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As Nigeria’s 1999 Constitution Amendment Begins, By Jerome-Mario Utomi

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With the House of Representatives recent invitation to the general public, executive and judicial bodies, traditional institutions, political parties, civil society organizations, professional bodies and all other stakeholders, to public hearing on the ongoing amendments to the nation Nigeria 1999 Constitution, the process has graduated from mere rhetoric to reality.

According to the statement by the Chief Press Secretary to the Deputy Speaker, Umar Puma, titled ‘Constitution review: Reps to Begin Zonal Public Hearings 1st June,’ It is scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday in the six geopolitical zones. The Senate had already begun a parallel exercise.

While this awareness is viewed as welcoming, the question that is as important as the public hearing itself is; what will be our inputs as well as expectations as Nigerians? What are those areas that Nigeria and Nigeria have expressed concerns? And most importantly, how do we have the constitution amended in ways that will lead to nation restructuring?

To act as a guide, President Muhammadu Buhari while delivering a nationwide broadcast on Monday 1st, January 2018, noted that ‘no human law or edifice is perfect. Whatever structure we develop must periodically be perfected according to the changing circumstances and the country’s socio-economic developments’. Identifying those imperfections and catalyzing the process of reforming this changing circumstance as muted by the president should be the preoccupation of all at the present circumstance.

For sure, the above is imperative as the current posturing has made the government at the centre become the dispenser of goodness by proxy while leaving the federating states idle and lazy which is against the spirit of the federal system of government and the expectation of the masses.

This is the time for Nigerians to remember vividly some recently over-used words in the nation’s political space- words such as, namely; true federalism, fiscal federalism, restructuring and resource control among others.

By the constant use of those word, what the masses are saying and wanting in my understanding is that the padding of the second schedule of the exclusive legislative list, of our 1999 constitution with sixty-eight (68) items has made Abuja suffer ‘political obesity’ and need to shed some weight via power devolution
What the people are saying is that the over blotted exclusive list has made our nation to currently stand in an inverted pyramid shape with more power concentrated at the top and the base not formidable enough making collapse inevitable if urgent and fundamental steps are not taken.

What the proponents of restructuring are saying is that the majority of the items are too trivial for the Federal Government to handle and should serve the greater good of the people if left in the hands of both the state and the local government. This is the hub of the masses’ expectations. Items such as; Police and some government security services, mines and minerals; including oil fields, oil mining geological surveys, control of parks, stamp duties, public holidays, taxation of incomes, profits and capital gains, and insurance among others to my mind should find their ways back to the states and the local councils.

Another area of ‘interest’ to watch as it has caused concerns among Nigerians in the past is a chapter with a very long list of what ordinarily could have been very beneficial to the citizenries and at the same time solve the multifaceted challenges bedeviling the nation if it were at par with the provisions and status enjoyed by similar items as contained in chapter four. But, as expected, this portion for no clear reason shares the same body and spirit with chapter four but not equal in essence.

How do we make the exercise a rewarding one?

Let’s cast a glance at Felix N.C. Oragwu’s memorandum, entitled; Critical Steps towards the Resolution of Nigeria as a True Federation. The memorandum proposed the Steps for Consideration that will help Nigeria develop and grow in real Unity, Peace and real economic progress.

STEP ONE.

There is now the need to eventually consider a New Name for the Federal Republic of Nigeria. In this respect, Nigeria may be renamed,“United States of Nigeria (USN)”. Please see the UK of Great Britain. This may erase the ugly History or Memory of Nigeria’s forced Amalgamation without the consent of the different / distinct ethnic Nationalities comprised in Nigeria and located along the Length and Breadth of the River Niger, by Lord Fredrick Lugard, the first Governor General of Nigeria, 1914-1918, acting on the Authority of British Imperial Power and Colonial Diplomacy.This transaction taken without the consent and agreement of ethnic Nationalities concerned.

STEP TWO:

Suggested TERMS of UNION for Nigeria as a True Federation:

The Terms of Union are already well spelt out early in 1951 during the British Colonial sponsored National Conference of Representatives of the ethnic Nationalities comprising Nigeria, at Ibadan, South West Nigeria, to restructure the amalgamated Unitary Administration of Nigeria operating since 1914. The Restructuring Conference of 1951 was attended by the True Representatives of the ethnic Nationalities comprised inNigeria, namely Sir Ahmadu Bello leading the Representatives of Northern Region of Nigeria (now 19 States of Northern Nigeria), Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe leading the Representatives of Eastern Region of Nigeria (now the 5 States of Igbo land and the States of AkwaIbom (Ibibio/ Anang) and Cross River State (Efik / Ogoja) land,and Chief Obafemi Awolowo leading the Representatives of South West Nigeria (now, the 6 Yoruba States of Western Nigeria and the present Edo and Delta States, respectively. The Conference was chaired by the British Colonial Secretary, then Sir Oliver Littleton.

The Terms of Union of the Nation State of Nigeria, arrived at the Ibadan Conference which successfully kept Nigeria together in relative peace, should be adopted with necessary Amendments.

The Highlights of these Terms of Union that operated from 1952-1965, are as follows, namely, The Federal (Central) Government is to operate as a Coordinating Government and not as a Controlling Government, but has the exclusive Responsibility for the mutually agreed Common National Services, such as Armed Forces, Nigerian Police, Citizenship, Customs, , Central Bank of Nigeria, / National Currency, Immigration, Foreign Affairs including Foreign Trade, National Education Standards, but not Educational Institutions (Primary, Secondary and Tertiary Levels, which are the sole Responsibilities of the Federating Regional Governments), National Scientific, Technological and Industrial Goods Standards including Agricultural / Mineral Commodity Export Standards, Trunk A Roads or Interconnecting High ways of Nigerian Federation, but (as Stated in the Document) any other Responsibility not specified for the Federal (Central) Government, is a matter for the Federating Regional Governments.

For more Details, readers can also see the Report of Nigerian Conference at Ibadan, Western Nigeria, 1951, attended by the Political Leaders of Nigeria’s Federating Regions, led respectively by Sir Ahmadu Bello for Northern Nigeria, Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe for South East Nigeria and Chief Obafemi Awolowo of Western Nigeria which include Mid -West Nigeria (now Edo and Delta States) and Chaired by the then British Colonial Secretary, Sir Oliver Littleton.

