Friday, August 26, 2016


Polish Olympian Sells Rio Medal To Save Boy Battling Cancer

"If you help me, my silver medal may turn out to be more precious than gold," wrote the discus throwing champion on Facebook.

Piotr Malachowski of Poland competes in the Men's Discus Throw Final on Day 8 of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games
Piotr Malachowski competing in the Men's Discus Throw Final at the Rio Games

Italy earthquake: Death toll rises to at least 159

  • 24 August 2016
  • From the section Europe
Media captionThe earthquake caused houses to crash down the hillside in Pescara del Tronto, as Damian Grammaticas reports
At least 159 people have been killed and 368 injured in an earthquake that hit a mountainous area of central Italy, civil protection officials say.
The magnitude-6.2 quake struck at 03:36 (01:36 GMT), 100km (65 miles) north-east of Rome, not far from Perugia.
At least 86 of the dead were in the historic town of Amatrice, where the mayor said three-quarters of the town was destroyed, and in nearby Accumoli.
Many people are still believed to be buried under rubble.
Rescue teams are using heavy lifting equipment and their bare hands and authorities said the search for survivors would continue through the night.
Media captionSister Marianna: "I went outside to ask for help, but no one heard me"
There were cheers in the village of Pescara del Tronto when an eight-year-old girl was pulled alive from the rubble after being trapped for 17 hours.
Earlier, Prime Minister Matteo Renzi warned the toll could rise as he visited the area.
He had previously paid tribute to the volunteers and civil defence officials who rushed to the scene in the middle of the night and used their bare hands to dig for survivors.
He promised "no family, no city, no hamlet will be left behind".
The tremor was felt across Italy, from Bologna in the north to Naples in the south. There have been dozens of aftershocks.
Hardest hit were the small towns and villages in the mountainous area where the regions of Umbria, Lazio and Le Marche meet.
As well as the 86 dead in the two towns of Amatrice and Accumoli, 34 people are known to have been killed in Le Marche province, including in the neighbouring villages of Arquata del Tronto and Pescara del Tronto.
  • Health minister Beatrice Lorenzin said there were many children among the dead
  • In Amatrice the missing include three nuns and four guests at their convent
  • In Accumoli the dead include a mother, father and their two young sons; rescuers had heard the screams of the mother and one of the children and had frantically tried to reach them in time, Italian media reported
  • Mayor Stefano Petrucci told Ansa that not a house in the town was fit for habitation, and they would have to set up tents to house everyone
  • Almost all houses in Pescara del Tronto have collapsed, the local mayor said
  • In Arquata, a grandmother saved her two grandchildren, aged four and seven, by pulling them under a bed with her
Image copyright AP
Image caption Aerial images showed the extent of the damage in Amatrice
Image copyright AP
Image caption A rescued woman in Amatrice, which appears to have suffered the most fatalities
Italy's National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology said it had recorded more than 200 aftershocks by 15:00 (13:00 GMT) on Wednesday.
The country is no stranger to earthquakes: in 2009 a tremor killed more than 300 people in L'Aquila and in May 2012 two tremors nine days apart killed more than 20 people in the northern Emilia Romagna region.
Rescue teams from around the country have been sent to the affected region.
The area is mountainous and access is difficult. Tent camps are being set up for those who need shelter, while others will be accommodated in buildings such as gymnasiums.
The national blood donation service has appealed for donors to come forward.
Many of the people affected were on holiday in the region. Some were in Amatrice for a festival to celebrate a famous local speciality - amatriciana bacon and tomato sauce.

