Author: Wale Alonge

  • Nigeria: Challenging the Dysfunction, Rebuilding the Institutions

    Nigeria: Challenging the Dysfunction, Rebuilding the Institutions

    My faith in my country is anchored on the knowledge that nation-building is like making sausage. It is a messy, ugly, unending process. Every nation has its fair share of shit, the difference between failed and successful nation states is not measured by their inherent perfection but by the commitment of their citizens to the patriotic task of constant improvement and adding more layers of growth from lessons learned from past mistakes and failures in the gradual, unending and never-completed task of building the elusive perfect union.

    Beyond the particular case of Dele Farotimi versus Aare Afe Babalola which hopefully will be fairly decided in the court of law, after listening to his lengthy video interview, I have to agree that Dele Farotimi made a compelling case about the decadence, the abject lack of integrity and probity in the Nigerian judiciary.

    Frankly, that should not come as a surprise to most Nigerians. In most Nigerian lived experience we have all at one time or another been confronted with, and victimized by the obscenely ugly side of the Nigerian legal system starting with the decadent, corruption ridden, oppressive Nigerian police force which victimizes the poor with illegal arrest and bribery at every point in our interaction with it while the rich gets away with murder.

    A police force which ordinarily should serve as the foundation of the judicial system, but which instead is the agency in which the victim of crime is made to pay for the book on which his or her case will be documented and to provide fuel to the car to arrest the offender. A police force that will advise the criminal how to circumvent the law.

    We have seen a judiciary where justice is meted out according to the pocket book. A judicial system in which a poor man who steals rickety cellphone, if he escapes lynching by the mob, would be lucky to get 10 years in jail while a white collar criminal who steals billions and with a water-tight case against him or her by the EFCC , will have his or her case killed with adjournments amidst injunctions.

    If we are going to be honest with ourselves, the weight of evidence against our judiciary like every single institution in our country starting with our religious bodies, the churches, the mosque and the traditionalists, to our educational system where certificates have been commoditized and sold to the highest bidder or with demand for sexual favor or exploitation, to the highest level of our government, is that the stench and rot is so deep, so total, so all-encompassing, and so systemic, that they are almost irredeemable and all need to be totally blown into shreds and rebuilt from the ground up. That is the honest to God truth. Until then, we shall be moving from one crisis to another.

    It is a bitter pill to swallow but there is no escaping it. It is sad and demoralizing but we must face our stack reality. This is bigger than President Tinubu because the rot in our institutions predates him. It has been long, deep and systemic from its foundation.

    Before people start to shout “we told you so”. Let me state clearly that my faith, belief and commitment to Nigeria is total. It is not anchored on a denial of nor shaken by its inherent dysfunction and its internal contradiction. My faith and commitment to my country which I dearly love and in which I am grateful that the universe has placed me, is regardless of its dysfunction and internal contradiction. My faith in my country is anchored on the knowledge that nation-building is like making sausage. It is a messy, ugly, unending process. Every nation has its fair share of shit, the difference between failed and successful nation states is not measured by their inherent perfection but by the commitment of their citizens to the patriotic task of constant improvement and adding more layers of growth from lessons learned from past mistakes and failures in the gradual, unending and never-completed task of building the elusive perfect union. That is the task we as citizens must take on if we are going to build a virile, strong nation we all can be proud of. No one else in this world would do it for us. And no matter how many passports we earn by way of naturalization, there is no escaping our Nigerianess. People will always ask you the “I mean where are you really from” no mater how much you try to code-switch.

    Adewale Alonge, PhD, is Founder & President, Africa Diaspora Partnership for Empowerment and Development. www.adped.org

  • Dele Farotimi Versus Baba Aare Afe Babalola: A Case of an Unfair Apportioning of The Institutional Wage of Sin

    Dele Farotimi Versus Baba Aare Afe Babalola: A Case of an Unfair Apportioning of The Institutional Wage of Sin

    The titanic legal confrontation between Dele Farotimi and highly respected Chief Are Afe Babalola has totally taken up the oxygen in the Nigerian social media, judicial and political space. It has dominated the news and taken on a life of its own with partisan combatants on both sides. It has pitted the preeminent Doyen of the Nigerian legal aristocracy against a legal upstart who is a master of social media fueled social activism and pseudo-defender of the poor and oppressed. I am not pretending to be a neutral objective analyst in the conflict. I have never been a fan of Dele Farotimi and his tactics of seeking to take on the mantle of Gani Fawehinmi as the fighter for social justice and the little man without putting in the work. Unlike the late icon Gani Fawehinmi who put in the work, paid the huge price personally and professionally with deep scars to show for his effort, Dele Farotimi has sought to use social media notoriety, crude and unguarded defaming, scandalizing of other people’s reputation as the launchpad for his undeserved and unmerited social activist status. I find that morally and professionally reprehensible. He is not the only one in this new cottage industry of reputation washing. I find the entire short cut celebritization of virtue as an obscenity.

    Chief Gani Fawehinmi

    Baba Are Afe Babalola is undoubtedly at the very pinnacle of the Nigerian legal industry, a reputation he has built diligently and meticulously over six decades. Yes, there are rumors out there in the public domain about how he might have parlay his contact with the Nigerian political class to build his legal empire. If leveraging political capital is a crime, the Nigeria jail-house and in fact jailhouses around the globe will the filled to overcapacity. In order for anyone to criminalize alleged political influence like Dele Farotimi did in his book, on public TV and social media, they had better have irrefutable evidence. That judgement will hopefully be rendered in the Nigerian court of law.

