Friday, 23 April 2021

New FG Passport Application Policy

- ALL current passport backlogs to be issued on or before May 31, 2021.

- Those with issues with their application will be contacted.

- Names of all those whose passport are ready and currently waiting for collection will be published on the Immigration website and they will be required to visit the Command HQ in the state where they applied for collection.

- New passport application regime begins June 1, 2021

- Passport application processing to collection has now been standardized to take a total of 6 weeks.

- Those who desire express service of 24hrs-72hrs waiting time, can visit any of the passport express centres (it will come with an additional fee).

- One passport express centre has been launched in Maitama, Abuja and 10 more to open across the country in the next few weeks.

- A zero-tolerance stance to all forms of touting has been declared. No applicant will be made to pay any illegitimate fees.

- Security operatives – seen and unseen – has been embedded in all passport offices. They will wear body cameras. They will detect and report any form of solicitations, inflation, improper communications, extortion, diversion, hoarding and other corrupt practices. Those caught will be dealt with according to the law.

- An ombudsman has been created for members of the public to receive complaints and reports on officers trying to deviate from prescribed guidelines and subversion of the process.

- Applicants will have no basis for further communication with officers, other than to complete their application process and leave the venue.

- The date for the collection of their passports or any challenge to the application, will be communicated to them. The technology for the efficient running of this system has been acquired.

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

NEC STRONGLY AFFIRMS NIGERIA’S UNITY, DIRECTS STATE-BY-STATE CONSULTATIONS.

Unanimously debunks claim Naira was printed to support March allocation.

Welcoming recommendations of a national townhall meeting on Enhanced Security and National Unity recently held in Kaduna, the National Economic Council (NEC) rose from its monthly meeting today strongly affirming the unity of the country, emphasizing that staying as one country remains the best option for Nigeria.

The Council’s position was among resolutions adopted at the 4th 2021 meeting of NEC, chaired by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, which also had in attendance State Governors, FCT Minister and the Central Bank Governor. Also at today’s meeting were the Finance, Transportation, Information, Aviation and Water Resources Ministers, and the Minister of State for Budget and National Planning.

While emphasizing the need to address the problems of agitation in parts of the country, Council noted that “these agitations are common with countries with huge and diverse populations like ours and it is important not to allow the minority to hijack the mainstream of opinion.”

The Council also directed States “to hold consultations and dialogues on the issues and report back by the next meeting of Council so that a firm position would be taken on the recommendations of the Townhall many of which it already welcomed.”

NEC urged all States (even where there are no agitations) to hold wider consultations to have diverse opinions on the burning issues, taking into consideration local peculiarities and report back to NEC the outcome of the consultations.

The Council resolved that after the planned State-wide consultations a national consensus would be reached on the recommendations of the national town hall meeting held in Kaduna which included the adoption of State Police among other matters.

Taking a position on the alleged printing of N60 billion after receiving presentations from the Minister of Finance and the Central Bank Governor, the National Economic Council (NEC) stated that the claim as reported in the press is outrightly false, affirming that no money was printed to shore up allocation for the month of March.

The Governors, having critically reviewed the matter, unanimously expressed satisfaction with clarifications made by the NGF represented by its Chairman, Governor Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti State, Finance Minister, Hajiya Zainab Ahmed and the Central Bank Governor, Mr Godwin Emefiele.  While the Finance Minister categorically debunked that Naira was printed to back up allocation last month, the CBN Governor fully supported the position of the minister, and the Chairman of NGF also noted that he knew no such thing happened at all.

OTHER HIGHLIGHTS 115TH NEC MEETING:

BUDGET AND NATIONAL PLANNING MINISTER TO BRIEF ON FINANCE UPDATES:

The Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning gave update to Council on the under listed accounts as follows:

1.     EXCESS CRUDE ACCOUNT (ECA)

Balance as at 22nd April 2021 stood at N72, 413,008.60

 2.    STABILIZATION ACCOUNT

Balance as at 22nd April, 2021 was put at N23,299,008,799.06

3.    NATURAL RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT ACCOUNT

Balance as at 22nd April, 2021 was N77, 742,012,342.87

BUDGET SUPPORT

On the budget support facility, Finance Minister observed that the deductions for repayment by States are meant to resume in May. The Governors however requested for an extension considering the economic challenges in the States.

The Central Bank Governor explained the technical challenges involved should there be a further postponement of the deductions. The Vice President then directed that a meeting be held soon after today’s NEC where the issue would be properly considered and a decision reached.

The VP will chair the meeting and the Governors would be represented by Governor Kayode Fayemi, while the Finance Minister and the Central Bank Governor both of whom attended the meeting today will also participate.

Council also received a presentation on the current status of water, sanitation, and hygiene services level across the country as revealed by the 2019 WASH National Outcome Routine Mapping (WASH-NORM II) survey jointly carried out by the Federal Ministry of Water Resources and National Bureau of Statistics in collaboration with UNICEF.

Under the 2019 survey, six modules were adopted: (1) Households, comprising Water Quality assessments and household WASH; (2) Water Facilities, (3) WASH in Educational Facilities, (4) WASH in Health facilities and (5) WASH in Public places (markets and motor parks), and (6) Water Utilities and Consumer Satisfaction Survey.

Key findings from 2019 WASH-NORM survey:

The percentage of the population with access to basic water supply services has steadily increased from 67% in 2015to 68% in 2018, and 70% in 2019. In terms of population figures, these changes equate to about 9 million more people gaining access to basic water supply services between 2018 and 2019. However, only14% of the population has access to safely managed drinking water supply services, which means that up to 171 million Nigerians are still off the SDG target 6.1.

On access to sanitation, indicators across the country show a slight improvement as 44% of the population were found to have access to basic sanitation services in 2019 compared to 42% in 2018. Only 17% of the population use improved sanitation facilities that have proper handwashing facilities with soap.

The number of people practicing open defecation marginally changed from 24% in 2018 to 23% in 2019 meaning that about 46 million people are still defecating in the open.

About 27% of markets and motor parks have access to basic water supply services. Accessibility of persons living with disabilities is very low at 17%. About a quarter of markets and motor parks (24%) have access to basic sanitation services and slightly more than half (53%) of markets and motor parks do not have toilets for public use.

28 out of 36 States plus FCT have urban water utilities out of which only 16 are functional and producing water for the people. The functional 16 State Water Agencies (SWA) have a total number of 1,171 water works which 41% is operational.

Council, therefore, welcomed the key findings from the 2019 WASH-NORM survey and noted that the Ministry has commenced the third round of WASH-NORM Survey in 2021 and is hereby urging all the States and FCT to support the process.

PRESENTATION ON NATIONAL AVIATION INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT PLAN, PROSPECTS OF LEVERAGING PRIVATE SECTOR CAPACITY ON INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT BY SENATOR HADI SIRIKA, MINISTER OF AVIATION.

The Minister stated that the Federal Ministry of Aviation is saddled with the overall responsibility for the formulation and management of aviation policies and was given the following mandates:

1.     Conclude the Concession of Murtala Muhammed International Airport (Lagos), Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport (Abuja), Aminu Kano International Airport (Kano) and Port-Harcourt International Airport (Port-Harcourt).

2.     Implement a plan for effective maintenance and optimal use of Airport facilities across the Country.

3.     Ensure and facilitate the Establishment of a National Carrier.

4.     Actively collaborate with the Private sector to create a large number of well-paying jobs for Nigerian youths.

5.     Implement a strategy towards the realization of Mr. President’s June 12 promise to take 100 Million Nigerians out of poverty in the next ten years.

KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS:

1.     Concession of four International Airports - Lagos, Abuja, PH and Kano.

2.     Implement a plan for effective maintenance and optimal use of all Airport facilities across the Country

3.     Ensure and facilitate the establishment of a National Carrier.

4.     Actively collaborate with the Private sector to create a large number of well-paying jobs for Nigerian youths.

5.     Implement a strategy towards the realization of Mr. President’s June 12 promise to take 100 million Nigerians out of poverty in the next ten years.

Council Resolution:

The Minister should make available copies of the presentations to states so that Council will have a fuller understanding.

PRESENTATION ON THE PROGRESS REPORT OF RAIL DEVELOPMENT IN NIGERIA BY RT. HON. CHIBUIKE ROTIMI AMAECHI, HONORABLE MINISTER OF TRANSPORT

Council was informed on how Rail Development was stalled in the 60s until 1986, when the Federal Government of Nigeria commenced the construction of 326 km standard gauge (1,435m) rail lines phase 1 from Itakpe – Ajaokuta – Warri.

Furthermore, rail infrastructure development halted until the present Administration came on-board and brought to reality the railway modernization plan of the Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) by commencing the implementation of the 1,367 km Lagos – Kano railway lines. The outcome of the present government intervention includes:

Completed and made operational the 186 km Abuja – Kaduna Standard gauge rail lines;

Commencement of 185.5 km Lagos-Ibadan new Double standard gauge rail lines in 2016 and is almost completed;

Completed and made operational the 302 km Itakpe – Ajaokuta – Warri standard gauge rail lines; and

Connected the Apapa Ports by Rail, while that of Warri Port has been concessioned.

THE 25 – YEAR RAILWAY STRATEGIC VISION 

The Federal Government in its determination to revive and modernize the Railway System in line with the 25-year Strategic Vision, adopted a Systematic dual approach.

This entails the rehabilitation of the entire existing narrow gauge lines simultaneously with the development of standard gauge lines.