Why is Italy at risk of earthquakes? By Jonathan Amos

Earthquakes are an ever-present danger for those who live along the Apennine mountain range in Italy.
Through the centuries thousands have died as a result of tremors equal to, or not much bigger than, the event that struck in the early hours of Wednesday. The modern respo

Thursday, August 25, 2016

Check Out Amazing 5-Seater Helicopter Built by a Biafran Boy from Igala with Local Material (Photos)

Biafra-Chopper
This kind of raw talent needs to be harnessed. This secondary school student reportedly built a five-seater helicopter using locally sourced materials. He designed this right at his backyard in his village in Igala land, Kogi state. Biafra-Chopper
If such a young boy can build this with scarce resources and in an unfavorable condition, imagine what he will do when he has everything at his disposal.
Biafra-Chopper2Biafra-Chopper3Biafra-Chopper4Biafra-Chopper6
I Will Never Renounce Biafra – Nnamdi Kanu 
  • Nnamdi Kanu, the detained leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra seems not tired of the struggle as he has spoken again.
  • Through two of the organisation’s spokespersons, Kanu replied the Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Niger Delta.
The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has again replied the Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Niger Delta (MEND) insisting that unlike MEND, it is not ready to fall to the federal government.
IPOB, in a report by The Sun, said Nnamdi Kanu, their leader who
had been in detention for many months now, is not ready to surrender to the government or renounce his dream whether in secret or in the open. It warned MEND to stop making deceitful, frivolous, malicious and baseless statements. In a statement by two spokespersons of IPOB, Emma Mmezu and Dr Clifford Iroanya, the group said MEND was working with the federal government to frustrate the struggle to gain Biafra.
Kanu Biafra 2
IPOB, in a report by The Sun, said Nnamdi Kanu, their leader who had been in detention for many months now, is not ready to surrender to the government or renounce his dream whether in secret or in the open. It warned MEND to stop making deceitful, frivolous, malicious and baseless statements. In a statement by two spokespersons of IPOB, Emma Mmezu and Dr Clifford Iroanya, the group said MEND was working with the federal government to frustrate the struggle to gain Biafra.
IPOB said: “We hereby remind MEND that we are into Biafra restoration in order to free the enslaved people of Biafra and by extension other parts of Nigeria that are under the hegemony of Hausa-Fulani domination. “We are


BIAFRA

Stephanie Findlay is Canadian reporter working for Agence France-Presse based in Lagos, Nigeria. She is a Regional freelance Journalist and AFP journalist, Formerly correspondent in Pretoria and South Africa (September 2012 – July 2015), Toronto Star (September 2011 – September 2012), Maclean’s Magazine (June 2010 – September 2011) and News editor for the Ubyssey (August 2008 – June 2009).
On 18th May 2016, a media agency, Correspondent.afp.com made a publication covering empirical observation toured by Stephanie Findlay in Igweocha (Portharcourt) Biafra land. The observation confirms issues bordering on Hausa/Fulani herdsmen.killings, IPOB massacre, etc. According to her, Port Harcourt is ready to do anything necessary to welcome Biafra.
Contrary to the view of people escalating that Portharcourt is not part of Biafra, the whole corners of Igweocha is filled up with posters, graffiti etc. Just to express their enthusiasm to welcome Biafra. In her view, she said
” Unlike in Abuja and Lagos, news of Kanu’s trial dominates the front pages of newspapers and radio airwaves here and pro-Biafra graffiti and posters are commonplace on the streets”.
” In the wider southeast, Kanu’s IPOB group seems to enjoy VIP status”, ” With Kanu behind bars, IPOB is suspicious of strangers, fearing they are agents of the federal government”
She went on to explain how Igweocha is filled up with Biafran Security. Majorly, all commercial drivers in Igweocha are IPOB men “IPOB’s chief of security advises me to get rid of the Yoruba driver in case he’s a spy for the federal government. It’s “for your own safety,” he said, assigning us a new Igbo driver and an IPOB bodyguard”
” Our new driver certainly had a cavalier attitude towards police. At several checkpoints, he hung out the window of his luxury Lexus SUV and shouted Kanu’s trademark phrase “the zoo must fall” — the “zoo” being Nigeria. But surprisingly, instead of getting arrested, police officers broke into smiles and shouted “God bless you!” ” On the way back from Aba our driver started blasting Rod Stewart’s “Rhythm Of My Heart”, turned on the hazard lights and started driving into oncoming traffic to beat the rush, a privilege usually reserved for Nigeria’s “big men” — top politicians, army heads of staff and oil executives”.

