Sunday, May 19, 2019
From begging to banditry: Revolt of the almajiris
APRIL 28, 2019 By Dele Sobowale
“No revolution is the fault of the people but the fault of the government.”—Johann Goethe, 1749-1832, VANGUARD BOOK OF QUOTATIONS, VBQ.
A revolution is underway in the northern states of Nigeria. The downtrodden constituting 99.9 per cent of the population, hitherto docile beggars, saying rankaindede to the privileged 0.1 per cent, are sick and tired of begging. They are now demanding for their own share of “the national cake” to be delivered to them – at gun or cutlass points.
Nigeria will never be the same again. The North is now gradually sliding into the dictatorship of the beggars or almajiris.
As usual, Nigerian pseudo-socialists, like the original European promoters of the idea, had not expected the least developed region in this country to trigger the revolution, just as the uprising which occurred first in Russia and died there as well was wrongly predicted. Our local copy cats had been writing and talking about revolution in Nigeria on the assumption that highly educated Nigerians would lead it.
History might eventually record that the Nigerian revolution (and make no mistake about it there is one on) was spear-headed by those with nothing to lose – no job, no house, no family to speak of, and no hope.
For too long there has been ample evidence to prove that the most difficult enemy to fight is one who has nothing to lose.
The privileged class in Nigeria had been busy since 1914, and particularly since 1960, nurturing millions of fellow citizens who can only be described as people without hope living in another Nigeria from the one inhabited by their overfed leaders.
“There are only two families in the world, my old grandmother used to say, the Haves and the Have-nots.” Miguel Cervantes, 1547-1616.
It has always been a puzzle to me why leaders – Presidents, Governors, Ministers, Commissioners, party leaders – who we presumed were/are intelligent and wise could have individually and collectively failed to understand that we cannot continue to increase the number of jobless adults and children out of school without eventually reaching the breaking point. Nigeria has one of the widest income disparities in the world – less than one per cent own over seventy per cent of the wealth.
The North as a whole is the worst – with the North East and North West being the absolute worst. For as long as anybody can remember religion has been misused to get the vast majority of “have-nots” to accept their penury as an “act of Allah”.
The extremely wealthy, even if the wealth was accumulated by looting the public purse got away with robbing the masses because of the pervasive docility. Every delinquent individual readily was submissive to the privileged whose only obligation was to give pittance to the people they have robbed by way of alms giving.
A governor caught on video receiving bribe shows no remorse and even receives presidential endorsement because president and governor belong to the oppressive class. Class solidarity was always more important than justice. For over four decades since first setting foot in the North, I had wondered when the injustice would result in absolute rebellion. I was certain that the system of institutionalised serfdom could not continue for ever.
The chickens have come home to roost in the North and the revolt might spread all over the country. The former beggars have dropped their bowls and have acquired bullets and guns. They are now forcing the Haves, who have suppressed them to pay. Henceforth, it will be “Your money or your life.”
The report by DAILY TRUST a few weeks ago is revealing. The four most dangerous places to be in Nigeria today from the standpoint of kidnapping and murder are: Zamfara, Katsina, Kaduna and Federal Capital Territory. President Buhari resides in two of them.
“If there is government in place, then it should listen to people and address the security challenges. We have mass burials from time to time and there is no sign that government cares about what is happening.”—Catholic Bishop of Yola, Rev. Stephen Mamza. To that query President Buhari gave an answer which is most pathetic and which tells us all we need to know about why we are in this mess and may never get out of it. Read what our leader said. Speaking through one of his echoes, we were told that “but for Buhari’s efforts, Yola and other towns in Adamawa and the rest of the Northeast would still be under the control of Boko Haram”.
Two reasons among several render that rejoinder most unpatriotic. One, there was never a time all of the North East or Yola were under the control of Boko Haram. Parts of them yes, but not the entire region. A president does need to stretch a small truth to the breaking point in order to exonerate himself. Two, on the same day that the President’s spokesman was uttering that falsehood, Nigerians were informed thus:
“Gun men kill 14 in Katsina and Benue.” Nine of the fourteen were slaughtered in Katsina State. Under Jonathan nobody was killed in Katsina State and Kaduna had not become the murder capital of Nigeria. While the Bishop was making a general observation about insecurity, Buhari and his small-minded spokesmen turned the entire problem to a political debate – APC versus PDP. With such little intellect at the top levels of government, it is easy to understand why Buhari might be the last to grasp the significance of what appears like random violence ravaging Nigeria now. Allow me to present a true account of what happened four days to Easter last week.
