Pendulum: An Appeal To My Dear Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, By Dele Momodu

By Dele Momodu

My dear Asiwaju, I pray my letter meets you and yours in fantastic spirit. It has almost become a tradition for me to write, or openly express my views, to you periodically on political issues, since about 2007. Before I go into the meat of my epistle, kindly permit me to establish some protocol, or preamble. I always choose to write to you in this manner, in moments of great concern and uncertainty such as this, because these words must be kept for posterity. It is not easy to advise someone much older than oneself in our clime. An elderly person can do no wrong, according to our tradition, particularly, if such an elder is respected and revered as you are. It is even much tougher to offer advice to someone as powerful as God has made you to be. You are a man of destiny, and miracles. Yours is a fairy-tale. A real grass to grace story that many applaud and seek to emulate. But at the end of the day, Sir, you are very human. You are a very kind and generous man. You are exceptionally brilliant and smart and everyone, including your foes, admit and acknowledge that fact.

 
I have known and seen you at your lowest ebb, when we were in exile in England. You rose stoutly to the occasion then like a true generalissimo. We didn’t see the type of crowd that currently mill around you now. You were focussed on dismantling the military junta under the command of General Sani Abacha. I remember with nostalgia how Tokunbo Afikuyomi and I used to stroll into your apartment around Cavendish near Regent’s Park, as if we were the owners of the beautiful flat that you still own till this day. I could go into your kitchen and cook whatever food I wanted and later do damage to your wine collection. I recollect the NADECO meetings at the Quadrangle, God bless Lt. General Alani Ipoola Akinrinade, for his inspirational leadership. Some of the faces I used to see are staring at me as I type this letter to you, Professor Bolaji Akinyemi, Chief John Odigie Oyegun, Reverend Peter Obadan, Hon. Wale Oshun, Dr Amos Akingba, Commodore Dan Suleiman, Chief Ralph Uweche, just to mention a few. I remember you as a good dancer at our occasional discos at Mill Hill. I also recognise two good names, Mr Ibukun Fakeye and Mr Bola Opaleye. We were under pressure, but you made things easier for most of us because of your natural gift of giving. Mama Calabar restaurant at Hendon Central was a good place to rendezvous then for good home food.
 
From your home, you coordinated many things, linking up with Papa Anthony Enahoro, Professor Wole Soyinka, the Afenifere Group at home, Dr Kayode Fayemi, the main man at Radio Freedom (later Radio Kudirat) and several other distinguished refugees. We had young but active journalists like Richie Dayo Johnson, George Noah, Greg Odo and Ike Okonta. I will readily attest to your uncommon courage and unassailable commitment to the struggle for democracy in our dear beloved country Nigeria. Nothing would ever scare or rattle me like the day you and I sat alone, in a coded location, with some German mercenary, who told us his organisation could rescue Chief M.K.O Abiola from detention. Many more personalities who are now sojourners in your various homes, who have made fame and fortune through you, were not part of the beginning no matter how much they now try to demonstrate that they were. Some of those who planned and plotted at that time joined you in your political forays, especially, a perfect gentleman like LT. General Alani Akinrinade who chose to observe from the back seat and make occasional contributions as the exigencies of our political situation dictated. I have gone through this tale to soften the ground a bit for what I’m about to tell you.
 
A lot of water has passed under the bridge since those London days. Please, Sir, cast your mind back to the day you boarded the British Airways flight back to Nigeria a free man, about 20 years ago to the minute, in October 1998. God has been extremely kind, in all ramifications. If anyone had predicted you would ever be this big, you would have dismissed the person pronto as insane. You never prepared to be the Governor of Lagos then. Perhaps, you thought of returning to the Senate. The name on everyone’s lips was Dr Wahab Dosunmu. But the ways of God are permanently mysterious. All in a jiffy, things turned around for you and you became first the Candidate and later the most powerful Governor in Nigeria. You know those who helped you achieve that status and assisted in ensuring that you ultimately became the most powerful man in Nigeria after the President of Nigeria, even after you finished your term of office. It wasn’t all rosy-rosy as you had a running battle with President Olusegun Obasanjo who, for whatever reason, chose to starve Lagos of its statutory funds. You assembled a fantastic team of technocrats and, with them, you set out on a beautiful voyage to create a new roadmap and gargantuan masterplan for modern Lagos. You survived every challenge or attack on your person, including plots to impeach you. After a turbulent first term, you coasted home to victory during your second term. By then your eminent position in the pantheon of Nigerian icons was assured.
 