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

news

Ohanaeze Ndigbo accuses President Buhari of being anti-Igbo

Ohanaeze Ndigbo accuses President Buhari of being anti-Igbo
Muhammadu Buhari
Following the continued detention of the Leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, Nnamdi Kanu, the youth wing of the pan-Igbo group, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, has accused President Muhammadu Buhari of being anti Igbo and urged him to release the detained leader, without further delay.
The youth group wondered why the Federal Government would continue to detain Kanu who has never taken up arms against the state while members of the dreaded Boko Haram terror group are being serially released from detention.
In a statement signed by its National President, Mazi Okechukwu Isiguzoro, insisted that the continued detention of the IPOB leader even against court orders, is the cause of the escalating tension and ill-feelings in the South East and part of South South zone, and portrays President Buhari’s administration as anti-Igbo.
It further stated that said intelligence reports available to the Igbo youths group indicated that there could be a total breakdown of law and order in the entire South East and South South zones if Kanu is not released soon.
“It beats our imagination that terrorists who have been responsible for the death of innocent Nigerians are being released while unarmed freedom fighters are kept behind the bars against court orders.
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“This bias poses serious threat to our peace and national unity, and we hope the President will address it before it becomes too late,” the statement said.
On the tussle over the Abia state governorship position, Ohanaeze youth council argued that the Abia Charter of Equity which recommends power rotation among the senatorial zones in the state should be respected for justice and fair play.
“Anything that truncates the zoning arrangement in the state could pose security threat which will not be in the interest of anybody. As Igbo youths, we can’t afford to sit back and watch any Igbo state put into avoidable crisis, hence our call for the Abia Charter of Equity to be respected by all the parties.
“Removing Gov. Okezie Ikpeazu who is the first and only governor from Ukwa/Ngwa zone amounts to shortchanging the entire Abia South zone as other zones has produced two-term governors. We advise that the wise decision of the founding fathers of the state who put in place the power rotation arrangement be respected to give peace a chance.”



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Biafra impossible through court –Prof. Ben Nwabueze