I wish Nigeria and Nigerians good luck on this task!!!

Utomi Jerome-Mario is the Programme Coordinator (Media and Policy), Social and Economic Justice Advocacy (SEJA), Lagos. He could be reached via;jeromeutomi@yahoo.com/08032725374

One Bullet Too Many: The Gunshot Assault on Comrade Sowore and the Bad Faith of the Nigeria Police Force

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By Pelumi Olajengbesi, Esq.

There is an ongoing ‘conscienceless’  atrocity by officers of the Nigeria Police Force against law-abiding citizens of the country who trooped out to protest against the incessant security challenges in the country which has rendered many homeless and exposed communities to incessant existential attacks by herdsmen, bandits and other unknown gunmen.

The protest is said to have been led by one-time presidential aspirant, Omoyele Sowore, and aimed at expressing dissatisfaction against the state of affairs in the country and the manner in which same is being handled by the Nigerian government.

It is however saddening and indeed condemnable that such a constitutionally guaranteed movement has been greeted with a violent and brutal response by the government who, acting through its Police Officers, opened fire on unarmed, peaceful protesters leading to several serious injuries on citizens, including a fatal wound on the person of Comrade Omoyele Sowore.

The right to protest cannot be over emphasized in a democratic society. Section 39 and 40 of the 1999 constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria remain glaring. Section 40 provides that;

“Every person shall be entitled to assemble freely and associate with other person, and in particular, he may form or belong to any political party, trade union or any other association for the protection of his interests”.

In addition to this, Nigeria is a signatory to many international treaties which have direct provisions that guarantee the right to peaceful demonstrations. The 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Right (ICCPR) under article 21 makes provisions for peaceful assembly. It provides thus;

“…the right of peaceful assembly shall be recognized. No restrictions may be placed on the exercise of this right other than those imposed in conformity with the law and which are necessary in a democratic society in the interest of national security or public safety, public order, the protection of public health or moral or the protection of the rights and freedom of others.”    

To buttress the point, article 11 of the 1981 African Charter on Human and People’s Right further states that;

“…every individual shall have the right to assemble freely with others. The exercise of this right shall be subject only to necessary restrictions provided for by law, in particular those enacted in the interest of national security, the safety, health, ethics and rights and freedom of others.”

It is crystal clear from the foregoing that the Comrade Sowore-led peaceful protesters committed no infractions nor broke any local laws but simply exercised their constitutional right to movement, assembly and association. Therefore, the government’s violent response to the legitimate grievances of the Nigerian people through the brutally attacked protesters betray its ignorance of the people’s plight and affirms emerging consensus on the lack of legitimacy of a government that cannot guarantee the safety of its own people.

Without mincing words, I want to reiterate that the Buhari led administration will be held responsible and dragged before the international community should anything happen to Comrade Sowore and indeed all participants in today’s peaceful protest at the Unity Fountain, Abuja. The Nigerian government must do better and be more mindful of its troubling antecedents as hard of hearing and failing to distil historical hindsight from the experiences of the past.

It is high time the Nigerian government place premium on human life and respect the rule of law which is the hallmark of any civil society across the globe. Indeed, it must be seen to pursue the course of justice in this unfolding matter by arresting and prosecuting the officers whose overzealousness has caused grievous bodily and psychological harm to today’s protesters. Any extrajudicial harm to an individual or a group is an affront to all, and well-meaning members of the public and civil society groups must waste no time in cooperating towards making a deterrent scapegoat of the police officers who acted ultra vires today.

Having severally commented on the mindlessness and abhorrent actions of the Nigeria Police Force, I am appalled by its apparent inability to reform itself through proper and professional conduct, repeatedly choosing to be truant with state power and reckless in its policing. Indeed, we must have a conversation on the continuous tenability of the Force as presently constituted with a view to arriving at a policy action that will tame its excesses.

Pelumi Olajengbesi Esq. is a Legal Practitioner and Principal at Law Corridor, Nigeria. He can be reached through Lawcorridor@gmail.com

Opinion: Making Sense of Nigeria’s Current Economic Growth Trajectory

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Ifeanyi Uddin (credit: Premium Times)

If the GDP numbers released last week by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) tell any story at all, it is the classic tale of the subtle distinction between “six”, and “half-a-dozen”. At first blush, the data is clear evidence of the economy’s emergence from last year’s recession. If a recession is, technically, two back-to-back quarters of an economy shrinking, then, surely, two consecutive quarters of economic growth (first in the final quarter of last year and then in the first quarter of this year) ought to count for something.

Not a few commentators have asked, tongue-in-cheek, what this “something” is. Do we now have much needed evidence of the Buhari administration’s economic competence? For, surely, back-to-back economic growth must be the consequence of purposive action. On the other hand, we could simply be seeing evidence, if this were needed, that a rising tide (the global economy’s return to growth) lifts even the leakiest boat (the Nigerian economy).

Part of the answers to these questions lies in the strength of output growth in the last two quarters. The talking heads in the echo chambers where matters around the economy are mulled, appear to have settled on “fragile” as the best description of this growth. In the final quarter of last year, the economy grew by 0.11 per cent. And by 0.51 per cent in the first quarter of this year. However you look at it, both outcomes represent a considerable improvement on the lousy COVID-19-induced numbers from much of last year. Nonetheless, against the economy’s specific needs ― poverty reduction, especially ― neither is reassuring.

Much of the growth in the first quarter of 2021, for example, was the consequence of the oil and gas sector shrinking far less rapidly than it had done in recent times. Not much consolation in this, when you recall that this sector has been our bête noire since 1960. Or that the test of good governance in the country, after its first major economic crisis in the mid-1980s, has been how well successive governments have been able to diversify the source of our export earnings. Incidentally, the dominance of crude oil export dollars in our fiscal space continues to underscore the myth of a mono-product domestic economy.

Yet, as an activity sector, oil and gas exploration accounts for less than a tenth of our economy’s annual output. To its credit, however, the sector is more efficiently run than any of the activity sectors in the non-oil space ― arguably because, as Chu S. P. Okongwu argued a few years ago, it is an exclave of the economy with few serious linkages to it. This status has spared the sector the burden of the full weight of government’s dead hand. In recent times, this mortmain has come to be discoursed in terms of easing the cost of doing business in the economy.