You were not yet done. Out of the blues, you gave Lagos a superlative retirement gift in Mr Babatunde Raji Fashola, a gentle colossus, who took Lagos to a new height of excellence. Many people never knew Fashola had such incredible talent. But towards the end of his first term, tragedy almost struck, when news broke out that you were not going to endorse him for a second term in office. I remember writing you a letter, in this same Pendulum column, asking you to perish the thought. I remember saying emphatically then that the marriage between you and Fashola was consummated in heaven and any attempt to seek a divorce by either of you would end up in monumental disaster for both of you and your great party, ACN. I have no idea how many important personalities appealed to you before you calmed down and embraced your godson, warts and all, but you did the needful, and despite rumoured friction between both of you today, Fashola remains a great pride of Lagos State and Nigeria as a whole.
 
Thereafter, I also had occasion to beg you not to get involved in certain battles at the beginning of the Buhari administration because I was aware some people were out to use and dump you, but your new acolytes frowned at my humble suggestion and went to town with blistering insults and abuses. Over three years after, I’m sure you’ve seen the futility of your great effort at helping your party get its bearing right. Even the reconciliation committee which you headed was never allowed to flourish for one day. It has been one crisis after the other. But let’s leave that and move forward to the crux of the matter today. 
 
Let me say categorically that no one has sent me to you because what is fashionable these days is the web of conspiracy stories on social medial. You must have guessed what this is all about, already. My appeal to you, openly and frontally, is to plead with you to handle the Akinwunmi Ambode debacle with utmost care and tact. Until you brought him out from retirement, not many people ever knew him and his achievements as the Lagos State Accountant-General. He was obviously a young, shy but brilliant man who knew how to get results. Your unusual sagacity and prescience in unearthing gems like Fashola and Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, the Vice-President birthed another genius of an administrator in Ambode. He has succeeded in following and emulating the glorious heights set by you and Fashola and Lagos State has again been better for the choice you made. I have read all sorts about how power changed him and how he has not been too grateful and appreciative to all those who gave him this uncommon favour and the seat of power that he currently occupies. I have also sat with people who swore never to forgive him even if you do. We all know though, that once you give direction, all the sabre-rattling by these political journey-men will cease and they will abide by your decision. Hmmm, Asiwaju, at the end of the day, no matter what happens, you would be held responsible for the plight of your party, APC and Lagos State, for good or for bad.
 
It is normal for every mortal to feel let down. It is even always tempting for humans to get angry and seek vengeance but after every war, the gladiators often come together on the table to start a new life as if they were not killing themselves in recent past. I can’t claim to know all the sins Governor Ambode committed to warrant his present predicament. But whatever it was, we are told he has begged and pleaded, his wife has apologised, many distinguished Nigerians have beseeched that you forgive and allow him to complete his good work. I have read the complaints of many of your foot-soldiers, Sir, the reasons and excuses for dumping Ambode are very similar, he has not looked after anybody, he has been standoffish, who does he think he is, and so on. These are at the very worst, personal issues that could naturally lead to bickering and animosity. I doubt if the issue was more about lack of performance in accordance with the mandate of improving Lagos which you gave to him. Not even uncharitable persons would accuse him of that. Politics is indeed a delicate and dangerous game. A few months back, no one would have envisaged this type of strife or brouhaha to visit a man everyone called the most hardworking Governor in Nigeria. If I want to sound superstitious and to put it the African way, this is the handiwork of witches and wizards.
 
I’m aware that my very dear Brother, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, incidentally, I’m 20 times closer to him than Ambode, has been dragged into the cauldron of intrigue and power struggle in Lagos State. I will love him to be Governor, because he is undoubtedly qualified, but not in the manner many of your supporters are going about it. If he is so destined, he may still be Governor, some day. This is my reason for saying that the apparent unnecessary and unwarranted humiliation of the current Governor is bizarre and definitely uncalled for. The giddiness of the moment must urgently give way to sobriety. If care is not taken ‘kata kata’ may burst! It seems that the Lagos electorate is being taken for granted and that it is assumed that they are merely dogs that can be controlled by the whistle of the dog handler. Asiwaju, you never know, the unpredictable may happen and it has happened before. I do not pray that history repeats itself within a short time, at a time when you hold sway as the undisputed power broker. If that happens, God forbid, most of those saying there is no one like you today, will swiftly disappear before you can blink an eye. I venture to say that most of them do not personally like you.  They live in fear of you and not in awe of you. I hear and know what many of them say behind you. If one asks them, why haven’t they told you face-to-face, the usual answer is “you will be called an enemy once you tell Oga the truth…” These are people very close to you, but do not have your interest at heart.  They are only concerned with their selfish interests and self-preservation.
 