The Ministry/NRC is rigorously following the strategic vision in developing its short and medium-term plans

KEY CHALLENGES

Finance

Inadequate Funding

Operational challenges 

Insufficient locomotives, coaches and wagons, leading to congestion

Obsolete Machineries and workshop equipment

Access to only two seaports and none to airports

Lack of capacity to recover encroached premises and rental debts from government organisations.

Security

Porosity of rail corridors and level crossings

Vulnerability of outdoor Signalling & Telecommunication installations to vandalism

Legal and Legislative 

The Railway Act of 1955 does not encourage Public Private Partnership.

Council welcomed the presentation and looked forward to further collaboration with the FG on this matter.

Laolu Akande

Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media & Publicity

Office of the Vice President

22nd April 2021

Thursday, 22 April 2021

Nollywood Actor, Baba Ijesha In Police Net For Allegedly Raping 14-Year-Old Girl

A popular Nollywood actor, Olarenwaju James popularly known as Baba Ijesha, has been arrested by the Lagos State Police Command.

This was confirmed by a statement released the Command’ss Public Relations Officer, Olumuyiwa Adejobi, on Wednesday.

It read, “The Lagos State Police Command has arrested one Olarenwaju James ‘male’ 48, aka Baba Ijesha, popular Nollywood actor for defiling a minor.

The case of defilement was reported on 19th April, 2021 by one Princess Adekola Adekanya ‘female’ at Sabo Police Station and transferred to the Gender Unit of the State CID, Panti, Yaba Lagos for proper investigation.

“Based on preliminary findings, the suspect started sexually assaulting the victim, 14 years, since she was seven years old. The suspect confessed to the crime and was also captured by a CCTV camera in the house of the complainant.

The Commissioner of Police, Lagos State, CP Hakeem Odumosu, has ordered for proper investigation as he promised to do justice in the matter.”

Source: www.ourpeoplesfm1041.com.ng

Who is an Ìyáláwo?

The term "Ìyáláwo" in Yorùbá language literally means "Mother of mysteries" (Ìyá: "mother" ; Awo "mysteries").

Ìyáláwo (female Ifá Diviner and Priestess) undergo training in the memorisation and interpretation of the whole 256 Odù-Ifá mysteries, as well as in the numerous verses (ẹsẹ Ifá)). The Ìyáláwo are generally trained in the determination of problems, or to divine how good fortune can be achieved and maintained, and the application of both spiritual and related secular diagnosis, treatment, and solutions.

Ìyáláwo usually have additional vocational skills in herbal treatment, spirituality cum spiritualism. Ìyáláwo study Ifá, perform Ifá divination, prescribe sacrifices and rituals, and performed them. And they are initiated into Ifá with their personal Ifá corpus like their male counterparts known as Babaláwos.

Both Babaláwo and Ìyáláwo use Ifá and its objects of divination, including the divining chain, popularly known as Ọ̀pẹ̀lẹ̀ or the sacred palm nuts called Ikin-Ifá on the traditional wooden divination tray or board called Ọpọ́n-Ifá to perform Ifá divination. And today in Yorùbáland, there are tens of women trained as Ìyáláwos.

Differences between Ìyáláwo and Ìyánífá:

Ordinarily, "Ìyánífá" is a Yorùbá word or term that can be translated as Mother (Ìyá) has or of (ní) Ifá or Mother in Ifá.

While Ìyáláwo and Ìyánífá are often used interchangeably, the terms have different denotations and connotations. The term Ìyánífá is specifically a recognised title in Ifá community nowadays, and it could also indicate that a woman has obtained Ifá (she is a custodian of Ifá in a personal capacity) and or performed "Ìtẹ̀fá" (Ifá initiation). The term Ìyáláwo indicates a woman who has knowledge of sacred wisdom of Ifá and she is a properly trained female Ifá Diviner and Priestess.

Categorically and assertively, the word or term Ìyánífá  is never a new one; it is as old as the word or term known as Babaláwo or Ifá, but certainly, it is not the opposite of or synonymous with Babaláwo.

But sadly, the etymological meaning and the actual definition of Ìyánífá is being badly altered and influenced, presently, by many Babaláwos (both in Yorùbáland and in the diaspora), objectively to promote Western values and ideas; and to also massage the ego and adress what they identified as "identity crisis" being faced by the so called "emerging" female Ifá Diviners and the ever rising number of female Ifá Devotees in Western world and Diaspora in general.

Traditionally, Ìyánífá refers to any woman (irrespective of age or spiritual background) married to any practising Babaláwo (Ifá Diviner /Priest) commonly called "Apẹ̀tẹ̀bí aya Awo" choosen by the Babaláwo for the singular purpose of serving as Ìyánífá (Godmother) during the "Ìtẹ̀fá / Ìtẹ̀lódù" (Ifá initiation) rituals and ceremonies of anybody that is performing his Ìtẹfá/ Ìtẹ̀lódù. And her major duty is to lead the procession of the participating Babaláwos to the Igbó Ifá / Igbódù (Ifá Grove) and also led them back home by carrying on her head Èṣù Ẹlẹ́gbára.

On this, Ifá says in Òtúrá Òdí:

Bí ẹ bá rí ọmọdé Ifẹ̀

Ẹ fi ìbò lọ̀ọ́

Bí ẹ bá rí àgbà Ifẹ̀

Ẹ fi ìbò lọ̀ọ́

Bí ẹ bá rí Olúwo......

Ẹ fi ìbò lọ̀ọ́

Bí ẹ bá rí Ojùgbọ̀nà

Ẹ fi ìbò lọ̀ọ́

Bí ẹ bá rí Ìyánífá aya Awo

Ẹ fi ìbò lọ̀ọ́.....

Torí a ò mọ ẹni tí baba rẹ̀ kú

Tó fi èbù sílẹ̀

A dífá fún Aṣẹ́gità ilé Ọba

Èyí tí yóò ti oko he òkú agbe wá sínú ilé.....

It’s instructive to note here  that this practice of choosing any woman to serve as Ìyánífá during Ìtẹ̀fá / Ìtẹ̀lódù is actually a standard practice in ONLY Ọ̀yọ́ speaking part of the Yorùbáland, and that it is Never a general practice in the whole of Yorùbáland.

Categorically factual, Ìyánífá is never an ordinary title or chieftaincy title until very recently (few decades ago) when our traditional narratives are being changed; and traditional concepts and practices being polluted, all in the name of promoting them and widening women participations; partly in response to the ever changing socio - cultural values in our society. Before now; "There is never anything like Ìyánífá of this town or that community. Never"!

According to a particular verse in Ogbè Atẹ̀ (Ogbè Ìrẹtẹ̀), Ifá says;

Ẹ̀ ní ó gbà

Kò wá gbà

Ẹ̀ ní ó tẹ̀

Kò wá tẹ̀

Mo gbà.......

Mo tẹ̀

Ìrègún Ifá tán

Ìrègún Ifá ò tán

Ìrègún Ifá kù lẹ́yìn jọjọ 

A dífá fún Ọ̀rúnmìlà.....

Baba ń lọ rèé gbé Odù ní ìyàwó

Ǹjẹ́ ta ló bí wa bá wọ̀nyí wẹrẹ

Odù ló bí wa bá wọ̀nyí wẹrẹ......

The first Ìyánífá in history is the powerful female Irúnmọlẹ̀ called Odù; the first and the most prominent wife of Ọ̀rúnmìlà Baraà mi Àgbọnnìrègún.

In ancient Yorùbá spiritual world, Ifá practice, specifically as a Babaláwo is exclusive to the men only. No woman can become a Babaláwo or practise as a female Ifá Diviner. It's against the sustained tradition of the land. Women are only required or expected to practise Divination, using ever popular ẹríndìnlóógún (special sixteen cowries called owó ẹ̀rọ̀) as Olókun Devotee (obìnrin ló ń dá Olókun) in Ilé Ifẹ̀ or as Ìyá Ọ̀ṣun, Ìyá Òòṣà, Ìyá Ṣàngó, and Ìyá Ẹgbẹ́ across lands (particularly in the Western axis of Yorùbáland, comprising Ọ̀yọ́, Ìjẹ̀bú, Ẹ̀gbá, Ìgbómìnà, Ìbọ̀lọ́, and Àwórì lands). 

Until very recently in the history of the developments in Ifá community in Yorùbáland, its a well known interdiction or taboo, particularly in the Eastern Yorùbáland (comprising the Ifẹ̀, Ìjẹ̀sà, Èkìtì, Àkókò, Ọ̀wọ̀, Ìkálẹ̀, Oǹdó, and Ìlàjẹ lands) for a woman to become a "Babaláwo" (Ifá Diviner / Priest).

But, around early Sixties (1960s), a certain woman of courage, popularly known as Ìyánífá and reputed to be very brilliant, skillful; and of exemplary life "pioneered" the ever tedious and laborious learning of Ifá as a vocational discipline in Ọ̀gbáàgbá, a relatively small community near Ìwó, in the present Ọ̀ṣun State.

Her successful practise as a first female Ifá Diviner / Priestess later inspired about four other women in her locality and around Ìwó entire axis; and they successfully proved their mettle as reputable cum professionally competent female Ifá Diviners / Priestesses - Ìyáláwos.

After the death of these first generation of the female Ifá Diviners; years later in the late Eighties, another woman of faith and destiny, very hard-working, resourceful, brilliant; and a woman blessed with native intelligence and retentive memory in the person of Chief (Mrs) Mofáwokẹ́ Fáníyì (née Ọ̀ṣúnmákindé), born into Ifá household in Fèéṣú, also in Ìwó  emerged again; and she was successfully trained as a female Ifá Diviner / Priestess - Ìyáláwo.