    Even more impressive and legacy affirming than Chief Afe Babalola’s out of this world remarkable legal career, are what he has done at the later stage of his life with his resources, when most of his contemporaries have either kicked the bucket or are too infirm to do much. While the Nigerian money class would rather invest their resources in plush real estates in the Riveira amd Monte Carlo and in shell companies in Panama, Baba Afe Babalola has instead chosen late in his life when he could be resting in the luxury of retirement, to invest a huge chunk of his resources in legacy humanitarian projects like the Afe Babalola University with its world class physical and academic infrastructure among other community development ventures and donations to international institutions. That, in my view, is a life worthy of celebration and emulation. It is not how one begins life that matters, it is how one ends it. Baba Afe Babalola embodies that as he races to the finish line of a remarkable life. Baba has left a legacy that people will be talking about for centuries after we all have gone. His legal exploit will be a mere byline in that legacy. So Baba Afe Babalola would remain a historical figure whose humanitarian footprint will stand the test of time no matter the outcome of this last legal kungfu fight. He should be commended for his courage in taking on the fight when he could have walked away and let the howling dog have its day.

    The legal tussle between him and Dele Farotimi is however an entirely different story. On its legal merit, based on what is out there in the public domain it would appear that Chief Afe Babalola has a solid case against Dele Farotimi. It would appear that Dele Farotimi recklessly and maliciously defamed Baba Afe Babalola’s name to advance his unearned and underserved social activist street cred. Dele Farotimi has a long record of recklessly throwing bombs at other people’s reputation wrecking them to build up his own. Many including President Tinubu have been on the receiving end of his reckless scorched earth, bomb throwing reputation damage tactic. Perhaps his being held accountable this time will send a cautionary warning to him and his ilk. Nigerian Social media has for too long become a waste land for long earned reputation with many of its victims having no place to seek restitution. While this case will not put and end to the celebritization of social media activisms and notoriety monetization cottage industry, the Dele Farotimi versus Are Babalola case might send a cautionary note that there are limits.

    The unfortunate part of the whole saga for Baba Afe Babalola is that it has metastasized beyond its legal argument to the status of an attention-grabbing, controversy-spinning social media cause célèbre. On top of that, it has gotten enmeshed in the messy world of Nigerian class warfare. It has been mischievously turned into a David versus Goliath affair, and partisan politics. The partisan dimension is indeed the most curious part because neither Baba Afe Babalola nor Dele Farotimi supported Asiwaju Tinubu candidacy, yet some mischief makers have sought to make it so. The two combatants are in fact ideological and partisan compatriots.

    What is working against Baba Afe Babalola, despite his solid legal argument, is the public perception that he represents the ultimate insider, the primadonna, and the power broker of the much maligned and unpopular Nigerian judiciary whose reputation with the Nigerian populace is only slightly better than that of politicians. That is as low as it can get for any Nigerian institution given how much the Nigerian masses despise their politicians.

    So, unfortunately and unfairly in the public perception, Baba Afe Babalola is being made to carry the institutional wage of sin for the judiciary, while Dele Farotimi is erroneously and unjustifiably being portrayed as the one carrying the cross and the angst of the common man in a fight against what is perceived as an oppressive, corrupt judiciary. No matter the final outcome of the legal rumble in the jungle, that unfortunately is likely to be the final narrative of the story. Either a David who fell a Goliath, or a Goliath who uses his brute power to oppress an innocent and overmatched David in a rigged match.

    Adewale Alonge, PhD, is Founder & President, Africa Diaspora Partnership for Empowerment and Development. www.adped.org

  • The Metaphor of the Bleached Whale and Resistance to the Proposed Tinubu Tax Bill

    The Metaphor of the Bleached Whale and Resistance to the Proposed Tinubu Tax Bill

    The proposed tax bill being debated by the Nigerian Senate whose stated goal is to overhaul the country’s tax system, simplify the tax landscape, reduce the burden on small businesses, and streamline how taxes are collected has pitted national interest against parochial tribal and regional agenda. Although objective analysis seems to suggest that on balance, the proposed tax reform is great for the overall interest of the nation as it eliminates multiple taxation across the country, deploy taxation as a tool to encourage private sector investments in critical industries and boost individual disposal incomes through targeted tax exemptions, the passage of the bill hangs in the balance.

    All through our history as a nation, national interest has always taken the back seat to parochial tribal and regional hegemonic interest. Even our struggle for independence from the British was almost derailed by those who perceived that their region will be disadvantaged by the more advanced and educated regions of the country.

    If we were to draw an analogy to Nigerian state from the animal world, the most appropriate would probably be the image of a bleached whale in an impoverished sea-shore community whose inhabitants see a stranded bleached whale as manna from heaven and each has brought out in an orgy of gluttony, any cutting device they could lay their hands on to carve out for themselves as much of the free meat as they could grab.

    There is actually a concept in political science, known as political particularism, which describes the propensity of policymakers and politicians to further their careers by catering to narrow interests rather than to broader national platforms. So, it is not a unique problem to our country for politician to think national but act locally, to take into cognizance how national policies will affect their local community. After all the essence of politics is the process by which choices are made regarding how resources will be allocated and which economic and social policies government will pursue. Put more simply, politics is the process of who gets what and how.

    In the U.S. Congress, there is actually a term for this phenomenon of political particularism. Pork barrel projects, refer to appropriations for constituents’ sweetheart projects by senators and members of Congress that are inserted into and hidden in big omnibus legislative documents as part of the legislative negotiation process.

    So, it is not a uniquely Nigerian problem, it is just that ours is the extreme form of political particularism in which our politicians take as their default mode of operation to subvert critical national interests in pursuit of parochial selfish agenda.

