Monday, January 22, 2018

Nigeria: Preparing an Alibi For Impending Mass Atrocities?

by Eze Eluchie,

With its near weekly announcements of the release of what it unconvincingly claims are ‘reformed’, ‘de-radicalized’ and ‘rehabilitated’ Boko Haram terrorists, the Muhammadu Buhari-led Federal Government of Nigeria has just sneaked through media houses what it feels will ostensibly pass-off as it’s alibi in the event of an expected bloodletting of apocalyptic proportions across Nigeria’s predominantly Christian idle Belt and Southern regions.

Nigerian newspapers have been awash with a report allegedly submitted to the Presidency, wherein the Department of State Security (DSS) is said to have notified the President of the discovery of Islamic State of West Africa (ISWA) networks and terrorists who have in been ‘sighted’ with some ‘apprehended’ in Benue, Kogi, Edo and other locations in the idle Belt and Southern regions of the country.

ISWA in Christian dominated areas? Really? And what has the leadership of the Immigration Services, DSS, National Security Agency (NSA), Nigeria Police and all other security agencies charged with checking the influx of foreigners into Nigeria and ensuring the security of the contraption been up to? When it is realized that for the very first time in the annals of the Nigeria’s history, all the security organizations are headed by Muslim Northerners who were all appointed by Nigeria’s extremist-leaning Muslim ruler, Muhammadu Buhari, who had in earlier times stated that “I will continue to show openly and inside me the total commitment to the Shari’a movement that is sweeping all over Nigeria...God willing, we will not stop the agitation for the Shari’a in the country”.

Are the 'reports' gaining momentum of the 'sighting' of ISWA terrorists deliberately planted to show 'we are doing our best' and 'this is all part of the global terrorism issue'?.

The above scenario coupled with the Buhari-led administrations fatalistic insistence on compelling/forcing all component Nigerian States to appropriate communal and or private lands for the establishment of ‘Cattle Grazing Colonies’ to assuage so-called Fulani Herdsmen bloody clashes over grazing lands is heightening expectations of a brutal crackdown on hapless citizens, particularly of the idle Belt and Southern States who have shown clear aversion to such interference with their properties.

Indeed with the lacklustre lackadaisical response of federal security agencies to the continuing acts of ethnic cleansing in rural areas of Benue, Taraba and Adamawa States, where the victims have been predominantly Christian/animist villagers, the projections that must be made with the news of ISWA infiltration deeper into the Middle Belt and Southern regions are quite, quite dire.

With objectives on all fours with each other, it is now becoming pertinent to wonder if there is any difference between Boko Haram, the Fulani Herdsmen terrorists and the so-called Islamic State of West Africa (ISWA). Are they same but acquiring different appellations to suit different regions and sub-objectives?

It’s not going to be only Nigeria. For these characters to succeed in Nigeria, the cost will be extremely high in terms of human lives, as it will be extremely bloody. In addition, it will put the entirety of sub-Sahara Africa within easy reach of extremist Islamist terror.

An immediate holistic restructuring and renegotiation of the Nigerian contraption will go a long way to eliminate these worries.









Picture: Boko Hara terrorist-cum-Fulani Herdsman Militia-cum-ISWA terrorist?


Monday, January 15, 2018

Nigeria: Unfortunately Stoking the Embers of Sectarian Strife.

by Eze Eluchie,

The signs of a build-up to a religious conflagration in Nigeria is all too clear, particularly since the ascendance into the highest political office in Nigeria of a man, Muhammadu Buhari, who has over the years exhibited traits of adherence to extremist Islamists philosophies and severally proved himself an ethno-religious bigot. The odious record Mr. Buhari had set in 1985 as the only President who had voted against a national of his own country for the Office of Secretary General of the African Union, during his earlier stint in office as Nigeria’s Head of State (as Military dictator) when he had voted for Ide Oumarou, a Muslim Fulani from Niger Republic against Mr. Peter Onu, a Nigerian Christian, still remains etched in history and reality. 