Conclusively, one can sensibly, reasonably, and safely assert here that, if the male Ifá Diviner and Priest is a Babaláwo (Father of secrets or mysteries) and Not Bàbá Onífá or Bàbá Ifá, any female Ifá Diviner and Priestess is an Ìyáláwo (Mother of secrets or mysteries), and definitely Not Ìyánífá! And that Ìyáláwo is the opposite of Babaláwo! 

A bọrú bọyè o!

Adérẹ̀mí Ifáòleèpin Adérẹ̀mí

(Olúwo Ifákòleèpin)

Founder and Chief Coordinating Officer

Society for the Ifá Practice in Nigeria (SIPIN) 

#CustodianofYorubaTraditionandCulture

Know your EMI ("I") The Real YOU

The most common trap is a matter of the words "I" and "me," which create confusion between the automatic "I," with its various selves, ... To penetrate this false Ego we must learn the full repertory of its disguises its professional ego, its social ego, its sexual ego, its pious or skeptical ego, and its ego for family use; they all have different faces, characters, and behavior, according to their several ages, circumstances, and secret passions. But each of these "me's" says "I want" and "I promise," pretending not to know that one of the other "I's" may contradict it.

To be more precise, this is not a mere disagreement over meanings of words ; rather one must become one's own confessor in order to be no longer deceived by that undiscoverable mirage of a character, the multiple "I" of daily life. First, one of its disguises appears, then another, according to the role that has to be played, but all are recorded in the mirror of IFÁ CORPUS, which is the mirror of UNIVERSE.

By- Aboriginal Segun

Copyright: © 2021

#CustodianofYorubaTraditionandCulture

Money Printing Controversy, Pantami’s Confession

THREE THINGS CANNOT LONG BE HIDDEN: THE SUN, THE MOON, AND THE TRUTH

-Confucius.

After Governor Godwin Obaseki of Edo finished and won the state’s gubernatorial battle in 2020, every other battle will be almost always surmountable, call it “akamu” case if you like. The switched-party governor is a product of “rofo rofo” fight. Fighting and subduing a relentless godfather and perpetual combatant as Comrade Adams Oshiohmole, Obaseki won’t even think twice about engaging anybody else, especially if it is in his familiar terrain.

If the Finance Minister Zainab Ahmed had known Governor Obaseki’s pedigree, she would have avoided drawing a fight with him over the alleged money printing by the Central Bank of Nigeria because Obaseki appears to be better armed for the battle. Taking on Governor Obaseki for exposing how cash-strapped the Federal Government has been was an unwise decision for Hajia Ahmed.

Governor Obaseki is hardly a talkative, but a strategic thinker. That’s why he was able to subdue a garrulous mentor who had thought that being vociferous or eloquent can substitute for strategy.

Governor Obaseki has a background in Economics. He is an investment banker and can smell danger in the economy from afar. He knows that Nigeria is in the doldrums regarding the national economy. He knows that the government and those piloting its affairs and the economy have been living in denial, refusing to interpret properly to the people the correct state of the nation’s economy.

Obaseki saw that as dangerous because such false images can make the people leave their belt loose when it should be tighter.

The governor being privy to the correct picture of things, given his investment background, would not want his people to fall prey. He decided to brief them painting a gory picture of Nigeria’s current economic status and the danger it portends.

After lamenting the quantum of borrowing the government was doing, the governor went further to underscore the grave danger arising therefrom. He regretted that the federal government appears to have no ideas of what to do or how to go about the situation and has resorted to printing more bank notes to survive. He then revealed that the government had to print between 50 to 60 billion to be able to find funds for states to share as federal allocation.

The revelation did not go down well with the Finance Minister who described the governor’s statement as untrue, misleading, and unfortunate. That minister’s remark will make the governor look like a liar, a profiling he wasn’t ready to take. Then he fired back at the minister, thereby opening the arena for the fight.

The CBN, the real culprit in the alleged money printing, found itself cornered. Denying Governor Obaseki would mean telling lies which could have far-reaching consequences for a regulator in such a critical sector. And denying the minister would once again be exposing the government as divided and incoherent. They had to come in-between the two. Yes, we printed money but for loans not for sharing, which sounds like saying, “We took away six, not half a dozen.”

Although the apex bank’s position is a half-truth, it is still better than outright denial. By this, the minister is also somehow protected. But the minister owes Nigerians the truth about the state of our economy. How much has been borrowed so far? Where are they deployed for investment? How have they been able to block the bleeding corruption in high places…revenue agencies like NNPC, FIRS, Nigerian Ports Authority and the Customs. What is the true position with petrol subsidy?

All said and done, Governor Obaseki should be commended for this patriotic exposé. Nigerians have been wondering the cause of the sudden jump in inflation. The price of virtually all goods skyrocketed overnight. One social media joker captured the inflation funnily, “I don’t understand what is happening again, my N100,000 suddenly started behaving like 10,000.” Those who went to market recently will understand what the joke is all about but that is the state of our economy today which is hidden from us.

We have found ourselves down the line where currency had to be printed for the government to find money to spend. Even during the war such voodoo economics was not practised. When money printing was popularized that we can recall was under the Ugandan maximum dictator late Idi Amin who was so bereft of ideas and was isolated from the people that he resorted to printing money to spend. We understand printing money to replace dirty notes.

God forbid that Nigeria has gotten so close to such danger where the government has run out of ideas and is now engaging persons skilled in voodooist ideas to run the economy.

If it’s the same staccato mentality with which we approach security issues that we bring to economic matters, the consequences will be hyper-disastrous, if there’s a word like that.

The National Security Adviser Major-General Babagana Monguno recently blew the lid off the missing billions meant for arms and ammunition and was short of fingering the immediate past service chiefs. Coming from NSA, the whistleblowing was a clear picture of a divided house and we are long taught that a divided house hardly stands.

Perhaps, even more intriguing is the disturbing trending facts that a sympathizer of terrorism, Dr Isa Pantami, is in the cabinet occupying a strategic position. Yet we go on searching for their sponsors when what we are looking for in faraway Sokoto is right in our Shokoto.

The terrorism lover-minister who was threatening to go to court against the media that exposed him has now done a U-turn, blaming his early show of love for terrorists to youthfulness. Only God knows how many lives were lost during his youthful exuberance.

Very regrettable that this man and his background passed through the security screening and the confirming Senate. However, that is what you get when a nation’s intelligence and parliamentary bodies are run on ethno-religious sentiments rather than the set best practices.

Pantami does not deserve to be a minister of a liberal democracy, still keeping him in the cabinet after his unveiling says a lot about the bigotry of the regime itself. In saner climes, he would resign like yesterday.

When this administration came to power, it anchored its future to Nigerians on three issues, security, corruption, and economy and six years down the line, the government has failed woefully in all the areas. Why? Because it has approached the three very important matters with narrow minds, putting square pegs in round holes and expecting results. Beclouded by nepotism, this government has ignored ideas that could have made the difference.

Nigeria as a country is lavishly blessed with egg heads in all fields whose input can turn things around for good but they are either from the wrong religion or tribe, the two variables that dictate appointments in this dispensation at the expense of merit and character.

What Governor Obaseki has done, possibly without knowing, is letting the cat out of the bag. What has come out very glaring in the altercation between the Governor, the minister and possibly the CBN governor Godwin Emefiele is the clear picture of where we are as a nation economically. But for Obaseki the CBN governor would not have admittedly said, “Nigeria is unfortunately in a very bad situation and I am not going to pretend about it.”

Attempting to defend and deny the truth has further strengthened it and a better picture of the situation brought it to the fore for all to see. Sooner or later, the same correct picture will come out regarding the hide-and-seek going over petrol subsidy and the curious attempt to refurbish a dead refinery at the exit end of the regime. Nigerians are no fools.

It took the NSA to reveal the arms procurement scandal. It has now taken Governor Obaseki to reveal the money printing strategy to cover up. In all, there are feeble denials to save face at the expense of truth. It will take another Obaseki if not now sooner to uncover the other hidden truths about what is going on in this government. Was it not Pantami’s attempt to bury his past by threatening the media house that brought out his tapes?

If not God, who would have known that the man in charge of the nation’s database, the National Identification Number, NIN, the Minister of Communication and Digital Economy, is a sympathizer of Boko Haram and terrorism. Before long, NIN database will be released and Muslim and Fulani figures will clearly show the agenda. Why not when the hired imported herdsmen may have been captured as Nigerians?

We have all followed frantic efforts Dr Pantami is making to disown his past. If he had done that before he was dug out, maybe it would have sufficed, but to do it because you are caught is incredulous.

What a country, no wonder one Nigeria is not negotiable to some and impossible to others. One thing, however, is obvious: We cannot forever hide the truth about ourselves, from ourselves. The fact is snow-white that Nigeria as currently structured is not working and cannot work.

God help us.

By Ike Abonyi. Posted. 22nd April 2021

Source: New Telegraph Thursday Back Page


Wednesday, 21 April 2021

Thought from A Southwest Commissioner

I have been thinking about  Nigeria and followed on history that caused the first near secession. 

I wondered what made western countries so great and make them always think of the well-being of the country. 

I realized Nigeria would keep having problems because all the tribes didn't come together to form Nigeria by their own volition. It was just something the colonial masters did to make their rule easier. 