    Just like pigging out on the meat of bleached whale often come with the risk of botulism Type E outbreaks, and high metal toxicity, our country has paid a huge price from our tendency to treat it as a bleached whale where everyone takes as much as they could at the expense of everyone else and at the expense of our national interest. Our extreme form of political particularism, of putting tribal parochial interest above national is the root cause of our leadership failure, the stagnation of our economy, the failure of our institutions, and the endemic corruption that has stymied our national development and pauperized our citizens. It explains why a particular region or country has cornered for itself a disproportionate number of nation’s oil well licenses and why our presidential elections have become a do or die contest for tribal hegemonic domination.

    It is the reason that our country after 64 years of independence does not have a reliable census of its population and other critical national data for rational development planning.

    Given our history, it will take all of the political capital the president can expend to push the proposed tax bill over the line against the massive force that has been arrayed against it.

    Adewale Alonge, PhD, is Founder & President, Africa Diaspora Partnership for Empowerment and Development. www.adped.org

  • Omokiri Has Outdone Himself With His Economy On Full Rebound Statement

    Omokiri Has Outdone Himself With His Economy On Full Rebound Statement

    This most valuable asset of a policy analyst, a social influencer and political commentator is credibility. No one respects a lapdog whose mouth is in his principal’s ass leaking his or her sh!t. This Omokiri guy has built a reputation as an unapologetic supporter of the president. Many allege that he has in fact turned it into a cottage industry from which he is smiling all the way to the bank. This is mere speculation but a reasonable one at that.

    No doubt the president’s reform policies were a much needed tough chemotherapy for the unsustainable Nigerian economy that was on the throe of total collapse from the metastasis of corruption, budgetary indiscipline, oil subsidy and an artificially juiced foreign exchange regime that were bleeding life out of the economy while a few were profiteering like bandits.

    However it is beyond ridiculous and absurd for anyone to say that the Nigerian economy is on full rebound. That is beyond the pale for even an Omikiri.

    How ridiculous can Omokiri get to include the statistics of the number of life-streaming of Wizkid’s recent album as a metric for the rebound of country’s economy. Spotify is a global music streaming entity whose subscribers are global. By the way,not all Spotify subscribers are paid subscribers. Spotify offers free subscriptions with advert.

    I am also a great supporter of President Tinubu, not because he has already turned the economy around. Only time will tell. The legacy of most transformative leaders often come after their tenure has long elapsed when historians look back. That is likely to be the case for President Tinubu who I strongly believe history will judge as one, a transformative leader, if he remains committed to his reform agenda putting the interest of the country above every other consideration. I support him for his courageous leadership. Every president before him knew that our economy was heading toward the abyss of the apocalypse with endemic corruption, budgetary indiscipline, the oil subsidy scam and juicing up our foreign exchange to enrich the well connected while bleeding out and hemorrhaging our economy. They were just too lily-livered to pull the plug. They chose to prioritize their personal political expediency over the future of this country and of generations yet unborn. President Tinubu is not a saint. No one qualifies for the sainthood after playing in the mucky water of Nigerian political pigs pen. He however, has shown the courage to do the needful to safe the country.

    President Tinubu needs to call Omokiri to order and let the country know that he has his three-person presidential communication team and that Omokiri is not one of them.

    Like I have said before, there is no better spokesperson for this president than himself. As he busies himself choreographing the reform agenda, he must combine it more and more with his equally important role as encourager, motivator, truth-teller and empathizer-in-chief. The communication role of great leaders is often an underrated but often a most important function. Nigerians know how they feel. They live daily in the reality of the painful economic reform agenda. No amount of sweet-talking Omokiris and his unhinged propaganda machine can make them unfeel their daily reality. It is the job of the president and his team to continue to encourage, reassure and motivate the citizens by their soothing words, their action, and life style of prudence to keep holding on, bear the pain and that a bright glorious future lies behind the dark gloomy cloud.

    Adewale Alonge, PhD, is Founder & President, Africa Diaspora Partnership for Empowerment and Development. www.adped.org

  • President Tinubu’s Multi-layered Communication Team: A genius contraption or Disaster in the making: Only Time Will Tell

    President Tinubu’s Multi-layered Communication Team: A genius contraption or Disaster in the making: Only Time Will Tell

    When President Tinubu started his first day in Aso Rock with the bold or what many would consider a bone-headed political Kamikaze move of removing oil subsidy, and then proceeded with his excruciatingly painful economic and structural reform agenda, he made a decision that has put his presidency on an irreversible trajectory that will either seal his place as the transformational leader Nigeria has waited for or a catastrophic disaster. He locked himself into that irreversible trajectory, when unlike all his predecessors, he took what many have considered the Nigeria equivalent of the kiss of death by withdrawing the oil subsidy and floating the currency.
    Nigerians have taken it as their citizenship right and as the only benefit accruable to them from the corruption-ridden national oil reserve, access to cheap oil. To take that away from them was like taking away a child’s only Christmas toy. Since the Arab oil embargo fueled oil boom of 1973 when the god of crude oil smiled on Nigeria with massive inflow of petrodollar which unfortunately the country’s young president General Gowon knew not what to do with it, Nigerians have measured the health of their economy by the value of their heavily subsidized and overvalued local currency even though it was not backed by any measurable productivity to justify its valuation. We all now talked with great nostalgia of the era when our Naira exchanged for twice the dollar as if it were the apogee of economic genius, when in fact it led to the kind of insane conspicuous consumption which saw Nigerians clogging Heathrow airport runway with our useless imports. We spent money like a drunken sailor who just won a lottery jackpot. While it was obvious to everyone that artificially juicing and propping our currency was hemorrhaging life out of our economy, yet no president until Bola Tinubu had the courage to withdraw the addictive heroin from the dying drug addict. Floating the Naira exchange rate and in the process pauperizing the citizen was therefore another third rail of Nigerian politics that President Tinubu was courageous enough to touch. To do one was bad enough, but to do both, that is remove the oil subsidy, and at the same time float the currency was a political equivalent of jumping off the cliff of Mount Kilimanjaro without a parachute. It is for that precise reason that every Nigerian president for decades has promised to remove the oil subsidy but have chickened out even as everyone knew it was the bitter pill Nigerians had to swallow to stop the insane plunder of our commonwealth but a small but powerful oil mafia. This explains why President Tinubu has become one of the most divisive political figures in Nigeria history, who is virulently hated and despised by his detractors, and beloved by his loyalists and those who believe in him. With President Tinubu you either hate or love him. Many have compared him to blood thirsty Abacha while others have lost their minds to the point of equating him to genocidal Hitler.

