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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - War on Women

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Oga Moses.
Thanks for providing the subtext to these raids.  Again the question is why did the authorities wait so ling until the children of the high and mighty enter the configuration before they acted?

And this brings me to the fact that I answered Yes queries only partially.  Why said normal clubs which are not designated as brothels if they were not infiltrated by prostitutes according to intelligence gathered by the Police and how can the problem be subtly solved?

The problem can be easily solved by  the deployment of plain clothes vice police led by a female officer disguised  as club goers who would show their identification yo suspects and warn them off the premises thus cleansing the clientele.  The affected prostitutes will inevitably warn off their members to stay off such clubs.  This should be routinely done until the whole area is sanitized.


OAA



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: Moses Ebe Ochonu <meochonu@gmail.com>
Date: 04/05/2019 14:08 (GMT+00:00)
To: USAAfricaDialogue <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - War on Women

Boxbe This message is eligible for Automatic Cleanup! (meochonu@gmail.com) Add cleanup rule | More info

The Abuja nightclub raids were not so much an assault on prostitution as they were the manifestation of some people's idea of societal moral cleansing. The rub is that this moral zeal was filtered through class and religious lens. There are many clues to this, the first one being Police PRO, Shogunle's stupid statement that both Islam and Christianity "the two religions practiced in the FCT" frown upon prostitution. Leaving aside the privileging of the two religions to the exclusion of others and of non-religionists, the statement ignored the fact that most of the women were arrested at night clubs dancing and were not prostitutes.

 

The second clue emerged when the lady in charge of the agency that coordinated the raids with the police gave a press conference in which she 1) railed against societal moral decadence, and 2) declared that most of the women arrested were from rich homes and that many were wives and mothers.

 

So, here, we see a convergence of affluence and patriarchy acting to police female behavior considered a threat to a the patriarchal domestic order and to the image that wealthy Abuja families would love to project of themselves. Some of these wealthy families are Hausa-Fulani Muslim households who would have been scandalized at seeing their children perform exotic dances at night clubs.

 

The third clue emerged on Nigerian social media in the wake of the raids. Apparently, a photo of a stripper/dancer at one of the nightclubs in hijab had circulated widely on Nigerian cyberspace in the two weeks prior to the raids. Many commentators and online Nigerian forums speculated that this was the trigger for the raids. The photo has since gone viral as it was recirculated after the raids. Obviously, the picture offended the moral sensibilities of the Hausa-Fulani Muslim overlords of Abuja and its environs who moonlight as moral guardians of what they see as Islamic moral values.

 

In Nigeria there is always a subtext to such campaigns and if you miss those subtexts you'll not understand why some actions are being undertaken at the time they are being undertaken. These nightclubs have been in existence for more than a decade. Why raid them now? Clearly, the entry of the female children of wealthy Abuja families into these spaces and the introduction of hijab-clad strip dancers pushed the envelope too far for some powerful people.


On Fri, May 3, 2019 at 7:23 PM Okey Iheduru <okeyiheduru@gmail.com> wrote:
It's not just in Abuja. See the article below.

Shari'a Court In Kaduna Jails Two Ladies For Two Months For Wearing Skimpy Dresses

The ladies who are residents of Argungu road in Kaduna, were convicted after they pleaded guilty to "constituting public nuisance and indecent dressing."


BY SAHARAREPORTERS, NEW YORKAPR 23, 2019

Two ladies, Farida Taofiq and Raihana Abbas, have bagged two months in prison each for wearing skimpy dresses.

The sentences were handed down to the 20-year-olds by a Shari'a Court II sitting at Magajin Gari, Kaduna State.

Before learning of their fate, the two convicts had pleaded for leniency, saying they won't repeat the crime.

The ladies, who are residents of Argungu road in Kaduna, were convicted after they pleaded guilty to "constituting public nuisance and indecent dressing".

The judge, Mallam Musa Sa'ad-Goma, however, gave the convicts an option to pay N3,000 fine each.

Sa'ad-Goma also ordered them to return to their parents' homes.

Earlier, the prosecution counsel, Aliyu Ibrahim, said that Taofiq and Abbas were arrested on April 16, at a black spot along Sabon-Gari Road roaming the streets in skimpy dresses.

"When they were asked where they were going, they said they were going to the house of a friend who had just put to bed," the prosecution said.

Ibrahim said the offence contravened the provisions of Section 346 of the Sharia Penal Code of Kaduna State.



On Fri, May 3, 2019 at 8:27 AM Chielozona Eze <chieloz@gmail.com> wrote:
Thanks a lot, for this stimulating read, Brother Jibrin,
I have always believed that the test of every civilization is the degree to which people respond to the pain of others. When we become numb to the humiliation of others, we might as well kiss our collective humanity goodbye. The war against women is the war against all.
Chielozona

Chielozona Eze
Professor, African Literature and Cultural Studies, Northeastern Illinois University; Extraordinary Professor, Stellenbosch University, South Africa.Fellow - Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Studies, South Africa
https://neiu.academia.edu/ChielozonaEze
www.Chielozona.com



On Fri, May 3, 2019 at 5:09 AM Jibrin Ibrahim <jibrinibrahim891@gmail.com> wrote:

The War on Women in Abuja

Jibrin Ibrahim, Friday Column, Daily Trust, 3rdMy 2019

There is an open war against women in Abuja and the justification is a moral crusade against so-called prostitutes but not their male customers who are apparently considered the moral pillars of contemporary Nigerian society. Over the past two weeks, raids were organized in different locations leading to the arrest of over 100 women by agents of the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) Joint Task Team. The first raid about two weeks ago was at a popular night club, Caramelo, where 34 females, alleged to be nude dancers, were arrested. This was followed by the arrest of another 70 women in different clubs on Wednesday and Friday last week. The women were taken to Utako police station, Abuja and detained.

It is important to note that for the past two decades, this task force has been systematically arresting women in the streets after 10pm and any woman seen outside is assumed to be a criminal and prostitute and treated as such. Independent Nigeria has therefore fully restored the colonial rules of arbitrarily arresting people in the streets for "loitering and wondering" but this time the targets are exclusively female. They have made complete nonsense of our Constitution which protects the human rights of all Nigerians including the right to walk in the streets, day and night. They are also disregarding the right that you cannot be assumed to be a criminal simply because you are found at a location at a certain time.  

Concordant reports indicate that some of these women were sexually assaulted and released after the "moral policemen" had sex with them. Others paid bribes and were released and it was the few that refused to be blackmailed that were taken to court and charged with prostitution. It is really shameful that this would occur in the capital city of Nigeria. The charge of prostitution has become an instrument for committing terrible crimes against women. All the clubs had men and women in them but they picked on only the women, a blatantly discriminatory approach. Some of the women were professionals, AND YES RESPONSIBLE PROFESSIONAL WOMEN ALSO HAVE THE RIGHT TO GO AND ENJOY THEMSELVES IN CLUBS JUST AS MEN. The women who resisted arrest and made the argument they have a right to go to clubs were thoroughly beaten up for daring to stand for their rights.

The Federal Capital Authority has made the argument that one of the night clubs is supposed to be a clinic and was illegally turned into a night club. It that was the case, the authorities should have no issue with guests, their case should have been with the proprietor, whose business could have been closed and the person prosecuted. They did nothing to the proprietor and just arrested the women who were there enjoying themselves.

The Abuja authorities justify their war on women on the basis of the implementation of the Abuja Environmental Protection Board Act 1997, which is a statutory act applicable in the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja. The law gives them powers to: "Keep owned or occupied tenements clean, neat, keep grass low and trim, cut and trim flowers; keep drainage running through the tenement free from blockage. Provide adequate dust bin and sanitary convenience; must not dry cloths in front of the balcony or in front of his premises or on hedges or sidewalks, must not keep animals or birds likely to cause nuisance; must not use residential premises for the sale of alcoholic drinks or as a restaurant or for other commercial activity." Out of all these responsibilities, their only focus is skimpily dressed women. The law provides as punishment the payment of N5,000 and or imprisonment from one month to six months or both depending on the offence. This is the basis on which they collect the N5,000 from all the women they arrest and sexually abuse them when they do not have the money or refuse to pay.

This blatant violation of human rights in Abuja must stop and the officials prosecuted for their crimes against so many women. The women still in detention must be released immediately. When I raised this issue in the social media, many people intervened to tell me that I am supposed to be responsible man so I should not defend prostitutes engaged in illegal acts. The act in question is dancing and I do not know how dancing can be defined as prostitution. Secondly, even if some prostitutes attend such clubs, other women also attend. One of the women arrested for example is a youth corper visiting Abuja for the Easter vacation. In Nigerian law, you are innocent until proved guilty. The most important issue for me however is that the task force calls every woman they see at night a "prostitute" because they know that in our sexist society defined by bigotry and hypocrisy, "responsible" men will keep quiet and watch the way as soon as a woman has been labelled a "prostitute". All responsible men should have a different attitude, they should come out and defend any woman who is labelled a prostitute without proof. When such men start doing the needful, the task force will be forced to stop the massive violations of the rights of women they are engaged in.