It was never from the wise thoughts of our forefathers that we have a "Nigeria"

Because if the union is something past heroes from each tribe had really worked on, each and everyone might be strengthened by the awe-inspiring strive and valour of the history to keep peace, unity and oneness. 

For Nigeria to remain whole, everyone must think and reflect on what is there to gain by staying together and forming an allegiance and form a pact our forefathers never got to do, that would cater for needs of each tribe, where respect and oneness may blossom. 

Because weather we separate or not, we would still have intolerance to deal with intra and inter tribe. 

And we shouldn't lie to ourselves, the primary reason most want separation is lust for power. Some would admit it if there's a tiny part of them that yearns for truth, while the majority would keep living in delusion. 

We just need to sit back and watch when the ones who had fought hard for the secession don't get a taste of the power they crave, it won't be long before rebellion and assassination start taking place. 

I still hope Nigeria stay one, but... It's no use when it was just a selfish motive, architectured by the colonial masters that formed Nigeria. It makes it seem congealed and unhealthy. 

The true way to pure flowing vigour and independence, that, is shielded from my sight.

#CustodianofYorubaTraditionandCulture

Chad's President Idriss Deby dies of injuries suffered on front line

Chad President Idriss Deby arrives for a group picture during the G5 Sahel summit in Nouakchott, Mauritania, June 30, 2020. (Reuters Photo)

Chad's President Idriss Deby has died while visiting troops on the front line of a fight against northern rebels, an army spokesperson said Tuesday, the day after Deby was declared the winner of a sixth term in office.

The 68-year-old "has just breathed his last defending the sovereign nation on the battlefield" over the weekend, army spokesperson General Azem Bermandoa Agouna said in a statement read out on state television, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The army said a military council led by the late president's 37-year-old son Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno, a four-star general, would replace him.

"A military council has been set up headed by his son, General Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno," Agouna, said on state radio.

Deby won a sixth term on Monday, as the army said it had beaten back a column of insurgents advancing on the capital, N'Djamena. Deby, who came to power in a rebellion in 1990, took 79.3% of the vote in the April 11 election, which was boycotted by top opposition leaders.

He was expected to give a victory speech to supporters, but his campaign director, Mahamat Zen Bada, said he had instead gone to visit Chadian soldiers on the front lines. 

"The candidate would have liked to have been here to celebrate... but right now, he is alongside our valiant defence and security forces to fight the terrorists threatening our territory," Zen Bada told reporters, according to remarks carried by Reuters.

The rebel group Front for Change and Concord in Chad (FACT), which is based across the northern frontier with Libya, attacked a border post on election day and then advanced hundreds of kilometers (miles) south.

But it suffered a setback over the weekend. Agouna told Reuters that army troops killed more than 300 insurgents and captured 150 on Saturday in Kanem province, around 300 kilometers (185 miles) from N'Djamena.

Five government soldiers were killed and 36 were injured, he said.

FACT said in a statement that an "error" on Saturday had "slowed by a little bit the victorious march... to N'Djamena" but that the rebels had routed the army in battle on Sunday and Monday, killing, wounding and capturing hundreds of soldiers.

Chadian state television on Sunday showed images of a crowd of soldiers cheering next to what state television said were dozens of captured rebel fighters, who sat with their hands tied behind their backs.

The unrest has raised alarm bells among Western countries, which saw Deby as an ally in the fight against extremist groups, including Boko Haram in the Lake Chad Basin and groups linked to al-Qaida and Daesh in the Sahel.

BY AGENCIES

Source: www.dailysabah.com


Who Owns ILORIN: Ifá’s Documentation On A Yoruba Town

A couple of days ago, it was surprising to hear of an Islamic Cleric in Ilorin town stating that Ìlọ́rin is not part of Yorùbá land. Unfortunately, some Yorùbá people have allowed themselves to be wallowing in ignorance and stupidity due to their religious indoctrination. The indoctrination has caused their narrow-mindedness, ignorance, and refusal to learn from other’s standpoint and thus created a forum in their minds for madness and disaster.

Consequently, the man’s utterance and action can be likened to a Chinese proverb thus: “he who knows not, and does not know that he knows not is a fool, so shun him.” To worsen the situation, some people rely mostly on fabricated stories about our history written by foreigners or foreign-sponsored Yoruba scholars who did not consider the recorded history in our oral traition and intangible heritage of Ifa. Ifa is the Olódùmarè sacred word of the beginning; it also became a body of knowledge and databank into which all the knowledge of life is encoded for humans to use.

This coded body of knowledge is found in all the 256 chapters of Odù-Ifá, starting from Èjì-Ogbè to Òfún -Ọ̀ṣẹ́. Each Odù represents an esoteric pigeon-hole, itself divisible into another 1,680 sub-holes. There is no gainsaying that Ifa divination system of the Yorubas is recognized and endorsed as a “Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity” by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO, 2005). For several millennia, Ifá as a sacred scripture has been regarded by the Yorubas as the potent source of their inspiration, a crucial part in the formation of human perception of reality.

It hitherto remains sacred and treated as possessing authority that could always be referred to and relied upon under any circumstance.

According to Dr. Ade Ekundayo in an article entitled “Spirituality and Mental Health – An Ifá Overview” Published in Orunmila Magazine, issue No. 7 defines Ifá as follows:

“Ifá is an ancient monument where the culture of the people is encapsulated, enthroned, and entombed. It is much more than Geomancy in that it is not only divinatory. It also embodies the Beliefs, Religion, History, Sociology, and Ecology of the people. Therefore, it diagnoses, treats, adjudicates, arbitrates, guides, advises, instructs, teaches, explains, and attempts to unravel the mystery of Existence in this world. Generally, it covers the physical and biological systems. Ifá also skims the chemical then moves on quickly into the psychological, religious and spiritual.”

Furthermore, in one of the lectures delivered by Prof. Idowu Odeyemi, “What is Ifá?” He highlighted eight basic essences of Ifa as follows:

1. The Spiritual Essence, which relates to the place of man (as a spirit) in the cosmos, the powers of matter, and all aspects of ontological evolution and development.

2. The Religious Essence relates to faith, catechism, and Ifagelism (Preaching).

3. The Divine Essence is related to the methods of Divination and accessing of esoteric information, the mechanics of Divination, and the systematics of Divine Message collection, processing, and interpretation.

4. The Worship and Sacrificial Essence relates to the basis and meaning of worship and sacrifice.

5. The Medicinal Essence is related to both magical and materialist medicine.

6. The Historical Essence deals with all creation history, including the creation of materialist, non-materialist, and spirit worlds.

7. The Scientific Essence deals with the power of observation, axiomatic, astronomy, cosmology, cognitive and pre-cognitive experience, astral science, physical and biological sciences, logic, philosophy, mathematics, statistics, and computer science.

8. The Cultural Essence is related to rites, rituals, politics, socioeconomics, language dress, and normative value systems.

The focus here in regard to the topic is to extrapolate and understand the historical essence of Ifa, as highlighted by Prof. Idowu Odeyemi. Ifá reveals the history of humankind, nature, and existences on earth including the emergence of the Irunmole on the earth’s surface. Also, the Yoruba history from the beginning of time till about four or five centuries ago can still be found in nearly all the stanzas of Odù Ifá. The Yoruba (a recent terminology) describes the ethnic group of about 45 million people Africawide that inhabits Western Africa, mainly the countries of Nigeria, Benin, Ghana, and Togo. There is hardly any ancient town in Yorubaland that is not mentioned in Ifá Scriptures, including Ìlọ́rin. Historically, ” Ìlọ́rin was founded by the Yoruba, one of the three largest ethnic groups in Nigeria, in 1450 (15th Century). Ìlọ́rin is a city situated in Kwara State, west-central Nigeria. It is bounded by Benin to the west and by the Nigerian states of Niger to the north, Kogi to the east, and Ekiti, Osun, and Oyo to the south. Almost all of its savanna area was conquered by the Fulani in the early 19th Century (about 400 years after the town was founded by the Yorùbá), and the region remained part of the greater Fulani empire until the forces of Sir George Goldie’s Royal Niger Company defeated the emirs of Nupe and Ìlọ́rin in 1897.” (Brittanica, 2009).

Aside from the fact that Ìlọ́rin town is mentioned in Ifá, the people of Ìlọ́rin ‘s sociocultural identities were described. These can be found in some stanzas of Odù Ifá such as Ọ̀ṣẹ́ Òtúrá, Ọ̀wọ́nrín Ọ̀sá, etc. For instance, Ifá describes the ancient people of Ìlọ́rin as one of the most skilled in blacksmithing and iron smelting/metallurgy. This description by Ifá gives credence to the etymology of the word “Ìlọ́rin” (a Yorùbá language), which was actually called “Òkúta ìlọ́ irin” (meaning stone for sharpening metals). It is from this tool that the town Ìlọ́rin derived its name. Ifá also describes the people of Ìlọ́rin in terms of their recalcitrant attitude towards offering of ẹbọ and traditional rituals. Their refusal to heed advice, according to Ifá, led to the negative outcome and their downfall. A stanza of Ọ̀ṣẹ́ Òtúrá reads in part thus:

…Àgbẹ̀dẹ wọn ò mẹ̀’rọ́ ìlẹ̀kẹ̀.

Dífá fún wọn ní Ìlọ́rin Ọ̀pá.

Níbi tí wọn ò mọ rírú ẹbọ.

Wọn ò mọ èrù àtètè tù.

Wọ́n wá ń kú ikú agọ́ sílẹ̀ bẹẹrẹbẹ ………

Meaning:

…A blacksmith does not know how to manufacture beads (Alias of Babalawo).