By Omoniyi Salaudeen
IN Nigeria’s elusive search for unity among its separate ethnic nationalities, Professor Ben Nwabueze, a foremost constitutional lawyer, lends his voice to the agitation for restructuring, saying it is the only way to go.
Looking way back to the days of Nigeria’s struggle for independence, would you say this is the kind of country our forebears had in mind while they were negotiating for self governance?
My answer will be no; not exactly. They had a vision of Nigeria as a great country. They had in mind a country that will become one nation. At that time, everything was focused on one united nation. But that particular vision of having Nigeria as one united nation has not been realized and the prospect of that realization seems to dim. They also had in mind a vision of a prosperous nation and a leader in the African continent. We may say, yes, the vision of prosperity has been realized to some extent in that things that were not available or possible during the time of independence are now possible. Up till 1948, there was no university in the country. The University College was established in 1948 by transforming Yaba College into the University College of the University of London.
Today, the number of universities in the country both federal and state is on a steady increase. That shows you the transformation that has taken place. At that time, very few people had an idea of what television and radio was all about. When Nigeria Broadcasting Service was introduced, there were only a few people who could avoid radio box in their houses. I recall the story of some thieves who broke into a house in Onitsha, packing this and packing that.
While that was going on, the Nigeria Broadcasting Service, which had gone on recess suddenly came on air saying, ‘Here is Nigeria Broadcasting Service’ and the thieves jumped out of the window thinking that somebody was inside the house. This shows you that there has been tremendous development. But then, couldn’t we have done more than this over this period of time? Is that enough with the amount of resources available to the country?   The short answer to your question is that the vision of the founding fathers has not been realized. Development has taken place, but certainly very much short of what is expected.
Will it be right to trace the mutual suspicion that exists among different ethnic nationalities to the way and manner the founding fathers played their politics in the immediate post independence era?
In the immediate post independence period, the founding fathers you were referring to, which I suppose means Zik, Awolowo, Sardauna, Akintola, Okotie-Eboh and others were flushed out by the military. Sardauna was killed in the January 15, 1966 coup. Zik was out of the country at the time and came back later but no function for him. Tafawa Balewa was killed, Akintola was killed. So, the founding fathers were no longer in control. They were out of the picture. The military takeover in January 1966 helped to plunge the country into the kind of chaos and darkness that we are in today. What the military takeover in January 1966 did to us as a country was the destruction and undermining of our value system. The story has not been fully told. It nearly practically destroyed our values, the values these founding fathers inherited from the British colonialists. Today, as far as our values are concerned, no leaders either military or civilian could be compared with Zik, Awolowo, Sarrdauna and Tafawa Balewa. The values we have today are all money-related. That was not so before the coup. Today, money dominates our values. This is the tragedy. If we have a leadership that is concerned with bringing back the old values in place of money-rated values, then things could be better. I don’t believe it is impossible. It is difficult, but it is not impossible.
Last week some stakeholders marked the 50th remembrance of Aguiyi Ironsi and Adekunle Fajuyi amidst outpouring of emotions. Issues were raised over the motive of the Northerners in the army who staged the counter coup to avenge the killing of their kinsmen in the January 15, 1966. Couldn’t we have lived beyond the past as a people at 56? What is really happening?
These were two important personalities, especially Fajuyi who sacrificed himself in order to maintain a principle. Can that happen today? Now, to your question as to what is happening. There was a vision in the past, but I don’t remember that tribalism and nepotism really shaped governance in the country as we have today. I cannot think of a Federal Government in those days making 41 appointments and 80 percent of it going to one section of the country. It is unthinkable. In those days, they would balance it, taking cognizance of the division among the tribes. If you are making appointment into the federal level, you have to take that into account. That was how things were done, which helped to sustain the unity of the country. The idea of 41 appointments with 80 percent of it going to the North alone is unthinkable. It never happened in the past.