The recent raids are being organized on the basis of an unholy alliance between anAbuja-based NGO, the Society Against Prostitution and Child Labour in Nigeria (SAP-CLN), in collaboration with Abuja Environmental Protection Board (AEPB) on a moral crusade to rid Abuja of prostitutes. This NGO should ask itself the ethical and moral basis of declaring every woman out at night as a prostitute. They should ask themselves the basis on which they provide support for rape and sexual assault on women. I understand their concern that "innocent" men are being dragged into sin by prostitutes, but should they not focus their attention on moral and ethical reinforcement of the men to resist the said temptation. Prostitution, according to the police is said to be illegal under AEPB law and offenders risk fines and jail terms. The problem however is that there is no definition of who is a prostitute. In the absence of a definition, two criteria have been developed – a woman, in the streets or in a club must be a prostitute. This is lawlessness of the highest order. The worst aspect is that many of the women taken to court are forced to "confess" being prostitutes to get a smaller fine and then have the conviction in their records for the rest of their lives. All those who have suffered this indignity should sue SAP-CLN  for their role in spoiling their names. Their activities violate the rights of women guaranteed in our Constitution. Once again, I call on all responsible men to stand up and defend all these innocent women who are baselessly and illegally declared to be prostitutes without evidence. FCDA STOP THE WAR AGAINST WOMEN.

 


Professor Jibrin Ibrahim
Senior Fellow
Centre for Democracy and Development, Abuja
Follow me on twitter @jibrinibrahim17

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Okey C. Iheduru

Just published"The African Corporation, 'Africapitalism' and Regional Integration in Africa" (September 2018). DOI: https://doi.org/10.4337/9781785362538.

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Fwd: USA Africa Dialogue Series - War on Women

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EDITED



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.

-------- Original message --------
From: OLAYINKA AGBETUYI <yagbetuyi@hotmail.com>
Date: 04/05/2019 15:54 (GMT+00:00)
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - War on Women

Boxbe This message is eligible for Automatic Cleanup! (yagbetuyi@hotmail.com) Add cleanup rule | More info
Oga Moses.
Thanks for providing the subtext to these raids.  Again the question is why did the authorities wait so ling until the children of the high and mighty enter the configuration before they acted?

And this brings me to the fact that I answered TFs queries only partially.  Why said normal clubs which are not designated as brothels if they were not infiltrated by prostitutes according to intelligence gathered by the Police and how can the problem be subtly solved?

The problem can be easily solved by  the deployment of plain clothes vice police led by a female officer disguised  as club goers who would show their identification yo suspects and warn them off the premises thus cleansing the clientele.  The affected prostitutes will inevitably warn off their members to stay off such clubs.  This should be routinely done until the whole area is sanitized.


OAA



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: Moses Ebe Ochonu <meochonu@gmail.com>
Date: 04/05/2019 14:08 (GMT+00:00)
To: USAAfricaDialogue <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - War on Women

Boxbe This message is eligible for Automatic Cleanup! (meochonu@gmail.com) Add cleanup rule | More info

The Abuja nightclub raids were not so much an assault on prostitution as they were the manifestation of some people's idea of societal moral cleansing. The rub is that this moral zeal was filtered through class and religious lens. There are many clues to this, the first one being Police PRO, Shogunle's stupid statement that both Islam and Christianity "the two religions practiced in the FCT" frown upon prostitution. Leaving aside the privileging of the two religions to the exclusion of others and of non-religionists, the statement ignored the fact that most of the women were arrested at night clubs dancing and were not prostitutes.

 

The second clue emerged when the lady in charge of the agency that coordinated the raids with the police gave a press conference in which she 1) railed against societal moral decadence, and 2) declared that most of the women arrested were from rich homes and that many were wives and mothers.

 

So, here, we see a convergence of affluence and patriarchy acting to police female behavior considered a threat to a the patriarchal domestic order and to the image that wealthy Abuja families would love to project of themselves. Some of these wealthy families are Hausa-Fulani Muslim households who would have been scandalized at seeing their children perform exotic dances at night clubs.

 

The third clue emerged on Nigerian social media in the wake of the raids. Apparently, a photo of a stripper/dancer at one of the nightclubs in hijab had circulated widely on Nigerian cyberspace in the two weeks prior to the raids. Many commentators and online Nigerian forums speculated that this was the trigger for the raids. The photo has since gone viral as it was recirculated after the raids. Obviously, the picture offended the moral sensibilities of the Hausa-Fulani Muslim overlords of Abuja and its environs who moonlight as moral guardians of what they see as Islamic moral values.

 

In Nigeria there is always a subtext to such campaigns and if you miss those subtexts you'll not understand why some actions are being undertaken at the time they are being undertaken. These nightclubs have been in existence for more than a decade. Why raid them now? Clearly, the entry of the female children of wealthy Abuja families into these spaces and the introduction of hijab-clad strip dancers pushed the envelope too far for some powerful people.


On Fri, May 3, 2019 at 7:23 PM Okey Iheduru <okeyiheduru@gmail.com> wrote:
It's not just in Abuja. See the article below.

Shari'a Court In Kaduna Jails Two Ladies For Two Months For Wearing Skimpy Dresses

The ladies who are residents of Argungu road in Kaduna, were convicted after they pleaded guilty to "constituting public nuisance and indecent dressing."


BY SAHARAREPORTERS, NEW YORKAPR 23, 2019

Two ladies, Farida Taofiq and Raihana Abbas, have bagged two months in prison each for wearing skimpy dresses.

The sentences were handed down to the 20-year-olds by a Shari'a Court II sitting at Magajin Gari, Kaduna State.

Before learning of their fate, the two convicts had pleaded for leniency, saying they won't repeat the crime.

The ladies, who are residents of Argungu road in Kaduna, were convicted after they pleaded guilty to "constituting public nuisance and indecent dressing".

The judge, Mallam Musa Sa'ad-Goma, however, gave the convicts an option to pay N3,000 fine each.

Sa'ad-Goma also ordered them to return to their parents' homes.

Earlier, the prosecution counsel, Aliyu Ibrahim, said that Taofiq and Abbas were arrested on April 16, at a black spot along Sabon-Gari Road roaming the streets in skimpy dresses.

"When they were asked where they were going, they said they were going to the house of a friend who had just put to bed," the prosecution said.

Ibrahim said the offence contravened the provisions of Section 346 of the Sharia Penal Code of Kaduna State.



On Fri, May 3, 2019 at 8:27 AM Chielozona Eze <chieloz@gmail.com> wrote:
Thanks a lot, for this stimulating read, Brother Jibrin,
I have always believed that the test of every civilization is the degree to which people respond to the pain of others. When we become numb to the humiliation of others, we might as well kiss our collective humanity goodbye. The war against women is the war against all.
Chielozona

Chielozona Eze
Professor, African Literature and Cultural Studies, Northeastern Illinois University; Extraordinary Professor, Stellenbosch University, South Africa.Fellow - Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Studies, South Africa
https://neiu.academia.edu/ChielozonaEze
www.Chielozona.com



On Fri, May 3, 2019 at 5:09 AM Jibrin Ibrahim <jibrinibrahim891@gmail.com> wrote:

The War on Women in Abuja

Jibrin Ibrahim, Friday Column, Daily Trust, 3rdMy 2019

There is an open war against women in Abuja and the justification is a moral crusade against so-called prostitutes but not their male customers who are apparently considered the moral pillars of contemporary Nigerian society. Over the past two weeks, raids were organized in different locations leading to the arrest of over 100 women by agents of the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) Joint Task Team. The first raid about two weeks ago was at a popular night club, Caramelo, where 34 females, alleged to be nude dancers, were arrested. This was followed by the arrest of another 70 women in different clubs on Wednesday and Friday last week. The women were taken to Utako police station, Abuja and detained.

It is important to note that for the past two decades, this task force has been systematically arresting women in the streets after 10pm and any woman seen outside is assumed to be a criminal and prostitute and treated as such. Independent Nigeria has therefore fully restored the colonial rules of arbitrarily arresting people in the streets for "loitering and wondering" but this time the targets are exclusively female. They have made complete nonsense of our Constitution which protects the human rights of all Nigerians including the right to walk in the streets, day and night. They are also disregarding the right that you cannot be assumed to be a criminal simply because you are found at a location at a certain time.  

Concordant reports indicate that some of these women were sexually assaulted and released after the "moral policemen" had sex with them. Others paid bribes and were released and it was the few that refused to be blackmailed that were taken to court and charged with prostitution. It is really shameful that this would occur in the capital city of Nigeria. The charge of prostitution has become an instrument for committing terrible crimes against women. All the clubs had men and women in them but they picked on only the women, a blatantly discriminatory approach. Some of the women were professionals, AND YES RESPONSIBLE PROFESSIONAL WOMEN ALSO HAVE THE RIGHT TO GO AND ENJOY THEMSELVES IN CLUBS JUST AS MEN. The women who resisted arrest and made the argument they have a right to go to clubs were thoroughly beaten up for daring to stand for their rights.

The Federal Capital Authority has made the argument that one of the night clubs is supposed to be a clinic and was illegally turned into a night club. It that was the case, the authorities should have no issue with guests, their case should have been with the proprietor, whose business could have been closed and the person prosecuted. They did nothing to the proprietor and just arrested the women who were there enjoying themselves.

The Abuja authorities justify their war on women on the basis of the implementation of the Abuja Environmental Protection Board Act 1997, which is a statutory act applicable in the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja. The law gives them powers to: "Keep owned or occupied tenements clean, neat, keep grass low and trim, cut and trim flowers; keep drainage running through the tenement free from blockage. Provide adequate dust bin and sanitary convenience; must not dry cloths in front of the balcony or in front of his premises or on hedges or sidewalks, must not keep animals or birds likely to cause nuisance; must not use residential premises for the sale of alcoholic drinks or as a restaurant or for other commercial activity." Out of all these responsibilities, their only focus is skimpily dressed women. The law provides as punishment the payment of N5,000 and or imprisonment from one month to six months or both depending on the offence. This is the basis on which they collect the N5,000 from all the women they arrest and sexually abuse them when they do not have the money or refuse to pay.