He was the Awo who cast Ifá for them in Ilorin town.

Where they did not recognize the value of offering ẹbọ.

They did not believe in offering ètùtù.

Consequently, they were dying foolish deaths in droves.

In Ọ̀wọ́nrín Ọ̀sá, Ifá says:

… Àwọn ká sọ̀rọ̀ fún ni ká má gbà.

Adífá fún wọn ní Ìlọ́rin Ọ̀pá.

Nílé Mọ́mọ́, ọkọ Moróhun.

Àmọ̀rí adùn níí gbẹ̀yìn ọ̀rọ̀.

Ìlú tó yìí wọn ò leégún.

Ẹṣin l’eégún wọn, ọ̀kọ̀ lorò ibẹ̀.

Gàárì ni pààká, Agádánṣi ni t’Alábala.

Ọmọ ab’ọ̀kọ́ dún hún-ùn orò lójú pópó.

Ọmọ ab’ẹṣin sín eégún jẹ lójúde Ọba.

Wọ́n ní kó rúbọ kó leè b’Ọọ̀ni ọmọ.

Ẹbọ kó má leè bi lórú.....

Meaning:

Those that were advised but refused to heed the advice.

Were described during Ifá divination for the inhabitant of Ìlọ́rin Opa.

In the home of Momo, the husband of Morohun.

Where happiness was the consequence of their plight.

A big town without ancestral deity (Egungun).

Rather horses were used to represent their Egungun.

The javelin became their traditional sporting rituals.

Gaari was used to represent their masquerade.

They are the offspring of those who used javelin on the street to make sound similar to Oro sound.

The ones who used horses to mimic Egungun masquerade in front of the palace.

He was advised to offer ebo to beget a stubborn and strong-willed child.

But he offered the ebo not to have such a child…

Some other nearby Yoruba settlements in Kwara State, as mentioned in some Ifá stanzas, include Àjàṣẹ́ Ìpo, Ọ̀fà, Aṣà, Mọ̀rọ, Igbónnà, etc. Ipò and Ọ̀fà towns are always mentioned in the concluding part of most Ifá stanzas as follows:

“Èrò Ipò, èrò Ọ̀fà.

Ẹ bá ni ní wọ̀wọ́ ire gbogbo”.

Meaning:

“Travelers to Ipo and Ofa towns.

Join us in the midst of abundant Ire.”

In Ogbè Atẹ́, there was a story of the king of Ipò town (close to Ìlọ́rin). He invited some Babaláwo to come and divine for him; the Babaláwo advised him to undergo Ifá initiation due to the hardship and adversity he was facing. On this, Ifá says:

A kìí jí ní kùtùkùtù.

Ká má mọ Odù tó dá ni s’áyé.

Dífá fún Olúpo Àláelú.

Èyí tó f’ ẹ̀yìn tì.

Tó ń f’ẹkún sùnrá hùn ire gbogbo.

Èyí tí ilé ayé ni lára kokooko bi ọta.

Wọ́n ní kó ṣáá kàalẹ̀, ẹbọ ni ṣíṣe.

Kó sì lọ rèé tẹ Ifá.

Ó gbẹ́’bọ, Ó rú’bọ.

Kò pẹ́, kò jìnnà.

Ire gbogbo wá ya dé tútùru.

Ifá dé ò, Aláṣẹ.

Ọ̀pẹ̀ abìṣẹ wàrà wàrà.....

Meaning:

It is not advisable for one to wake up in the dawn of one’s life.

Without knowing one’s birth Odù.

This was the declaration of Ifá to Olúpo Àláelú (King of Ajase Ipo town).

Who reclined and was weeping in lamentation of his inability to achieve all Ire in life.

He whose life was as hard and tough as pebbles.

He was advised to offer ẹbọ.

And also told to undergo initiation.

He complied.

Before long, not too far.

All Ire in life came to him in abundance.

Here comes Ifa, the embodiment of Ase.....

The holy palm tree, which ensures that its predictions come to pass with rapidity.

On Igbónnà (Ìgbómìnà), and Mọ̀rọ, Ifá says in Ọ̀yẹ̀kù Méjì:

Olókoṣẹ́ l’awo àf’ìkùn.

Ó f’ìkùn títí.

Ó lọ bí òde Igbónnà.

Arẹ̀rẹ̀ l’awo am’ẹ̀mù.

Ó m’ ẹ̀mù títí.

Ó lọ bí òde Dàbàì.

Tìnhín -tìnhín mèrùwà jìngín.

Ó m’ẹ̀rọ́, ó m’ẹ̀pa.

Títí lọ dé Ìgbòho-Mọ̀rọ…..

Meaning:

Olokose, the sparrow, is a crooked-legged bird.

With its crooked legs, it went as far as Igbonna town.

Arere, is a diving bird.

It dived and traveled as far as Dabai town.

The small Tinhin-tinhin bird is not easily recognizable in the shrub.

While flying inside the shrub.

He went as far as Igboho-Moro…..

It was not a mere coincidence that these towns were mentioned in Ifa without having to do with the people of Yoruba land. On Aṣà town, Ifá says in Ìrẹtẹ̀ Ìworì thus:

Eégún wọlé ó ní òun ò rì Gọ̀ntọ̀.

Gọ̀ntọ̀ náà wọlé ó ní òun ò rí Eégún.

Ẹni tó pé èèyàn kò sí.

Olúwarẹ̀ ni kò sí.

Dífá fún Ọ̀rúnmìlà.

Baba ń sawo lọ sókè Aṣà.

Ẹbọ ni wón ní kó ṣe.

Ó gbẹ́’bọ, Ó rú’bọ..…

Meaning:

Eegun, the masquerade, enters and pays no attention to Gonto.

Gonto, too decides to show a lack of recognition to Eegun.

Whoever disregards other people.

Such a person deserves no recognition.

These were Ifa’s messages for Ọ̀runmila.

When going on a spiritual mission to the land of Asa mainland.

He was advised to offer ebo.

He complied..…

In conclusion, for a Yorùbá person to say that Ìlọ́rin is not part of Yorùbá land is an attempt to twist and mangle the truth out of shape due to motives other than a proper representation of fact not far from greed, political ambition, and illicit financial gains. This act is foolhardy and tantamount to committing grand deceit capable of misleading not only this generation but several generations to come. Let those in the habit of falsehood and lies remember what Ifá says in a stanza of Ogbè Ọ̀sá:

Purọ́purọ́ kú.

Ó kú sí gbó iná.

Ṣìkàṣìkà kú.

Ó kú sí ọ̀dàn oòrùn.

Sòótọ́-sòótọ́ kú.

Ó kú gbẹdẹ mukẹ.

Ó f ẹ̀yìn ti àmù ìlẹ̀kẹ̀.

Ara òpùrọ́ kìí balẹ̀.

Mo sọtítọ, ara rọ̀ mí gbẹ̀dẹ̀ gbẹ̀dẹ̀.

Dífá fún ọmọ ènìyàn.

Wọ́n ń tọ ’rùn bọ̀ wáyé.

Ẹbọ ni wón ní kí wọ́n wá ṣe.

Ǹjẹ́ ṣòtítọ́ ṣòdodo.

Eni tó ṣòtítọ́ ni ‘mọlẹ̀ ngbè......

Meaning:

The liar died.

And died in the forest of fire.

The wicked died.

And died in the savannah of the scorching sun.

But the truthful died.

And died peacefully.

And reclined his back against the pot of beads.

A liar has no rest of mind.

I speak the truth, and I feel extremely comfortable.

These were the declarations of Ifa to humankind.

When coming from heaven to the world.

They were advised to offer ẹbọ.

Be truthful, be honest.

Those who are honest the deities will support.....

Aboru aboye!

Akoda Awo of Ibese Kingdom.

By Oloye Fakunle Oyesanya

References

Britannica, T. Editors of Encyclopaedia (2009, January 9). Kwara. Encyclopedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/place/Kwara

Ekundayo, A. (2007). Spirituality and Mental Health – An Ifa Overview. In Orunmila Magazine, issue No. 7.

Odeyemi, I. (n.d). What is Ifa? Elerii Ipin Magazine. International Council for Ifa Religion.

Popoola, S., Oyesanya, F. & Okemuyiwa, G. (2004). What is Ifa? The Diet: Ifa Lecture Monograph. Ifa International Training Institute.

Our Love for Western Things is the Real Cause of Africa's Stagnation

Àwọn òun a bí wọn mọ́ kìí wù wọn.

Tẹni ẹlẹ́ni níí yá wọn lára jọjọ.

Àwọn ló dífá fún ìwọ̀dẹ̀rẹ̀ tó ń lọ ṣ'alábárin ẹja nísàlẹ̀ odò, wọn ní kó rúbọ, ekòló l'ẹbọ. Ó rúbọ.

- Àtẹ̀-Gbè.

Those who don't value their own heritage, but lust after the things from foreigners, they were the ones who cast Ifá for Ìwọ̀dẹ̀rẹ̀ the fishing hook when he was proposing to go and 'befriend' the fishes at the bottom of the river.

He was asked to make sacrifice with earthworm, he complied.

Ate-gbe

Meanwhile, The fishes had earlier been warned to make sacrifice so that they won't receive a visitor that will become a problem to them, they taught the Awos were not seeing clearly, they called Ifá a liar and called Èṣù a thief. They said to the Awos that it was impossible for them to not be safe in their natural habitat - inside the water. On the grounds of this arrogance, they refused to make the requisite sacrifice.

