘prisoner exchange’ treaties, which usually leaves the already overcrowded and overburdened Prisons and social welfare system across sub-Saharan countries in more pitiable states as they are forced to take in more inmates, inmates whose guilty are very questionable. 

The fate suffered by some sub-Saharan citizens, whose countries suffer from a huge capacity deficit in the quality of diplomatic personnel at their Embassies abroad is truly unfortunate and quite worrisome to anyone concerned about international human rights law

Fully conscious of this lack of capacity of many sub-Saharan states to come to the aide of their citizens who get entangled in foreign criminal justice systems, there appears to be several isolated incidents of brazen trampling on the rights of citizens of sub-Saharan countries in foreign climes.

A restructuring and renegotiation of our contraption will ensure that the need for our youths to waste away in foreign lands will be minimized and responsible officials represent sub-Saharan State, particularly Nigerian, interests abroad.




Picture  behind bars:

Monday, January 13, 2014

Labor Strikes: Holding Ourselves Hostage

by Eze Eluchie

Often times, when a crisis situation unfolds in any country and thousands of people embark on long ,seemingly endless treks to destinations unknown, there is the tendency for people looking at the emerging pictures from afar, to think that the persons embarking on such pitiable journeys are urchins, miscreants, ne’er-do-well’s and people society can do without.  That impression is unfortunately, not correct.

A closer look at the trekking mass will reveal that in that throng of human bodies, soaked in their individual sweats, faces caked with dust, with their mattresses, foodstuff, jerry cans of water and most precious possessions perched precariously atop their heads with children  and livestock tagging alongside parents, there are professionals of all callings (teachers, Architects, Lawyers/Judges, Health service providers and so on) and all those held in esteem by stable societies on account of their intellectual prowess. When crisis ensues and survival becomes the name of the game, class distinctions, professional rankings, wealth and other criteria used to distinguish one from the other gradually disappear until all persons in the given crisis laden environment merge into one indistinguishable unit. The collapse of the State, under crisis situations, allows for the emergence of a new breed of ‘leaders’, based on mans primitive instincts – the rule of the brawn.

Professionals, skilled persons and those generally termed as the ‘middle-class’ in any society bear the brunt of any collapse of State structures. The urchins, miscreants and ne’er-do-wells were already down and, as the saying goes, need fear no fall. Those who have had opportunity to rule in such societies would usually have looted sufficient funds to acquire some semblance of comfort in foreign territories - this is however quite suspect as these category of exiles are held in absolute contempt by their American/European hosts/neighbors who know that such ex-rulers of collapsed States are basically criminal elements and their offspring's, scions of criminals. The professionals who constitute the middle-class are apparently stuck in limbo, resigned to a life of misery in refugee camps and where they are able to find a country willing to grant them  asylum, have to contend with all manners of indignities in the new territories they have to habit – perpetually day-dreaming over what might have been only if they had avoided the crisis which turned their homeland and lives around.

One only needs to take a ride in a Taxi cab in the major cities of the United States or European countries, dine in Restaurants in those foreign climes or even visit Car-wash facilities to appreciate the monumental waste, to which diverse intellectual resources which would have been of better use in the societies where the hapless refugees originally hailed from, have been rendered. With Surgeons and Attorneys of several years experiences competing with themselves over who would drive a cab for a few hours in a day, to Engineers and Bankers waiting on tables at eateries, to Teachers and Artists wasting away, washing cars in frigid hostile temperatures – people who allow themselves and their countries to plunge into crisis really loose out big time.

It is in the light of the foregoing that one is perplexed by the exuberance with which professional and labor organizations in countries in transition assiduously work towards the collapse of their countries with extremely self-serving insistence on a piece of their country’s flesh and blood, at times cloaking such actions in the guise of national interests.  

Unfolding events in Nigeria would illustrate this worrisome trend. For an incredulous period of over 4 months, the umbrella association of Nigerian public university lecturers (the Academic Staff Union of Universities - ASUU) embarked on a crippling strike over payment of allowances (some of these allowances had such incredulous titles as ‘Examination’ and ‘Thesis Supervision’ – what are these lecturers receiving salaries for?), a strike action which grounded all academic activities in Nigerian universities, holding the Government hostage until ASUU was able to extract whatever they felt was satisfactory.

Soon after the strike by Lecturers, the umbrella association of Medical Doctors in Nigeria (the Nigerian Medical Association - NMA), sensing it could likewise have its way, threatened to call off all doctors in public service unless it was assured that their members would in addition to maintaining dominance in the public health sector, be assured of permanent slot as Minster of health, continued percentage remuneration superiority gap for their members over the income of other actors in the health sector, and creation of a novel office of ‘Surgeon General’, crafted after the model adopted in the United States, which will be occupied only by Medical Doctors. In private meetings with the NMA, and worried about the collapse of the already fragile public health sector, the Federal Government indicated it was willing to capitulate to the threats of the Medical Doctors. Soon after and in order not to be out-done by the Medical Doctors, other professionals in the health sector have likewise threatened a showdown with the Government if it dared accede to what I must admit are quite greedy demands of Doctors.  A crippling strike in our public health sector is thus guaranteed.

Even the umbrella organization of lawyers, a profession group to which I belong, is gleefully jumping into the fray of bodies issuing threats to Government over issues in the polity. Following the bombing of a court house in the south-south zone of the country, the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) issued a 30-day ultimatum to the Federal Government to conduct necessary inquiries, fish out and prosecute culprits involved in the terror related event otherwise….. This is the same NBA which seems not to be bothered when thousands of Nigerians are routinely sent to their early graves resulting from terrorist attacks and whose members ‘prosper’ from a most unjust justice system which ensures that over 90% of our prison inmate population are persons who are presumed innocent by our laws until they are proven guilty and where civil and criminal suits drag on for seeming eternities.

Professionals and workers in the petroleum, maritime, financial and virtually all sectors of the Nigerian economy have issued threats which cumulatively can hasten the demise of the Nigerian state when all such threats come to maturity later this year.

Without doubt, the perception, and in some cases, reality of large-scale and endemic corruption in the polity serves to energize the quest for a piece of the ‘national pie’ by professional and labor associations, but have we as a people wondered what happens to the pie when all the pieces of it has been taken away? What about the situation of the vast majority of our fellow citizens who are not opportune to go on ‘strike’ for or negotiate their way to some slice of the national pie?

Are we all not better off synchronizing efforts towards a holistic restructuring and renegotiation of our polity to ensure the emergence of a system which accommodates all: professional, skilled and unskilled, literate and illiterate and of whatsoever category, rather than merely seeking to, via tactics akin to hostage taking, carve out the maximum slice of the polity we can for our professional or labor set?  

Some professionals who are deluding themselves with the thought that their qualifications will offer a safe parachute to jump ship in the event of a collapse of the Nigerian state to some other life/jobs abroad, should think twice and ask of the whereabouts of other professionals from crisis-prone countries who found refuge in foreign lands. In the event that we persist in our various insistence on a piece of the country, we should also begin to fine-tune our dish-washing, driving, and gigolo skills(yes, you are reading right: gigolo), because when the chips are really down, our existence in those foreign climes may well be dependent on such inanities and not on intellectual prowess.


Let us renegotiate and restructure whilst there is yet time.


Picture: Refugees in motion