Sudan must not touch Nigerian footballer Stephen Worgu

By Adeola Aderounmu

Sudan should be warned, at least by the Nigerian Foreign Ministry. Sudan and the reckless sudanese police should not touch Stephen Worgu’s ass with one lash of the cane. I have seen a terrible video once when a man was flogged as a result os sharia sentence. The man was bleeding as his bare ass was flogged severely and at the same spot.

Stephen Worgu (photo; BBC)

Stephen Worgu did not drink alcohol, he has stated this in his own defence. A policeman stopped him and after questioning he was asked to drive to the police station. The sudanese policeman who has enjoyed a free ride in Worgu’s car alleged that he was drunk.

That policeman must be very useless and senseless. How can you allow a “drunk” person to give you a ride to your station? If he was drunk, shouldn’t the policeman have asked him to park the car instead? Stephen Worgu was never given an alcohol test, so how can the sundanes judiciary believe such a lie.

If there is anything the sudanese should be taking seriously by now it is the war crime offences that the sudanese president Omar al Bashir has committed. Sudan should also concern itself with solving the Darfur crises instead of “beating up” an innocent Nigerian footballer. This is very irritating and annoying.

The Nigerian embassy in Sudan must see to it that Stephen Worgu is not given any lash. The embassy must protect the rights of S. Worgu. The Nigerian embassy must protest vehemently to the Sudanese government about this false allegation. Stephen must be given compensation for this undue harrassment and embarassment.

The Nigerian Foreign Ministry must also warn Sudan that no form of injustice against a Nigerian on the Sudanese soil will be taken lightly. Sudan must remember that there are Sudanese living in Nigeria too and we are no fools.

To all who are concerned speak out now and don’t allow this mad act to be carried out. 40 lashes on Worgu’s ass will end his football career. I can bet on that. The guy could even be paralysed from those evil lashes.

The days gone by

by Adeola Aderounmu

I have missed blogging. I was busy with my books and then I had a visitor from another country. But now I have a little time to review some major things that I had in mind.


Yar adua’s travel

Umaru Yar Adua went to Saudi Arabia again because he hasn’t found the reasons to build a state of the art hospital in Nigeria 10 years after occupying positions of power. First he wasted 8 years as a governor and for the past 2 years he has wasted everyone’s time as the fake president of Nigeria. Yar adua remains a waste of space and time.

The questions remain: why should the ruler of Nigeria travel to Saudi Arabia for treatment?

Why can’t he build a good hospital for himself in Nigeria or why didn’t he do this as the governor of Katsina State?

Those who are ignorant of Nigeria can easily pop-up the race-intelligence question. If the ruler of a country is used to ascertain the intelligence of the other people then Nigerians are in real trouble. Seriously is it not stupidity that such a man cannot arrange his priorities and ensure that modern hospitals are built for Nigerians including himself?

If the ruler of Nigeria goes abroad for treatment, where should the citizens go?

Nigerian Guardian reporter killed
Nigerian Guardian reporter/journalist Mr. Ohu was gunned down in his home early Sunday morning. That was on the 20th of September 2009. May his soul rest in peace. Anyone expecting that his killers will be found should wake up from his or her nightmare. Nigerian Police do not have the resources to unravel any murder. Check the records and you will not find any solved murder case. The former attorney general Mr. Bola Ige was killed and no one was held accountable. Once again the question of security of life and property is brought to the fore by this ugly incident. Why would anyone assassinate a journalist? Isn’t this an assault on freedom of speech?

Total Strike in Nigerian schools
All public schools in Nigeria are now under lock and keys. Teachers and lecturers are on strike. Here we are in 2009 Nigeria, education finally grounded to zero. Meanwhile the children of the rich are in private schools in Nigeria or they are attending schools in Europe and America.

The fake Minister of education Mr Egwu has not even resigned. Does anyone resign in Nigeria in the face of failure? Never! Instead these nonentities are elevated even as they continue to steal and loot.

Nigeria is now 49 years. Where do we go from here? This country is failing…from where cometh our help? Thy Glory O’ Nigeria is slain upon the high places!

My Random Reflections @ 37

My Random Reflections @ 37

Who could have imagined that traits of dictatorship would grow stronger in Nigeria 10 years after civilians took over the mantle of leadership in Nigeria? Who could have imagined that genocides would be committed twice in Nigeria under a period of 10 years? Obasanjo wiped away the Odi community and Yar Adua is in the process of wiping out more than 6 separate communities in the same Bayelsa! Obj and Yaddy are two examples of the heartless and wicked rulers that should be seeking amnesty from Nigerians.

In countless ways, Nigerian writers, critics and social crusaders have expressed their displeasure and sadness regarding the situation in Nigeria. But what have I done about it? I do not think that it is enough to just write about these problems even if it goes a long way to make the politicians and rulers uncomfortable. You will hardly find any real leader in Nigeria: they don’t listen. Can they read? They are so unbelievably enmeshed in the madness of corrupt practices.