On the day the fishing hook was going to the river, Èṣù asked his scribe to check the book of essences and asked him "whose turn is it for the wheel of fortune to roll?" The scribe responded "it's between the fish and the fishing hook", Èṣù asked "who made sacrifice?" The scribe replied "the hook", then Èṣù advised the hook to hold out the earthworm as it approaches the fishes in the river. 

This is how the fisherman baits the fish till date with the earthworm.

This is the explanation of the situation between the West and Africa. The earthworm represents the gins, mirrors and other things that the West brought to entice our forefathers. Today, it is in foreign aid, Visa lottery and the likes. This is the reason why Africa will continue to trail behind.

Africa doesn't appreciate her things, it prefers those of foreign origin. Until this changes, Africa will continue to be at the mercy of the West.

Aboru Aboye Abosise.

Ìbà Oluwo mi Wande Akọmolafe.

PS: The verse quoted above is a summarized version of the entire verse.

By Ayobami Ogedengbe 

Copyright: © 2021

Raising Responsible Children

1. Give your children age-appropriate domestic tasks, even if you have a thousand and one domestic servants at home. It is sheer ignorance to think that doing everything for your children is a mark of honour or a way of bequeathing royalty on them.

2. Teach them to be useful and make their impact felt positively wherever they are found – in the school, place of worship, in another person’s home, etc.

3. Encourage your children to always leave a good impression wherever they go to; teach them to be courteous, respectful, friendly, cheerful and helpful.

4. Teach them good toilet manners – they must know how to keep the toilet neat for the next user, let them know that it is unacceptable to leave the bathroom floor and/or walls messed with soap, foam or any form dirt after bathing.

5. Teach your children the importance of taking good care of their body and their environment; whether they are at home or elsewhere. Remind them that responsible people don’t leave their rooms unkempt or their bed unmade when they get up in the morning; teach them to bath very well and smell fine always. It is unbearable to have a smelly young person around you; let them take care of their armpits, teeth, hair, nail, etc.

6. Teach your children to manage their used clothes and other personal belongings very well, whether in their home or elsewhere. It can be irritating to have dirty clothes or shoes, especially those of a visitor litter every corner of the house.

7. Let them pack their toiletries before leaving home. Your children should not depend on their hosts for their basic toiletries like soap, cream, tooth paste and other essentials.

8. Teach your children to dress well all the time, especially when they are spending time with another family. You probably allow your daughters to dress in bum shots and your sons to walk about with their chest bare in your home, but they may not be safe if they do so in another place. You may not know where a predator would lie in wait for a child.

9. Teach them good table manners; not the one recited in nursery schools rhymes. Teach them to chew with their mouth covered, not to make noise with the cutlery on their teeth, not to talk with their mouth full, etc.

10. Let your children know that washing only their own plates after eating is not a noble idea.

11. Remind your children that jumping into a conversation when adults are talking is a sign of being ill-mannered. Discourage this both in your home and elsewhere.

12. Help your children not to be social birds online and anti-social bugs offline. They should relate well with people around them, much more than they do with virtual folks they meet online. Please, discourage this idea of young people locking themselves in the room hours on end without communicating with anyone in the house – all because they are on phone.

13. Empower your children to uphold your family values wherever they are. But before then, make sure that your family values are credible, empowering, socially and morally beneficial.

14. Teach your children to control their appetite and learn to turn down certain offers, even when such offers come from people they know. And at home, it is not compulsory that they must taste everything they see someone eating. This will help them to take their eyes away from certain things when they are in other people’s home.

15. Always remind your children that they are the window through which the world sees you. If your children’s behavior outside is bad, the general consensus is that they lack home training. And since children are not meant to give themselves home training, it means that you failed as a parent.

16. Finally, make sure your children know God. Salvation is not hereditary; that you are godly or highly spiritual is not a guarantee that your children are saved. You must consciously and deliberately lead them to God.

My fellow parents, let us try our best to make sure these children represent us well. I am sure you will feel good if you come to your children’s school and people are pointing at you as the parent of the best behaved child in the school. Won’t you?

Make sure your hosts and the hosts of your children are always impressed to have you and/or your children around.

May God Almighty make our children responsible and successful.

#CustodianofYorubaTraditionandCulture

Disquiet in Chad As New Leader Allegedly Killed

The Chadian interim Leader Muhammat Kaka Idriss Deby is no where to be found. A statement by Mohammed Ahmed, a member of the interim government said “Yet to be confirmed information reaching my desk now indicates that the Chadian interim leader, General Mohammed Kaka is either killed or overthrown following the Sporadic GUNSHOTS in the Presidential villa.”

Neptune Prime gathered it was a shootout between him and his elder brother and most likely Chad is in the hands of the rebels.

The implication of that may not sound good because the late president, Idriss Deby, had been a pillar of support for Nigeria in the fight against Boko Haram.

Source: www.neptuneprime.com.ng

Tuesday, 20 April 2021

32 POINTS ABOUT ÈSÙ

1. The word Èsù has no translation in to another language.

2.  Èsù is an Òrìsà.

3. Èsù is not the devil.

4. Yoruba culture doesn’t have the word devil.

5. The word Devil derives from Ancient Greek  <diabolos > and not Yoruba origin.

6. Devil is a subordinate evil spirit afflicting humans.

7. Samuel Ajayi Crowther was a Yoruba man, who was captured by the Fulani slave raiders when he was 12 years old. In Sierra Leone he adopted Christianity and translated Èsù  as devil in the bible.

8. Èsù is very close to Olódùmarè

9. Èsù is a guardian of the Yoruba compounds

10. Èsù has different names

11. Èsù is known as Elégbára

12. Èsù is known as láàlú 

13. Èsù is known as onílé- oríta

14. Èsù is known as láaróyè

15. Èsù is known as látopa

16. Èsù is known as well as àgbó-Òdàrà, etc

17. Èsù priest is known as Eléré

18. Yangí stone is a symbol of Èsù

19. Aso gogowú dúdú is the Èsù cloth

20. Ògo is a symbol of Èsù

21. Èsù doesn’t like àdí (black palm kernel oil)

22. Èsù doesn’t like Ìgbín (snail)

23. Èsù is consulted with orógbó (bitter kolanut)

24. Èsù prefers orógbó

25.  Obì (kolanut) is not taboo for Èsù

26.  Èsù can as well be  consulted with Obì (kolanut) 

27. Èsù eats Okà (amala)

28. Èsù eats elédè (pig)

29. Èsù eats èwà (beans)

30. Èsù eats Iyán

31. Èsù eats epo (palm kernel oil)

32. Èsù eats Eja abori(fish) 

#CustodianofYorubaTraditionandCulture


STOP THE ACT OF BULLYING

A few days ago a Grade 10 pupil named Lufoa lotSouth African) took her own life.

Why?

She was BULLIED at school. She was called ugly names, filmed while being violently beaten up after which she overdosed on prescription pills.

The Police have since arrested her attacker. She has been charged to court.

Every of her family and friends has described her as peace loving, self giving and so on. Yet the dream of the aspiring Medical Doctor has been cut short.

While meditating on Lufono's death, I realized that our actions, reactions, psychological State of mind, behavioral Patterns are determined by the the scars engraved on our minds at different phases in our lives.

What did you grow up with?

In whose company did you grow up?

How were you brought up?

Parents, how well are you taking care of your wards?

Lufono was bullied in school by her mates who are from a "home". 

What is the atmosphere like in your home.

You as a mom (children are generally believed to be closer to moms, nevertheless, fathers are not left out), how do you correct your children? How do you interact with people around you?

I know of a mother who's first reaction to any of her children’s misdeeds is to curse and curse. If she is not cursing she is verbally and emotionally abusing them. 

What kind of young adult (adults) do we expect such kids to become?

It will take a lot of hard work for such kids to snap and not become a bully themselves since that's how they were raised. 

The good book says "if the Foundation is bad, what then can the righteous do? 

Lufono herself is from a home? Didn't they catch a whiff of the situation? 

Why didn't they stand up for Lufono as I am very sure it wasn't a first time thing. 

Did Lufono not trust her family enough to speak to them about the situation? 

Why didn't she speak out?

This is a wake up call to every parent, or aspiring parents. We can do better.

The best you can be to your children asides from being their providers is to be their friend. 

If any of your child, male or female is afraid of speaking to you about anything/everything then you have failed as a parent.

Stop the Bullying. Stop the emotional torture.

The future is wasting away!!!

Please Stop 🚫

Someone somewhere is planning to take his/her life at the moment.

PLEASE stop! 

Take a deep breath. 

Talk to someone. 

Talk to me inbox. 

You will be just fine. 

Sucide is NOT the way out.

By Oladapo Oluwadamilola Oluwatobiloba

Copyright: © 2021

#CustodianofYorubaTraditionandCulture

NELSON MANDELA

NELSON MANDELA, former SOUTH AFRICAN PRESIDENT, wrote a personal awesome story.

After I became PRESIDENT, I asked one day some members of my close protection to stroll with me in the city, have lunch at one of its restaurants. We sat in one of the downtown restaurants and all of us asked for some sort of food.

"After a while, the waiter brought us our requests, I noticed that there is someone sitting in front of my table waiting for food"

"I told then one of the soldiers: Go and ask that person to join us with his food and eat with us. The soldier went and asked the man so. The man brought up his food and sat by my side as I asked and began to eat. His hands were trembling constantly until everyone had finished their food and the man went. The soldier said to me: the man was apparently quite sick. His hands trembled as he ate!"

"No, not at all," said MANDELA.