When, for instance, a Christian converts to Islam, it’s a private issue (some State Governors, for example Governor Rochas Okorocha of Imo State and several Muslim State Governors, have been known to waste public funds in ‘rewarding’ such converts). In an environment plagued with endeic poverty, the cash and other rewards accorded the convert serve to entice many others to change creed;

When, however, a Muslim converts to Christianity, from nowhere, it becomes a ‘security’ issue and the Department of State Security, the Police Force descend on the convert and whosoever is believed to have aided the conversion, to reverse and or ‘punish’ such conversion. Riots even break out or get instigated, during which several Churches get destroyed and more Christians flee fro the area where such ‘conversion’ took place.

The issues are further exacerbated by the undue pro-Islamic slant the machinery and alliances of the Nigerian government has been taking under the present leadership of Mr. Buhari. Such acts as Nigeria’s joining the Saudi Arabia-led ‘Islamic Military Alliance to fight terrorism’, the Nigerian Government floating SUKUK (Islamic) Bonds, the ineffective response by Security agencies (controlled by the Federal government) to check ethnic cleansing of genocidal proportions taking place against the predominantly Christian populations of the idle Belt region by predominantly Muslim Fulani herdsmmen and recent vote patterns at international summits.

When one realizes that the above situations are occurring contemporaneously in a supposedly secular state where the numerical strengths of the twin Abrahamic religions are almost at par, it does not take a rocket scientist to discern that if current approach and deployment of state apparatus in favour of any religious orientation continues, it will give rise to conflict.

The way out of this oncoming apocalyptic conflagration is to holistically restructure and renegotiate the Nigerian contraption whilst there is yet time.



Muslim girl conversion becomes cause for intervention by Department of State Security (DSS):  http://guardian.ng/news/controversy-over-girls-conversion-from-islam-to-christianity/


Picture: Symbols of the Islamic and Christian faith.     


Sunday, December 31, 2017

The Worst Nigerian Awards for Year 2017

by Eze Eluchie

The Worst Corporate Entity:
After considering the horrendous looting of national resources which virtually ensured that foreign exchange earned from the sale of crude oil (which accounts for over 90% of Nigeria’s income) and other governmental sources, was spirited away before it ever got to the shores of the country, former Military Dictator of Nigeria, Ibrahim Babangida once confessed, during his stay in office, that he had no idea what was sustaining the Nigerian economy. The looting has continued, albeit more vicious. The simple answer to Babangida’s wonder, was that the resilience, dexterity never-say-die attitude of the average Nigerian
Taking cognisance of the lax governance structure, absence of effective corporate regulatory and enforcement mechanisms and a hapless citizenry benumbed and incapacitated by extreme lack, thus unable and unwilling to challenge adverse situations, many corporate organizations have taken it upon themselves to extort, hoodwink and milk the Nigerian public. From the confectionaries, to the brewers, to the private educational institutions and various manufacturers, every corporate entity seems to be perfecting long fangs with which to deepen their capacity to suck the Nigerian consumer dry.

One industry, in Year 2017, exceeded all others in terms of their dubiousness and adverse impact on the Nigerian citizen and the Nigerian state at large.

With shylock interest rates (usually over 34% interest on loans), rates repayable only by persons involved in drugs or human trafficking ventures and guaranteed to ruin any legitimate business; dubious hidden charges mostly imposed by fiat against their customers; and deployment of quasi-criminal loan recovery tactics and techniques that would have in other saner climes earned the Directors of such Banks long spells behind bars, amongst other unorthodox practices, the Nigerian Banking industry has proved a clog in the famed entrepreneurial spirit of the Nigerian. The apex banking agency, the Central Bank of Nigeria, which has enormous regulatory and administrative powers over the Banking industry, compounds the situation with it’s Mafia-like secretiveness and lack of transparency, collusion with public officials to siphon huge sums out of Nigeria and a destructive regime of multiple extremely diverse foreign currency exchange rates which overnight, in one fell swoop, create US Dollar millionaires – encouraging mediocrity above merit and ultimately deepening the destruction of the Nigerian economy.
For the harms its actions, inactions, dubiousness and opaqueness caused Nigerians in Year 2017, the Central Bank of Nigerian (CBN) is hereby awarded the Worst Corporate Entity for Year 2017.            