“The Devil finds work for idle hands.” I was in Suleija after venturing into a part of Nigeria which was once very safe but which has now become like the “lion’s den” for travellers – especially for those driving good cars and well-dressed. Not to test my luck, I had chartered an old jalopy from the Motor Park instead of the usual Camry. We stopped at a filling station to refuel and my eyes could not believe what they saw. A leading member of the National Assembly, NASS, was sitting in the back seat of a car which no panel-beater would touch. I recognised him and moved to introduce myself and to ask what was the matter with his cars?
Almost in tears, he told me he was heading for Kaduna state but he had to disguise out of fear of being kidnapped or murdered. He would enter his community at night and depart before light of dawn for safety. His family once paid ransom to kidnappers and he was not ready to go through the trauma again. He finished with words that will live long in my memory.
“The kidnappers we dealt with were all graduates. They spoke good English. They said they were all unemployed and they too must live somehow. Dr Dele, God save the North. We are in deep trouble.” He was not alone.
I know people who would spend every possible week end in their country homes in Kaduna State until a year ago. That was three years after Jonathan left office and Buhari took over. They don’t go anymore – unless it is absolutely necessary. The Governors of Zamfara and Katsina recently cried out loud that their states were under the control of bandits and kidnappers. The Presidency does not dispute those claims. The Governors of Zamfara and Katsina under Jonathan never cried all the way to Abuja that their states had been taken over by criminals. The fact that the President’s own state is under siege by gun men should have been embarrassing to the people (if that is the right word?) at Aso Rock if commonsense is still present there.
If the President’s men and women have taken any trouble to collate the crime reports daily presented by all our newspapers, they would have discovered an alarming correlation between unemployment and serious crimes in rural and urban communities. Even the murders seemingly committed for rituals have as their goal acquisition of wealth by people whose means of legitimate livelihood is not secure. The North has more of them and it is breeding them faster than any other part of the country.
“The child is the father of the man.
” William Wordsworth, 1770-1850. When in 2006, Dr Oby Ezekwesili was the Federal Minister of Education and the number of millions of children out of school was reported, any demographer could have told President Obasanjo that the bandits and kidnappers of 2019 were already with us waiting to grow up and terrorise us. The five years old boys of 2006 are now lanky eighteen years old lads; the ten years old have turned to men 23 years old. While the very young might be afraid to kidnap, rob and murder, the eighteen-plus, without parental guidance all the time, are not so squeamish. There are millions of them now. That is bad enough. Now we have a new set of future delinquents – ten to thirteen millions – out of school. Most of them will live to reach eighteen and above. Millions of their older brothers identified in 2006 will still be alive when the fresh crop of idle hands gets set to be engaged by Satan. The numbers will swell and the security forces will never be able to cope with the deluge of criminals unless we do something urgently. The problem is national.
But, the North is now experiencing a revolt of the beggars. They no longer wait patiently at the gates of the few wealthy people in their communities. They now have set about redistributing wealth by violence.
No better definition of revolution can be found anywhere. Hitherto, they were afraid of the rich and powerful. Henceforth, the privileged will be afraid of them. It is no coincidence that Kaduna-Abuja expressway has become the frontline of battle.
A good percentage of the over-pampered Northern elite travels through that route on their way to their well-appointed palaces. Next to that is Katsina. It is the home of the newly-rich. More public officials from that state had been alleged to embezzle public funds since Buhari became President than ever before.
The bandits can observe new mansions springing up and they want their share of the loot. Kidnapping will not end any time soon. Like vultures, bandits and kidnappers can literally “smell money”.
They are not even afraid of the security forces. They fight back; and they can afford to select their targets. They know the army is over-stretched and cannot be everywhere. Most important of all, they have nothing to lose. The soldier who dies in conflict with them probably has a wife and children. He really does not want to die. The bandits have nobody waiting for them at home.
That is the nature of the army which Nigerian leaders have assembled and which is now launching a full scale assault on the country – especially the North. They have thrown away the begging bowl; they now confront the rest of us with bullets and guns. We might be engaged in this war for fifty years or more.
THEY JUST CAN’T STOP LYING.
“Wherever God erects a house of prayer/ The Devil always builds a Chapel there/ And, it will be found upon examination/ The latter has a larger congregation. Daniel Defoe, 1661-1731. Buhari meant well when he tried to achieve religious balance in the appointments of his closest officials. I cannot speak about Muslims.