It bothers me how much money is wasted daily on Nigerian Televisions as several state governors have turned private TV stations into propaganda machines. Tax payers’ monies are wasted and unaccounted for in several advertisements and unnecessary documentaries. Why does the governor of a paralyzed state have to advertise any achievement at all? What would it take for a blockhead governor to know that he was (s)elected to deliver the dividends of good governance?

It takes stupidity to advertise the work of a governor on TV. I have built these houses, I have constructed these roads and so on. It is absolute nonsense and bullshit! Ogun state government has constructed and commissioned new secretariat but how glad the people would have been if the same energy, speed and sincerity of purpose had been simultaneously devoted to constructions of affordable houses for all. At what opportunity cost will a state governor build a new secretariat or a liaison office in Abuja?

When will water start to flow permanently in our homes? As a nation, we have no electricity to do basic work or to enjoy our lives. Electricity generation in Nigeria is approaching zero megawatt. How sad can it get? The roads are so bad that people are on a daily basis cursing and swearing especially now that it is raining heavily. Has anyone driven recently to and fro Apapa during this rainy season? Do we have an agency taking the economic cost in terms of time and money wasted into consideration?

Nigerian roads have been rated as probably the worst in the world. One day in the month of June my friend Uwa Igiehon was driving towards Lagos from another state. After following a trailer for a while he decided to overtake the trailer at what he thought was a convenient point. As he did, he saw a big pot hole ahead of him. If he tried to swerve back, he would drive directly to the trailer. So he had no choice but to drive over the pavement and eventually into the mid-road barrier. His car somersaulted several times. When he told me the story few days later, he didn’t understand how he survived such a ghastly accident. It is called miracle I suppose. The car was condemned but no one died in the crash. Thousand of Nigerians have died in less ghastly accidents. What a country!

In 1984, precisely August 23rd when I started class one at Festac Grammar School, the cost of all my books was N36.20K. In primary school I didn’t have to buy any books as Jakande provided me with free books and I remember how elated I was to receive my first maths set in primary 3. Last year one of my nephews sent me the cost of his school fees by sms and I almost fainted. Education in Nigeria is in perpetual comatose. It is now very expensive and exclusively reserved for the rich and the privileged.

To anyone who is keen about the 2011 elections, David Mark has already started announcing the results. He was shown on National TV informing whoever cares to know that the present crop of looting Senators in Nigeria will be returned unopposed and unchallenged in 2011. With people like Mr. Mark steering the Nigerian senate and with the near complete relegation of intelligence in public spheres, this country is heading for the abyss. I have no doubts that Mr. Iwu will do what he knows how to do best. The recent elections in Ekiti indicated that Nigeria is far from being a free and democratic nation. It is pure undiluted dictatorship at work. It is do or die!

I started criticizing the Nigerian government and statutory corporations since 1990. However in the years ahead I want to do less criticisms and more participation. I’ve always known that the best way to bring about change is to be the change yourself. This is one of the biggest challenges facing Nigeria even as well-meaning people have become monsters and looters once they tasted power or got a feel of political office. I am convinced that I am a different person. I know the son of whom I am. My parents are not thieves and I have both my name and integrity to protect.

I have started taking initiatives on certain projects with the hope that someday I will be able to get the chance to make remarkable impacts in Nigeria. I have started sharing my views with a team of health professionals (Nigerians living in the US, Britain, Sweden, South Africa and Nigeria) and we are looking into a major project that can change the face of Nigeria health care forever. We only need one chance!

I have also started dreaming of a foundation that will help at least one Nigerian citizen per year to get the same opportunity that I had to study in Sweden. There are less and less scholarships available to Nigerians from this part of the world for several reasons-discussion on that is certainly beyond the scope of this article. I have a dream to fill one of the gaps.

I also have another dream to initiate the African Rights Initiative in Scandinavian (ARIS). I had the idea even before I saw a good friend sent home before he could complete his doctoral research in Uppsala, Sweden. He suffered primarily because of the colour of his skin but he went home thereby preserving his dignity. I could not help him but I will like to protect other people. I’m looking at this for the future. Surely, I can’t do that alone.

Often I regard myself probably as the angriest Nigerian alive. I am going to be the last Nigerian to understand how we allowed fools, looters, thieves and dream-killers to reign over us. I will never understand why we don’t have a real democracy and why we cannot count votes in Nigeria. There are many things about Nigerian politics that are shrewd in secrecy and myths. How can people be taking oath to spread poverty and penury? It baffles me!