This blatant violation of human rights in Abuja must stop and the officials prosecuted for their crimes against so many women. The women still in detention must be released immediately. When I raised this issue in the social media, many people intervened to tell me that I am supposed to be responsible man so I should not defend prostitutes engaged in illegal acts. The act in question is dancing and I do not know how dancing can be defined as prostitution. Secondly, even if some prostitutes attend such clubs, other women also attend. One of the women arrested for example is a youth corper visiting Abuja for the Easter vacation. In Nigerian law, you are innocent until proved guilty. The most important issue for me however is that the task force calls every woman they see at night a "prostitute" because they know that in our sexist society defined by bigotry and hypocrisy, "responsible" men will keep quiet and watch the way as soon as a woman has been labelled a "prostitute". All responsible men should have a different attitude, they should come out and defend any woman who is labelled a prostitute without proof. When such men start doing the needful, the task force will be forced to stop the massive violations of the rights of women they are engaged in.

The recent raids are being organized on the basis of an unholy alliance between anAbuja-based NGO, the Society Against Prostitution and Child Labour in Nigeria (SAP-CLN), in collaboration with Abuja Environmental Protection Board (AEPB) on a moral crusade to rid Abuja of prostitutes. This NGO should ask itself the ethical and moral basis of declaring every woman out at night as a prostitute. They should ask themselves the basis on which they provide support for rape and sexual assault on women. I understand their concern that "innocent" men are being dragged into sin by prostitutes, but should they not focus their attention on moral and ethical reinforcement of the men to resist the said temptation. Prostitution, according to the police is said to be illegal under AEPB law and offenders risk fines and jail terms. The problem however is that there is no definition of who is a prostitute. In the absence of a definition, two criteria have been developed – a woman, in the streets or in a club must be a prostitute. This is lawlessness of the highest order. The worst aspect is that many of the women taken to court are forced to "confess" being prostitutes to get a smaller fine and then have the conviction in their records for the rest of their lives. All those who have suffered this indignity should sue SAP-CLN  for their role in spoiling their names. Their activities violate the rights of women guaranteed in our Constitution. Once again, I call on all responsible men to stand up and defend all these innocent women who are baselessly and illegally declared to be prostitutes without evidence. FCDA STOP THE WAR AGAINST WOMEN.

 


Professor Jibrin Ibrahim
Senior Fellow
Centre for Democracy and Development, Abuja
Follow me on twitter @jibrinibrahim17

--
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Okey C. Iheduru

Just published"The African Corporation, 'Africapitalism' and Regional Integration in Africa" (September 2018). DOI: https://doi.org/10.4337/9781785362538.

--
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USA Africa Dialogue Series - Today's Quote

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There is need, sometimes, to "balance terror", so as to drag the other party to the peace table.

CAO.


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Chidi Anthony Opara is a "Life Time Achievement" Awardee, Registered Freight Forwarder, Professional Fellow Of Institute Of Information Managerment, Africa, Poet and Publisher of PublicInformationProjects



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USA Africa Dialogue Series - FG Woos Herdsmen with N100b to Stop Kidnapping : Aiding a Terrorist Croup?

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FG woos herdsmen with N100b to stop kidnapping as delegation meets in Kebbi

FG woos herdsmen with N100b to stop kidnapping as delegation meets in Kebbi

May 3, 201917123


In a bizarre fashion, the Federal Government has thrown a huge carrot at the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria, MACBAN, by offering it  N100 billion over two years to stop kidnapping in the country.


The Federal Government delegation was led by the Minister of Interior, Abdul-Rahman Dambazau, and met with MACBAN leaders on Friday. It was a closed door meeting which lasted for over five hours as monetary negotiations according to a source dragged on until N100 billion was accepted.


MACBAN had said it would take nothing less than N160 billion. But briefing news men after the meeting the exhausted Minister said, the "gathering is part of steps we have taken to tackle insecurity and clashes between herdsmen and farmers."


"You should not forget the fact that we have extended the meeting as a regional one when the Economic Community of West African Countries hosted a conference on this. "These issues were discussed, and part of the dialogue was to provide a national action plan on security challenges and solutions by all members of the ECOWAS commission, and to present it to the commission for consideration. "That is the main reason we have come to Kebbi State, to dialogue with leaders of herdsmen as part of the process,'' Danbazzau said.


Herdsmen have been on rampage since 2015 at the ascension of Mr Muhammadu Buhari as Nigeria's President pillaging, sacking, rapping and kidnapping for ransom which always lead to deaths. The orgy of kidnapping has made major national roads especially in the North West impassable. The Abuja/Kaduna road is one major road that has been affected.


Daily Mail reports that the herdsmen also attacked and killed many people in villages and farms in Benue, Zamfara, Plateau, Nasarawa, Kogi, Kaduna, Enugu, Imo, Cross River, Edo, Delta, Abia, Kwara, Taraba, Osun, Ondo, Sokoto and others.


The killings associated with the fulani herdsmen led to the group designation as the fourth most dangerous and deadly terrorist group in the world by the World Terrorist Index.


Also at the meeting was the Acting Inspector General of Police, Alhaji Muhammad Adamu, who few days ago gave a grim picture of the havoc being wrecked on Nigerins by the herdsmen. While nothing that over one thousand people had been killed and a lot more kidnapped in Kaduna, he noted in Bernin Kebbi that, "The criminals have infiltrated the crisis, and we should cooperate and deal decisively with the culprits, hence we called for this interaction. "Those criminals that are beyond redemption, will be dealt with and brought to book," Adamu said.


On his position, the State Governor, Atiku Bagudu, said hosting the meeting in his state "shows the seriousness of President Muhammadu Buhari's administration in tackling the security challenges in the country." Responding, the President of MACBAN, Alhaji Muhammad Kiruwa, said, "This is the first of its kind in the history of this country, for the president to direct his security aides to interact with an aggrieved party to air its views. "This meeting will serve as a foundation for peace between the Fulani herdsmen and farmers; and among the Fulanis themselves," Kiruwa said.


News Agency of Nigeria noted that other members of the Federal Government delegation at the meeting include: Alh. Yusuf Bichi, Director-General (D-G) Department of State Security Services, Alh Ahmed Rufa'I, D-G, National Intelligence Agency; among others.

 

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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - FG Woos Herdsmen with N100b to Stop Kidnapping : Aiding a Terrorist Croup?

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Thank you Toy in for sharing this piece which demonstrates that PMB is not taking matters lying low just because his kinsmen are involved. In democracies unlike in military dictatorships ( asI noted at the inception of this administration) things may happen slower than with immediate alacrity.

(OAA



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju <toyin.adepoju@gmail.com>
Date: 04/05/2019 19:27 (GMT+00:00)
To: usaafricadialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - FG Woos Herdsmen with N100b to Stop Kidnapping : Aiding a Terrorist Croup?

FG woos herdsmen with N100b to stop kidnapping as delegation meets in Kebbi

FG woos herdsmen with N100b to stop kidnapping as delegation meets in Kebbi

May 3, 201917123


In a bizarre fashion, the Federal Government has thrown a huge carrot at the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria, MACBAN, by offering it  N100 billion over two years to stop kidnapping in the country.


The Federal Government delegation was led by the Minister of Interior, Abdul-Rahman Dambazau, and met with MACBAN leaders on Friday. It was a closed door meeting which lasted for over five hours as monetary negotiations according to a source dragged on until N100 billion was accepted.


MACBAN had said it would take nothing less than N160 billion. But briefing news men after the meeting the exhausted Minister said, the "gathering is part of steps we have taken to tackle insecurity and clashes between herdsmen and farmers."


"You should not forget the fact that we have extended the meeting as a regional one when the Economic Community of West African Countries hosted a conference on this. "These issues were discussed, and part of the dialogue was to provide a national action plan on security challenges and solutions by all members of the ECOWAS commission, and to present it to the commission for consideration. "That is the main reason we have come to Kebbi State, to dialogue with leaders of herdsmen as part of the process,'' Danbazzau said.


Herdsmen have been on rampage since 2015 at the ascension of Mr Muhammadu Buhari as Nigeria's President pillaging, sacking, rapping and kidnapping for ransom which always lead to deaths. The orgy of kidnapping has made major national roads especially in the North West impassable. The Abuja/Kaduna road is one major road that has been affected.


Daily Mail reports that the herdsmen also attacked and killed many people in villages and farms in Benue, Zamfara, Plateau, Nasarawa, Kogi, Kaduna, Enugu, Imo, Cross River, Edo, Delta, Abia, Kwara, Taraba, Osun, Ondo, Sokoto and others.


The killings associated with the fulani herdsmen led to the group designation as the fourth most dangerous and deadly terrorist group in the world by the World Terrorist Index.


Also at the meeting was the Acting Inspector General of Police, Alhaji Muhammad Adamu, who few days ago gave a grim picture of the havoc being wrecked on Nigerins by the herdsmen. While nothing that over one thousand people had been killed and a lot more kidnapped in Kaduna, he noted in Bernin Kebbi that, "The criminals have infiltrated the crisis, and we should cooperate and deal decisively with the culprits, hence we called for this interaction. "Those criminals that are beyond redemption, will be dealt with and brought to book," Adamu said.


On his position, the State Governor, Atiku Bagudu, said hosting the meeting in his state "shows the seriousness of President Muhammadu Buhari's administration in tackling the security challenges in the country." Responding, the President of MACBAN, Alhaji Muhammad Kiruwa, said, "This is the first of its kind in the history of this country, for the president to direct his security aides to interact with an aggrieved party to air its views. "This meeting will serve as a foundation for peace between the Fulani herdsmen and farmers; and among the Fulanis themselves," Kiruwa said.


News Agency of Nigeria noted that other members of the Federal Government delegation at the meeting include: Alh. Yusuf Bichi, Director-General (D-G) Department of State Security Services, Alh Ahmed Rufa'I, D-G, National Intelligence Agency; among others.

