Nigeria, where is the love?

Former Education/Petroleum Minister, Professor Jubril Aminu

Professor Jubril Aminu, Nigeria’s former Education/Petroleum Minister, on loving and being patriotic about Nigeria:

Love for this country is just not there. People love their religion more than their country. I am from the North; people from the North are mad about the North but our leaders did not advise us to be as mad about our country. It is the same thing with the West and the East; their leaders did not advise them to be mad about Nigeria too. The people from the West love the West, but they were not thought to love their country, Nigeria. They were told to antagonise the federal government, because of the opposition stance. In my view, everything necessary should be done to get the people to love their country, Nigeria. Not in the fashion of what we see on the television every day, ‘We are Nigeria, we are one’….etc. Even children laugh at it. Invent real ways of making the people love Nigeria.

I remember this quote on patriotism from Mark Twain: “Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.” Continue reading…

A nation tranquilized and lost

On August 29, 2011 / By Imnakoya / In Corruption, Democracy, Nigeria / 2 Comments

The construct of the Nigerian nation is complex, multifaceted, and demands a sound political and executive management that is contrary that what is being operated today.   Continue reading…

Elections 2011: Is the tide turning?

On April 9, 2011 / By Imnakoya / In Democracy, elections, Governance, Media, Nigeria / 3 Comments
Source: Vanguard newspapers

Source: Vanguard newspapers

Splattered on the several mainstream media outlets are the reports on bombing attacks on electoral office and polling station in central and northwestern Nigeria. From the Oyinbo-land I live in Upper Midwestern U.S, one could easily be made to believe that the election in Nigeria on Saturday April 9 may not be any different from previous ones marred with widespread violence and electoral fraud. This may not be the case this year. It does appear the violence is limited to just few areas, and the election has been relatively free and fair. Continue reading…

Nigeria’s million dollar legislators

On December 7, 2010 / By Imnakoya / In Activism, Democracy, Governance, Nigeria / 1 Comment
Nigeria National Assembly complex, Abuja

Nigeria National Assembly complex, Abuja

Nothing seems to be making sense in Nigeria any more (has anything ever, really?). As the uproar continues over Sanusi’s revelation, the enormous burden of keeping the 469 legislators becomes even more apparent: annual salary (plus benefits) for those in the House of Representatives and Senate are in the range of 204 million and 240 million naira, respectively. In US-dollar translation, Nigeria pays each of its 469 lawmakers more than one million dollars each year! Continue reading…

Nigeria: 25% of federal spending on legislators

On November 29, 2010 / By Imnakoya / In Corruption, Democracy, Governance, Nigeria / 5 Comments

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, is going to take some flak from federal legislators over his statement that the national assembly consumes 25 percent of federal spending.

“We need power, we need infrastructure, so we need to start looking at the structure of expenditure and make it more consistent with the development initiative of the country”, he stated. “It not good enough that a quarter of the federal spending was being consumed by the National Assembly instead of using it to bring real development to the country”

Continue reading…

Democracy distorted

On November 16, 2010 / By Imnakoya / In Democracy, Nigeria / No Comments

An editorial from NEXT newspaper provides some impetus to comment of the recent event in Delta state, excerpt:

On 9th November 2010, Mr. Uduaghan was booted out of office by the Benin Court of Appeal ruling which nullified his election. The court in effect upheld the submission of Great Ogboru, the candidate of the Democratic People’s Party (DPP) who said elections did not take place. In other words, the courts agreed that for three and a half years, Mr. Uduaghan illegally occupied the office of governor of Delta State based on elections that were nonexistent. The implication of this judgement is clear; Mr. Uduaghan ‘rigged’ his way into office, and this is the man that our President is happily endorsing for public office. Mr. Jonathan’s decision raises questions not only about the president’s judgement but also the sincerity of his avowed commitment to not just the rule of law and order but the entrenchment of democracy in our society.

The meaning of this ‘presidential’ endorsement is simple:

Uduaghan did nothing wrong, even if he had been occupying for 3+ years an elective position acquired by fraud. The definition of electoral fraud is not applicable in this instance; therefore there is no ground—morally or legally, for sanctions. This is a grotesque distortion of democratic values.

‘God forbid bad thing!’

Let’s hope out of the Abuja tragedy, agony and mangled wrecks comes a renewed vigor to turn around the worsening conditions in Nigeria. Continue reading…