Still at 37, I don’t know why we are so blessed, yet poor. We are so rich, yet suffering. The problems with Nigeria and the intricacies surrounding all the wahala, to me, is one of the greatest mysteries of modern history. The role of the colonial master-Britain, the interests of the International community and the alleged hypocritical status of the United States are some of the problems that we need to address or possibly dismantle once and for all. As a people we must be able to choose our leaders and make them accountable. As a people we must decide how we want to live and we must be able to enjoy our commonwealth together. These things may come with great sacrifices but they are paramount if we want our children to have a place they can call home.

To continue to leave the outcomes of our existence in the hands of the oppressors-seen or unseen-is one of the greatest crimes of the 21st century.

I will have some of my friends over at my place for my annual birthday celebration. I will also be surrounded by my family here in Stockholm. It always gives a good feeling to be surrounded by friends and family. I will enjoy the day and continue to reflect on the avenues through which I want to be a part of the people that will change Nigeria for the better. If we believe, together, we can rescue Nigeria from all destructive agenda. It is possible.

May the Glory of Nigeria come, soon..!

Thy Glory O’ Nigeria…!

aderounmu@gmail.com

1960-2008: Nigeria has wasted 2 generations and 48 years

By Adeola Aderounmu.

Not everyone will agree that 2008 was another wasted year but in actual fact, it was wasted. To those who have managed to climb up and away from the poverty zone, it is a year of accomplishment. To those who have succeeded through hardwork and a little bit of luck, it is a wonderful year.

However, more than 90m Nigerians are still below the poverty level. Many of them living desperately on less than 2 USD per day. To be sure, there are some people in Nigeria who do not have any money or material comfort. These people are neither covered by any form of social security nor consoled by the any type of social amenity. They lack the basic things of life: water, food and good accommodation. In general, their standard of living is below acceptable human conditions.

Several millions of Nigerians will start 2009 just the way they started 2008-poor and facing extreme hopelessness. They will start a new year without electricity in their homes. Nigeria is currently generating less than 3000 MW of electricity! Power supply in the last quarter of 2008 is one of the worst in the history of Nigeria. There are many days of absolute power cut and (sometimes) intermittent supply of about 30min in 2 days. Is Nigeria really a country?

Yet Nigerians are addressing Yar Adua as president. What has he successfully presided over since he was illegally bundled into power by Obasanjo and Iwu? Nigerians know that they are being held as captives but they don’t know how to release themselves from the bondage.

No one can deny that the Nigerian masses are being held as captives by a clique of tropical gangsters who have “bought” the country and turned it to their paradise and our hell. It is so unbelievable that these monsters have held swayed for most part of the 48 years of Nigerian independence. It is also remarkable how they re-group and recruit new accomplices in order to ensure that evil and terror are perpetually unleashed on the common man.

For instance Yar Adua’s fake government is oiled by corruption just like the others before it. How long shall we repeat this? Everytime I hear Yar Adua condemning corruption, I get stomach pains. How can you condemn something that you are enmeshed in, something you are doing almost nothing about in the interest of the public even though you have the transient or stolen power to do so?

Can Yar Adua tell Nigerians why Ibori is not facing prosecution? Why did Lucky Igbinedion pay just 3 million naira after looting for 8 years? Why are all the indicted governors and Ministers from 1999 to 2007 free people? Yar Adua should please save us the hypocrisy of his pseudo-leadership. It is not possible to fool all the people all the time.

It is now known to all and sundry that Ibori is the one controlling the EFCC nowadays. This would explain why Farida is his foot mat. Ibori has perfected the act of escaping prosecution. This guy stole Delta State to dryness and he is enjoying a post-governorship immunity simply because he donated more money than anyone else in sponsoring Yar Adua to the global centre of corruption aka Aso Rock.

Among the people who have contributed to the waste and hopelessness in Nigeria, one should never fail to mention Obasanjo. In Nigeria today, NEPA is generating less than 3000MW and the misdeeds of Obasanjo and his co-looters is a principal factor in this debacle. For 8 years, this man deceived all Nigerians and made us believed in vain. Nigerian are invariably in for another ride of deceit-waiting in vain for a declaration of a state of emergency in the power sector.

Maurice Iwu has joined the long list of the men holding Nigerians as captives. All the elections held even after the sham of April 2007 are still condemnable. The worst political comment in the world in 2008 was made by Iwu when he said that the US should learn from Nigeria when it comes to conducting election. The comments of senile Mugabe (“Zimbabwe is mine” and “no cholera in Zimbabwe”) are child’s play compared to Iwu’s venomous utterances. Nigeria is surely condemned when men without defined visions or missions are in control.

Anyone who has been following the proceedings of the Nigerian Senate under the leadership of the mega-looter called David Mark would really feel sorry for Nigeria. There is almost no room for intelligent discussions and Mark is usually way off the mark when he makes his comments. Nigerians have sacrificed intelligence for stupidity and looting games in the Nigerian Senate and House of Assembly.