What would be worse is for this grave matter not to be settled and Babajide’s head is used to break coconut. This would be sad. Everything must be done to bring your team together again as one. Both of them can still work perfectly for the good of the State.  There is nothing wrong in having two brilliant, diligent and industrious people on the same ticket to advance the prospects of the State, with the recognition that the deputy is already anointed to take over. I believe that this may be a veritable solution to the present imbroglio and that it can work to assuage the feelings and aspirations of all concerned.
 
The present situation is sad and unfortunate. I seriously pity those who think you and Ambode cannot be friends again. I know from your antecedents that you do not practice politics like that.  You are much more astute. You are buoyed by the philosophy of ‘itesiwaju Eko’. That demands sacrifices for the Lagos State you envision.  I believe this is one sacrifice that is necessary to make. It is difficult but not impossible. You must forgive and make up, before it is too late. All those who have intervened are waiting, and watching, to see if you would disregard, and disrespect, them all collectively. That would be truly unfortunate.
 
Finally, Asiwaju, you have shown your power and demonstrated the ability to squash and rout, but, please, don’t fire the bullet. Ambode deserves a second chance. 
I remain your dear younger one who will not shirk from telling you the plain truth!

Lagos Guber: The Forces Against Ambode

Lagos State since inception has a mix- pouri of a cosmopolitan city with refined and advanced fixture of ultra-modern urban lifestyles as well-as global outlook. As someone born, bread and buttered in Lagos decades ago, it is sad to note that the ongoing impasse over the second-term aspiration of Governor Akinwunmi Ambode and a sect of political marauders is a manifest threat to the basic fabrics and foundations of Lagos as a Centre of excellence, a mega-city where merit, performance and social commitment take precedence over mediocrity, covetousness of power and lust for filthy lucre.

The State has been well blessed under democracy with rare breed of visionary pointsmen, from Lateef Kayode Jakande to Sir Michael Otedola, Asiwaju Ahmed Bola Tinubu, Babatunde Fashola and the present Akinwunmi Ambode. The political stability, seamless transition of power is what makes the State the capital of industry, business, and commerce, global home to all; a safe haven for lives and properties despite accommodating over twenty million residents with enormous security challenges. Interestingly, the state also wears the crown of the political headquarters of Nigeria and a major pacesetter in the continent.

It is instructive to recall just a few unique features of Lagos State to emphasize the importance of political stability for a trail blazing State. It would be recalled that during the misadventure of military incursion into power, the State was the hot-bed and sanctuary of pro-democracy, human rights movement and other social resistance forces. Till date any agitation of even the labour, self-determination and other groups gather momentum from Lagos. Even processes for national redemptionand advancement commence from the State. This is why Lagos is critical to democratic governance, political stability of the country. The present devious plan to create political chaos in the State is tantamount to a blank recipe to derail our nascent democracy.

It is granted that we are in the season of democratic contestation, i.e. election year. Thus various hues and shades of individuals are at liberty to throw their hats into the ring. Indeed other contestants are free to aspire to become Governor of Lagos State, but to conspire a design to debar the performing incumbent from contesting is not duly glaringly anti-democratic but also constitutionally subversive. For all Lagosians who have played roles in entrenching democracy, it is obvious that the current macabre drama playing itself out is a grand plot to put all residents’ freedom under siege, by arresting the State’s developmental strides and pro-poor masses projects.
The main kernel of objections to Ambode return ticket stems from his policy resolve to level up infrastructural growth across all rooks and crannies of the State. When he decided to shift emphasis of his administration projects from elites areas to ‘light-up’ the suburbs, to construct over-head bridges in Abule-Egba, Agege etc and road construction in Epe, Ikorodu and Badagry – there were vehement opposition from the ruling political elites. There are covert and open campaigns to rubbish the Governor’s accomplishments like the increase in Internally Generated Revenue, regular payment of workers’ entitlements, and building of helipad for LASUTH and prioritization of the education sector.