So, you can see the difference between the outlook of founding fathers and the outlook of the leaders today. We are no longer pursuing the idea of one united country. We are now talking about Northernisation and Islamisation of the country. So, there are agitations everywhere. Those who feel marginalized by the pattern of sharing of what you might call the national cake agitate. They become disaffected and take to the streets. The idea of Biafra was revived. It does not mean that Igbo really want to secede from the country. They have tried it and they know the futility of it. What they are doing is to protest against the unfairness in the sharing of the so-called national cake. And whoever introduced this experience in the sharing of the cake must take responsibility for what is going on today. We should not blame people who agitate; we should blame the people who caused the feeling of disaffection. They should take responsibility for the agitations and what might follow. We don’t know yet, but I believe somehow the country is on the path of disintegration.
Is it possible to trace the genesis of distrust among the ethnic nationalities to the first military intervention in politics which led to the killing of Northern politicians?
The distrust within the ethnic groups had been there before the coup. It is inbuilt because of the differences among the ethnic groups in their character, in their feelings, in their mode of life, in their customs. Because of these, the distrust was there. The job of nation building is how to harmonize and reduce these tendencies. That is essential challenge for nation building. You must not ignore the fact that these ethnic groups differ in so many aspects. But then, instead of trying to close the gap created and bring them together, what military rule did was to increase the differences. There was so much money made available by discovery of oil, which was not there before. Oil was discovered during the time of military rule and that altered everything. There was so much money but the problem was how to spend it.
People tried to help themselves to grab it. And that is why we have today separatist movements in the Niger Delta. We are spending money without taking cognizance of the damage oil exploration has done to us. There are legitimate grounds for complaining. You may not agree with their methods, but they have genuine reasons to agitate. Destruction of oil installation has affected the economy. Production of oil has gone down and this is complicated by the falling price in the global market.  We are producing far less because of destruction by the militants. We need a leader who can rise above all these, not a leader who will stay in Abuja, saying he is going to deal with the Niger Delta militants ruthlessly. In my view, that is not the way to go about it at all. The question of dealing with them ruthlessly is a question of addressing the cause of their grievances.
If this trend is not checked and nipped in the bud, what might likely be the end result of these agitations on this nation?
We have seen the effect already. Every day, you cannot get power because the gas supply to the power plants has been cut off. Sometimes we don’t have light for a whole week. So, it is affecting everything.
If the agitation in the Niger Delta is sustained, the Biafra struggle is sustained, and the Boko Haram insurgency in the North east is not contained, what is the possibility of survival of Nigeria as one indivisible country?
That is the big question mark. Nigeria may disintegrate. But we must continue hoping, we must not lose faith in ourselves. We must continue to hope that somehow this phase will pass.
So, effectively Nigeria is already on the path of disintegration?
Yes, it is. It is a process and is already going on. If we are not able to terminate the process and we allow it to continue to go on, we may disintegrate. But I hope and pray that it will not go on like this.
This then brings to question the vision of President Muhammadu Buhari who fought for the presidency for four consecutive times to get there. Is it for his lack of vision that the economy of the country is on the reverse trend?
You are right; he fought for the presidency in three successive elections and he persisted. He failed the first one, failed the second, failed the third and finally won the fourth attempt. One would have thought that the man who went through three elections and emerged at the fourth attempt would have a vision of what he wants to do for the country not advancement of some personal agenda or sectional interests.
It is a complete betrayal of our expectation as to what motivated him to go on fighting. What we have seen is a complete betrayal of our expectations. Nobody would have thought that the man who fought four successive elections to become president would be there only to advance some sectional interests.  It is difficult to reconcile. But that is what we have. We must continue to hope that the trend will be reversed and that he will give up this tendency to advance the Northernisation and Islamisation agenda. But what is happening today is clear that his agenda is Northernisation and Islamisation of the country. If he realizes the danger that is implicit in the pursuit of that agenda and that it contradicts the expectation of the people, he will look into the report of the 2014 national conference and implement it.
There is a loud agitation for restructuring almost everywhere in the South, whereas a sizeable number of people in the North still believe that the country should remain the way it is configured at present. What do you think is the fear of the Northern people about the idea of structuring?