    Whether you like or hate President Tinubu and yes, we may argue whether or not his reform policy could have been better deployed, or whether he could have taken more time to properly put in place palliative measures to ameliorate its excruciatingly painful impact, however, no rational or objective analyst will deny that President Tinubu deserves the presidential medal of courage for putting the country’s future above his political calculus. If anyone has wondered why I have been unwavering and unapologetic in my support for the President, that exactly is the reason, his political courage to do the unpopular and to risk his political career if that was the price. I have never met the President nor anyone in his circle, however, I believe in his reform policy as the necessary painful therapy our country needs. Our country desperately needed the very painful reform that President Tinubu has taken on if we were to have any chance to dig our country out of the economic grave it was in. A grave many past presidents have dug deeper and deeper to the point of no return.

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    As a member of the baby boomer generation who enjoyed the stupendous prosperity of the heady days of the oil boom of the 1970s, when a college degree was a ticket to the middle class, I believe the last act of our generation, was to make this one last sacrifice to patch up this country whose huge potential we frittered away, to give the next generation a fighting chance of salvaging a livable country from the mess we have made of it. Regrettably, members of the same baby boomer generation who bear much culpability for the mess our country is in, are also the most vociferous in opposing President Tinubu’s reform agenda to salvage it.

    So, readers might ask, what is the connection between the presidential communication architecture and his economic reform agenda? A lot. One of the major mistakes President Tinubu made which has done so much damage to his bold economic reform agenda was his failure to have a presidential communication team in place at its launch, that was up to the challenge of selling it especially since they knew it was going to impose so much excruciating pain on the citizens. That mistake has turned out to be a costly error for this presidency especially in a fast-moving social media era where bad news travel at the speed of light, shaping perceptions along its path. Social media with its information overload has unfortunately made us less contemplative and more susceptible to perception manipulation which are often hard to shake off. It is easy to get the policy right and yet lose it all with a poor communication infrastructure. That has been the Achilles heel of this presidency as it has embarked on some of the toughest, excruciatingly painful but much needed economic reform agenda. It was political malpractice for a government that knew that its proposed policy was going to impose pain on the citizens not to have in place a first-class communication team to sell it.

    It is therefore within this context that one can analyze the present effort by the presidency to rejig its communication architecture. The presidency seems to have gotten the message that it had better addressed the communication mismatch or it will have a tough time going to the electorate for a second term despite its recent electoral success in gubernatorial elections. Presidential elections are a different ball of wax. However, the proposed architecture which trifurcates the function of the presidential spokesperson into three-person architecture is to put it mildly odd and unconventional. Choreographing and harmonizing the most important function of presidential spokesperson with a three-man team is like choreographing a three-person tango. If it works, it would be the most genius presidential communication architecture in history. My fear is that it might create discordance and a turf fight unless the three can subjugate their egos to the task of marketing their principal and his agenda. Time will tell if they can pull off the miracle.

    Last line. There is no better spokesperson for a presidency than the president himself, not even the best in the business. Closeting President Tinubu in Aso Rock away from his constituents is bad communication strategy. President Tinubu must become the empathizer-in-chief. Every president in the world understands the value of well choreographed interview with sympathetic media. It is the reason you have not seen Biden grant an interview with MAGA Fox-news nor Trump with CNN. President Tinubu’s communication team should organize press conference and interviews to allow him go over the noise of social media to talk directly to Nigerians.

    Adewale Alonge, PhD, is Founder & President, Africa Diaspora Partnership for Empowerment and Development. www.adped.org

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  • President Obasanjo and the Yale Meltdown

    President Obasanjo and the Yale Meltdown

    All politics end at the water’s edge is a global cornerstone principle in partisan politics. Water’s edge is a metonymy for “national border”. It is the unwritten rule that partisan domestic political disagreement must not cross the national border. It is a global norm that a true patriot does not go outside his or her country to trash and de-market his own country, talk less of calling it a failed state. That rule is observed by every self-respecting political figure to avoid doing irreparable damage to the international reputation and economic interest of one’s country.

    So, it is especially sad to see a historic personality like President Obasanjo who fought to defend the sovereignty of this country, who in his own word has testified that not in his wildest dream could he have dreamed of twice becoming the accidental president of Nigeria, travel outside the country to declare to the entire world that his country was a failed state. Anyone who does not realize what a gross malpractice that is but instead applauds such a despicable act needs a deep examination. Many might not realize that the Yale meltdown was more of a reputational damage for President Obasanjo than it is for the target of its venom, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

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    It does not take a genius to know that the concept of a failed state is so specific in its usage in international development. In order for a country to be so classified, it must meet a specific threshold of total economic, political, social and security failure including inability to defend its sovereignty. Yes, our country is facing arguably one of its most challenging economic landscape, however, only a mind warped by pathological hate and bias will write off a regime that is less than two years into its tenure as a failure and of being responsible for turning the country into a failed state. A failed state does not hold elections and maintain a governmental structure for 25 straight and uninterrupted years. No one is claiming that Nigeria is a fully functioning state operating optimally. It is not even close to being that, which has been the source of our national disappointment. It is true that the country is facing very serious economic and security challenges but those challenges are not a new phenomenon. In fact some of it dates back to the tenure of President Obasanjo who himself tried unsuccessfully and unconstitutionally to truncate our fragile democratic governance with his third term agenda.

