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Showing posts with label Common Good. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Common Good. Show all posts

Friday 28 April 2023

Vultures From Within

Vulture perching on a tree stump in front of a castle
Image credit: Pixabay


No one leads,
No structure or strategy,
Voices from all around,
Reasonable voices can't be heard or sort,
No one listening,
All are talking and loudly; 

No one believes no one,
Everyone is a fighter or a leader or a spokesperson;
Everyone strive to shout louder than everyone,
The loudest get the jeep, the house and the bloody money;

The violent get their belly filled,
The gentle go hungry or forced to join the violent;
The fight is mostly from within,
Instigated by the controller from without,
Fighting for the $billions in the bush,
Wasting the $millions in hand;

Monday 27 March 2023

Voices of Hopelessness

                                                        Image: Courtesy pexels.com

For the average youth and the silent majority of older Nigerians who dream of a future for Nigeria which will work for all Nigerians their voices got willingly muffled. They were silenced by the few who knew no civilised way to win in what was supposed to be a democratic electoral process. For them the future is uncertain. Their already inhuman existence is made worse by feelings of hopelessness and despair caused by the BIVAStarized open rigging of the just concluded 2023 general election.

The government and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) are not pretending not to be part of the show of shame. It appears that Prof. Mahmood Yakubu sold millions of Nigerians into slavery for thirty pieces of silver. This man is not a Nigerian in essence.  At this stage of Nigeria's bumpy journey to a democratic system guided by respect for the rule of law and established elections administration process, it is right to expect the INEC chairman to be seen to have overseen a process which can be adjudged to be fair, credible and free. He failed woefully.

Thursday 1 September 2022

Behind the Cloak of Chieftancy

Abonnema council of chiefs in 1895. Aboonema was founded in 1882
Founding members of the Abonnema Council of Chiefs

Note: This article was first published on 28/08/2011

Chieftaincy institutions will continue to evolve. More so in some communities in the Niger Delta area of Nigeria where the prerequisites for an individual's elevation to that erstwhile revered position has changed quite significantly recently. Recent key changes we are experiencing are not the type that strengthens a community because they occur in violation of the constitution of these communities with respect to the way individuals are accepted as members of the council of chiefs.

The chieftaincy institution is the most important one in the social and political life of these communities and its strength or weakness, therefore, reflects the fitness of the community. A community's fitness is its ability to create and manage positive change and/or its ability to withstand and manage changes that are not favourable to its long term survival.