But, the President must have inadvertently strayed into the Devil’s chapel to select his Christian advisers. The Pastors in Aso Rock are probably the worst worshippers of Satan ever to enter the Rock. One claimed that the FG bought millions of cows to feed the kids.
Farmers wonder where he got the cattle from since none of theirs was bought. The second went to the South West saying only blind men can fail to see Buhari’s monumental achievements.
Are Onakakanfo of Yorubaland, Gani Adams, a Professor needing no glasses, as well as everybody in attendance laughed derisively at the Aso Rock Pastor. Has shame or honour gone out of fashion in churches? Is the king of darkness the only one working full time?
FROM VANGUARD
Etichette:
EDUCATION SOLIDARITY,
NIGERIA
Tuesday, May 7, 2019
THIS NIGERIA MUST DIE.....
THIS NIGERIA MUST DIE FOR THE TRUE NIGERIA TO RISE.
Governor Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta State made a startling but sobering declaration recently. In paraphrase, the governor declared that the only thread holding Nigeria together is the indecision or prevarication of the South south states of the Niger Delta zone over where to belong.
According to him, any day the zone decides to join forces with the pro-Biafra protagonists of the Southeast zone, the current Nigeria will cease to exist. In the mind of the newly reborn vocal governor, the life of the present Nigeria hangs in the balance awaiting the final decision of the south south states.
The governor went on to lament the fact that in a nation with about 300 ethnicities, only one ethnic group, the Fulani, controls all the security, political and economic forces available. For him, this will ultimately determine what will tilt the balance on whether Nigeria survives or not.
There is no faulting Governor Okowa’s analysis in this regard. The final decision of the Niger Delta region is crucial towards solving the grave problem of the Nigerian nation. They have the power to tilt the balance and save our nation that is on a perpetual life support. If the people of the zone continue to play their wartime and post-civil war subservient role to the Fulani oligarchs, Nigeria will die eventually but quite slowly. But if they rise and assert their God-given right as equal citizens of Nigeria and not continue to present themselves as slaves to any other region or ethnic group in Nigeria, then they will be respected and our nation will survive.
Currently the minerals underneath their feet are being taken as booty by the oligarchs. They have endured this pillaging for more than fifty years now. If they wish to continue enjoying being pillaged by the conquering oligarchs, let them continue with their indecision. This is most painful as Governor Okowa lamented because while the minerals of the Niger Delta are being carted away and employed in the development and urbanization of western and northern cities, the south south zone is littered with primitive villages that have no hope of seeing any glimmer of civilization until the turn of the fourth millennium. If this is not enough incentive for the south south zone to call off their indecision, then their fate with that of the entire nation of Nigeria is forever sealed and hopeless.
While the minerals of Niger Delta are being “officially” exploited for “common good” of the “the nation” the precious minerals of the north like gold, diamond, uranium, platinum etc, that have the capacity to turn the entire economy of Nigeria around are tactically left in the hands of a few prominent members among the oligarchs who have become international millionaires mining them. If this type of information does not help those in the south south zone make up their minds on where they should belong; if they cannot realize that those they serve as slaves in Nigeria are even their worst enemies, then nobody should weep for them because they are forever doomed.
But back to Governor Okowa’s declaration. The real danger that spells imminent death for the present Nigeria is the concentration of all security apparatuses in the hands of one ethnic group. This is the clear and present danger for the nation of Nigeria. If this concentration had been in the hands of any other ethnic group besides the Fulani, it could be treated as benign. But for it to be in the hand of the Fulanis with all their history of invasion and conquest in Nigeria, the matter is far more serious than ordinary Nigerians are willing to concede.
The only reason why an ethnic group would seize all the security powers of a multiethnic country like Nigeria is because they are planning a conquest. They see war in the horizon. And this is what will kill the present Nigeria sooner than any one of us could imagine. Any day the Fulani that have all the powers in present-day Nigeria decide to use it according to their customary way of invasion and conquest, Nigeria will exist no more.