The most ribald irony of our political situation is the allegation that the State should not have dabbled into constructing the Muritala Muhammed International Airport road, Ikeja. which ought to be a Federal Government project. They forget that the road and many others are meant to alleviate the transportation hardship of Lagosians, ease movement of goods and services as well position as a sign-post of attractiveness to investors, international visitor and tourist. The so-called political leaders claim that Governor Ambode’s projects to meet up the infrastructural deficit of the state are adversely affecting their natural entitlements and political patronage in the allocation of the scarce resources of the state.
If the truth must be told without fearing whose ox is gored, the arrowheads of the “infamous gang” clamouring against the return ticket of Governor Ambode ought to be exposed and taken up in public market square for maximum opprobrium and appropriate peoples’ sanction. They include a two time female Senator, a former Chairman of the party, a reverend that is not a gentleman, a four time member of state house of Assembly and a serving Governor of a South-West State who had earlier served as a Commissioner in Lagos State.

These elements have a single aim to perpetually ensure that Lagos State, its people and resources are their personal fiefdom. This is extremely dangerous to genuine people’s democratic rule and all should combat it.

Olawale Saint Jherico
Ex-Secretary
Trade Union Congress, Lagos Council

Akeem Lasisi, Another Exponent of Ideas, Joins Ex-Punchers Club

By Seth Akintoye

Akeem Lasisi, another exponent of ideas, joins Ex-Punchers Club
It was William Shakespeare who said in Julius Caesar: “There is a tide in the affairs of men, which taken at the flood, leads on to fortune.
Omitted, all the voyage of their life is bound in shallows and in miseries.
On such a full sea are we now afloat.
And we must take the current when it serves, or lose our ventures.”
This, to some extent, is true of Akeem Lasisi, who said goodbye to PUNCH yesterday. He had planned to leave the organisation some years back, but was prevailed upon to stay on. However the moment of truth came yesterday when finally he said goodbye to PUNCH.
Like everything that has a beginning, the final stay of Akeem in PUNCH came, and he grabbed the opportunity with the two hands.
Emotions were displayed; speeches were made, pictures were taken, but could not change what the Babalawo has predicted.
God knows why Akeem did not leave the organisation before now. Perhaps this is the best time to take the tide in his affairs, as William Shakespeare has said in Julius Caesar. Had he taken the tide before now, it could have resulted in another thing.
But Akeem waited until this opportune time. It is my prayer that this tide would lead on to fortune, and not bound in shallows and miseries. Like the philosophical musician, Jim Reeves, said: “This world is not my own; I am just passing through…” PUNCH is not our home, it is a stopgap. We are just passing through. We don’t pray to die here. Sooner or later, we will leave PUNCH, one after the other.
Brethren, on such a full sea are we now afloat? We must take the current when it serves us, or lose our ventures. This is the current Akeem has taken, and I pray it will lead him to fortune.
The Yoruba would say: “Eyin to ku ki emu ra; Eyin to ku ki emu ra; Akeem ti k’oke odo k’afara to ja; Eyin to ku ki emu ra!”
Like Tunde Odesola, my bosom friend; Demola Babalola, my kinsman and “tormentor-in-chief”; Azubuike Ishiekwene, my boss and friend; Steve Ayorinde, a co-pilot in the ESD; Yemi Adebowale, another ESD exponent; and Yusuf Alli, my friend, colleague and boss at various times, Akeem has joined the elite and guarded club of Ex-PUNCHERS. This is the ultimate, where we all aim to belong one day.
Before then, I crave we use any strength left in us to serve the organisation. Adieu Akeem! The parting yesterday was well made, I guess!

 

 

Ambode Planning To Leave APC? Ah Ah, Haba!