"This man was the GUARD of the PRISON where I was JAILED".

"Often, after the torture I was subjected to, I USED TO SCREAM and ASK for A LITTLE WATER".

"The very same man used to come every time and URINATE ON MY HEAD INSTEAD".

"So I found him scared, trembling, expecting me to reciprocate now, at least in the same way, either by torturing him or imprisoning him as I AM NOW THE PRESIDENT of the STATE OF SOUTH AFRICA."

"BUT THIS IS NOT MY CHARACTER NOR PART OF MY ETHICS"

"The MENTALITY of RETALIATION DESTROYS STATES, while the MENTALITY of TOLERANCE BUILDS NATIONS.

"The WEAK can NEVER FORGIVE ... FORGIVENESS is the attribute of the STRONG".

#CustodianofYorubaTraditionandCulture

144 Nigerian Police Officers Reportedly Arrive in Somalia to Boost Security

A contingent of 144 police officers from Nigeria have arrived in Somalia to boost stabilization efforts in the country, the African Union mission said on Sunday, April 18.

According to a report by CGTN Africa, the AU mission said the arrival of the new contingent is a major boost to law and order efforts, as they will be working in concert with their Somali counterparts in ensuring improved security in liberated areas.

AMISOM Police operations coordinator, Daniel Ali Gwambal, in a statement on Sunday was quoted as saying, “They are here in order to fulfill the mandate of AMISOM with regards to operational support to the Somalis and at the same time to mentor the Somali Police Force (SPF).

There are certain specific duties that are also incumbent on them to perform while they are here such as regular patrols at checkpoints, guard static duties and other duties that involve general policing.”

Gwambal said the officers will work on providing VIP escort and protection services, training and assisting the SPF in public order management, conducting joint patrols with their Somali counterparts and securing key government installations and high-level events.

#CudtodianofYorubaTraditionandCulture

LET NOBODY SPEAK MISCHIEF ON AKARIGBO

The attempted but failed media mischief and blackmail on our Kabiyesi Akarigbo by Koiki Media, who coincidentally is the spokesman of Chief Sunday Adeyemi Igboho, is a total act of disrespect and disregard to the head custodian of our traditional heritage, values and institutions in Remoland.

No responsible son or daughter of Yoruba race with good parental background, will go to the extreme point of using media lies and propaganda against a prominent and paramount royal father.

Is it not an irony of life, to say that those who claimed to be in the frontline agitation for a Yoruba nation are the ones disrespecting and insulting the natural and historical custodians of the same Yoruba nation?

What an Irony?

In as much we believe in every organization's rights and liberties as enshrined in the constitution of the Federal Republicof Nigeria, it is important to note and warn that we also have the rights to protect and preserve with pride, our traditional heads and institutions.

Therefore, Let no one speak mischief on our AKARIGBO. Let it be told that he that hatcheth mischief, catcheth mischief. An evil plan does mischief to the planner.

May Remo kingdom under the rulership of Oba Babatunde Adewale Ajayi FCA, continue to expand for economic greatness and evindence-able development.

Signed:

Otunba Akile Taofeek Sokoya (Danku)

#CustodianofYorubaTraditionandCulture

WHO IS ÈṢÙ?

The character called Èṣù can be a confusionist, master trickster and a trouble maker. 

But he uses these attributes in a predictable manner. 

This was a code that Ọ̀rúnmìlà, by reason of his being present with Olódùmarè at the moment of creation (Ẹlẹ́rìí Ìpín), was able to reveal to his followers, the Babaláwos. Before Ọ̀rúnmìlà came to the scene, the children of Irunmoles and the children of men alike had trouble dealing with Èṣù who was always causing troubles for them through this aforementioned nature of his.

Olódùmarè conducted a test in the spirit realm for all the divinities before sending them to earth to know which of them will be able to solve a problem created by Èṣù. All the divinities failed save Ọ̀rúnmìlà.

Ọ̀rúnmìlà was able to use Ẹbọ as an instrument to get Èṣù to become his friend.

Ẹbọ, (sacrifices and atonement) is today a crucial part of all major religions of the world and we can say it stemmed out of this early prescription of Ọ̀rúnmìlà to the early Wisemen (spiritual, philosophical, introspective men) thousands of years ago.

When Èṣù receives Ẹbọ, he can present false information to be true to the advantage of the person who has made the Ẹbọ and he can present true information to be false to the advantage of the person who makes ẹbọ.

He can confuse the counsel of your enemy in order to get them to back off and where necessary, if your enemy has to die for you to move ahead in life, they will die - Provided you make Ẹbọ. 

Èṣù doesn't side with either the good person or the bad person, because in reality, the definition of good and bad is subjective, dependent upon your finite and transient perception which is susceptible to change. Èṣù sides with the person that makes the requisite Ẹbọ as prescribed by Ifá, the only eternal unchanging thing.

But how does Ẹbọ come into being? 

Ẹbọ came into being at the instance of Olódùmarè who taught the divinities through Ọ̀rúnmìlà how to ward off the machinations of Èṣù. 

If you come to Ọ̀rúnmìlà, Olódùmarè's own witness, Ọ̀rúnmìlà will consult Ifá (Olódùmarè's living word) for you and Ifá will reveal what you have to do in Ẹbọ and/or Ìkìlọ̀ (warning) to advance your cause.

Èṣù therefore waits for your response to the word of Olódùmarè. It is your disposition to the word of Olódùmarè that determines what side of Èṣù you will see - either the supporting side or the obstructing side. "Èṣù supports whoever makes Ẹbọ" is a principal canon in Ifá Religion.

According to Dr. Osamaro Ibie (deceased), Olódùmarè didn't create Èṣù but Èṣù existed autonomously as the ruler over the primordial darkness which was the original state of the universe before the creation of light. Upon the creation of light by Olódùmarè, an agreement was struck between Olódùmarè and Èṣù, where Èṣù said would be able to move freely within Olódùmarè's creation and do as he pleases. Olódùmarè conceded and life (creation) began (continued). 

After a while, Èṣù's notorious nature amongst the creation of Olódùmarè got Olódùmarè concerned and he* had to find a solution to the troubles Èṣù was formenting. This was why Ẹbọ (as discovered by Ọ̀rúnmìlà in the heavenly contest I mentioned earlier) was instituted. 

Ọ̀rúnmìlà was then sent to the world to be the voice of Olódùmarè concerning the issues affecting the lives of ALL creatures and to bring solutions to their troubles. 

This institution of Ẹbọ made Ọ̀rúnmìlà and Èṣù close pals where Èṣù then became a useful messenger to Ọ̀rúnmìlà and by extension Olódùmarè. In essence, the Almighty Olódùmarè found constructive use for the all radical Èṣù.

I learnt this lesson that even the 'worst' of people, who can't be wished away or shoved to one side can be befriended and used as an ally if only we have the wisdom to approach and appeal to their reasonable side. 

I remembered when I was in the university, I wasn't a totally rugged boy but I had rugged boys who would cross seven rivers and seven seas for me.

Èṣù will cross seven rivers and seven seas for anyone who heeds the words of Ifá Olódùmarè as it proceeds from the mouth of Ọ̀rúnmìlà or any of his Babaláwos.

This is the institution of Ifá Religion. 

If you have any objection, travel to meet Olódùmarè and drop your petition. 

Is Èṣù therefore good or evil? Let me hear your thoughts.

Aboru Aboye, Aboye Abosise. 

He: Olódùmarè has no definite gender, I used this just for ease of communication. 

By Ayobami Ogedengbe 

Copyright: © 2021

Monday, 19 April 2021

LESSON TO LEARN

My daughter is six years old and is in grade one. We live about a kilometer away from school so everyday (motorcycle) okada man whom we are familiar with takes her to school and returns her home in the afternoon because both my husband and I are working and we leave home early, just after she goes to school.

One day when I was at work I received a call from her class teacher requesting me to avail myself there as soon as was possible.

“What happened to Angel?” I questioned anxiously.

“Nothing to panic about, just make sure you come before we break up for the day.”

Of course I panicked. This had to do with my daughter and I was worried sick about her. I immediately excused myself from work and hurriedly took the first transport available. I burst into the classroom panting and sweating.

“Mama Angel,” The teacher started. “We will talk about this privately.” She led the way to an empty office and I followed meekly.

“Do you see your child off when she comes to school?” Was her first question.

I didn’t know where this was leading to, so I just replied with a short “Yes.”

“What time does she leave home?”

“She gets picked up a bit early because I have to rush to work. So around 7:00 to 7:15 a.m.

“How does she behave then?”

“She behaves normally.”

“I want you to brace yourself with what I’m about to tell you. Are you ready?”

Did I really have a choice? I just nodded.

“Angel arrives here around 8:30 every day,” she started calmly. “For some time, she has been coming to school in tears every morning. First I thought it was because she didn’t want to come to school. Several times I asked her what the matter was but she didn’t give me a reply. Today when she arrived she was crying as usual so I took her aside, gave her some sweets and promised her some more tomorrow. Then I asked her in a very friendly tone why she cries every day and the answer shocked me.”

She took a breath while looking at me and the anxiety almost killed me.

“Mama Angel,” she continued with caution. “The okada  man has been raping your daughter every morning for some time now.”

“What!” I almost fainted. I surely would have fallen down if I had been standing. For God’s sake, Angel was only six! How heartless can some men be?

“Every day after picking her and before coming here, he would take Angel to his house, rape her and threaten to kill her if she ever tried to tell anyone. Then he’d bring her to school.”