If Nigerian politicians cannot find ways to decentralize and redistribute Nigerian security apparatuses, we can as well begin a requiem for this hobbled and beleaguered nation of ours. The current Nigeria of power-concentration in the hands of one ethnic group, of election manipulation to perpetuate incompetence in power, of economic blockade and strangulation of one section of the country, of political marginalization of nearly one half of the nation, of booty-taking fifty years after the civil war, etc, etc, must die and die soonest for a new Nigeria to rise.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/oblongmedia.net/2019/05/04/this-nigeria-must-die-for-the-true-nigeria-to-rise/amp/
Monday, May 6, 2019
AN APPEAL FOR SOLIDARITY
Dear Friends,
Last month end we read of a horrible road accident that happened on the Enugu- PH express way where about 9 persons died instantly and many with serious degrees of injuries. During my recent visit to Nigeria last month I drove past this spot severally while going to my birthplace just a couple of kms away and can attest to the dangers. I attach the this my personal request/appeal (the official appeal from the community leader).
I sincerely ask for your assistance in this great distressful time of the community. Our prayers and solidarity are needed. No amount is small because your 10 kobo added to my 5 kobo totals 15kobo and no more 10k. This is the time to show our brotherliness, our love and our being neighbours. The mere fact that people they don’t know and may never meet from far away places and from neighbouring towns like Nenwe (my town) etc are showing Love would play greatly in the psyche and healing of the wounded. Please show love to these our families, our friends, our neighbours and our friend’s friends.
Please contact or send directly your contributions( any amount ) to the community leader :
Ekpulambo Mgbowo Development Union Account number 1016068778 with Zenith Bank PLC Nigeria.
However, my friends who may wish more information and probable clarifications on quick overseas transfer through WORLDREMIT may feel free to in-box me or mail to charlie.mbc@gmail.com or chukwubike@gmail.com
Please be generous to this community that is already stretched to limits
Thanks
Charles O Chukwubike
££££££££$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$€€€€€€
Dear compatriots,
I write to thank all of you for your solidarity and show of concern to Ekpulambo Mgbowo community on the calamity that befell us on the 27th day of April 2019 when we lost not less than (9) persons from one family in Ameta in a ghastly motor accident as they were returning from a marriage ceremony.
As we commiserate with the families of the deceased, let us also remember those who survived the crash with serious and various degrees of broken limbs, hands, skulls and faces and who are in different hospitals in Enugu receiving and waiting to receive treatment because of mounting hospital bills. They are six in number. An operation carried out on Sunday on one of them gulped N1.8 million out of which only N500,000 has been deposited. This money was made available by some of our sons. The rest will be taken care of as soon as funds become available.
The community needs to visit the families of the bereaved with funds to alleviate their suffering in this trying times. I count on the support of all well meaning people of Mgbowo and friends to come to our rescue in this moment of grief. No amount is too small and I assure you of the judicious use of whatever is collected.
Please pay into:
Ekpulambo Mgbowo Development Union
Account number 1016068778
with Zenith Bank PLC
Ekpulambo Mgbowo Development Union
Account number 1016068778
with Zenith Bank PLC
PLEASE FORWARD THIS LETTER TO YOUR CONTACTS AS SOON AS YOU GET IT SO THAT WE DO NOT LOSE ANY OF THE SURVIVORS.
HRH IGWE JOHN AZUBUIKE IBE
Etichette:
NENWE (nol)
Saturday, May 4, 2019
THE DEPATURE OF A GOOD MAN :AUGUSTINE DURU
THE DEPATURE OF A GOOD MAN :AUGUSTINE DURU
It is in human nature and more the African culture to talk good of and show positive emotions about someone when we miss him especially through death, but Augustine was a man talked good of when he was alive. He was a good man he was a man of peace.
My first encounter with Augustine Duru was in the 80s at the Pontifical university in Rome. He was specially endeared and loved by most of the fresh students from Africa because he was always there to give you that brotherly, smile, look, and advise which were and are still the most valuable things to anyone arriving Europe from Africa; things that no amount of money can buy. He was trusted by the younger ones and he never for once disappointed nor deceived anyone. Everyone in our university then would attest to this. He was a brilliant student and a man of the people : He was a good man.
In around 1983 he wedded his beautiful wife Felicia in the city of Marino and most of us in the faculty were very proud (showing love) to attend the wedding of this our great brother who was forming a family.
He was an Igboman to the core: silently working very hard to take great care of his family. A peaceful family that was blessed with two children. In the community he was one of the elders that almost every president of Nigerian associations and Igbo community must have availed themselves with his good guidance and advise during great decisions. During my double tenure as the President of the Igbo Community in Rome/Lazio he didn’t attend all the sessions but there was no great decision that he was not consulted before they were made. He was one of the Igbo community ‘backbones’ and reflecting on those years I reckon that his advise to me then during difficult times were always ,for reconciliation, peace, and non-punitive dictions in most cases he mediated. I trusted him and his counsels . The Igbo community will miss Augustine Duru greatly.