The Worst State Governor/State Agency
In a year when despite collecting billions of US Dollars from the Federation Account under the guise of ‘Paris Debt Refunds’, several State Governors owed their workers’ salaries ranging from 5 months to 15 months, and during which some State Governors had devised the quasi-criminal practice of forcing the States civil servants to sign (under duress) and as a condition precedent to collecting their monthly salaries, contract papers forfeiting huge percentages of their due wages to the State; a year when the amorphous entity known as the Nigeria Governors Forum (NGF) has been severally exposed as a conduit for money laundering, illicit transfers and unconstitutional misappropriation of public funds; it is clear that with so many Governors qualified for the pathetic award as the Worst Governor of the Year, it would take a spectacularly devious, craftily disingenuous and a character whose negatives extend beyond his States’ borders and probably to the international arena, to clinch this ignoble title.

None other fits this Award than a character who has raised deception in governance to an art, deployed nepotism, cronyism and good old plain lying as cardinal tools of governance; admitted in own words of being pushed to the brink of insanity by the enormity of responsibilities of the Governor of his State; embarked on large-scale land thefts for self and dependants using the instrumentalities of the Office of Governor as subterfuge and spices up the rot by erecting sculptures of all manners of discredited and discreditable characters from across the country and beyond to spite the peoples of the State he governs who are widely respected as a people of integrity, academic excellence and culture.

The winner of the Year 2017 Worst Governor is, for the 3rd tie in a row, the Imo State Governor, Mr. Rochas Okorocha.


The Worst Federal Minister/Agency
The cacophony of misfits which characterized the appointment of persons to the various Federal Ministries, it was clear that right fro the very onset, the sufferings and disaster Nigerians are having to live through was very much expected. From the Medical Doctor who serves as the inister for Labour and Productivity, to the Attorney who presides over the Ministry of Power/Works/Housing, to the Supermarket Cashier who presides over the Ministry of Finance and the vital Transportation & Aviation Ministry handed over to a man whose ain qualification was having lavishly used the treasury of the State over which he had presided as Governor to fund the President electioneering campaigns, Nigeria was viciously shepparded (within the first 12 months of this present government) into economic depression from which it is finding most difficult to extricate itself.

The Federal agencies and parastatals, taking a cue from the quality of their supervising Ministers, tended to outdo each other in incompetence, dereliction of duty and generally contributing to the sorry position Nigeria and Nigerians find themselves amongst the comity of states.

Based on the often reiterated position that the present administration would frontally tackle the cankerworm of corruption which afflicts the Nigerian society, and the reality that incidents of large-scale corruption has gained momentum and frequency with the public clearly discerning a partisan slant in the so-called efforts at addressing corruption – a slant that unfortunately accords those in the ‘preferred’ partisan divide, immunity to perpetuate mind-boggling looting; the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has epitomized the disconnect between professed goals and reality, societal expectation and failure in service delivery by our Governments which has combined to relegate Nigeria to its sorry state in all global indexes for development.   

The Worst Federal Minister/Agency Award for Year 2017 is hereby bestowed on the Economic and Financial Cries Commission (EFCC).


The Worst Nigerian
In other climes, when the people are pushed to the wall by the graft of their rulers, there is always a backlash from the population to remind those charged with their affairs that there is a cost for maladministration of public affairs and poor governance.

From the reaction of Tunisians to the seizure of the wares of Buazizi and his subsequent self-immolation, to the reaction of the Togolese public to misrule by a psudo-monarchical dictator, and the ongoing reaction of Iranians to slight hike in prices of basic household needs and food items, there is always a commensurate reaction by the people to hardship inflicted on them by their rulers.

In the face of the worst devaluation of our currency, destruction of the national and individual economies, forced destitution of our peoples, colossal failure of the state to protect the citizenry from armed bandits resulting in decimation of our populations, wastage of our youths leading to mass exodus from the country of the vibrant segment of its population, the Nigerian public has remained complicity comatose. Hedges of religious and ethnic divides which have been waged between the various peoples of the country has served to blind the population to the need to rise in unison against their albatrosses.

For failing to rise and free ourselves from shackles which weigh us down, the Nigerian civil society is hereby bestowed with the Worst Nigerian Award for Year 2017.   




Picture: Worst Governor Award winner for the 3rd year running – Mr. Rochas Okorocha of Imo State.