 

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USA Africa Dialogue Series - Reactions as Nigerian Govt Enters Alliance With Fulani Herdsmen Terrorist Group

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NATIONAL LOW 
We have seen the recruitment of confirmed Boko Haram terrorists into the Nigerian military. Earlier, any individual with any form of criminal record is disqualified from being employed by any agency of government least to say the military and soul of Nigeria!

Now, the government is negotiating with the 4th most deadly terror organisation in the world to pay them N100 BILLION in order for them to sheathe their swords. Meanwhile, the number 1 Police officer in Nigeria has confirmed that the same Fulani terrorists are now ready to collaborate with the Police to flush out "bandits" from the forests!! The same government that guns down agitators for self determination and better society.....

Nigeria has hit an all time low as it gasps for breath. Yet, you are still going around claiming that "Buhari means well". Pray, forgive me but I will find it hard to have any dealings with you in future.

9JA NEEDS HELP

Comments
  • Sani Ibrahim
    Sani Ibrahim All index and indices of a fail nation is here with us courtesy of 'Sai Baba' end of the republic is here
  • Temilorun Adeyemi Mario
    Temilorun Adeyemi Mario Can you imagine,that would haste and enhance the project and plan of those bandits to totally destroy this nation. A government without good method to tackle the terrorist than to seduce and beg them with that huge of money that can eradicate the so called poverty that aids those people to that kind of work....SMH for Nigeria
  • Mesharch Adiukwu
    Mesharch Adiukwu We saw it coming. It's not ignorance, it's not a mistake: it is a deliberate attempt to execute a long time agenda
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Lawal Abubakar
    Lawal Abubakar God will severely punish all liars and false information peddlers as these people are the real cause of disunity in our societies.
  • Sunday A. Udeh
    Sunday A. Udeh What trained Police officers could not achieve is it fulani herdsmen that will achieve it? Sai baba educated men see what hatred for the Igbo has done to your Nigeria. After now they will called Mazi Nnamdi Kanu a fool and rogue
  • Ekewa Olu
    Image may contain: 1 person, text
  • Ekewa Olu
    No photo description available.
  • Ekewa Olu
    Image may contain: one or more people, hat and text
  • Gracious Daniel
    Gracious Daniel 2015 was when we missed it and we will suffer for long unfortunately those who wanted bubu would easily run out of the country .....what to do now ?

--
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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Reactions as Nigerian Govt EntersAlliance With Fulani Herdsmen Terrorist Group

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There is a saying in Yoruba that only a thief can be used to catch a thief on a rocky promontry.  It was either professor Bolaji Akinyemi or another senior professor who said the idea of ' engaging with terrorists was first suggested to Good luck Jonathan and people pooh poohed it.  So this idea is not entirely new and predates the PMB administration.  I myself would prefer a less contentious strategy..  But I am not in government.

OAA



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju <toyin.adepoju@gmail.com>
Date: 04/05/2019 20:11 (GMT+00:00)
To: usaafricadialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Reactions as Nigerian Govt EntersAlliance  With Fulani Herdsmen Terrorist Group

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NATIONAL LOW 
We have seen the recruitment of confirmed Boko Haram terrorists into the Nigerian military. Earlier, any individual with any form of criminal record is disqualified from being employed by any agency of government least to say the military and soul of Nigeria!

Now, the government is negotiating with the 4th most deadly terror organisation in the world to pay them N100 BILLION in order for them to sheathe their swords. Meanwhile, the number 1 Police officer in Nigeria has confirmed that the same Fulani terrorists are now ready to collaborate with the Police to flush out "bandits" from the forests!! The same government that guns down agitators for self determination and better society.....

Nigeria has hit an all time low as it gasps for breath. Yet, you are still going around claiming that "Buhari means well". Pray, forgive me but I will find it hard to have any dealings with you in future.

9JA NEEDS HELP

Comments
  • Sani Ibrahim
    Sani Ibrahim All index and indices of a fail nation is here with us courtesy of 'Sai Baba' end of the republic is here
  • Temilorun Adeyemi Mario
    Temilorun Adeyemi Mario Can you imagine,that would haste and enhance the project and plan of those bandits to totally destroy this nation. A government without good method to tackle the terrorist than to seduce and beg them with that huge of money that can eradicate the so called poverty that aids those people to that kind of work....SMH for Nigeria
  • Mesharch Adiukwu
    Mesharch Adiukwu We saw it coming. It's not ignorance, it's not a mistake: it is a deliberate attempt to execute a long time agenda
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Lawal Abubakar
    Lawal Abubakar God will severely punish all liars and false information peddlers as these people are the real cause of disunity in our societies.
  • Sunday A. Udeh
    Sunday A. Udeh What trained Police officers could not achieve is it fulani herdsmen that will achieve it? Sai baba educated men see what hatred for the Igbo has done to your Nigeria. After now they will called Mazi Nnamdi Kanu a fool and rogue
  • Ekewa Olu
    Image may contain: 1 person, text
  • Ekewa Olu
    No photo description available.
  • Ekewa Olu
    Image may contain: one or more people, hat and text
  • Gracious Daniel
    Gracious Daniel 2015 was when we missed it and we will suffer for long unfortunately those who wanted bubu would easily run out of the country .....what to do now ?

--
Listserv moderated by Toyin Falola, University of Texas at Austin
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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Ahmadu Bello University: Dress Code

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"thank God the case of that Sout African female athlete featured in the news earlier this week who had to use drugs to SUPPRESS her excessive hormones and was sanctioned.  When the case first came up a year or two ago I thought she was a man disguised as a woman the way she looked." 


What!!!  So you agree with that outrageous athletic body, the IAAF,  that seeks to drug a female  athlete under the guise of testosterone control!  The ruling  smacks of intolerance, sexism  and racism.  I hope we examine the repercussions of this ruling, should it stand.

The IAAF would now prescribe medication for the East African marathon runners and  every successful female athlete on the planet, especially when Black.  Before you know it we would be  in genetic engineering/ manipulation territory, writ large. It also opens the way for hard working  female athletes to be discriminated against and insulted. 

 Are  great athletes determined by their testosterone profile? Whatever happened to the following:

  1. passion for the sport
  2. constant training and years of practice
  3. appropriate diet
  4. dedication, determination and grit
  5. a competitive spirit
This ruling is insulting to the athlete and all female athletes-  and I hope that
it is thrown out on appeal. The South African sporting community called it an apartheid era  move.
I agree. Next they would want to mandate all Black successful female athletes to take
hormone pills. Serena next? How about all the successful Black female track stars of the past?


As I asked in another group, at what point do the testosterone levels in a male athlete
 make him an alien and too fit  to compete?

BTW, the Nazis would have injected Jesse Owens with testostorone reducing medication
at the 1936 Olympics  if they could.



Professor Gloria Emeagwali
History Department, Central Connecticut State University
www.africahistory.net
Gloria Emeagwali's Documentaries
2014 Distinguished Research Excellence Award in African Studies
 University of Texas at Austin
2019   Distinguished Africanist Award                   
New York African Studies Association
 



From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of OLAYINKA AGBETUYI <yagbetuyi@hotmail.com>
Sent: Friday, May 3, 2019 8:32 PM
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Ahmadu Bello University: Dress Code
 
Oga Okey:
Thank you for furnishing these details. I agree with the citing of the provisions of Kaduna State law on which the judges acted to the extent that the Nigerian state and the Constitution  allowed customary laws to be incorporated into Nigerian jurisprudence. Customary law operates in the legal Cannon of the South too.

I agree that nuisance dressing should be sanctioned but not that harsh as in jail terms.  I will never allow my own daughter dress in that manner so long as she lives under my roof.  If she does not live with me and is coming to visit she cannot dress like that to visit me.  I know we were all born naked without a stitch of clothes on, we agreed to enter civilization and cover up.  This is in part why I disagree with that contributor who blamed those who cannot bring their hormones under control.  As a student of psychoanalysis I know that hormones are NEVER evenly dustributed for everyone.  Some have far more in excess of what is needed pumping in their blood;  the real culprits if that hormonal victim isGod and their parents. ( thank God the case of that Sout African female athlete featured in the news earlier this week who had to use drugs to SUPPRESS her excessive hormones and was sanctioned.  When the case first came up a year or two ago I thought she was a man disguised as a woman the way she looked.  ) 

 So if Mr A can effectively control his hormones because they are average or stingily present to the extent that it is an Amazonian effort to arouse them then it is not the fault of B that he is easily aroused.  That is natures trick of ensuring the survival of the human race

 It's up to the North to reform Sharia law in view of its harsh sentences so it is brought into the purview of the 21st century human rights considerations.  We cant be cutting off peoples hands in this day and age because they stole or stoning women to death because they committed adultery.

OAA.



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: Okey Iheduru <okeyiheduru@gmail.com>
Date: 03/05/2019 09:55 (GMT+00:00)
To: USAAfrica Dialogue <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Ahmadu Bello University: Dress Code

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Shari'a Court In Kaduna Jails Two Ladies For Two Months For Wearing Skimpy Dresses

The ladies who are residents of Argungu road in Kaduna, were convicted after they pleaded guilty to "constituting public nuisance and indecent dressing."


BY SAHARAREPORTERS, NEW YORKAPR 23, 2019

Two ladies, Farida Taofiq and Raihana Abbas, have bagged two months in prison each for wearing skimpy dresses.

The sentences were handed down to the 20-year-olds by a Shari'a Court II sitting at Magajin Gari, Kaduna State.

Before learning of their fate, the two convicts had pleaded for leniency, saying they won't repeat the crime.

The ladies, who are residents of Argungu road in Kaduna, were convicted after they pleaded guilty to "constituting public nuisance and indecent dressing".