If much of these costs that we would rather the economy be rid of, arise from a combination of the effect of inept government ministries, departments and agencies, and the constraints from decrepit public infrastructure, the main consequence has been to rob the economy of the resilience needed to recover from both domestic and economic shocks. Given this state of affairs, it is far from surprising that the non-oil sector has not grown as well over the last two quarters as most analysts, public policy wonks, and the citizenry would have liked. Indeed, growth in the wholesale and retail sector, a generally accepted proxy for consumer spending, has been lazy thus far. None of which bodes well for the economy’s medium-term outlook. Not just does consumer spending account for two-thirds of domestic output; but it has been hardest hit by the responses to the pandemic, and so faces low prospects of immediate or rapid recovery any time soon.

How much of the poor economic performance over the last six months is the long effect of the lockdowns with which government tried to deal with the pandemic caseload last year? And how much of it is the result of the economy’s chronic inflexibility? The answers to these questions matter. First, as explanations for the constraints responsible for the economy’s snail-paced growth. And second as possible pointers to what our policy options are for driving faster-paced economic growth.

On the balance of preliminary evidence, government matters. Not, unfortunately, at the degree to which the public policy responses to the virus have strengthened its play in the economy. But only insofar as governments at the three tiers are able to guarantee level and time-stable playing fields for private sector supply responses. In this sense, the Central Bank of Nigeria’s surreptitious devaluation of the naira, after an early muscular promise to singe the fingers of currency speculators keen on shorting the currency, is a gratuitous addition to the domestic cost of doing business. A predictable and transparent policy environment is the first and main contribution that any serious government can make to bringing down the cost of doing business in its economy.

Uddin Ifeanyi, journalist manqué and retired civil servant, can be reached @IfeanyiUddin.

Opinion: Africa’s Optimist-in-Chief

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By Wole Olaoye

“Do not judge a runner by the challenges he or she faces, or the strains on their legs as they run, or even the grimaces on their faces; judge them at the finish line. Africa will finish its race for development well, against all odds!” That is the prediction of the President of the African Development Bank (AfDB), Dr Akinwumi Adesina.

A cheering prediction indeed.

Last week, the world marked Africa Day. The African Public Relations Association (APRA) held its annual conference virtually, in line with the ‘new normal’. APRA prides itself in creating an enabling professional environment for accurate perception, goodwill and the understanding of necessary and effective performance of Public Relations practice in Africa. Its annual intellectual fiesta usually draws stakeholders from around the world with the aim of heralding a more positively perceived and prosperous Africa.

Delegates and guests from 26 countries attended the 2021 edition.

Nobody else could have set the tone for the conference but the president of the continent’s foremost development financial institution, AfDB — the same bank recently named as the “Best Multilateral Financial Institution in the world for 2021” by the frontline U.S. magazine, Global Finance. The theme of the conference was “One Africa! March to economic integration and the role of Public Relations in the era of Covid-19.”

Adesina is so upbeat about Africa that he has been tagged the continent’s ‘Optimist-in-Chief’. What is he seeing which others are not seeing? Or, rather, in what way is the African story being re-written through the instrumentation of developmental interventions by the AfDB and how can the rest of the continent buy into his admittedly noble dream?

Among the public relations practitioners who formed the bulk of the audience were champions in branding, messaging and reputation management. They couldn’t agree more with Adesina that if you don’t say, ‘I am’, the rest of the world is not compelled to acknowledge ‘Thou art’.

“We need you as partners in public relations and the media to help curate and disseminate these success stories. Success stories of Africa’s progress on its path towards the actualisation of the Africa we want, as set out in the Agenda 2063 of the African Union! Your role is critical to ensure that people are inspired by gains being made on Africa’s journey to prosperity”, said Adesina.

He gave examples of how the work of the African Development Bank impacts the lives of ordinary people. Ms. Jamila from Ghana benefitted from access to improved agricultural technologies through AfDB’s Savanna Agricultural Productivity Project. Her testimony: “The Bank’s program has allowed me to expand my cultivated area by 9,000%. Now I will purchase a mechanised harvester for my crops”. From Ethiopia one of the female farmers said, “I built my house from the proceeds of my farm and now I can support my four children in school”, while Ms. Grace from Kenya noted that the Bank’s support has allowed her to get access to electricity in her village: “We once were in darkness, now we can see”.

Adesina argues that there is no continent without its own peculiar problems and that anyone with an eye on the future cannot ignore Africa. Because of the crucial role that public relations professionals can play in transforming the continent, the AfDB now plans to initiate a new strategic partnership with the African Public Relations Association in order to help weave a beautiful tapestry of stories of resilience of a continent progressing against all odds!

COVID-19 ravaged the world. In Africa, 30 million people were pushed into extreme poverty. It is projected that another 39 million could fall further into extreme poverty this year. Foreign direct investment into Africa declined from $45 billion in 2019 to $27 billion in 2020. Similarly, portfolio investments declined from $27 billion in 2019 to $19 billion in 2020.

In response, AfDB announced a $10 billion Crisis Response Facility to support African countries in addressing the urgent health and economic effects of the pandemic and provided another $28 million grant to the Africa Centre for Disease Control to enhance its capacity to tackle the scourge.

Before COVID, Africa recorded the second fastest economic growth rate in the world. Foreign direct investment grew faster in Africa than anywhere else. Africa was also reforming its business environment. With the advent of COVID, GDP growth declined by 2.1 per cent, the worst in over 25 years. It is noteworthy, however, that 13 African countries posted positive growth rates in the midst of the global recession. A cocktail of new challenges have since arisen but Adesina believes that Africa will bounce back. “The AfDB estimates that the continent’s GDP growth will bounce back to a positive trajectory of 3.4% this year”, he said.

To show what can be achieved if words are matched with action, AfDB has, in the last five years, positively impacted the lives of 335 million people: 20 million people obtained access to electricity; 74 million people obtained access to agricultural technologies for food security; 10 million people obtained access to finance; 69 million people got access to improved transport services through investments in infrastructure; and 43 million people got access to improved water and sanitation.