Yesterday, I again stumbled on a report making the rounds that Lagos State Governor, Akinwunmi Ambode is planning to defect to another party over alleged conclusion of All Progressives Congress, APC leadership, especially Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu to replace him with another governorship candidate in the 2019 elections. Haba! Kilode?
The report specifically claimed that Ambode had told his aides that he was pondering defecting to either the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) or the African Democratic Congress (ADC) should the APC leadership deny him a second term ticket.
The same report also claimed that former Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji, who is also an indigene of Epe, is being touted as Ambode’s likely replacement by the APC leadership.
Before addressing the tissue of lies the author of such malicious report purported, I need to quickly place it on record that this same Ikuforiji came out openly to dismiss such claim, describing it as the handiwork of mischief makers and detractors within the party. So I would rather not dwell on that issue, since we have heard from the horses’ mouth.
However, what baffles me is the wicked suggestion that our Governor intends to leave the APC, a party that he has struggled to build over the last three years. This is sacrilege, unbelievable and absolutely despicable! As a keen follower of the political developments in the Centre of Excellence, I know for sure that this is a hoax and a cheap blackmail. It is totally baseless and unfounded.
This is the pastime of detractors and more so in this era of social media where anybody with access to the internet can sit down and conjure falsehood and present it as the truth, one would not be too surprised about this report. Personally, I am not surprised that shameless elements are again up in arms and putting up crass report since it aligns with their evil agenda to cling to any straw in a desperate attempt to denigrate the government of the day in Lagos.
What we all know to be true is that there is no such plan by the governor to seek reelection in 2019 on the platform of another party other than the APC. Why should he anyway when he is the acknowledged poster boy of the party right now!
The Governor has spent the last three years in transforming the State through sterling projects and programmes and it is glaring even to his critics that the State has been moved a notch higher since he assumed office and he is ever ready to surpass what he has already achieved in the second term.
People should also care to note that this is the season of political jobbers and more of such baseless, unfounded and irresponsible report would find its way to the open space before the elections and so, the public should be wary of such malicious fabrications targeted at creating disaffection and confusion where none exists.
By Mr. Henry Gbadebo

Thank You Speaker Obasa, We Got The Job

By Moses Ayobami

Of course, I got the job. It was not just me alone, my friends and their friends too. At the end of the process, about 5,000 residents of Lagos got the job just from an idea you thought about probably in your car or in the office amid your very busy schedule as the Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly or even while driving home and seeing the faces mapped with hunger, desolation and fear.

When I say fear, there was real fear. Residents moved about their activities suspecting every moves by the next person. Trust was often lost. A thief could just emerge from nowhere and hit his target and disappear without a trace. The police was doing its best. The Rapid Response Squad (RRS) heavily sponsored with state funds were doing extremely well, but with fewer personnel for a populated Lagos, a lot more was sure needed to protect the security of lives and properties.

For those who might want to read this ‘thank you note’ with some bias, I want to confess that I have only met Rt. Hon Mudashiru Obasa once and this was at the recently held town hall meeting in his Agege State Constituency 1. I could not get close to him because of his security aides. I know he is the third citizen of Lagos state and would have loved to hear my testimony. But I also know that he would, by chance, see it and then try to picture how many more Lagosians are silently remembering him daily.

I came to Lagos in 2007 and God had been kind to me since then. I got my first job three months after my arrival and living with an uncle. My second job came months after. Then I got an apartment at the Omole area of Ojodu in the state. However, for two of my friends, the situation was not like mine. The two of them graduated two years after me. After their mandatory one year national service, they decided to come to Lagos for the supposed greener pastures.

For four years since 2010, I was saddled with the burden of taking care of my friends. They got menial jobs with wages that could hardly meet their needs let alone having any left for those who think they should get returns for investing in their education.

The case of one of them was very pathetic. With no father, he was left with a mother who struggled so hard to ensure he survived the hardship that the Nigerian educational system has become. The poor woman, a farmer back in a sleepy community in Osun State, has five children and my friend is the first. So one can only imagine the level of anticipated returns his family members must have prepared for but which was denied them because of the growing rate of unemployment across the country.

When it was time for me to get married, I moved away from the apartment, pleaded with the landlord that my ‘my two brothers’ would remain there. Since then, I had augmented whatever deficit they had and it had been choking.

Then, suddenly one day, I heard that there was this Neighbourhood Watch Bill that was being proposed by the Lagos State House of Assembly. I became interested in the Bill and was one of those who eagerly waited for its passage, simply because I have often advocated for the creation of state police especially in a state like Lagos with such soaring population against a few number of policemen. I knew and remained optimistic that if it was passed, the Bill would provide for an alternative security outfit to the police which many had grown sceptical about.