The judge, Mallam Musa Sa'ad-Goma, however, gave the convicts an option to pay N3,000 fine each.

Sa'ad-Goma also ordered them to return to their parents' homes.

Earlier, the prosecution counsel, Aliyu Ibrahim, said that Taofiq and Abbas were arrested on April 16, at a black spot along Sabon-Gari Road roaming the streets in skimpy dresses.

"When they were asked where they were going, they said they were going to the house of a friend who had just put to bed," the prosecution said.

Ibrahim said the offence contravened the provisions of Section 346 of the Sharia Penal Code of Kaduna State.



On Thu, May 2, 2019 at 12:09 PM OLAYINKA AGBETUYI <yagbetuyi@hotmail.com> wrote:
Oga:

This is a very robust analysis of the rules passed by ABU management.  A university is  supposed to be universal in scope. Again it depends on whose cultural values of universality.

You mentioned a germane constituency; youth.  We're they consulted? I don't know. They will be in the best position to do battle with management.  What was the reaction of the intellectual body of ABU (particularly scholars from the North) before the rules were passed into law?  I dont know.  Perhaps northerm Muslim scholars like Jibrin Ibrahim would like to shed some light on this for us.

To be frank I haven't seen a full statement of the rules themselves but my guess which is as good as yours  is that they have Muslim religious bias.  The "sexism" and other biases follow from that.  Islamic cultural code is basically what it is.  What is sexist to a westernized sensibility us not sexist to an Islamic conscious woman who is committed to followung the dictates.   of the Quoran.

I have taken a multicutural English class where a Congolese Christian male tried to incite Somali Muslim ladies against their husbands by asking why they allowed the men take other wives.  They replied in my presence that they were not forced into any arrangement and they liked it like that!
I have been in a Methodist congregation in the US where the priest announced that here in the Church mother's take last ( it was supposed to be a dignified arrangement as opposed to the feminised environment of the outer American society of ladies first.)  Mothers in the church( with their daughters) enthusiastically  supported the priest.


ABU is in northern Nigeria.  The whole region has a dominant Muslim ethos.  We shall see how the new rules on dress codes stand up against youth multiculturalism of university life .  Only time will tell.

OAA



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: Femi Kolapo <kolapof@uoguelph.ca>
Date: 02/05/2019 03:25 (GMT+00:00)
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Ahmadu Bello University: Dress Code

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Some basic problems  of ethnocentricity, discrimination,  etc with some of these rules :

#3. tattered jeans and jeans with holes - [how many holes count? how about the number of tears?]

Besides, some poor students have and wear jeans that are "tattered" and "have holes" because they are poor, and not because they bought fashionable tattered jeans to flaunt. At some point in university, I used to be one such person.

#5. tight fitting jeans etc that reveal the contour of the body

scary especially for girls and ladies who might like to wear sweaters that natural hug the body or who like to wear dresses that are fitting rather than saggy. This especially because, going beyond forbidding exposure of sexualized body parts, it polices the clothed body! Even the form of the body, in its beauty or ugliness, should be hidden from view, presumably, because some men (perhaps women too) are unable to bring their hormones under control when they sight body contours even under a dress! For a federal institution in an urban multicultural city, this is scary. I can understand such a rule being "informally" enforced and actually naturally adhered to in conservative village settings.

#7. unkempt appearances, such as bushy hair and beards -  

who defines "unkempt" - whose standards are applied?

and how do you distinguish bushy hair and beards from culturally and religious preferred styles of body decoration acceptable to the Sikhs, and some mallams whose identities are partly based on leaving bushy beards? I remember reading a prominent northern Nigerian elder once not only criticizing Wole Soyinka's hair a bushy but concluded that anybody with such hairstyle had a problem which adjective used should not be repeated here! What ethnocentricity!

this rule condemns the Yoruba "dada" or the Rasta hairdo. I am sorry that the Rastafari might have been excluded from this campus if they are not exempted from the definition of "unkempt"

#11. shirts without buttons or not properly buttoned, leaving the wearer bare-chested.

there are regular fashion wears with inner pieces (covering all of the chest) but with tops that are not meant to be buttoned, some not having buttons or having decorative buttons without buttonholes(often times both inner and outer pieces are sewn together). They are very stylish, but far from indecent by any reasonable definition of decency.

#12. wearing of ear-ring by male students & 13. plaiting or weaving of hair by male students

both #12 & #13 are very ethnocentric. for example, male Shango worshippers are thereby not allowed simply because they choose to worship the Shango deity; many people group from Central Africa and East Africa who wear earrings irrespective of gender are excluded. Many Fulani youth, with some of the most artistic body ornamentation styles in West Africa, who use rings in their culture of decoration are penalized and excluded. Their human rights are denied.

#14. wearing of colored eye glasses in the classroom except on medical grounds

- except on security grounds, it is so ridiculous. This is creating a problem where there is none. How many students were such glasses in class in the first place? Insignificant. security is the only reasonable ground for such a rule.  Rulemaking old adult people should know that a stage of life called youth is real and should not be confused with their own staid elderhood! Religious people also should know and accept that there are people without religion or who have different religions - all of who are made, according to most religions, by the same Creator. They want to self-express themselves. It is natural and normal. The generation of my children call it "being cool". It is a stage. They soon pass over it. It does not make them dangerous or less serious or less God seeking.

#16. wearing trousers that stop between the ankle and the knee.

I have seen conservative Hausa pants that stop short of the ankle. I know young Islamic scholars in my neck of the wood who wear trousers that do not reach down to the knee, though with the white flowing gowns as the top. Their identity as Muslim cleric/scholars is actually partly defined by this type of dress, with a specific "alim" type cap to match. Would they be arrested if they come to ABU campus or let go?

Also, there is a particular dashiki type Yoruba hunter wear, which now has been turned into regular fashion ware, that has a pant that does not reach down to the ankle. I have one and wear it to Church and can wear to at a wedding or to a child's name-giving ceremony! That is how so proper it is. I will not be able to wear this were I to visit ABU! Ridiculous. Discriminatory. But being a man, I may actuall be allowed to go.

It's not just the body that is being policed here. Some of these rules police adolescence and youthfulness as a stage of life with its goals, its aspirations. They seek to sublimate youthfulness, vigour, style and class - all normal biological, physiological, and anthropological features of youthfulness and the youth! Mostly though, those who will come under the gavel are females. I can imagine the fashion police being helped by "radical" students to detain girls they deem to have contravened any of these rules based on whimsical interpretations! It is only too clear which of these rules will be enforced and on which gender the most.

Those who fashioned the policy did not seem to think beyond the specific moral code of their particular narrow denominational religious community. It does not show that the authors consulted ABU scholars - anthropologist or sociologist for suggestions. Perhaps they consulted some select religious scholars. Were representatives of students, staff, religious and non-religious people and lawyers, consulted before these rules were sanctioned by ABU? The author indicated in the document is  Management. Did these rules pass through the Senate of the university? Does NUC have a right to countermand those rules that contravene basic human right?

These rules give an indication that that great institution is closing in on itself as an intolerant conservative and exclusionary organization. A huge chunk of the human population, many who by any definition would consider themselves to be concerned with decency, are not welcome! Very scary. Very scary.

Even if security and basic decency requirements are allowed for the document's rationale, quite a few of these rules seem to be in contravention of peoples human right.  Most of them are exclusionary and clearly gender biased and religion laced. If they stand without modification, they portend future trouble for many hapless "non-compliant" students, staff, and visitor, especially, women - some select women. They would likely heighten division and non-native sense of insecurity on the campus.

Something much more reasonable, basic, legal and inclusive can certainly be devised to ensure basic decency than these poorly put together rules.

It will not be surprising if this ABU Management goes the whole hog and make all students wear uniforms and RENT out uniforms to all visitors to the campus. That would be a great way to satisfy the rules regarding dress.

/Femi Kolapo

From:usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com<usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of OLAYINKA AGBETUYI <yagbetuyi@hotmail.com>
Sent: Wednesday, May 1, 2019 1:32 PM
To:usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Ahmadu Bello University: Dress Code
 
Oga Michael:

I know there is a problem here between the demands on ABU as a FEDERAL university (as opposed to state or private institution.)  The event of town and gown as it relates to the cultural dictates of the environs of location of a university still matter.

Many easterners have issues with this as it applies to UI for instance.  These universities are located within specific regions and the intercourse between local community and university is unavoidable.  Local cultural tastes differ and must be respected.

Whereas hijab may not be anathema for ABU because of the cultural dictates up there it may be so for say UI & UNN.( some if my course mates in graduate school in the US for instance dressed in Middle East head dress aroynd campus ( Im not sure with full hijab but full hijab is now routinely comnon in the streets of London with slits only for eyeballs.)

You are right to be apprehensive about use of hijab up there but it IS a legitimate dress code up there ( for instance if the student is admitted for say Islamic studies)

This was the sensibility that informed hypocrite Sani Abacha  ( the one who allegedly died in the company of a prostitute )deciding that ladies who dressed in trousers in public in Abuja be flogged.  Only a dictator could go that far!

The founding Nigerian nationalists understood this very well when they stated each region should westernize at its own pace.  Students and parents who oppose ABUs decision (even if they are notherners) may choose to educate their wards in the South and the Middle Belt.That would be these regions manpower gains.  The demographic  osmosis or reflux will ensure they are vanguard for change in the North in the longer term.

This is the quirky thing about democracy no one can force others to develop at their own pace and people may choose other models apart from the western in any area of develooment.  Much part of the North prefers the Arabian cultural model if not fully but as counterpoint to the excesses of full western mode.  In a democracy they have the right to.  They may also choose to balance their Arabic preference with Chinese rather than western.