And the landscape is changing, courtesy of forward-looking projects that should propel trade and improve lives all over the continent: The landmark Sene-Gambia bridge linking Senegal and Gambia, the expansion of the Togo container port, which has increased its capacity three folds; the Kazungula bridge, linking Zambia, Botswana, Zimbabwe and Namibia; the 1,000 kilometres highway linking Addis-Ababa to Mombasa, through Nairobi; the Noor Ouarzazarte project in Morocco (the largest concentrated solar power plant in the world); and the Lake Turkana wind power station, in Kenya, the largest of its kind in sub-Saharan Africa.

The Bank is now investing in the Desert to Power initiative in the Sahel region to construct the largest solar zone in the world, which will provide electricity for 250 million people across eleven countries. Accelerating industrialisation could create up to 14 million stable jobs over the next decade. AfDB is also supporting 234,000 youths with digital skills to make them competitive in the digital world and create nine million jobs. At the forthcoming African Investment Forum, AfDB and its partners have already prepared to showcase a pipeline of 230 projects valued at $208 billion.

Given all of the above, there is cause for optimism if — and only if — the serious security problems buffeting various parts of the continent are urgently addressed.

For public relations practitioners all over the continent, the 2021 APRA conference reinforced the clarion call on all professionals to protect and enhance the African brand. The achievements of the AfDB in Africa is a good signpost to the boundless possibilities of the continent. And who can tell that story better than those gathered at the annual feast of ideas? Several other insightful papers presented at the three-day virtual event reinforced the theme, “One Africa! March to Economic Integration and the Role of Public Relations”. And the worthy finale: the 2021 Sabre Awards Africa, at which the best practitioners of the trade on the continent were presented Awards in various categories by the inimitable global PR icon, Paul Holmes.

If the conference was an oracle, its verdict would be that Africa is the new frontier of prosperity, as long as the cobwebs of insecurity entangling the continent are cleared.

The president of APRA, Yomi Badejo-Okusanya of Nigeria, encapsulated the feelings of  his colleagues all over the continent thus: “Africa must tell its own story. And there is no better person to tell it than the authentic storyteller on the continent: The African public relations practitioner!”

Wole Olaoye can be reached through wole.olaoye@gmail.com.

Opinion: The Virtues of Open Grazing in Nigeria

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Junaidu Maina (credit: PT)

According to a popular adage, when you are in a tunnel, what you need is light, not sound. However, light at the end of the tunnel on issues relating to cattle husbandry in Nigeria is a long time coming, given the ill-tempered and sometimes uninformed exchanges on open grazing. Self-styled experts are attempting to stampede governments to ban open grazing by advancing fictitious arguments such as, there is no land for roaming cattle, while data on land use shows otherwise; or that ranching is the global best practice for keeping cattle, whereas in Sub-Saharan Africa, ranches exist only in parts of Ethiopia, Kenya and South Africa, and hence it is false to claim that ranches have replaced pastoralism in Kenya and Ethiopia, while the Maasai and the Oromos respectively still practice pastoralism in these countries.

The examination of data on land use in Nigeria will illustrate the logic of open grazing. It is true that the population has increased over the years, also more land has been put to farming and the building of infrastructure, but analysis of the data shows that for 20 million cattle and 200 million Nigerians, there is more than enough land. For a start, Kano, one of the most densely populated States in Nigeria, is home to about one million cattle and there is relative tranquility. Nigeria has a land mass of 92.3 million hectares, with 70.8 million hectares of agricultural area, of which only 34-35 million hectares had been cultivated as at last year. For the sake of discussion, let’s look at maize production.

Available data shows that in 2020, only about 12 million tons were produced. Research findings have shown that 86 per cent of the cereal biomass is made of materials not consumable by humans, but ruminants (cattle, etc.) can convert this into high quality animal protein. The implication is that over 50 million tons of crop residue will be wasted, if not consumed by cattle. Not to mention sorghum that accounts for 50 per cent of the total cereal production in the country and occupies about 45 per cent of the total land area devoted to cereal production. Add to these, the millions of tons of grasses on fallow lands and open ranges. To access these fodders, which are mainly available in situ, cattle must move and openly graze. In most cases, this is done with the expressed permission of farmers for a fee.

Cattle generally move along moisture gradients (the North in the wet season and the South in dry season, respectively) on International transhumance stock routes recognised under usufructuary rights. This explains why a kilo of beef sells for N1,700 in Nigeria. Therefore, until the country has a programme to process these quality fodders, banning open grazing will be a ‘dog in the manger’ policy. But I accept that rogue elements amongst herders engage in criminalities and the justice system has failed to prosecute them.

I also need to draw attention to a special category of pastoralists called agropastoralists. These are small scale livestock producers who settle in communities all over Nigeria. They negotiate with members of the host community for land to build their homesteads, grow crops and keep cattle. During the cropping season, they kraal the animals away from the farms. In fact, many of the animals in their herds belong to members of the host communities. Clusters of these type of producers exist in the South, along Iseyin-Igangan axis in Oyo State, in Adada-Nkpologu-Adani-Iggah axis in Enugu State and along the Awgu-Nkanu-Abakaliki axis in Ebonyi State, to mention a few. Some of these settlements have existed for upwards of 70 years, sequel to veterinary interventions that made it possible for cattle to stay in one place, year-round.

Many of these pastoralists are law abiding, they speak the local languages, their children are in schools, their wives engage in trades and have fully integrated into the communities. Consensus among livestock experts is that agropastoralism, peri-urban and urban livestock production systems account for over 90 per cent of dairy products in Sub-Sharan Africa. These producers adopt research findings, benefit from government extension services and comply with public health regulations. A ban on open grazing will destroy this system and uproot these producers. And the reason is simply the following.

A ban on open grazing literally means changing from agropastoralism to a zero grazing system, cold turkey. In zero grazing, animals are kept in stalls and fed entirely on purchased, specially prepared, rations to enable them to produce plenty of milk or fatten quickly. Agropastoral cows have poor productivity and live on grass and occasional crop residue.