We separated due to work and distance but never forgot each other however our mutual respect continued within us, a respect that was confessed when my brother in-law C.J told me he saw an Igbo girl to marry. When he mentioned her name (AdaezeDuru) I told him he had my blessings , before I could place a phone call to Augustine to ask for the hand of his only daughter he already blessed the marriage on hearing my name and relationship with the suitor. We both probably were secretly looking of a way to continue the good relationship that started in the University and these young people made it for us. I was physically present in his Village home to do all the Igbo traditional marriage rites. He was magnanimous, gentle and all the people who came from Enugu state and Ebonyi to marry Adaeze loved him and the wonderful welcome he gave to us. He gave me Adaeze and I will always respect and protect his princess as I promised him that rainy day in his village. Dear Augustine , As you continue the journey I want to reassure you that Adaeze has continued to represent you and your family well as an authentic Adaeze in our family and your wife Felicia has been a true queen. We shall never disappoint you and your expectations.
As you continue the journey we shall all miss you in the Igbo /Nigerian communities, your wife , children (Angelo and Adaeze) , your grand children, Aaron,Ifeoma, and Ashley will miss you. Nenwe, Enugu and Ebonyi people will miss your smiles. The great Owerri community will miss you , but we are all consoled that one day all good men will meet again.
May your gentle soul rest in peace with God, Amen.
From your Friend and Inlaw
Chief Charles Okey. Chukwubike
(Anyanecheoha)
Rome Italy
02/05/2019
It is in human nature and more the African culture to talk good of and show positive emotions about someone when we miss him especially through death, but Augustine was a man talked good of when he was alive. He was a good man he was a man of peace.
My first encounter with Augustine Duru was in the 80s at the Pontifical university in Rome. He was specially endeared and loved by most of the fresh students from Africa because he was always there to give you that brotherly, smile, look, and advise which were and are still the most valuable things to anyone arriving Europe from Africa; things that no amount of money can buy. He was trusted by the younger ones and he never for once disappointed nor deceived anyone. Everyone in our university then would attest to this. He was a brilliant student and a man of the people : He was a good man.
In around 1983 he wedded his beautiful wife Felicia in the city of Marino and most of us in the faculty were very proud (showing love) to attend the wedding of this our great brother who was forming a family.
He was an Igboman to the core: silently working very hard to take great care of his family. A peaceful family that was blessed with two children. In the community he was one of the elders that almost every president of Nigerian associations and Igbo community must have availed themselves with his good guidance and advise during great decisions. During my double tenure as the President of the Igbo Community in Rome/Lazio he didn’t attend all the sessions but there was no great decision that he was not consulted before they were made. He was one of the Igbo community ‘backbones’ and reflecting on those years I reckon that his advise to me then during difficult times were always ,for reconciliation, peace, and non-punitive dictions in most cases he mediated. I trusted him and his counsels . The Igbo community will miss Augustine Duru greatly.
We separated due to work and distance but never forgot each other however our mutual respect continued within us, a respect that was confessed when my brother in-law C.J told me he saw an Igbo girl to marry. When he mentioned her name (AdaezeDuru) I told him he had my blessings , before I could place a phone call to Augustine to ask for the hand of his only daughter he already blessed the marriage on hearing my name and relationship with the suitor. We both probably were secretly looking of a way to continue the good relationship that started in the University and these young people made it for us. I was physically present in his Village home to do all the Igbo traditional marriage rites. He was magnanimous, gentle and all the people who came from Enugu state and Ebonyi to marry Adaeze loved him and the wonderful welcome he gave to us. He gave me Adaeze and I will always respect and protect his princess as I promised him that rainy day in his village. Dear Augustine , As you continue the journey I want to reassure you that Adaeze has continued to represent you and your family well as an authentic Adaeze in our family and your wife Felicia has been a true queen. We shall never disappoint you and your expectations.
As you continue the journey we shall all miss you in the Igbo /Nigerian communities, your wife , children (Angelo and Adaeze) , your grand children, Aaron,Ifeoma, and Ashley will miss you. Nenwe, Enugu and Ebonyi people will miss your smiles. The great Owerri community will miss you , but we are all consoled that one day all good men will meet again.
May your gentle soul rest in peace with God, Amen.
From your Friend and Inlaw
Chief Charles Okey. Chukwubike
(Anyanecheoha)
Rome Italy
02/05/2019
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