  In the South we are more comfortable with westernization but that's due to a long historic ( and continuing) engagement with the West rather than Saudi Arabia and the Middle East.

OAA



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: 'Michael Afolayan' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>
Date: 01/05/2019 10:03 (GMT+00:00)
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Ahmadu Bello University: Dress Code

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Please don't get me wrong, Okey. I am more conservative than you think and I have lived in America for almost four decades. I once sent one of my language/education students home when I went to observe him and he was wearing a pair of jean-pants while student-teaching even though with a nice shirt and standard tie. My student teachers must be professional. Even as a professor, I always visited them in complete suits, even to my discomfort and irritation, and I also did so when teaching them. But all these are commonsensical, not necessarily based on the Mosaic model of the "Ten Commandments." I think a generic announcement of "We expect our students to be decent in their grooming and public appearances" would be sufficient; and individual programs like education, law, medicine, etc., could have more specific guidelines for how their students' carry themselves in public. ABU should transcend this level of rustic simplicity. It's okay for a high school to do so or even some private religious institutions, but let's be real: this is just not good for an institution of ABU status.
MOA 


On Tuesday, April 30, 2019, 4:15:53 PM GMT+1, Okechukwu Ukaga <ukaga001@umn.edu> wrote:


My esteemed broda, I obviously disagree. In your so called civilized society, naked people are found in strip clubs and brothels, not on university campuses. If folks are unwilling to self regulate to maintain a minimum level of decency in terms of dressing, university has both the right and the responsibility to take appropriate steps. After all, university degrees are awarded not just for academic achievement but also character, etc. Notably, dress code is not unusual in universities, even in the West. When I was in school of business in the late 80s for my MBA, business students were expected and required to dress in ways consistent with our profession. So it is not unusual to see business students and law students going to classes, etc in more formal attire than say soil science students. And in some cases there are strict guidelines like no jeans, no sleepers, no T-shirts, etc. Isn't that a kind of dress code?  So even within the same university there is not only an expected minimum standard for the whole, but component units can have their own additional guidelines, norms and expectations. Before zeroing in on the last part of my contribution that you quoted here, you will do well to read and consider the preceding parts that formed the foundation for that last part.
Regards,
Okey

On Apr 29, 2019 5:18 PM, "'Michael Afolayan' via USA Africa Dialogue Series" <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> wrote:
". . . and if this is not the right means to that end, then what better options or strategies are available?" (Okechukwu Ukaga) 

No options or strategies needed to be explored over a bad idea. The dress code at a first generation public university does not belong in a civil society. Pure and simple!

MOA



On Sunday, April 28, 2019, 1:48:51 PM GMT+1, Okechukwu Ukaga <ukaga001@umn.edu> wrote:


Perhaps there should be a balance between allowing folks to come to school "naked" and "policing" how they dress. How do we strike that balance? If students, staff, faculty and administrators fail to self regulate, how is a university supposed to assure that balance? Beyond automatic condemnation of dress code, it would be helpful to understand what made such a policy necessary, what it is designed to achieve; and if this is not the right means to that end, then what better options or strategies are available? 
OU

On Apr 27, 2019 1:19 PM, "'Michael Afolayan' via USA Africa Dialogue Series" <usaafricadialogue@ googlegroups.com> wrote:
So, what is left? Women to wear hijab and men to dress like the Taliban folks. Great progress for a premier Nigerian university. So grotesque, it's not even funny!
MOA  




On Saturday, April 27, 2019, 6:05:50 PM GMT+1, Toyin Falola <toyinfalola@austin.utexas.edu> wrote:




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--
Okey C. Iheduru

Just published"The African Corporation, 'Africapitalism' and Regional Integration in Africa" (September 2018). DOI: https://doi.org/10.4337/9781785362538.

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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - FG Woos Herdsmen with N100b to Stop Kidnapping : Aiding a Terrorist Croup?

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0
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Is this N100bn really true or just speculation or fake news? - how credible is Daily Mail online ... ? Or is this just another case of news that is created to feed biases and escalate tensions ..

 



From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju <toyin.adepoju@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, May 4, 2019 11:18 AM
To: usaafricadialogue
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - FG Woos Herdsmen with N100b to Stop Kidnapping : Aiding a Terrorist Croup?
 

FG woos herdsmen with N100b to stop kidnapping as delegation meets in Kebbi

FG woos herdsmen with N100b to stop kidnapping as delegation meets in Kebbi

May 3, 201917123


In a bizarre fashion, the Federal Government has thrown a huge carrot at the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria, MACBAN, by offering it  N100 billion over two years to stop kidnapping in the country.


The Federal Government delegation was led by the Minister of Interior, Abdul-Rahman Dambazau, and met with MACBAN leaders on Friday. It was a closed door meeting which lasted for over five hours as monetary negotiations according to a source dragged on until N100 billion was accepted.


MACBAN had said it would take nothing less than N160 billion. But briefing news men after the meeting the exhausted Minister said, the "gathering is part of steps we have taken to tackle insecurity and clashes between herdsmen and farmers."


"You should not forget the fact that we have extended the meeting as a regional one when the Economic Community of West African Countries hosted a conference on this. "These issues were discussed, and part of the dialogue was to provide a national action plan on security challenges and solutions by all members of the ECOWAS commission, and to present it to the commission for consideration. "That is the main reason we have come to Kebbi State, to dialogue with leaders of herdsmen as part of the process,'' Danbazzau said.


Herdsmen have been on rampage since 2015 at the ascension of Mr Muhammadu Buhari as Nigeria's President pillaging, sacking, rapping and kidnapping for ransom which always lead to deaths. The orgy of kidnapping has made major national roads especially in the North West impassable. The Abuja/Kaduna road is one major road that has been affected.


Daily Mail reports that the herdsmen also attacked and killed many people in villages and farms in Benue, Zamfara, Plateau, Nasarawa, Kogi, Kaduna, Enugu, Imo, Cross River, Edo, Delta, Abia, Kwara, Taraba, Osun, Ondo, Sokoto and others.


The killings associated with the fulani herdsmen led to the group designation as the fourth most dangerous and deadly terrorist group in the world by the World Terrorist Index.


Also at the meeting was the Acting Inspector General of Police, Alhaji Muhammad Adamu, who few days ago gave a grim picture of the havoc being wrecked on Nigerins by the herdsmen. While nothing that over one thousand people had been killed and a lot more kidnapped in Kaduna, he noted in Bernin Kebbi that, "The criminals have infiltrated the crisis, and we should cooperate and deal decisively with the culprits, hence we called for this interaction. "Those criminals that are beyond redemption, will be dealt with and brought to book," Adamu said.


On his position, the State Governor, Atiku Bagudu, said hosting the meeting in his state "shows the seriousness of President Muhammadu Buhari's administration in tackling the security challenges in the country." Responding, the President of MACBAN, Alhaji Muhammad Kiruwa, said, "This is the first of its kind in the history of this country, for the president to direct his security aides to interact with an aggrieved party to air its views. "This meeting will serve as a foundation for peace between the Fulani herdsmen and farmers; and among the Fulanis themselves," Kiruwa said.


News Agency of Nigeria noted that other members of the Federal Government delegation at the meeting include: Alh. Yusuf Bichi, Director-General (D-G) Department of State Security Services, Alh Ahmed Rufa'I, D-G, National Intelligence Agency; among others.

 

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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Reactions as Nigerian Govt EntersAlliance With Fulani Herdsmen Terrorist Group

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I have always been suspicious of those folks heading the country's security sectors, the Police, the Military, etc., including those who advised the Federal Government to take this option. I remember that Kaduna State Governor,  El Rufai, also paid some humongous amount of money to some faceless Fulani herdsmen, according to him, so that they could stop the killings in the State. To the contrary, the herdsmen became bolder and stronger than the State, and the killing continues till date. 

The Federal Government is not sincere with this step. I see it as another clever way to fund, albeit, unwittingly, the Fulani agenda tfor the purpose of sustain their hegemonic hold on the rest of other tribes in Nigeria. I am not sure the reason is to flush out bandits from the forests. The Fulani bandits have infiltrated most southern forests already and their nefarious activities have continued unchecked. This Federal Government is deliberately contradictory.  At some point it claimed that the herdsmen were from Niger, Libya, Mali and Sudan, but it failed to deal ruthlessly with the "outsiders" devastating the country, destroying lives, and turning the citizenry into mendicants! Rather, today, the same Government is negotiating with the "outsider-bandits", and planning to fund the terrorists. That logic does not hold any water. If the Federall Government gives the N100 billion to the Fulani terrorists, they will in turn be better equipped and the state of insecurity will worsen because the terrorists will bounce back stronger and more deadly! The Federal Government is, indeed, a bundle of contradictions that shouldn't be taken serious!

Ademola O.  Dasylva

On Sat, 4 May 2019, 22:33 OLAYINKA AGBETUYI, <yagbetuyi@hotmail.com> wrote:
There is a saying in Yoruba that only a thief can be used to catch a thief on a rocky promontry.  It was either professor Bolaji Akinyemi or another senior professor who said the idea of ' engaging with terrorists was first suggested to Good luck Jonathan and people pooh poohed it.  So this idea is not entirely new and predates the PMB administration.  I myself would prefer a less contentious strategy..  But I am not in government.

OAA



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju <toyin.adepoju@gmail.com>
Date: 04/05/2019 20:11 (GMT+00:00)
To: usaafricadialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Reactions as Nigerian Govt EntersAlliance  With Fulani Herdsmen Terrorist Group

Boxbe This message is eligible for Automatic Cleanup! (toyin.adepoju@gmail.com) Add cleanup rule | More info

NATIONAL LOW 
We have seen the recruitment of confirmed Boko Haram terrorists into the Nigerian military. Earlier, any individual with any form of criminal record is disqualified from being employed by any agency of government least to say the military and soul of Nigeria!