My investigation revealed that the Bill was a private member initiative sponsored by Speaker Mudashiru Obasa himself. I was not surprised. Before he became the Speaker, he, like many of his colleagues at the House of Assembly had often agitated for the creation of state police. Their advocacy had remained strong over the years. They spoke each time they had any opportunity. But their cries had often been taken with a refusal for action by those supposed to consider the implementation.

I believe Obasa saw the need to ensure that the protection of every life and property in Lagos remained sacrosanct. He wanted every Lagosian to sleep with his/her two eyes closed. He wanted a rewind of the era where people could leave their properties and wares at particular spots and still return to find them. He wanted a sane society in Lagos. I am not in his mind, but that is what I think and subsequent events on eventual passage and implementation of the Bill proved me right.

Mr Speaker, I do not know if you will come across this note, but I cannot stop thanking you for this concept. For me, it is even beyond the security of lives and properties; it is about job creation. I want to testify to you that I have been relieved of the two burdens I had. They are now part of the about 5,000 personnel that make up the Lagos Neighbourhood Safety Corps (LNSC). Mr Speaker! They fortunately made it.

Since learning of the intendment of the Bill, I followed its development and implementation to the letter. I was one of those who attended the Public Hearing on the Bill at the Lateef Jakande Hall in the Assembly premises. While listening to the speech of Speaker Obasa, I pick interest in the job-creating section of the Bill. I got home and related my experience to my friends.

When the Bill was eventually passed by the House, I monitored it to its final ascent by the State Government, Mr Akinwunmi Ambode.

I must also thank the Governor for the alacrity with which the Bill was not only ascented to but also the swift implementation of the new Law.

When the state government declared employment into the security outfit open, I quickly contacted my friends. The two of them did not hesitate. They were part of the first set to apply. Then prayers followed. Who do we know in power to help push? There was none. They simply followed all the processes. They were called. They completed the training. As I write this, I remember how one of them shed tears as he called me on phone to thank me for being more than a brother to them. With that emotion-ladden voice, he told me that he got his training kits and participated fully in the training. Days later, he got his uniform.

Today, he smiles each time we are together and discussing the past. He has never stopped thinking me. But I cannot keep all the thanks. I must give some of them to the man that initiated the Bill.

Speaker Obasa, just like my friends thank me today for the relief, I am also thanking you for helping to lift the burden off me. You were elected to serve Agege Constituency 1, but you found yourself serving the entire Lagos State. Thank you on behalf of the about 5000 personnel of the Lagos Neighbourhood Safety Corps. Each time I receive two ‘thank you’ from the two of my friends, I will send one and half of them to you while I keep the remaining half sir. Thank you again and again. Thank you, Mr Speaker!

Moses Ayobami, a digital analyst, writes from Ikeja, Lagos.

Saudi Arabia Sentences Female Activist, Israa al-Ghomgham To Death

Human Rights Watch says Saudi prosecutors are seeking the death penalty for a female activist, Israa al-Ghomgham, for non-violent acts.

It would be the first time that a female activist would bag such a punishment.

“It is unprecedented that they would seek the death penalty for a woman,” Zayadin told NBC News today.

Saudi Arabian officials were not immediately available to comment on the case.

She added that the kingdom’s public prosecutor behind the charges were reporting directly to King Salman and “by proxy” his son, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Ghomgham is among five Shiite Muslim activists from Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province currently on trial and facing the death penalty in a secretive terrorism court, according to Human Rights Watch.

Most people executed in the Gulf kingdom are beheaded with a sword, according to Reprieve, an international charity focused on the death penalty.

The charges against the group that Ghomgham is part of include incitement to protest, chanting slogans hostile to the regime, attempting to inflame public opinion, and providing moral support to rioters.

The crown prince, who is widely seen as the power behind the throne, has been on an intense international public relations campaign to tout the kingdom’s efforts to transform the Saudi economy and return the deeply conservative society to “moderate” Islam.

Women have been granted permission to drive and more freely work outside the home, and the country’s fearsome religious police have been defanged.

But a recent wave of detentions of intellectuals, clerics, journalists and women’s rights campaigners has alarmed rights workers around the world as well as some Saudi allies. Canada’s call in early August for the immediate release of Saudi women’s rights activists within days spiralled into a full-blown diplomatic crisis.