Their own thinking is different. Their main thinking is supremacy. If we restructure, they will lose supremacy. If we restructure, the power of the Federal Government will go down. They can maintain this dominance only, if the powers of the Federal Government are retained as they are now. Restructuring means not only altering territorial structure, but also altering power structure. At the moment, the Federal Government at the centre is too powerful and the whole idea of restructuring is to reduce it to at least what it was in the First Republic, which they don’t want because that would affect their ambition to control the country. But they must realise that they can’t go on resisting this. We cannot continue with the arrangement that gives to the Federal Government excessive powers. We must reduce it and redistribute it to the six geo-political zones. It must be done. They don’t want any diminishing in the powers of the Federal Government at the centre which they want to control. They don’t want to control nothing but they want to control something.
So, what should the concerned stakeholders do to get out of this quagmire?
They should continue the agitation. That is all. They should continue the agitation employing all constitutional means. The hand must be forced to accept restructuring.
Going back to the Biafra agitation, there is on one hand a section of the agitators who prefer to toe the line of constitutional means, which you have just suggested to achieve their demands. According to the report, they have gone to court to seek intervention in their struggle for self determination. There is yet another group which believes in violent protest to achieve the same goal. Which of these two options is more viable?
I don’t believe in violent method. I don’t think it will pay off. It has not paid off in the past. The secession of Biafra for three years didn’t bring any dividend to us. Agitation by means of court action I do not think also will achieve the purpose. If you go to court, what do you expect the court to decide in a case like this? Will the court tell you that you have the right to self determination? What is self determination? That is a very ambiguous term. If you go to court to say you want self determination, let’s assume they grant you the right to self determination, how do you enforce it? Due process or constitutional process is not really about going to court. There are internal and constitutional processes that can force a change.
In what way? Could you define that constitutional process?
There are many of them. There are many processes that can be used to force the hands of government. Impeachment is one of them.
You mean impeachment of the president?
Yes. I don’t advocate that, but if you can muster the necessary majority and you impeach him that will teach everybody a lesson. There are other constitutional means of forcing the hands of a government that is recalcitrant. I don’t believe in violence, but it is unfortunate that they are following this trend. This country cannot progress without restructuring. It has to be restructured. Restructuring means reducing the powers of the Federal Government at the centre.
But some members of the Arewa Consultative Forum are saying that restructuring could be achieved through the National Assembly. Is that the proper way to go?
 You mean constitution amendment?
Sort of…
Constitution amendment is not what we need. What we need is a brand new constitution drafted by the people at a referendum. The 1999 Constitution is no constitution in a proper sense of the term. It is a document imposed on us by the military. The people of Nigeria had nothing to do with it; it was done by the military. It is just a mere piece of paper, nobody regards it. It doesn’t enjoy sacrosanctity like the American Constitution.
What do you feel about the goings on in the National Assembly regarding the issue of budget padding vis-a-viz the anti-corruption of this government?
Initially, it was the Presidency that was accused of padding. Now, it is the National Assembly, specifically the House of Representatives that is being accused of padding. This whole idea about constituency project is really condemnable and I condemn it in very strong terms in some of my writings.  When you investigate the whole concept and practice of constituency project, you see that it is really very terrible. The former Chairman of the Revenue Allocation and Fiscal Commission who was an engineer wrote a report on this, that it is chilling, the amount of corruption that had been perpetrated through the so-called constituency project.
But I am surprised that in spite of what has been said, they are still engaging in constituency projects. Not defined though, but still in the same concept trying to siphon money. You want constituency project to improve agriculture but end up using it to improve your own farm. We don’t know all the fact yet but it gives you sheer agony and anguish. What is done in the name of constituency project is unknown anywhere in the world. Yet we are still trying to keep it alive by padding the budget. Let’s see what we come out of the ongoing controversy about padding.