As the rule of thumb, a local cow consumes 2.5 per cent of its body weight and consumes about 15 litres of water. The average herd size of agropastoralists is between 20-35 animals. So, for a 200-kilogramme cow, a herder must cut and carry 110 kilogrammes of grass and source 200 litres of water daily. This is an impossible task. So, a law-abiding Nigerians trying to eke out a living from the cattle business has two choices – stay and lose your means of livelihood or leave town.

The term ‘ranching’ is not clearly defined in this country, so all intensive or enclosed livestock production systems are categorised as ranching. However, a ranch is a very large area of rangeland that is enclosed, where animals roam and graze openly. It is in view of this that the Land Use Act recommends the allocation of up to 5,000 hectares for livestock farming. So, if State governors genuinely believe in ranching, they should put their monies where their mouths are, and allocate the recommended hectares to ranchers. The statement that herders should go into ranching because there is no land is incongruent. According to the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), 33 per cent of global land is under cultivation for animal feeds, while 30 per cent of the entire earth surface is permanently under pasture to support global intensive livestock production.

Against all odds, open grazing has been a success story. Ethiopia has a landmass of 110 square kilometres, with 60 million cattle, three times that of Nigeria, which are into open grazing. Ethiopia is one of the fastest growing economies in Africa, with livestock production covering 40 per cent of the agricultural output and contributing 13-16 per cent of the total GDP.

Without any doubt, cattle production is facing a myriad of challenges associated with husbandry, the misconducts of some herders, climate change and local politics. In today’s world, technology is the weapon of first choice to overcome most challenges associated with livestock production. Nigeria has successfully applied genetics to produce high-yielding day-old chicks, hybrid seeds to increase the yields of maize and soybeans for massive production of quality commercial poultry feeds, and veterinary sciences to deliver healthcare services to poultry.

Bankers eager to make a quick buck saw the huge internal market and the Nigerian spirit of entrepreneurship and massively funded commercial poultry. Today, that industry is worth about N10 trillion (Poultry Association of Nigeria) and is the biggest in Africa. But, most significantly, commercial and free-range rural poultry exist in all states, thus giving commercial poultry the all-important federal character. The poultry revolution did not just happen, it was made to happen by deliberate government policies, public-private sector partnership and the Nigerian spirit of entrepreneurship. The same technology can transform the cattle industry for the benefit of all, if only Nigerians can make that conscious and deliberate political decision rather than unhelpful legislations driven my emotions.

Junaidu Maina is a former Director of the Federal Livestock Department

Opinion: Constitutional Amendment and the Drummer at Alaafin’s Palace

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Festus Adedayo

By Festus Adedayo

There was this Alaafin, monarch of the ancient Oyo Kingdom, who ruled over a century ago, known for his fiery and terrifying wickedness. He spared neither malefactors nor critical elements opposed to his method of administration. For anyone who ran afoul of his whims, Alaafin got his dogari (palace guards) to behead them. He then asked the dogari to dig a very deep pit at the centre of the town, whose depth and actual usage were hidden from the rest of the world. Carved out and designated, on the outward, as the shrine where Ogun, the god of iron, was worshipped, this pit was however the place where heads of the victims of the Alaafin’s wrath were dumped. The specifics were shrouded from all but only a few in the kingdom.

After decades of the existence of this bottomless pit, one day, an itinerant drummer stood beside the purported shrine and with the cadence of a master drummer, he drummed that the shrine was actually a harvest pit of heads. All who gathered were aghast. In droves, they quickly left the scene, lest this tyrannical Alaafin descended on them. When word got to the king about the audacity of the drummer, the Alaafin summoned him to the palace and asked that he drummed the particular rhythm which he used to indict him of serial murders. This valiant drummer did exactly that for the Kabiyesi. Taken aback by his effrontery, all who gathered at the palace immediately began to sing his dirge. To their unbelievable shock, the king asked that the drummer be allowed to leave in peace. He also immediately ordered that the barbaric practice be halted and the bottomless pit filled up with sand.

For promoters of the ongoing review of the Nigeria’s 1999 Constitution – ostensibly President Muhammadu Buhari’s hirelings and their Hallelujah chorus group at the National Assembly – the foregoing story should signal the road to travel to them. Anyone who truly desires a Nigeria of the dreams of our forefathers should advocate a total U-turn from the ruinous and inequitable path that the Nigerian constitution has driven Nigeria. The Alaafin in the above story made a circuitous turn from the path of ruin. He knew, without being told, that he had reached the end of his tether of villainy. Like the Yoruba bata drum which, when its drummer beats it to the point at which it attains an auditory notoriety, this is an indication that it is on the verge of getting its leather hide face torn, the Alaafin had gotten to the point of rupture. The drummer epitomised a prologue to the calamity afoot for the Alaafin. If he stiff-neckedly chose not to move with the flowing tide, it would have spelled his doom and swallowed him. Alaafin, thus, immediately chose to totally disconnect from his past and erect a footstool for a new future.

One other road that these legislators on a frivolous junket should have trodden on the issue of a proper constitution for Nigeria is the gangrenous foot road. It goes thus: When a sore foot is badly managed overtime, so bad that it has developed gangrene, medics know that the solution is to remove the leg; not to tend it. Tending, mending or amending a gangrenous foot is not only an exercise in futility; it may be a route to death.

Like that drummer, Nigerians have repeatedly drummed into the ears of successive governments that the country was waiting to explode. Lawyers, for whom dealing with the constitution is a daily routine, have itemized over a hundred lacunas in the rule book which give constitutional fillip to the pall of mutual hatred, divisiveness and calls for secession that hang over Nigeria.

Right from the time of the forceful union called amalgamation of the North and South of Nigeria by Sir Fredrick Lugard, Nigerians were left with no doubt that Britain preferred one of the amalgam, to the other. The northern emirate system fascinated Britain. Its pliable and uneducated people who unquestionably carried out orders from the Emirs were the most fitting typology for the British racial exploitation system. They could not stand uppish emerging southern elite, many of whom studied in Britain and saw that the white man was not superior mentally to them in any regard. They even found out that Lugard and many of the colonial governors sent to Africa were the never-do-wells posted as recompense for their outlawry at home. Thus, right from the beginning, Britain and its colonial masters found the south a disagreeable model for its colonial administration. When they were thus leaving in 1960, they left the unseen fundamentals, the key of governance, in the hands of their northern lackeys.