Saudi Arabia’s explosion at a Canadian tweet shows how rules have changed
Rights groups worry that the execution of a woman for non-violent offences would set a precedent.

Zayadin added that Ghomgham’s case “provided a window” to an intensifying crackdown that had already swept up peaceful women’s rights campaigners.

The prosecution of Ghomgham was reported earlier this week by Berlin-based European-Saudi Organisation for Human Rights and ALQST, a London-based rights group.

The charges are related to Ghomgham’s involvement in huge demonstrations in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province — where most of the country’s Shiites live — that started in 2011.

She was arrested in December 2015 with her husband, who is also charged. Their next court date is scheduled for Oct. 28.

Tribute To Richard Akinnola II At 60: Half Human, Half Amazing

By Azuka Jebose

It’s A New Day In Nigeria…

 

Richard Akinnola II is half human, half amazing. He is a rare breed that God privileged planet Nigeria. Imagine the 60-year journey of his enchanting life, anchored by dreams of justice and equity for our dear native land citizens where all men women are created equal to live with dignity, respect and rule of law?. Imagine the intrigues, perseverance, sacrifice toward an esteemed dream, his service to humanity, intellect and humility?.

Richard was born for us. He came at the right time, to a complex nation-state. He arrived near the dawn of an emerging knitted, yet a troubled nation. Perhaps, his birth was purposeful. God needed him for this soil; his mission, engraved in his birth mystery.

He grew up watching the distrust and disturbances of our beautiful people by those that led us with brute, post independent Nigeria. Though tongues and tribes differ, we were hooked to that particular instance voyage of new Nigeria, by our resilience as one people, with one destiny. But along those hard routes, strong tides of indiscipline, corruption and bad leadership rocked our ship.

Richard and the rest of us endured that tough and rough turbulence. The experience made him stronger and further defined his purpose in life: to be true patriot and dedicated activist, to serve our father’s land, love unconditionally, Nigerians, regardless of ethnic, religious or political affiliations; to be firm, protect our civil liberties, seek equal rights and justice, fight for democratic governance, no matter the cost…

He matured at a time when our leaders turned our heaven to hell; when they asked us to trade our heroes ( Fela Anikulapo Kuti, Wole Soyinka, Balarabe Musa, Gani Fawehinmi, Tai Solarin, Chuba Okadigbo) for mere ghosts, rubbished our lives and peppered us with military authoritarianism that produced sufferings in the land. Richard did not sit on the sidelines to watch the people suffer and waste. No. He was bold, beautiful and defiant.

Sounds of our disenfranchised, anguished voices became the strength and courage which rallied him to get up, stand up and defend us, the weak dwellers of a ravaged republic. He chose to, if necessary; sacrifice his young blood for soil in efforts to save Nigeria from carnages and brutalities of army rules.

Richard sacrificed his brilliant and brave energy and challenged an oppressive lifestyle: an advocate for social justice. He became our unsung young oracle of civil rights activism. He did not choose bullets or terror as his weapon; he chose his charismatic and conspicuous Legal pearls of wisdom, rule of law and his intelligence to engage authorities and fight for our human rights and liberties. He continues to these times.

Richard Akinnola II’s heart is beyond beauty. Each year, he reminds us that there are pathways to serving and caring, selflessly, for the less privileged in our country. He appreciates and cares for widows in our society, by empowering them with financial aid. “Shey you understand why I began my writing that he is half human and half amazing?.

Nigeria is his tribe. Patriotism and service to country are his intoxicants, his unconditional love for his wife; children and spectacular grandchildren are testaments to a great magnificence.

Please rise, toast and salute my dear friend, an older colleague in everything journalism, an ambiance of our struggles as a nation state, the profound and beloved patriot of a country called Nigeria, a tribe-less dear Nigerian, Richard Akinolla II, who at 60 is still pretty. I love you, my guy. Mega earth run, Egbon. Continue to live strongest.

Azuka Jebose (Molokwu)

Onicha Ugbo Native

Umuchu Citizen ( Thanks to my brother Uzor Maxim Uzoatu)

As I Enter Into My 44th Year…By Hafsat Abiola-Costello

I’ve been traveling for most of my birthday, returning to Brussels after two weeks in the U.S. with my husband and kids to be with some of our family and friends. As I enter into my 44th year on this beautiful planet of ours, I am mindful both that it was in her 44th year that my mother was killed and that in this last year of her life, she demonstrated fierce courage in the face of a brutal dictatorship. She will always be a guiding light for me.