    Given his antecedents and his choice in the recent presidential election which his candidate lost, it is no accident that President Obasanjo chose the occasion of a memorial lecture in honor of Chinua Achebe to launch his most virulent attack to date on President Tinubu. We have not forgotten that President Obasanjo opposed Asiwaju Tinubu candidacy, threw every ammunition in his armory at him only to fail woefully. So most people understand the Yale meltdown for what it is, the outburst of a frustrated old man.

    It is so ironic and should not be lost on all of us, that as President Obasanjo was doing his best to bring President Tinubu into international disrepute, his global status got a huge boost. The G-20 will not invite the president of a failed state to its summit in Brazil. Neither will the international investment community be directing billions of dollars into a failed state. President Obasanjo is a global figure who has earned the right to be treated as an elder statesman in the mold of highly respected General Yakubu Gowon. The problem is that he has proven again and again that he is not able to control his insatiable and mind-numbing need to be the center of attention, to bring down anyone who he sees as a threat to it. Every single President since President Obasanjo left office after his failed third term agenda has been subjected to his biting, caustic, virulent negative assessment of their presidential scorecard including his handpicked protégé, President Jonathan. One can only hope that after the Yale meltdown, that President Obasanjo will finally realize that he has gone too far and will settle down to enjoy the grace that good fortune has bestowed on him and will finally retire as to his earned status of a respected elder statesman whose counsel is asked for and given behind the limelight. Everyone has their moment and President Obasanjo has had more than his fair share.

    Adewale Alonge, PhD, is Founder & President, Africa Diaspora Partnership for Empowerment and Development. www.adped.org

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  • The Mythology about Trump’s Christian Faith and Savior of the Faith

    The Mythology about Trump’s Christian Faith and Savior of the Faith

    On Nigerian social media videos showing Trump promising to bring the Bible back to America, opposing homosexuality and false claim of a Biden/Kamala government funded sex-affirming surgery for children are being used to portray Trump as devout Christian and savior of the faith. Health care coverage in the U.S. is provided by the private health insurance companies. Even Obama care is provided via the private market who decides what treatment it covers.

    This notion that Trump is Bible-reading, scripture union (SU) Christ-loving savior of the faith is one of the mythologies that has been propagated and accepted as gospel truth by many especially in Nigeria. By the fruit ye shall know them. No one knows which church Trump attends nor his pastor. Trump is not a Christian by any standard and there are no fruit of the spirit in his life.

    Yes, many U.S. evangelicals have adopted him as their reincarnated saviour of the faith due mainly to the overturning of Roe by the Supreme Court appointees who were hand picked for him by the conservation think tank. However, during the campaign when abortion became toxic Trump actually tried to walk back his claim as the one who overturned Roe. He supported Florida Amendment 4 claiming that the six weeks abortion ban was too strict before he walked it back.

    After decades of cultural resistance to homosexuality, public opinion has shifted towards more support for homosexuality as more scientific data has emerged supporting the biological foundation for most homosexuality. Homosexuality has been recorded for centuries in every culture across the globe dating back to biblical time. What has changed is societal attitude towards it, causing more gays to come out of the closet. This, of course, is still very upsetting on many especially in traditional societies like Nigeria.

    A recent survey by Gallup shows that 69% of Americans now support same sex marriage which is a seismic shift from just a decade ago.

    However, among the core evangelicals, opposition to homosexuality and abortion is cast in stone. Trump has exploited that opposition as the cornerstone of his three presidential bids to court the evangelicals and it has worked like magic.

    The Trump campaign spent over $30 million on videos like this one that falsely and effectively define Kamala Harris who, as an elected official from liberal California, has a long record of supporting abortion and gay rights.

    The realignment of the traditional strong Hispanic support away from the Democrat toward Trump who took over 40% of their votes is a reflection of both their concern about inflation but moreso, their traditional value which still strongly opposes Gay rights and abortion. I saw that shift here in Miami which was once a deep blue Democratic base which has now turned Ruby Red as Hispanics have become the vast majority, a major demographic shift due to immigration. Trump spent over 30 million dollars pushing the sex affirming video ad naseum during the campaign.

    By the way I know several Nigerians here in the U.S. who also voted for Trump on the same issue of opposition to Gay right and abortion.

    Without understanding the nuance of the context, one can easily misread the situation. The reality is that this election result and the massive loss by Kamala has a lot to do with misogyny, racism and xenophobia. Americans were just not ready for a woman president especially one like Kamala who has a complicated immigrant Indian and Jamaican parent more so as wars are going on both in Europe and the Middle East. The image of Trump as a strong man is very appealing to many especially Hispanics many came from countries where strong men were venerated.

  • Hon Ikwechegh’s Conduct: A reflection of Power drunkenness of some Nigerian Elite

    Hon Ikwechegh’s Conduct: A reflection of Power drunkenness of some Nigerian Elite

    It is quite obvious that had there not been a video recording which quickly went viral, Honorable (a desecration of that word) Ikwechegh would not have quickly shifted from his obscene haughtiness to the damage control penitence posture. In fact it is likely that the poor soul, the Uber driver, would have been picked up by Rep Ikwechegh’s goons and locked up like the powerful and the well-connected often do.