The 1952 and 1953 headcounts however gave the total Nigerian population as 30.4 million. Broken down, the North had 55.4 per cent; East, 23.7 per cent and the West, together with Lagos and Mid-West, 20.9 per cent. This was actually the hub of the rigging of Nigeria. The mathematics of this census was that the North now had 174 seats in the parliament; East 73 and West, with Lagos and Mid-West, 65 seats. What that then meant was that, if you add the east, west, Lagos and mid-west figures, they were not up to ones allotted to the north. This surprised geographers of the world whose study across the globe had revealed that more people live in the periphery of coastal areas than in arid north. The United Nations atlas, for instance, says that 44 per cent of all people of the world live within 150 km radius of the sea, due to the high importance of the coast to society. A bigger chunk lives in the semi-coastal areas.

Post-independence census was not any better. In May 1962, another headcount gave a provisional figure of 45.1 million as the Nigerian population count. Details of it revealed that the south’s figure was more than that of the north’s. Controversy ensued immediately, leading to its cancellation. The 1963 census, which later held, was even far more controversial as it returned a population figure of 55.7 million. This figure upped the previous’ with a difference of eleven million people in less than one year. Criticisms against it was that in the north, a lot of falsification of figures was done under the veneer of religion and culture, especially the ba siga, gidan aore ne (don’t enter, it is home of married women) system which signified restrained census officials from entering homes that had women in purdah. Subsequent census figures built on this inequity.

During the colonial era when Nigeria was administered as Crown Colony, Nigeria experimented with diverse constitutions, beginning with one of 1913, which took effect from January 1, 1914. It was followed with the 1922 Clifford Constitution, 1946 Richard constitution, 1951 Macpherson constitution and the 1954 Lyttleton constitution. Of all of them, the Lyttleton Constitution, which was named after the 1st Viscount Chandos, Sir Oliver Lyttelton and which began operation in 1954, could be said to be the first federal constitution of Nigeria. It had clearly spelt out federal principles and was what paved way for the Nigerian independence. It was then followed by the 1960 Constitution which reflected Nigeria’s sovereign nature but retained Queen Elizabeth as titular Head of State. The 1963 constitution, believed to be the best in the history of Nigeria, mirrored the plural nature of Nigeria and spelt out paths that each of the regions needed to walk to attain the height it desired. It was followed by the 1979 and then, the 1999 Constitutions.

Those who canvass that if Nigeria was really serious about undoing all the ills that bode calamity for her, she should return to the 1963 constitution, covet the constitution’s unhypocritical federal makeup. Some of its features include a provision for fiscal federalism, with the regions given power to collect revenues and pay agreed taxes to the federal government; the local (regional) police system; introduction of parliamentary system of government; creation of office of President; a federal parliament; even distribution of powers; powers to the regions to promulgate their own constitutions, among others.

The 1979 constitution, from where the 1999 constitution drew its strength, is very unitary in its tenets and gave untrammeled and even draconian powers to the federal government. Who administers the federal government today? It is the north, in dalliance with a sprinkle of lackeys of the south. Isn’t it pathetic that the north keeps on being in charge of customs and immigration, ports, Nigeria’s oil corporation and the key MDAs in Nigeria? The rigging of Nigeria by this section of the country is further reinforced by the humongous number of northerners in first-rate offices that bear the castrated prefix of “federal,” making other regions appendages that go to pour libations on the grove of this behemoth.

The most grievous and sadistic manifestation of that systematic and systemic rigging is found in the National Assembly where the skewed achievement that the north made in the falsification of population censuses overtime has given the region an octopodal power to effectively frustrate any bill or move made by even a united south. It does not matter if the move is aimed at advancing the development of Nigeria. The most brazen of that rigging can be gleaned in any comparative analysis of the states. While Lagos boasts of 5,6855,781 population, a la census and has 15 members in the House of Representatives and 20 local governments, Kano State, which has almost same population of 5,632,040 with Lagos, has 34 members in the House of Representatives and 44 local governments. Jigawa State, created in 1991 from Kano and with a population of about 3.6 million people, has 27 local government councils and 11 federal constituencies. Between it and its parent state of Kano, with a combined population of 9,232,040, less than twice of Lagos’, boast of 45 federal constituencies, thrice of Lagos’ and 71 local governments, about three and half of Lagos’. Niger, home state of military General, Ibrahim Babangida, with a population of 2,482,367 has 19 federal constituencies and Sokoto, which has a population of 4,392,391, lesser than Lagos’, boasts of 29 seats.

In all these, the north brazenly vitiated a crucial principle of federalism through rigging processes to become more powerful than the other federating units. It has emerged ever since and till this day, the Kabiyesi of Nigeria’s so-called federal practice.

It was that same rigging of Nigeria, from its census and constitutions over the decades, that resulted in a Muhammadu Buhari, with his avalanche of limitations, superintending over a country of extremely endowed peoples. A federally operated Nigeria would be a merit-driven Nigeria and will have no space for charlatans and ethnic bigots and canvassers. It will never give greater importance to cows ahead of human beings and can never throw up charlatans like Abubakar Malami.

This is why anyone who canvasses for an amendment of the 1999 constitution is either shamelessly naïve or merely embarking on a fruitless sprint. One major reason for this is that, the process of that amendment is so tedious and cumbersome that it can never be completed in the two years life of the Buhari government. Second, a government like one run by Buhari which got elected mainly due to restructuring being one of its electoral promises and which, in six years, has turned a deaf ear to it can never be trusted. Third is that, Buhari and his lickspittles benefit so egregiously from the imbalance and inequity in Nigeria, so much that it would be operating from the dreamland to imagine that they would forfeit this on a platter. To many people, Buhari instigated his lackeys in the National Assembly to begin this puerile and barren constitutional amendment process as a symbolic throwing of bones to a dog to chew, so as to take away distractions of the river of blood that Nigeria has become.