Buhari, it’s not the  best time to attack IBB  
By  Chijioke Nwosu
Give it to President Muhammadu Buhari, just about 15 months in the saddle, he has learnt so fast the art of politics or probably, all these years he was struggling to be the president, he had undergone political tutelage on how to keep people busy by diverting their attention in other directions when serious issues of deeper concern are on his table.
A cursory glance at his policies will reveal that when the complaints of people were reaching high heavens over the excruciating economic situation in the country, he would come up with issues that tend to distract the people and keep them busy talking momentarily ,so that they forget their sorrows and keep trudging on.
This strategy resonated penultimate week when the  Naira depreciated to an all time low, exchanging more than N350 to one dollar, causing more factories to close shop and more Nigerians to join the endless queue in the labour market.
More so, this played up when international aid agencies were bitter over the hunger and malnourishment of children in the Northeast and when the nation was experiencing its worst electricity supply capacity in years.
For the inability of the government to steer the ship of the nation’s economy in the right direction, the president has always looked for an excuse and who to hold responsible. It has always been excuses upon excuses. Policy summersaults. JAMB would give admission today and tomorrow the Ministry of Education would cancel it. Ministers openly disagree on the same issue. While the finance minister says the economy is on technical recession, the national planning minister would disagree.
Truth is no more a home run in Nigeria and has plunged to the deepest abyss. The entire society has been completely monetized, values and  norms eroding fast. The value of our society has fantastically been  eroded beyond revitalization and if a good leadership is not enthroned, a better societal reorientation cannot be achieved. Yet, he is looking for excuses. That is why his rating across the globe is nose-diving.
When he assumed office, Nigerians thought they were in for good times, but it hasn’t taken long for them to realize that the change mantra was a ruse.  Instead, they have been engulfed in crisis and threats of disintegration. In today’s Nigeria, every direction one turns  is crisis and mezzanine leadership. People flock around those they perceive as haves for favours of all kinds rather than going to constituted authorities. The favour recipients, in groups, can dangerously be brainwashed into private armies. Nigeria is drifting at hypersonic speed and the target destination could obviously be either a federated Nigeria or an apocalyptic split.
As the wailing in the country continues, the president continues to look for whom to pick on and this time, decided that former military president, Ibrahim Babangida, was an interesting target. And based on probable cause, this is a clear and present danger to IBB’s life.
In an interview published in the current edition of The Interview magazine, Buhari said IBB overthrew him to escape probe.
According to him, he was removed from office 31 years ago, because he planned to purge the military hierarchy of corruption. Specifically, he said senior military leaders, led by former military president, General Ibrahim Babangida(rtd) and General Aliyu Gusau(rtd), masterminded and effected his ouster on August 27, 1985, to save themselves from a probe, which was hanging over their heads like the proverbial sword of Damocles. Buhari said he championed the probe via a proposal he wrote to the Army Council.
He said it was after he tabled the proposal for the sacking of Gusau, then Director of Military Intelligence, that Babangida embarked on a coup knowing that he (IBB) was in line for a probe.
“I learnt that Aliyu Gusau, who was in charge of intelligence, took import license from the ministry of commerce which was in charge of supplies and gave it to Alhaji Mai Deribe. It was worth N100,000. It was a lot of money at that time. I confronted them and took the case to the Army Council in a memo… I wanted Gusau punished,” Buhari said.
This is an orchestrated total blackmail and being angry with a dog to kill it if Buhari can unfortunately and sadly evoke an event of 31years ago and see perhaps a time for vengeance. Next is probably to cause the arrest of IBB, Gusau, including Obasanjo, T Y Danjuma etc. for phantom reasons and a shutdown of several media outlets. It is unfortunate that President Buhari should choose this time to ruminate on the ugly past. He is rewriting history and equally making history to walk on its head.
This is not  time he should dissipate energy on frivolities and idle talk. This is a time that demands so much from him; a time he should roll up his sleeves and work hard to see how he would remove the forced wrinkles on the faces of Nigerians who are more disillusioned over his style of governance.
If Buhari is not seeing the real danger of disunity of Nigeria, which most Nigerians are glancing and staring at, reasoning inductively and deductively and yet remains clueless with no capacity to go head on to confront the virus to preserve unity, obviously he may suffer a repeat of his failed administrative idealism. Buhari can look over his shoulders to see Republic of Biafra emerging. It’s no more a mirage. If Buhari can’t spearhead the renegotiation of sovereignty, he must give way for someone else who has the interest of Nigeria at heart to come on board.
A peaceful resolution is still possible to arrest the imminent danger of disintegration and a two-year interim national government to renegotiate sovereignty is the only option available, otherwise forget the brand Nigeria.
The question Buhari ought to have asked is why was there jubilation across the country when Nigerian heard the voice of Sani Abacha that announced the overthrow of his government? Why was it that his government became so unpopular in less than 18 months? Why is it that 31 years after , Nigerians hardly looked back with nostalgia on that government?
In retrospect, Nigerians usually cite, the good old First Republic, first six years of Nigeria’s birth and three years of our republic, the existing cities then bore the names of great Nigerians from all walks of life, from the ethnic nations that makes up our nation-state and from the several political  and  ideological divides. In as much as the country was crafted fraudulently and corruptly, there was hope then for a country and nation building. Not anymore.
The overthrow of Buhari in August 1985 was timely to save the system from total collapse. That government was seen as the darkest period in  Nigeria’s political history outside the Nigeria/Biafra internecine war and so, no one wanted to remember it. It was a time  Nigerians queued to buy milk and other items that were categorized as essential commodities. In fact, back then, frustration and hunger were rife.
And now similarly, his ethnocentric and nepotistic style of  governance is anti-federal character, anti-Nigeria, anti-Ndigbo , anti-Hausa (only in favour Fulani), anti-Christian, anti-establishment, anti-basic needs of life, anti his own policies, anti his own government’s economic team and in fact, anti all facets of life. Terrible!
Nigerians know that our president was being economical with truth when he alleged that IBB removed him because he was about to probe former and Gusau. The fact was that his government had choked up Nigerians and as they suffocated and prayed for God’s intervention, IBB showed up. His coming was answer to their prayers.
IBB had also stated the reason for the coup, which Nigerians believe and not what President Buhari was telling them about the coup.
According to the former military president, there was nothing in the memo, which Buhari submitted to the Army Council. “Don’t forget that I was one of Buhari’s closest aides. I was the Chief of Army Staff. So, I had an important position, an important role to play within that administration. I don’t think it had to do with a memo”, Babangida was quoted to have said.
Except for diversionary reasons, this isn’t a good time for Buhari to attack IBB and unearth a history that the people didn’t want to hear. During his electioneering campaigns last year, Buhari went to IBB for endorsement and political support and IBB obliged him. That should have meant a lot to  Buhari.
•Brady Chijioke Nwosu is Imo PDP governorship aspirant and writes from Okai Eziama.
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Tuesday, August 9, 2016