Now, the government is negotiating with the 4th most deadly terror organisation in the world to pay them N100 BILLION in order for them to sheathe their swords. Meanwhile, the number 1 Police officer in Nigeria has confirmed that the same Fulani terrorists are now ready to collaborate with the Police to flush out "bandits" from the forests!! The same government that guns down agitators for self determination and better society.....

Nigeria has hit an all time low as it gasps for breath. Yet, you are still going around claiming that "Buhari means well". Pray, forgive me but I will find it hard to have any dealings with you in future.

9JA NEEDS HELP

Comments
  • Sani Ibrahim
    Sani Ibrahim All index and indices of a fail nation is here with us courtesy of 'Sai Baba' end of the republic is here
  • Temilorun Adeyemi Mario
    Temilorun Adeyemi Mario Can you imagine,that would haste and enhance the project and plan of those bandits to totally destroy this nation. A government without good method to tackle the terrorist than to seduce and beg them with that huge of money that can eradicate the so called poverty that aids those people to that kind of work....SMH for Nigeria
  • Mesharch Adiukwu
    Mesharch Adiukwu We saw it coming. It's not ignorance, it's not a mistake: it is a deliberate attempt to execute a long time agenda
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Lawal Abubakar
    Lawal Abubakar God will severely punish all liars and false information peddlers as these people are the real cause of disunity in our societies.
  • Sunday A. Udeh
    Sunday A. Udeh What trained Police officers could not achieve is it fulani herdsmen that will achieve it? Sai baba educated men see what hatred for the Igbo has done to your Nigeria. After now they will called Mazi Nnamdi Kanu a fool and rogue
  • Ekewa Olu
    Image may contain: 1 person, text
  • Ekewa Olu
    No photo description available.
  • Ekewa Olu
    Image may contain: one or more people, hat and text
  • Gracious Daniel
    Gracious Daniel 2015 was when we missed it and we will suffer for long unfortunately those who wanted bubu would easily run out of the country .....what to do now ?

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USA Africa Dialogue Series - 28 Research and Academic Job Vacancies at the Queen’s University Belfast, UK

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Reactions as Nigerian GovtEntersAlliance With Fulani Herdsmen Terrorist Group

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0
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I'm sure we have been here before.  What specifically will the money be used for.?  Any one with statistical details?

OAA.



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: Ademola Dasylva <dasylvaus@gmail.com>
Date: 05/05/2019 01:59 (GMT+00:00)
To: USAAfricaDialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Reactions as Nigerian GovtEntersAlliance  With Fulani Herdsmen Terrorist Group

Boxbe This message is eligible for Automatic Cleanup! (dasylvaus@gmail.com) Add cleanup rule | More info
I have always been suspicious of those folks heading the country's security sectors, the Police, the Military, etc., including those who advised the Federal Government to take this option. I remember that Kaduna State Governor,  El Rufai, also paid some humongous amount of money to some faceless Fulani herdsmen, according to him, so that they could stop the killings in the State. To the contrary, the herdsmen became bolder and stronger than the State, and the killing continues till date. 

The Federal Government is not sincere with this step. I see it as another clever way to fund, albeit, unwittingly, the Fulani agenda tfor the purpose of sustain their hegemonic hold on the rest of other tribes in Nigeria. I am not sure the reason is to flush out bandits from the forests. The Fulani bandits have infiltrated most southern forests already and their nefarious activities have continued unchecked. This Federal Government is deliberately contradictory.  At some point it claimed that the herdsmen were from Niger, Libya, Mali and Sudan, but it failed to deal ruthlessly with the "outsiders" devastating the country, destroying lives, and turning the citizenry into mendicants! Rather, today, the same Government is negotiating with the "outsider-bandits", and planning to fund the terrorists. That logic does not hold any water. If the Federall Government gives the N100 billion to the Fulani terrorists, they will in turn be better equipped and the state of insecurity will worsen because the terrorists will bounce back stronger and more deadly! The Federal Government is, indeed, a bundle of contradictions that shouldn't be taken serious!

Ademola O.  Dasylva

On Sat, 4 May 2019, 22:33 OLAYINKA AGBETUYI, <yagbetuyi@hotmail.com> wrote:
There is a saying in Yoruba that only a thief can be used to catch a thief on a rocky promontry.  It was either professor Bolaji Akinyemi or another senior professor who said the idea of ' engaging with terrorists was first suggested to Good luck Jonathan and people pooh poohed it.  So this idea is not entirely new and predates the PMB administration.  I myself would prefer a less contentious strategy..  But I am not in government.

OAA



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju <toyin.adepoju@gmail.com>
Date: 04/05/2019 20:11 (GMT+00:00)
To: usaafricadialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Reactions as Nigerian Govt EntersAlliance  With Fulani Herdsmen Terrorist Group

Boxbe This message is eligible for Automatic Cleanup! (toyin.adepoju@gmail.com) Add cleanup rule | More info

NATIONAL LOW 
We have seen the recruitment of confirmed Boko Haram terrorists into the Nigerian military. Earlier, any individual with any form of criminal record is disqualified from being employed by any agency of government least to say the military and soul of Nigeria!

Now, the government is negotiating with the 4th most deadly terror organisation in the world to pay them N100 BILLION in order for them to sheathe their swords. Meanwhile, the number 1 Police officer in Nigeria has confirmed that the same Fulani terrorists are now ready to collaborate with the Police to flush out "bandits" from the forests!! The same government that guns down agitators for self determination and better society.....

Nigeria has hit an all time low as it gasps for breath. Yet, you are still going around claiming that "Buhari means well". Pray, forgive me but I will find it hard to have any dealings with you in future.

9JA NEEDS HELP

Comments
  • Sani Ibrahim
    Sani Ibrahim All index and indices of a fail nation is here with us courtesy of 'Sai Baba' end of the republic is here
  • Temilorun Adeyemi Mario
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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Ahmadu Bello University: Dress Code

$
0
0
HE.

We may have  different rtakes on the
e ruling.  My own take is not that the atjletic body is right in any decion but to highlight that hormones are not evenly dtributed among people. I dont thi nk the body asked her to suppress her hormones.  I thi k she tested pisitive to drugs and jer explanatio. Was that the drugs were to suppress the high levels of testosterone  in her system.  Correct me if I'm wrong g on this take


OAA



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: "Emeagwali, Gloria (History)" <emeagwali@ccsu.edu>
Date: 05/05/2019 01:59 (GMT+00:00)
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Ahmadu Bello University: Dress Code

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"thank God the case of that Sout African female athlete featured in the news earlier this week who had to use drugs to SUPPRESS her excessive hormones and was sanctioned.  When the case first came up a year or two ago I thought she was a man disguised as a woman the way she looked." 


What!!!  So you agree with that outrageous athletic body, the IAAF,  that seeks to drug a female  athlete under the guise of testosterone control!  The ruling  smacks of intolerance, sexism  and racism.  I hope we examine the repercussions of this ruling, should it stand.

The IAAF would now prescribe medication for the East African marathon runners and  every successful female athlete on the planet, especially when Black.  Before you know it we would be  in genetic engineering/ manipulation territory, writ large. It also opens the way for hard working  female athletes to be discriminated against and insulted. 

 Are  great athletes determined by their testosterone profile? Whatever happened to the following:

  1. passion for the sport
  2. constant training and years of practice
  3. appropriate diet
  4. dedication, determination and grit
  5. a competitive spirit
This ruling is insulting to the athlete and all female athletes-  and I hope that
it is thrown out on appeal. The South African sporting community called it an apartheid era  move.
I agree. Next they would want to mandate all Black successful female athletes to take
hormone pills. Serena next? How about all the successful Black female track stars of the past?


As I asked in another group, at what point do the testosterone levels in a male athlete
 make him an alien and too fit  to compete?

BTW, the Nazis would have injected Jesse Owens with testostorone reducing medication
at the 1936 Olympics  if they could.



Professor Gloria Emeagwali
History Department, Central Connecticut State University
www.africahistory.net
Gloria Emeagwali's Documentaries
2014 Distinguished Research Excellence Award in African Studies
 University of Texas at Austin
2019   Distinguished Africanist Award                   
New York African Studies Association
 



From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of OLAYINKA AGBETUYI <yagbetuyi@hotmail.com>
Sent: Friday, May 3, 2019 8:32 PM
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Ahmadu Bello University: Dress Code
 
Oga Okey:
Thank you for furnishing these details. I agree with the citing of the provisions of Kaduna State law on which the judges acted to the extent that the Nigerian state and the Constitution  allowed customary laws to be incorporated into Nigerian jurisprudence. Customary law operates in the legal Cannon of the South too.

I agree that nuisance dressing should be sanctioned but not that harsh as in jail terms.  I will never allow my own daughter dress in that manner so long as she lives under my roof.  If she does not live with me and is coming to visit she cannot dress like that to visit me.  I know we were all born naked without a stitch of clothes on, we agreed to enter civilization and cover up.  This is in part why I disagree with that contributor who blamed those who cannot bring their hormones under control.  As a student of psychoanalysis I know that hormones are NEVER evenly dustributed for everyone.  Some have far more in excess of what is needed pumping in their blood;  the real culprits if that hormonal victim isGod and their parents. ( thank God the case of that Sout African female athlete featured in the news earlier this week who had to use drugs to SUPPRESS her excessive hormones and was sanctioned.  When the case first came up a year or two ago I thought she was a man disguised as a woman the way she looked.  ) 

 So if Mr A can effectively control his hormones because they are average or stingily present to the extent that it is an Amazonian effort to arouse them then it is not the fault of B that he is easily aroused.  That is natures trick of ensuring the survival of the human race

 It's up to the North to reform Sharia law in view of its harsh sentences so it is brought into the purview of the 21st century human rights considerations.  We cant be cutting off peoples hands in this day and age because they stole or stoning women to death because they committed adultery.