David Mark has no business in the Senate anyway. After participating in the looting of Nigeria, it is quite easy to understand the negative contributions he brings with him to the senate. The war on corruption, if we had one, should have engulfed his likes.

The reigning gangsters and looters in Nigeria are surely having a jolly ride with a man like Michael Aondoakaa in control of the legal system. He is not only shielding and defending the looters in Nigeria and abroad, his idea of rule of law is very instrumental in the spreading of poverty and deaths in Nigeria.

What these bad leaders don’t understand is that every little misdeed adds up to the misery of Nigerians. Why protect people who stole monies that they cannot spend in 10x their life span? Obviously he is gaining a lot in the process! One day na one day sha!

There is no way Babangida will not be on this parade. More than 12 billion dollars of Nigeria’s money alleged to be in his possession is enough to keep Nigeria in the doldrums for another decade or more. If 12 billion dollars is pumped into Nigeria’s scientific and medical research and development (R&D), almost all Nigerian scholars abroad will be heading home to contribute to the progress of the country.

We don’t need a prophecy to know that Nigerians will continue to suffer because of a few men in possession of the country’s wealth. If there is war on corruption in Nigeria, many of the people parading government houses in Nigeria today should be answering for corruption and crime against humanity.

There is no real anticorruption body in Nigeria and this is why politicians and government officials continue to steal. Obasanjo destroyed the EFCC by using it to crack down on all anti-third term groups and individuals. The rules have changed under Umaru-soft pedal for all and sundry. Slow and steady kill the case was the modification by Farida Waziri-a pure puppet.

If Nigeria has a proper anticorruption agency, it would be independent, open and sincere. The EFCC of today is a shield for the likes of Ibori and all the corrupt governors and politicians that served under Obasanjo. Those who served and lined their pockets before 1999 are not even moved. The only worried groups in Nigeria today are the yahoo-yahoo boys, cybercafé owners and of course the common man. EFCC has even dedicated a drama series to yahoo-yahoo boys on AIT. What a joke of an institution!

Forty-eight years of waste was solidify by the lukewarmness of the Nigerian judiciary. This organ of government has disappointed Nigerians over the years and more recently has produced highly questionable and contestable judgements. The court has made it possible for individuals who did not contest in elections to be winners. Serving convicts and ex-convicts contested and won elections in Nigeria. Imagine how many criminals are occupying political positions in Nigeria. The disposition of the Courts in Nigeria is one of the reasons that the police stations have been turned to firing squads. The Nigerian Police is a sick child on its own: a very sick child! When it mattered most, Nigerian law system usually becomes heavily compromised.

All of these evil acts that have confined Nigeria among the poorest nations in the world is actually the summation of the effects of a group fondly called “the cabal“. The cabal is the reason why sane and intelligent minds get to government houses and become stereotyped looting machines.

Even Nigerians who lived abroad before joining government have not been spared the initiation into the looting game. The cabal preaches a gospel of eat and go and don’t bug yourself with the status quo. This is why many nice people have become “new creatures” once they eat the forbidden fruits. It is because of the cabal that our elections have no values and are unworkable. The cabal is responsible for the annulment of the only free and fair election that took place in 1993.

The sins of the cabal are many but its prime approach is to promote fear and ignorance with the view of controlling the machinery of government forever. The newest approach being utilised by the cabal is the secrecy oath in the illegal presidency which is now being adopted across government institutions nationwide. What is secret about the illegality of the regime in Nigeria? What is the secret about the fact that they are all there to protect their personal interests and steal as much as they can just like the deceivers before them.

The problems in Nigeria are not going to be solved or ameliorated if we don’t take care of the stumbling blocks. Nigerians have been quiet for too long and everybody is after his or her own interests. It shouldn’t be like that. Some people have called for a revolution but Nigeria is a very complicated country and this complication is one of the weak points that the cabal and the corrupt leaders are using to oppress Nigerians more and more. Some people want the biblical call: To thy tent O’ Israel! The Niger Delta crisis, the threats of religious riots, tribal conflicts and secession bids are obvious indicators.

Rather than “every-man-to-himself” Nigerians should start thinking collectively of how rescue the over 90m people living hopelessly across the nation. We should come together and discuss whatever it will entail to capture this country back from the vultures who have been stealing and looting since 1960. If the outcome will send us back to our tents, so be it. Posterity should be the keyword.

After chasing Ghanaians out of Nigeria, they went home and built a formidable country that Nigerians are running to like rats. Ghana is now ranked as one of the most prosperous countries in Africa. The actions and leadership of one man changed Ghana forever. The lesson is that one man can make a difference. Enlightened Nigerians have the honour to take up this challenge and start building formidable forces and groups that will challenge the “status quo”.

We must do whatever it will take to break from this yoke. It’s too heavy a burden and one way or the other we all feel the effects. Let’s do what it takes to free our children and grandchildren from this burden.

Happy New Year!