‘Unmask real faces behind Niger Delta Avengers’



Niger Delta Avengers
Niger Delta Avengers
Simon Utebor, Yenagoa
The President of the splinter group of the Ijaw Youth Council Worldwide, Mr. Elvis Donkemezuo, has called on the security agencies to intensify efforts to fish out real faces behind the Niger Delta Avengers’ mask.
Donkemezuo, who made the call in a statement on Monday, urged the NDA to leave IYC and the Ijaw nation out of their antics.
He said his group had been intimated on reports in an online medium containing a statement from a faceless group, the Reformed Niger Delta Avengers, by a pseudonym, Cynthia Whyte, that named some Niger Delta leaders as sponsors of the NDA.
He said, “But for the fact that our noble organisation, the IYC, was mentioned in relation to our erstwhile interim President, Udengs Eradiri, which the RNDA claimed  is also known as ‘Brigadier General Murdoch Agbinibo’ and ‘serves as the NDA’s chief spokesman’ and the enormity of our ignoring  this lame attempt at linking the IYC to the hostilities of the Avengers, we would not have dignified them with a response.
“Nonetheless, given that our silence would mislead the unsuspecting public and embolden the source of the publication,  we have decided to set the records straight.
“For the sake of clarity, we want to state unequivocally that Eradiri is no longer the President of the IYC. IYC is not Eradiri’s private estate. Therefore, we urge those who have personal or business quarrels with him not to drag the name of the Council into their tussles.
“The IYC and the entire Ijaw nation distance ourselves from the NDA and any splinter group from it as well as all their sponsors. Moreso, for the avoidance of doubt, we want the world to know that although we do not know who the NDA are, we are confident that they are not Ijaw people and do not speak for the Ijaw or the Niger Delta region.”
Meanwhile, the embattled President, IYC, Mr. Udengs Eradiri, has distanced himself from an allegation that he was a member and spokesperson for the NDA.
Eradiri said as a leader of the influential Ijaw socio-cultural group, he had on many occasions spoken against a violent approach to achieving the Niger Delta struggle.
He insisted that he would continue to speak against the militant group with a firm belief that only dialogue, with genuine leaders, would resolve the problems in the region.
A NDA splinter group, the RNDA, had in a statement claimed that Eradiri was speaking for the group using the pseudonym ‘Brigadier-General’ Murdoch Agbinibo.
However,  Eradiri, who spoke in Yenagoa, on Sunday, said he was not surprised that his name was being dragged in the mire because of his unwavering position on the region’s crisis and the way forward.
The IYC boss accused the promoters of the Movement for Emancipation of Niger Delta of deliberate efforts to blackmail him for opposing their “Aaron team.”
Eradiri said, “I have no business whatsoever with the Niger Delta Avengers. I am the President of the Ijaw Youth Council, the largest youth organisation in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria and not spokesman for NDA.
“Since the splinter group of the Niger Delta Avengers said they have broken away and repented from their old ways, I call on them to come out in the open and identify themselves openly instead of still using pseudonym such as Cynthia Whyte to issue press statements.
“Any discerning mind will know that the said statement purportedly naming sponsors of Avengers was issued by the promoters of the Aaron II MEND negotiation with the Federal Government.
“Their grouse against me is because I said in my recent interviews that MEND Aaron II team does have the mandate of the Ijaw and other Niger Delta people to negotiate with the Federal Government. They are desperate because of the lack of credibility in what they are doing.”