Growing Cult of Abidemi Rufais

The arrest of Abidemi Rufai, Senior Special Assistant to Dapo Abiodun, the governor of Ogun State, immediately became an instant trend in Nigeria and abroad. Rufai is currently enmeshed in a $350,000 fraud case in the United States of America. Before him, Nigeria has had other sewage ambassadors, in the persons of Ramon Olorunwa Abbas and Obinwanne Okeke. The former, commonly known as Hushpuppi, was an Instagram celebrity arrested in the UAE for a £350 million-worth cyber scam and taken to the US. He is now facing criminal charges of conspiracy to launder money from compromised business email frauds, as well as other scams. The latter, a Nigerian entrepreneur who meandered his way into reckoning and mention in the Forbes magazine, was arrested for internet fraud worth $11m. He has since been convicted and jailed ten years in the United States.

Rufai was arrested in New York on May 14 this year by America’s Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) at John F. Kennedy International Airport. Current media reports were to the effect that he would continue to be in detention, having failed to perfect bail requirements.

Many people have traded blames on how a maggot of Rufai’s magnitude could swim in the sewage that is the Nigerian political and governmental river undetected. While many blame Abiodun for not conducting due diligence which led to such stain, others argue that there are a thousand-and-one Rufais in Nigerian politics and government and thus, trying to ostracize a Rufai is akin to stilling a corrupt system that has become part and parcel of our society.

Those who single out Rufai for the crucifix are either unfair to him or are on a roller coastal of hypocrisy. The Rufais are us and we are the Rufais. Due to the collapse of the frontiers of values in Nigeria and the rat race for money, whoever has money is the Igwe of the present time. The younger elements impugn us for misleading them into believing that education offers an Eldorado. To them, the world that education offers is at best utopian or non-existent. And they seem very right. Education has become extremely barren to situate the educated in a comfortable world. In fact, it compounds their problem. Today’s world is the world of the Yahoo-Yahoo boys, the fraudsters, kidnappers, bandits and their allies who make more money than imagined and have colonized the social and political space.

If what defines us is sewers, why then do we expect to have a political or governmental system that is composed of the ideal that we read about in western literature? That in itself is hypocrisy. The Rufais fund political campaigns with their ill-gotten money and contribute immensely to the process of electioneering. So why will you collect their money and deny them slots in governments that are themselves not better than a Yahoo-Yahoo system?

The truth is, we cannot continue to eat our cake and still desire to have it. If we desire purity in all our systems, we have to knock down this social system we currently operate that privileges wealth ahead of brain. No serious people of the world make headways with the kind of infected social mindsets that we have now. Rufais are all over the place – in the executive, legislature and even the judiciary. We incubate them right from our homes.

Article of Faith: By His Stripes We Are Healed (1)

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By Femi Aribisala

Abraham was a faithful man in all his ways. He was not only faithful to God: he was faithful to man. He was faithful to Sarah his wife.

If there was anything Abraham wanted in this world, it was to have a son. However, Abraham discovered that Sarah, the woman he married, was barren.

Abraham could have insisted that Sarah must get pregnant before they are married, so he can be sure she can conceive. But he did not. He might have waited for a few years and then married wife number two just to get a child. But he did not. He might have warned Sarah that all bets are off if she does not give him a son.

But Abraham did not take any of these lines of action. He remained faithful to his barren wife. Then one day, God appeared to faithful Abraham and promised him a son. Abraham must have told Sarah about this promise of God. They must have been very excited. They must have celebrated this wonderful promise of God.

But then they waited, and no child came. They waited and waited. To all intents and purposes, God had forgotten about His promise.

Sarah’s Carnal Plan

Then one day, Sarah decided that God needed help. She came up with a plan.

“Abraham, you are a faithful man. You have been faithful to me even though I was barren. You did not drop me and marry another woman. You did not start sleeping around. You did not have mistresses. I am giving you full permission to sleep with our house-girl, Hagar. If she has a child by you, I will regard the child as mine.”

Abraham must have asked Sarah: “Are you sure? Are you sure about this? Are you sure you won’t mind if I start sleeping with the house-girl?” Sarah said: “I won’t mind. Am I not the one suggesting it now? I would rather have a child through her than not have a child at all.”

So, faithful Abraham started sleeping with the house-girl. And lo and behold, the house-girl becomes pregnant. But once the house-girl becomes pregnant, she started acting strange and uppity with Sarah: “After all, with all your ‘Madam, Madam,’ I have been sleeping with your husband. With all your ‘Madam, Madam’ you cannot even have a child. With all your ‘Madam, Madam,’ I am the one carrying Abraham’s child.”

Then Sarah attacked Abraham. She said to him: “My wrong be upon you! I gave my maid into your embrace; and when she saw that she had conceived, I became despised in her eyes. The LORD judge between you and me.” (Genesis 16:5).

Sarah said to Abraham: “My wrong be upon you.” Yes, I was the one who made the mistake of asking you to sleep with the house-girl. Nevertheless, I want you to know that my mistake is your fault. Let the Lord judge between you and me.

 

Kingdom Dynamics

Who is to blame, Abraham or Sarah? If the Lord was to judge between Sarah and Abraham, whose side would the Lord take? Would the Lord blame Abraham for Sarah’s mistake? Would He put the wrong of Sarah on Abraham?

In effect, Sarah said: “Abraham, I know God.  Abraham, I understand kingdom dynamics.  I know that God would put my wrong on you.”

Is Sarah right in this conclusion or is she wrong?

Yes, she is right. God is going to blame Sarah’s wrong on Abraham. In the first place, Sarah is a woman under the authority of her husband. If she does anything wrong, God is going to hold her husband, Abraham, responsible.

God said of Abraham: “I have singled him out so that he will direct his sons and their families to keep the way of the Lord by doing what is right and just. Then I will do for Abraham all that I have promised.” (Genesis 18:19).

At long last, the Lord opened the womb of Sarah and she conceived and gave birth to Isaac. The child grew and was weaned. But one day, Sarah caught Ishmael, Abraham’s son by Hagar, laughing at Isaac. And Sarah went to Abraham and insisted:

“Throw out this bondwoman Hagar and her bastard child, Ishmael, because Ishmael will never inherit with my son Isaac.”

Abraham was angry. “Why should I throw out my son Ishmael? Were you not the one who talked me into having him? Now that you have Isaac, you are only interested in Isaac your son; conveniently forgetting that Ishmael is also my son.”