    The sad reality is that our country has become a de facto caste society in which the children of the rich and the less fortunate do not intercept at all. Unlike in our days when poor village kids like us went to the same public school with the children of the high-up, the Tokunbos, the dapperly attired Lagos boys, when what separated us was our academic prowess, not our parents bank accounts, today only the children of the dirt poor attend our dilapidated public schools. Today, it is next to impossible for the child of the poor to marry up to the high society. We then act surprised when these spoilt brats grow up into egomaniac, condescending, entitled brutes.

    So while it is a positive development that Honorable Ikwechegh, who someone suggested was the son of a former governor (just rumor), is showing contrition, it does not take away from the deeper lesson and challenge that this ugly incident portends for our country.

    In our society, the condescending attitude of the Nigerian elites towards the less fortunate, mostly the Nigerian youths whose future they the elites have plundered and reduced to hopelessness, was starkly on display on some of our social media platforms. In some of the platforms which I belong, there were surprisingly some people who chose to circle the wagon, defending the obscene, repulsive and repugnant conduct of the congressman. Someone in one platform wrote about the Uber driver “Some of those streets touts atimes need direct massaging, they are always rude and never polite, it takes only angels to ever consider dealing with them”. How nauseating to read.

    The Nigerian elites expect everyone to gravel before them and wipe their stinking asses with your bare hands. You see it in the way they maltreat, dehumanize and demean their drivers and house maids like pieces of human excrement. Then we wonder why our politicians behave like demi-gods and treat us the citizens like shit.

    Let’s even assume that the delivery guy was rude, which I can bet my house against given the power dynamic here, what right did the congressman have to assault and threaten the guy?

    Someone of the same platform argues that that senators and congressmen in the U.S. are treated like pastors. This left me head -scratching because Florida Senator Rubio used to attend the same church I attended and most people paid him no mind. He sat among the congregants like everyone else. He signed in and out his young children from the church nursery like everyone, no maid, no driver, no entourage.
    He was addressed by his first name. No special seat for the Senator. In Nigeria, a Senator would probably have a special seat reserved for him on the pew. People would be milling around him looking for one favor or another.

    I have written this before that I often advise my Egbe Omo Oduduwa members that on their return from a trip to Nigeria, they had better taken a humility shower to cleanse them from the near slavish worship they enjoyed in Nigeria where everyone calls you dad and would rush and almost body slam you if you dared attempt to wash your own hand after a meal. A lot of men get into fights with their spouses on their return trip from Nigeria when no one is there to pack and wash their dirty dishes after them.

    Perhaps it is the grinding poverty, it is nauseating how shabbily many Nigerian elites treat the less fortunate and how submissive the poor are to this maltreatment.

    I have found it shocking how surprised the people from the lower social economic ladder react when you treat them with their human dignity. My driver was so surprised he didn’t have to wait in the car whenever we went out to a restaurant, or visited my friends. He was surprised he was invited to join us at the dinning table in my friend’s home or that he had his hotel room next to mine whenever we travelled overnight and had to sleep in a hotel. By the way the same malaise quickly inflicts the Nigerian diasporan the moment they return home and drink the power kool-aide. The guy who was so approachable outside the country now will not pick your call and will expect you to wait for hours in his office to see you. I have a policy of not visiting the Nigerian powerful in their offices. When I have to, I have a 30-minute wait policy, after which I am out.

    Our position is in life is a product of fortune. No one is born with two heads. We must stop our slavish worship of power and the powerful in Nigeria or forever forget ever enthroning servant-leadership in our politics.

    I hope the assaulted driver sues the brute congressman for all he has got. Sadly, the poor guy stands a higher chance of being struck by lightning than winning against the brutish egomaniac in a Nigerian court of law. Perhaps now that the video has gone viral and the congressman has apologized, some sort of settlement could be reached. Nothing will change until we start holding the powerful accountable for their behavior.

    Adewale Alonge, PhD, Founder & President, Africa Diaspora Partnership for Empowerment and Development. www.adped.org

  • Blaming the World Bank will not save our economy. Only us can

    Blaming the World Bank will not save our economy. Only us can

    I stumbled on an article by one Mr. Ahmed Sule ( FCA). It is so disappointing to read. It is nothing but a regurgitation of the same well-worn World Bank blame game. There was not one single alternative policy prescription other than the usual finger pointing and externalization of our problem. Expectedly, Mr. Sule latched on the article in which the World Bank gave its analysis of the Tinubu reform, as the bogey-man. He did not even make an attempt to provide his own counter-point to the World Bank. He failed to provide his position on the Tinubu economic agenda other than a listing of the pains it has inflicted on the populace. The president in his inaugural address stated clearly that his proposed economic reform agenda was going to be excruciatingly painful. He stated unequivocally that he was going to remove fuel subsidy and that he was going to float the currency. He did not trick the electorate. He also told the citizens to render their judgement on the performance of his reform policy with their votes in 2027. Mr. Sule in his social media post pretended as if our economic nightmare began with or was precipitated by the Tinubu regime. He had nothing to say about our profligate and obscene economic mismanagement dating back to the mid 1970s-early 80s during which we frittered away our oil windfall like drunken sailors on a pirate ship.

    World Bank bashing has been our default excuse for our collective failure since the 1986 IMF SAP debacle. We focused on SAP rather than its predicate. We never asked ourselves the hard question about what we did wrong with all the stupendous oil windfall that accrued to our country, and why we ended ended up prostrate in 1986 crawling on our belly to the World Bank and IMF for a bail out.