I felt dizzy. Why? Why my little Angel? I was sweating. My whole body was shaking.

“Should I call your husband?”

“No!” I shouted. He might do anything. Patience was something alien to him. I had to find a way of breaking the news to him. After a while, I decided to call his sister. Together we could try to talk to him.

The news shattered my husband. He cried uncontrollably. Then he got so furious that he swore he would strangle him, but we told him not to take matters into his own hands and just leave the law to do its work. We reported the matter to the police. We gave them the details of the man. They caught and took him in. We took Angel to the hospital after getting a p3 form from the police.

He was found guilty of raping our little girl a multiple number of times and was sentenced to a twenty year jail term.

My call to all parents:

Absolutely no one should be trusted with our girls. Take time to drop your kids to school, be friendly with them, teach them to be polite but never to trust strangers, ask them about their day and always make them trust you enough to open up in case of any unusual incident.

#CustodianofYorubaTraditionandCulture

The Anti-Nigeria Rebellion on Ibadan Streets

There was an open rally against the entity called Nigeria on the streets of Ibadan on Saturday. The organisers wanted a Yoruba country. That it happened where it happened should worry everyone. The Yoruba believed so much in Nigeria and sacrificed so much to make it live and work. Now, the medicine man no longer cares if the child dies. The first call for secession in Nigeria came from the north in 1966. They called it Araba (separation). The train soon moved to the East the following year with the declaration of the Republic of Biafra. Saturday's event would appear to be the first time such would hold on the soil of Western Nigeria. For the West to move from hosting 'Save Nigeria Group' rallies a few years ago to rallying for 'Oduduwa Nation' today is tragic for Nigeria. We can blame this on the pro-north impunity of today's Federal Government and its tenacious incompetence. But it should also be argued that the tragedy started at the very birth of Nigeria. The British created Nigeria by tying down the southern Leopard (Amotekun) for the northern dog to feed on the big cat's tail. You can't do that and expect the forest to benefit anyone.

The British consecrated Nigeria as a "union" between "the promising and well-conducted youth" (the north) and "a southern lady of means." For several reasons, the union is in very bad shape - and it has always been. What took place in Ibadan on Saturday was a rally for divorce. I do not know how many people participated in it but I know that the street did not boo them. And that is where the problem lies. The Yoruba, ordinarily, are not rebellious to the point of seeking divorce or separation. They understand what an abusive relationship is and would do everything to patch up things. But everyone has a breaking point beyond which they may not care what follows again. And I will use some stories to paint a portrait of tomorrow.

Professor Karin Barber did her doctoral work on an aspect of the culture of the Yoruba. The result of that study is her classical work: 'I Could Speak Until Tomorrow.'  It dwells on 'Oriki, Women and the Past in a Yoruba Town.' I am interested in the 'past' part of the book and the Yoruba concepts of loyalty and rebellion. Barber quotes an elderly farmer: "I worked from childhood for my father on his farm. When I was about thirty, my father lent me out as an iwofa in exchange for a loan of £4. I was to live in the house of my father's creditor...After three years, the debt was paid and I was allowed to leave and go to Abeokuta as a P.W.D labourer on the roads. I spent ten months there and got £1/10s for it. When I got home, I handed over the money to my father. A girl had been betrothed to me but my father did not produce the money to pay the bride price. So, I left. I joined Jacob Ajayi of Ile Oluawo (a maternal relative) and went to Ghana with him. That was in 1930. I worked as a firewood gatherer, serving Ajayi. In 1932, I came back and paid the bride price out of my savings. It was fixed at £7/5s. After the wife had come to my house, I refused to work for my father any longer. I told him he could not expect me to continue serving him, since he had not paid the bride price or helped me in any of my difficulties. I went to the farm and seized the plot I wanted to use. I cleared it for myself without my father's consent. All my younger brothers by my father's other two wives did the same thing one by one...until only one young boy was left working for my father" (See page 216 - 217).

I hope the drift in this personal, local narrative won't be lost. In that story, we see a greedy, domineering father who took without giving. Today's Nigeria is that father. We see how the unfeeling father indentured his 'obedient' son for £4 and how the boy took the 'slavery' as a duty he owed his needy father. We also see how, just a few years later, the man lost, not just the control of the boy but also valued portions of his farm to the young man, now liberated. At the community level, the story is the same. The founding history of almost every town in the region is an enduring narrative in initial accommodation of autocracy and then, rebellion and divorce. When a king became too dictatorial or his aural destroyed the people's destinies, the Yoruba moved. Abuja and all its enablers should read what is happening correctly.

American political economist, Sara Berry, did an original work on Yoruba cocoa farmers and their descendants in western Nigeria.  The product of her study is the "densely written" book, 'Fathers Work for Their Sons,' published in 1985. Her position is that among the Yoruba, socio-economic and even political relationships are organized in symbiotical orders. The state can be both an ally and an oppressor. The people readily give loyalty to the leader and the state. But they do because they expect those ones, in turn, to provide "maintenance and protection." Leadership, or what she calls 'seniority' may convey authority and access to the productive services of others but it is also dependent on them. She says: "A chief, an elder, or a 'big man' who failed to satisfy his subordinates' expectations ran the risk of losing their support and, in consequence, much of his own influence and/or wealth." There are several cases of intra-regional agitation for freedom (ominira) in Western Nigeria in the last two decades before independence. Very early in the 1950s, the old Ifelodun District Council with headquarters in Ikirun faced the kind of agitation being witnessed today by Nigeria from its subjugated south. Berry captures it in the right context and perspective. She says that for many reasons, including cornering of benefits which should go to all, marginalization and injustice, a majority of the towns in Ifelodun district in 1952 "began agitation to have the district divided into two parts." And when such popular demands were made, everyone around was expected to fall in line. Opposition to the request was seen as an enemy action. And it did not matter who the enemy was, he/she was confronted with sanctions or with threats of sanctions. By January 1953, Berry says: "specifically, the majority of the towns, Iree and Eripa included, wished no longer to be subordinate to Ikirun. In the midst of the ferment, several Iree chiefs requested permission of the district officer to discipline the Aree of Iree (their oba) who had opposed division against the wishes of his own constituents" (see page 170). The District Officer begged the chiefs "to do nothing" to their oba, but in 1954, the district was broken into two.

There are bigger examples for Nigeria to learn from. Long before colonialism, there was the Old Oyo which had to fall because it decayed in leadership and in compassion. Ibadan, which forced its own freedom from 19th century Oyo also became too powerful and perverse in its dealings with other Yoruba groups. It grew big, strong, confident and became what the Fulani Federal Government is today - a haven for plunderers and an enabler of impunity. It invited resentment to itself. The results were the century-long Yoruba wars. Sixty years after the wars, the story of the creation of Osun Division came and it is particularly instructive. The refrain of the Ibadan overlords after forcing tributes from Osun people was "omo yin yio d'agba, d'agba, yio to igbaa sin k'aa to tun wa (your children would have grown big enough to also be our servants like you before we come again). Soon, obas and other leaders from the area felt they had had enough. They challenged the status quo and changed the refrain to "omo wa yio ti d'agba, yio to iya a gbon, bi e ba tun wa (our children would have grown big enough to resist you and shake off our yoke if you come again). That yoke was removed on April 1, 1954.

That is how the Yoruba collect their freedom from seedy, greedy overlords. Because they have the benefit of (early) education and exposure, they very rarely lose; sometimes they win without fighting wars. They act decisively and get the table turned - we saw it in Karin Barber's father-son relationship above. Indeed, a Yoruba farmer told Sara Berry in 1966: "formerly, sons worked for their fathers, but today, we have schools and civilization, and now, fathers work for their sons." And it is not as if the 'fathers' acquiesced without a fight or that they did not foresee the looming reversal in their fortune. They just lost to the liberating properties of education and civilization. A century before Berry, there was pioneer CMS missionary, Anna Hinderer in Ibadan who lamented in one of her various entries that "our school does not increase at present, people are afraid to send their children; they think 'book' will make them cowards..." That was it. 'Cowards' here may not be interpreted as being lily-livered; it is more a pejorative term reserved for the rebel who won't serve his 'lord' and 'father' again because of olaju (civilization). Pre-colonial and colonial 'fathers' (like Boko Haram enablers in the north) had reasons to be 'afraid' of 'book' because it represented education - and civilization, and liberation. We saw how the 'obedient' young man in Karin Barber's book went to Ghana as a 'good boy' but came back a fiery, no-nonsense freedom fighter.

Nigeria is a very grisly, ghastly example of an abusive, barbarous union. Experts say you are in an abusive relationship when your partner threatens you with injury or inflicts you with it; when you are afraid, even, scared of the partner; and, more importantly, when the partner sees you as an inferior and treats you so. The south feels all these from the north. A marriage where one partner wantonly stabs the other is a tragedy happening real time. The foundational husband-wife metaphor employed by the British creators of Nigeria did not hide its hideous future. The British, in 1914, after "issuing the special licence" marrying the resource rich south to the bankrupt north prayed that "the union be fruitful and the couple constant." Has the prayer been answered? What fruit and what constancy from a predatory partnership? And constancy in what? But, despite the precariousness of today, I still believe it is not too late to pull back from this brink. The colonial prayer can still be answered if the sinners stop sinning; if there is mutuality of respect in the form and content of Nigeria's affairs; and, if it restructures itself back to its negotiated pristine, unspoilt form. Divorce is painful and expensive but abusive partners are death.

By Lasisi Olagunju

(Published in the Nigerian Tribune on Monday, 19 April, 2021)


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