Every year is again an invitation to let our lives express our deepest beliefs.

So… No excuses. No lies. No crutches. Just courage to face what is there, to nurture what is desired and to be who is required.

My gratitude to all of you, brothers and sisters, for your presence, your friendship, your many acts of kindness. May I be able to repay you in kind and to pay it forward.

Kofi Annan: The World’s Peacemaker From Africa – Strive Masiyiwa

Reflection: Sad farewell to my counselor, mentor, friend, father, confidant.

“God blesses those who work for peace, for they will be called the children of God”. (Matthew 5:9)

The world just lost one of the greatest leaders ever. Africa has lost its most illustrious son. I just lost one of the most important people in my life @ Kofi Annan.

For the last 12 years I have worked with the man I simply called “Chief,” at times on a daily basis. Being my elder, I never called him Kofi, but when he would come on the line, it would always be “Strive, it’s Kofi. How are you? How are Tsitsi and the kids…”

We talked about everything and anything.

We discussed serious and grave situations: world peace, African crises, poverty, hunger, girls’ education, pandemics, food crises, elections, leaders, climate change…

We discussed them all. He was always looking to do something right away.

I worked with him on several international organizations, often at his invitation. I always saw myself as one of his foot soldiers. Just ready to do anything to help his work.

We started things together and drove initiatives together.

He was a quiet man of extraordinary humility and poise.

We also laughed and joked together because he had such a warm sense of humor.

He was my counselor, mentor, friend, father, confidant. All that… and more!

I loved him so dearly.

My family and I loved him to high heaven.

True, I’m kinda hurting right now but I know how to draw Comfort, so I will be fine.

To Nane, Kojo, Ama, Nina – my deepest heartfelt condolences. This man worked for peace, and henceforth shall be called:

# The world’s peacemaker from Africa!

 

– Masiyiwa is the Executive Chairman and Founder of the Econet Group

Re: On Governor Ambode’s Stunted Re-election

By Ibidapo Balogun

From the get-go, the writer, a supposed journalist for that matter, going by that known name, made it clear he was not a Governor Ambode’s person, signposting the danger that daily besieges the journalism profession when those required by the ethics of their noble profession to look at issues from a non-aligned, unbiased and dispassionate angle, now tell us openly who they are for or against. This is dismaying to journalism purists who constantly advocate that the profession and its practitioners be guided by the ethics of their work.
Now to the issue of direct primaries adopted to popular acclaim for the choice of Osun APC flag bearer because the generality of the party members are the electors in the process as opposed to delegates who usually turn themselves into mercenaries extorting money from the candidates at such election. Yes at the Lagos APC stakeholders’ meeting at ACME Road, Ikeja, Asiwaju Tinubu affirmed the direct primary option would be employed to pick candidates for election at all levels in Lagos. This was not targeted at anybody, not in the least Governor Ambode who also spoke at the meeting and equally embraced the option, knowing full well it can only galvanize the party members behind him.
The writer needs to be properly educated that the fact that incumbents may enjoy the option of first refusal does not mean they would not participate in primaries. President Buhari will most likely enjoy the option of first refusal in APC but this does not mean there would be no primaries.
The idea of direct primaries is not to shut out incumbents and certainly not Governor Ambode. The direct system can only help to give more legitimacy to the party’s candidature as it enjoys more popular participation and is akin to giving power to the party members and a test of the party’s strength before the real election.
Again, the impression that all is not well between Asiwaju Tinubu and Governor Ambode is not correct. That is what the sponsors of the hired writer want people to believe. They are out to create a crisis situation in Lagos but that is not what obtains. It will not happen. The Governor enjoys the confidence of Asiwaju Tinubu who brought him in in 2015 when the naysayers like the writer and his sponsors were shouting blue murder and wanted to shoot down the same Ambode they now see as their good boy in a bid to get at Tinubu.
Truth is there is no problem in Lagos APC, definitely none between Asiwaju and Ambode. The primaries would come and the best candidate for the job that the governor represents will emerge to take the state to greater heights.