    The World Bank does not force itself on any country. Countries choose membership of the World Bank out of their free will. They usually approach the World Bank for low interest loan when they are totally out of luck and option, unable to access finance through the open financial market because they have mismanaged their credit worthiness. That was the position Nigeria found itself in 1986. Even after General Obasanjo was able to get a big chunk of our debt written off by the World Bank and other multilateral financial institutions we were indebted to, did we take advantage of that? No, we didn’t. Our politicians continued unabatedly to plunder our commonwealth and they still do.

    The Bible says the debtor is a slave to his creditor. So, when countries like Nigeria have run out of options and are forced by their desolate and desperate circumstances to crawl on their bellies for financial life wire, of course like the slave described in the Bible to their creditors, they are forced to go on a forced diet (conditionalities) in order to access the low interest loan and sometimes outright grants that the World Bank offers due to the “generosity” of the donor members.

    We need to know that donors do not donate their fund to the poor out of philanthropy and benevolence. Foreign aids are a tool of promoting national hegemonic advantage. There are no free lunches in international relations. U. S and Europe are not funding the Ukraine war necessarily because of their love for the Ukrainians. They are dropping billions of ammunition and weapons of death into Ukraine to fight Russia because it advances their geopolitical agenda against Russia. It also creates opportunity for the military industrial complex to dispose their unused weapons, to test new one and create jobs in their local economies. We will be wise to understand that our economic success lies with us doing the hard work of national building and advancing our economic interest in an amoral, survival of the fittest, rigged global economic system. We should never again put our country in the position in which external financial institutions dictate or have a veto on our economic policies. China can tell the World Bank to go to hell with its economic prescriptions. In fact China has created its own alternative to the World Bank. As we romance China, we would be wise to learn that China like the West before it is not a benevolent Father Christmas doling out free money for its Silk Road project.

    The phrase “ World Bank” is in fact a gross abuse, misuse and exaggeration of the financial muscle of the “ World Bank”. When the phrase World Bank was used at its founding it represented an extreme case of hubris. The capital asset of the “World Bank” is minuscule compared to those of global behemoths like the JP Morgan Chase, the China Bank of Industry, or the Bank of America. The world number one bank, China Industrial and Commercial Bank has total assets of $6.3 trillion. By comparison, the World Bank had just about $200 billion of assets under management. The World Bank would not rank among the top 50 banks in the world. In fact, there is a debate whether the term bank can truly be applied to the World Bank.

    There is therefore the tendency by failed economies and misinformed economic analysts to use the World Bank as the bogeyman, “the devil that made them do it”. We can externalize and blame the World Bank all we want, until we owe our economic misfortune and our culpability for it, we will only be spinning wheel stuck in the muck.

    Those who are condemning the Tinubu economic reform policy, which is neither perfect nor the silver bullet by any stretch of imagination, should go beyond finger-pointing and Monday morning quarterbacking. They should show us their alternative economy prescriptions. They should tell us how Nigeria succeeds economically by continuing with the failed policy of fuel subsidy and of artificially juicing and propping up our forex with high interest loan we could not afford so that the oil subsidy and forex mafias can prosper like bandits while mortgaging the future of generations of Nigerians yet unborn.

    You had oil subsidy mafia making billions of dollars by simply pushing unverifiable paper of millions of PMS import which never made it to our shores and the a huge portion of what ultimately makes it to the market is smuggled out of the country for a tidy windfall profit. You also had the forex mafia who bought forex at CBN subsidized rate purportedly to import capital equipment and essential commodities only to turn around to sell the same forex to their foot soldiers in the Bureau de Change at stupendous, huge profit margin. If that is not the definition of madness, please tell us what is.

    In his dream, Pharaoh is standing by the Nile when seven fat cows come up out of the river, followed by seven thin cows that eat the fat cows. In response Pharaoh stored away excess grains in the seven years of abundance to sustain his nation during the seven lean years that would follow. Our situation is the reverse of the Pharaoh situation. We failed over the decades, especially in the heady days of the high global oil market price to save money for the rainy day. Have we forgotten the commonwealth fund that was proposed by Sister Ngozi Okonjo Eweala during the President Jonathan regime to put away our excess oil revenue for the rainy day but rejected by the governors, or the hubris of young General Gowon who in the 70s declared that our country’s problem was not lack of money but how to spend it? Now we all have to endure the lean years we didn’t make provision for, in order for us to survive and be here when hopefully the years of abundance come back again.

    There are no guarantees that President Tinubu’s reform agenda will do the trick, but we are like an extremely critical patient who got into a bad auto accident after a night of excessive drinking and is now on the ER (emergency room) and the doctors are doing everything to safe his life. We have no option than to hold on tight for our dear life, bear the pain of the poking and the electric shock applied by the Defibrillators and hope and pray that it works.

    We must continue in our civic responsibility and obligation to hold the president accountable to live by example, the life of austerity his policy has forced Nigerians to live under. He should tackle and hold people accountable for past endemic corruption that is still rife under his administration. He should cut down on the profligacy that his administration has been accused of. He should rein in the unsustainably high cost of governance and the bloated bureaucracy that supports it. We are still waiting for the cabinet reshuffle to prune out dead wood and non-performing ministers and heads of agencies. He should prioritise competence over political patronage. He should constantly review the performance of his economic reforms agenda against the result in the real economy where the citizens live, and make adjustments when and where necessary. Those are the kind of debates we should be having not this constant whining and blaming the World Bank.

