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Sunday, 21 October 2012

Still on the controversy of Chinua Achebes memoirs........

I encourage more memoirs to be written as long as the writer writes it from truth, personal experiences and observations. Irrespective of the outcome.
Today the politician Alex Ekweme turns 80, now, I would love to read his memoirs!. Someone like MT Mbu, who had a lot to say about the way history has presented itself eg his surprise declaration that Tafawa Balewa died of an asthma attack not a gun shot wound never wrote his memoirs.

Its true when they say ‘Each time an old man dies a library is burnt.’

The Jan 1966 coup was the excuse given for the genocide that proceeded in Nigeria that ultimately led to the civil war.

People will like you to believe the first military coup was an Igbo affair. But how could it have been, when the objective was to free Awolowo and install him as leader? But no doubt that coup became the reason for a chain of events that would change the political culture of our Nation.

I still feel the truth has not fully been told. Maybe its just my suspicious mind and the conspiracy theorist within, but I think that the plotters (and some of the victims) were specifically chosen as part of an elaborate grand plan.

Maybe a memoir would have explained the bewilderment of someone like Nzeogwu, an outstandingly meticulous, young Major, clearly in possession of his senses. But uttered these words when he gave himself up:

“We have pledged allegiance to
General Ironsi on behalf of all men who were for some unknown reasons,
referred to as ‘rebels’. We feel that it is absurd that men who risked their
lives to establish the new regime should be held prisoners. We wanted to
change the government for the benefit of everybody else...” ....This reeked of betrayal.

How else do you explain their treatment?
The assassins of our founding leaders apparently going scott free?. Crazy! Nzeogwu and his colleagues were never court -martialed. Instead, they remained on government payroll and were set free after some time in protective custody. They were allowed to communicate with their families and friends.
Even when Nzeogwu was killed in the East his body was taken to Kaduna and given the honour of a military burial.

I have come to realize these young men, must have done something grossly
appreciating for the successive Juntas and governments!

Its my personal opinion that Nzeogwu was a tool in the hands of superior officers, including those who emerged as major beneficiaries of his action and they used the July counter coup of ridding those that would stand in their way.

Saturday, 20 October 2012

PICTURE OF THE WEEK !

Patience Jonathan, President Goodluck Jonathan's wife, dances to the crowd upon her arrival at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, Nigeria, Wednesday, October 17, 2012. Image: Sunday Agbaeze/Associated Press. Via Ambrose Ehirim


Thursday, 18 October 2012

Lagos Okadas: What Next?



So the Lagos state government has proposed implementing a heavy restriction on Okadas (commercial bike drivers) and some are saying its an outright ban. What do you think about this? I personally think this is a bad idea which may have terrible consequences.

What are the drivers of these bikes to do? Are you aware of the implications of them being left jobless? It may actually be cheaper in the long run to put a strict training programme in place rather than create a mass of unemployed men who have to survive one way or the other.

A lot of these boys have been sent from their respective communities, often from the North to fend for their families. Yes they drive badly, but so does the average vehicle driver :). I think there needs to be a complete but gradual fool proof overhaul of the way drivers are trained and are issued licences! Or is it too much work trying to figure out how to train these young men so to make them road safe?

Yes there are plenty of accidents involving Okada riders, but I don't think these young men are suicidal, all they need is the necessary training on awareness and road safety.

Shutting down a whole way off eking out a living will only lead to the increase of crime!
I suggest a stringent course for drivers and a fool proof method of getting them to complete it.
Those that have made this decision may not use this form of transport but ultimately they may end up becoming a victim of the unemployed ex drivers they will have created.

Wednesday, 10 October 2012

What Can We Learn From Aluu ?

What happened to the 4 young men in the Aluu community happens very often in Nigeria, but its rarely caught on camera and the victims personal stories are rarely shared on the social network.

In effect, people think its their duty to take the law into their own hands thus making them judge, jury and executioner.
BUT NOW ! people are asking what sort of human beings are we becoming.... BECOMING? .

..ARE ! We have always been this way....what that community did is no different from the welcomed vigilantes like the Bakassi boys who unleashed their version of justice as they saw fit. They are no different from the executors of suspected thieves on the streets all over Nigeria and their goading spectators, no different from self proclaimed men and women of God who brand children as witches and so on .....and then, the reprisal attacks. WHEN DOES THIS STOP? Why has this not been addressed fully?
We continuously talk about our "democracy", A "democracy built on the rule of law", Isn't it closer to the truth that there is a growing number of Nigerians who have absolutely no regard for the rule of law?
Is it because there is a complete lack of trust in the Judiciary and people have resorted to jungle justice instead of allowing the "available" instruments of law to be applied to each case?

So here we are in 2012, where the regard for human life appears to be at its lowest. We risk falling into complete anarchy if we continue in this vein. The government has failed in its duty to maintain law and order, and in a society were there is no law n order people take it into their own hands.
The people need to be convinced that the police and the judiciary have the will and resources to deal with crime and protection of the citizenry.

We need to say NO to Jungle justice, whichever form it presents itself.

R.I.P Llyod Toku, Chiadikobi Biringa, Tekena Elkanah and Ugonna Obuzor