But the Lord took sides with Sarah because, here again, Sarah understood kingdom dynamics.

“God said to Abraham, ‘Do not let it be displeasing in your sight because of the lad or because of your bondwoman. Whatever Sarah has said to you, listen to her voice; for in Isaac your seed shall be called.’” (Genesis 21:12).
Scapegoat
Sarah said: “My wrong be upon you Abraham,” and God agreed. We need to understand this peculiar way of God for it runs contrary to human logic and reasoning. We get an inkling of it when we observe the scapegoat principle of the sacrificial system under the Law of Moses.

God says the priest: “Shall take the two goats and present them before the LORD at the door of the tabernacle of meeting. Then Aaron shall cast lots for the two goats: one lot for the LORD and the other lot for the scapegoat. And Aaron shall bring the goat on which the LORD’s lot fell, and offer it as a sin offering. But the goat on which the lot fell to be the scapegoat shall be presented alive before the LORD, to make atonement upon it, and to let it go as the scapegoat into the wilderness.” (Leviticus 16:7-10).

God, in His mercy, justifies the ungodly. (Romans 4:5). He visits the iniquities of the fathers upon the children to the third and fourth generations. Jeremiah says: “Our fathers sinned and are no more, but we bear their iniquities.” (Lamentations 5:7).

It was Adam who sinned, but he blamed God and God took the responsibility in Christ. We were blamed for Adam’s sins, that we may be justified by Christ’s righteousness. We were the ones who sinned, but the Lord laid all our iniquity on Jesus:

“All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned, every one, to his own way; and the LORD has laid on Him the iniquity of us all.” (Isaiah 53:6).

Is it fair for God to punish Jesus for our sins and acquit us? If we consider it to be unfair, then we must be prepared to be judged for our sins, and the guilty verdict is inevitable. If we consider it to be fair, then we can no longer complain of injustice from a human point of view. If God cannot impute Adam’s sin to us, then He cannot impute Christ’s righteousness to us.

“Just as David also describes the blessedness of the man to whom God imputes righteousness apart from works: ‘Blessed are those whose lawless deeds are forgiven, and whose sins are covered; blessed is the man to whom the Lord shall not impute sin.” (Romans 4:6-8). CONTINUED.

Faribisala@yahoo.comwww.femiaribisala.com 

Opinion: Storytelling for Africa by Africans

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John Ugbe, CEO Multichoice Nigeria

By John Ugbe

Africa’s star is rising. The continent is taking its place on the global stage, as demand for our unique and exciting contribution to the world increases. Africa’s presence is finding expression in numerous fields, but in a few areas has it been as pronounced as in the creative arts and entertainment. We were excited to see our cultures taking pride of place in movies like Black Panther and in Beyonce’s extended video for “Spirit + Bigger”. Listening to Sam Smith’s “My Oasis”, featuring Burna Boy (who just won a Grammy) does warm our African hearts. These are real signs of African achievement and an acknowledgement of the rich culture that has inspired people in so many other parts of the world.

Authentic representation matters: Global audiences are hungry for new voices and being positively acknowledged at home and abroad inspires us to create even more. However, these are small steps, as there is a lot to be done for Africa’s true potential to be realised. While seeing ourselves on screen is certainly progress, it is not yet true representation because it is mostly through the eyes of others. It is unbelievable that our pre-colonial history is barely told from our perspective. The stories of Vikings, Columbus and many Western historical dramas have been used to educate audiences, while so many of our stories remain untold. There is a lot of work to be done to ensure that we see ourselves accurately reflected in the content that we consume and that’s where we as consumers, producers, broadcasters, teachers and as a community have roles to play.

Much as Africa is underrepresented in the rest of the world, there is still room for African content to be shared on Africa’s own media platforms. At MultiChoice, we are proud to be a part of this journey, helping to create platforms and make investments that support this evolution. As content producers, we understand how critical it is that we not only tell our own stories but that we do so using the highest possible standards and production values. We need to be the best we can be for our audiences who deserve nothing less and are highly appreciative of the added enjoyment that quality, locally resonant storytelling provides. Quite rightly, they are also unforgiving of anything that falls short of the high standards they have come to expect.

To help realise this vision, we have taken a “hyperlocal” approach, producing relevant content within the respective regions of our continent, as opposed to a one-size-fits-all strategy with generic African and international content. A hyperlocal approach to content creation also often makes business sense, as even commoditised American studio content is expensive when it must be paid for in U.S. dollars. In our audiences, we have found an almost insatiable appetite for authentic local content. The more local entertainment we offer, the less international content audiences choose to watch! It’s worth remembering that even American content is “local” in the U.S. The fact that it travels internationally is largely because audiences have become accustomed to it after decades of the U.S. intentionally building and driving demand for their language and culture.

African audiences, like others across the world, respond enthusiastically to seeing themselves and their communities represented in home-grown productions done in their own languages. A few months ago, we launched the first Pan African lifestyle channel – Honey – which celebrates how we live, what we aspire to and brings style makers from across the continent to a single destination. A rule of thumb is that content will be most successful when it reflects the values, culture and language of its audience. Home-grown, hyperlocal content strikes a blow against the homogenisation of culture by celebrating what makes us unique. At the same time, it creates opportunities for entire industries. Every time we create local content, instead of simply purchasing foreign ones, hundreds of opportunities are created for African writers, actors, directors, producers, show-runners, caterers, stylists and others.

In Nigeria, Nollywood has started facilitating international movies, series and commercials. In other countries such as Kenya, Ghana and Uganda, similar nodes of creative and professional excellence are taking root. We look forward to a time when every country on the continent is producing world-class, authentic and locally relevant African content for its own audiences and the diaspora.

As we mark the UNESCO Africa Week with the theme “Peace, innovation and sustainable development in Africa” – we celebrate African excellence in all creative fields. Already, our fascinating, vibrant and powerful continent is reclaiming its rightful place on the world stage. The future looks even brighter as we strive to take African stories to the world. Let us all claim that place in the spotlight because our people deserve to see themselves reflected in our own content, produced by our own people.

For more information on the our African content offering visit https://www.multichoice.com/our-africa-2021/

John Ugbe is the CEO of MultiChoice Nigeria.

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