    The true victims of the Nigerian elites, who are the one on social media doing most of the complaining, are the poor masses who did not benefit a thing in the days of economic abundance and the Nigerian youths who have known nothing but tear, pain, sorrow, dashed hope and bleak future all of their life. Those of us who benefitted from the years of abundance should prioritize making the needed sacrifice so that our grandchildren can take over a country they have a chance to rebuild, than this constant complaining. If truth be told many of us cannot with a good conscience claim innocence in the plunder of our economy. Our generation’s obligation now is to make the last sacrifice to save this country for the future generations. Time is running out. We will never be able to hand over to the next generation, a country better than we met it. We are constantly looking back at the old western region era of Chief Awolowo with great nostalgia. That should tell us all we need to know about our abject failure.

    Externalizing the blame for our economic mismanagement to the World Bank is therefore, not a viable economic prescription.

    Adewale Alonge, PhD: Founder& President, Africa-Diaspora Partnership for Empowerment & Development (ADPED). www.adped.org

  • President Tinubu’s Much Touted Independence Speech: A monumental Let Down

    President Tinubu’s Much Touted Independence Speech: A monumental Let Down

    President Tinubu must be living in an alternate universe and in a denial bubble if he thinks “Nigerians worldwide can look back to see how well we have succeeded in realizing the lofty dreams of our founding fathers”. That single line so early in his 64th independence presidential speech set the tone for the speech and it tanked it from the get-go. It is so off-putting, so disconnected from reality, I totally lost interest in reading the rest of the speech. The heroes of our independence could not have envisaged that 64 years after, the nation they fought for would be unable to feed its citizens, still be so consumed by the virus of ethnic animus in geometruc proportion than what they faced, be overrun by bandits and kidnappers with tens of millions of its children panhandling for survival instead of being educated in schools. Our country had the largest population out of school children in the entire world. That was not the country they fought for.

     

    If the President thinks that Nigerians can see any light at the end of the tunnel, he must be totally disconnected from the daily Hobbesian reality in which his citizens live. Our people are locked up in the prison of their home unable to get to work due to unavoidability of fuel to power their cars or pay for public transport. State governments are telling their workers to stay home and not come to work because the cost of transport is greater than their wages.

     

    Children are going to bed on absent stomach with formula 001 which Obey sang about decades ago looking now like a faraway unobtainable Nirvana.

     

    I am a supporter of the Tinubu presidency who strongly believes that our economy was desperately in need of a major reform shock treatment to prevent our match to the apocalypse. Hence, I have defended his reform agenda as necessary even though it is imposing unbelievable pain on the citizenry. I am also not blaming him for the despondency in the country and our collective failure. Only a jaundiced and blind fool would blame a 16-month presidency for the dysfunction of 64 years. In fact I commend President Tinubu for taking the hard road instead of continuing in our delusion of riches that was sinking our country deeper and deeper into the abyss. His reform policy was the painful surgery our country needed to remove its festering malignancy.

     

    However, the president is failing to show the needed empathy to put a soothing balm on the pain of the people. He is failing once again to understand that government is part policy, part public relation and public perception. He is failing woefully in the public relation, public perception part and if not urgently addressed it might further sour people on his presidency and tank it.

     

    People are not so more interested in his enumeration of his many policies nor new proposals like the proposed youth confabs. Nigerians have lost faith in confabs with our very long history of meaningless national confab jamborees with their resolutions left on the shelf to gather dust. The Nigerian youths want jobs, schools that are conducive to learning not the dilapidated pig pens they are forced to learn with no teachers nor resources to prepare them for the highly competitive knowledge driven global digital economy. They are not interested in hobnobbing with well fed, rosy-cheeks, government officials and politics bigwigs.

     

    Nigerians are so consumed with the insurmountable challenge of meeting the most basic requirements of minimal existence which have been priced beyond the reach of the middle class if they even exist not to talk about the masses. They are sick and tired of looking their children in the face at night and tucking them in bed on an empty stomach: Husbands are tired and ashamed to live off of the bounty of their wives’ adulterous exploits to put food on the table. They are looking for an empathetic presidency to acknowledge their pain, to accept and own the responsibility that their reform policy is a major source of their pain. They want President Tinubu to reassure them that their pain has a terminal date and that even though it looks like the darkest night, that the sun shall shine again on the other side. They are not interested in being told to deny their daily reality by being told that Boko Haram and bandits have been eliminated when they are afraid to leave their homes, or to go to their farm without the fear of kidnappers and bandits. Not even great Michelangelo can paint over the Hobbesian reality in which the Nigerian citizens are living. The president will do himself a great favor by acknowledging it even as he is convinced and confident that his policies are the right one to save the country. I also believe that his policies will work if we are patient.

     

    His most urgent task is to calm the restive passengers on the wobbling ship he is captaining on a violent sea or risk a stampede that will capside and doom a voyage to the promised land. He should learn great lessons of Moses in the wildness leading his Israelites people to the promised land. I am his great supporter but he needs to do a better job of feeling the pulse of his citizens and communicating with them.

     

    Presidential speeches, especially in moments of crisis like we are going through, are historical documents that are carefully and methodically crafted, with each word, infection, tonality and even commas carefully chosen, debated and analyzed to meet the exigency of the moment. Once again the people around the president did him great disservice by inserting some of the totally disconnected from reality lines, so early in his speech instead of the president spending a big portion of his speech empathizing with the pain, anguish, suffering, and the disillusionment with the country, with its democracy, with his reform policies and his regime. Where are the promised cost of governance cutting proposals, the bloated bureaucracy shrinking and ministerial reshuffle proposal?

     

    Great and consequential presidents are known for and defined by the great speeches they delivered to rise to the magnitude of the ocassion. In fact many presidencies have been saved by great presidential speeches in moment of national crisis, like the Gettysburg address. This to my mind was a Gettysburg moment for President Tinubu to rise to the magnitude of the occasion and he failed to deliver. He needs to replace his media team and his speech writers.

    As Nigeria Turns 63: No Quick Road To Nirvana