OAA.



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: Okey Iheduru <okeyiheduru@gmail.com>
Date: 03/05/2019 09:55 (GMT+00:00)
To: USAAfrica Dialogue <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Ahmadu Bello University: Dress Code

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Shari'a Court In Kaduna Jails Two Ladies For Two Months For Wearing Skimpy Dresses

The ladies who are residents of Argungu road in Kaduna, were convicted after they pleaded guilty to "constituting public nuisance and indecent dressing."


BY SAHARAREPORTERS, NEW YORKAPR 23, 2019

Two ladies, Farida Taofiq and Raihana Abbas, have bagged two months in prison each for wearing skimpy dresses.

The sentences were handed down to the 20-year-olds by a Shari'a Court II sitting at Magajin Gari, Kaduna State.

Before learning of their fate, the two convicts had pleaded for leniency, saying they won't repeat the crime.

The ladies, who are residents of Argungu road in Kaduna, were convicted after they pleaded guilty to "constituting public nuisance and indecent dressing".

The judge, Mallam Musa Sa'ad-Goma, however, gave the convicts an option to pay N3,000 fine each.

Sa'ad-Goma also ordered them to return to their parents' homes.

Earlier, the prosecution counsel, Aliyu Ibrahim, said that Taofiq and Abbas were arrested on April 16, at a black spot along Sabon-Gari Road roaming the streets in skimpy dresses.

"When they were asked where they were going, they said they were going to the house of a friend who had just put to bed," the prosecution said.

Ibrahim said the offence contravened the provisions of Section 346 of the Sharia Penal Code of Kaduna State.



On Thu, May 2, 2019 at 12:09 PM OLAYINKA AGBETUYI <yagbetuyi@hotmail.com> wrote:
Oga:

This is a very robust analysis of the rules passed by ABU management.  A university is  supposed to be universal in scope. Again it depends on whose cultural values of universality.

You mentioned a germane constituency; youth.  We're they consulted? I don't know. They will be in the best position to do battle with management.  What was the reaction of the intellectual body of ABU (particularly scholars from the North) before the rules were passed into law?  I dont know.  Perhaps northerm Muslim scholars like Jibrin Ibrahim would like to shed some light on this for us.

To be frank I haven't seen a full statement of the rules themselves but my guess which is as good as yours  is that they have Muslim religious bias.  The "sexism" and other biases follow from that.  Islamic cultural code is basically what it is.  What is sexist to a westernized sensibility us not sexist to an Islamic conscious woman who is committed to followung the dictates.   of the Quoran.

I have taken a multicutural English class where a Congolese Christian male tried to incite Somali Muslim ladies against their husbands by asking why they allowed the men take other wives.  They replied in my presence that they were not forced into any arrangement and they liked it like that!
I have been in a Methodist congregation in the US where the priest announced that here in the Church mother's take last ( it was supposed to be a dignified arrangement as opposed to the feminised environment of the outer American society of ladies first.)  Mothers in the church( with their daughters) enthusiastically  supported the priest.


ABU is in northern Nigeria.  The whole region has a dominant Muslim ethos.  We shall see how the new rules on dress codes stand up against youth multiculturalism of university life .  Only time will tell.

OAA



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: Femi Kolapo <kolapof@uoguelph.ca>
Date: 02/05/2019 03:25 (GMT+00:00)
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Ahmadu Bello University: Dress Code

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Some basic problems  of ethnocentricity, discrimination,  etc with some of these rules :

#3. tattered jeans and jeans with holes - [how many holes count? how about the number of tears?]

Besides, some poor students have and wear jeans that are "tattered" and "have holes" because they are poor, and not because they bought fashionable tattered jeans to flaunt. At some point in university, I used to be one such person.

#5. tight fitting jeans etc that reveal the contour of the body

scary especially for girls and ladies who might like to wear sweaters that natural hug the body or who like to wear dresses that are fitting rather than saggy. This especially because, going beyond forbidding exposure of sexualized body parts, it polices the clothed body! Even the form of the body, in its beauty or ugliness, should be hidden from view, presumably, because some men (perhaps women too) are unable to bring their hormones under control when they sight body contours even under a dress! For a federal institution in an urban multicultural city, this is scary. I can understand such a rule being "informally" enforced and actually naturally adhered to in conservative village settings.

#7. unkempt appearances, such as bushy hair and beards -  

who defines "unkempt" - whose standards are applied?

and how do you distinguish bushy hair and beards from culturally and religious preferred styles of body decoration acceptable to the Sikhs, and some mallams whose identities are partly based on leaving bushy beards? I remember reading a prominent northern Nigerian elder once not only criticizing Wole Soyinka's hair a bushy but concluded that anybody with such hairstyle had a problem which adjective used should not be repeated here! What ethnocentricity!

this rule condemns the Yoruba "dada" or the Rasta hairdo. I am sorry that the Rastafari might have been excluded from this campus if they are not exempted from the definition of "unkempt"

#11. shirts without buttons or not properly buttoned, leaving the wearer bare-chested.

there are regular fashion wears with inner pieces (covering all of the chest) but with tops that are not meant to be buttoned, some not having buttons or having decorative buttons without buttonholes(often times both inner and outer pieces are sewn together). They are very stylish, but far from indecent by any reasonable definition of decency.

#12. wearing of ear-ring by male students & 13. plaiting or weaving of hair by male students

both #12 & #13 are very ethnocentric. for example, male Shango worshippers are thereby not allowed simply because they choose to worship the Shango deity; many people group from Central Africa and East Africa who wear earrings irrespective of gender are excluded. Many Fulani youth, with some of the most artistic body ornamentation styles in West Africa, who use rings in their culture of decoration are penalized and excluded. Their human rights are denied.

#14. wearing of colored eye glasses in the classroom except on medical grounds

- except on security grounds, it is so ridiculous. This is creating a problem where there is none. How many students were such glasses in class in the first place? Insignificant. security is the only reasonable ground for such a rule.  Rulemaking old adult people should know that a stage of life called youth is real and should not be confused with their own staid elderhood! Religious people also should know and accept that there are people without religion or who have different religions - all of who are made, according to most religions, by the same Creator. They want to self-express themselves. It is natural and normal. The generation of my children call it "being cool". It is a stage. They soon pass over it. It does not make them dangerous or less serious or less God seeking.

#16. wearing trousers that stop between the ankle and the knee.

I have seen conservative Hausa pants that stop short of the ankle. I know young Islamic scholars in my neck of the wood who wear trousers that do not reach down to the knee, though with the white flowing gowns as the top. Their identity as Muslim cleric/scholars is actually partly defined by this type of dress, with a specific "alim" type cap to match. Would they be arrested if they come to ABU campus or let go?

Also, there is a particular dashiki type Yoruba hunter wear, which now has been turned into regular fashion ware, that has a pant that does not reach down to the ankle. I have one and wear it to Church and can wear to at a wedding or to a child's name-giving ceremony! That is how so proper it is. I will not be able to wear this were I to visit ABU! Ridiculous. Discriminatory. But being a man, I may actuall be allowed to go.

It's not just the body that is being policed here. Some of these rules police adolescence and youthfulness as a stage of life with its goals, its aspirations. They seek to sublimate youthfulness, vigour, style and class - all normal biological, physiological, and anthropological features of youthfulness and the youth! Mostly though, those who will come under the gavel are females. I can imagine the fashion police being helped by "radical" students to detain girls they deem to have contravened any of these rules based on whimsical interpretations! It is only too clear which of these rules will be enforced and on which gender the most.

Those who fashioned the policy did not seem to think beyond the specific moral code of their particular narrow denominational religious community. It does not show that the authors consulted ABU scholars - anthropologist or sociologist for suggestions. Perhaps they consulted some select religious scholars. Were representatives of students, staff, religious and non-religious people and lawyers, consulted before these rules were sanctioned by ABU? The author indicated in the document is  Management. Did these rules pass through the Senate of the university? Does NUC have a right to countermand those rules that contravene basic human right?

These rules give an indication that that great institution is closing in on itself as an intolerant conservative and exclusionary organization. A huge chunk of the human population, many who by any definition would consider themselves to be concerned with decency, are not welcome! Very scary. Very scary.

Even if security and basic decency requirements are allowed for the document's rationale, quite a few of these rules seem to be in contravention of peoples human right.  Most of them are exclusionary and clearly gender biased and religion laced. If they stand without modification, they portend future trouble for many hapless "non-compliant" students, staff, and visitor, especially, women - some select women. They would likely heighten division and non-native sense of insecurity on the campus.

Something much more reasonable, basic, legal and inclusive can certainly be devised to ensure basic decency than these poorly put together rules.

It will not be surprising if this ABU Management goes the whole hog and make all students wear uniforms and RENT out uniforms to all visitors to the campus. That would be a great way to satisfy the rules regarding dress.

/Femi Kolapo

From:usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com<usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of OLAYINKA AGBETUYI <yagbetuyi@hotmail.com>
Sent: Wednesday, May 1, 2019 1:32 PM
To:usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Ahmadu Bello University: Dress Code
 
Oga Michael:

I know there is a problem here between the demands on ABU as a FEDERAL university (as opposed to state or private institution.)  The event of town and gown as it relates to the cultural dictates of the environs of location of a university still matter.

Many easterners have issues with this as it applies to UI for instance.  These universities are located within specific regions and the intercourse between local community and university is unavoidable.  Local cultural tastes differ and must be respected.

Whereas hijab may not be anathema for ABU because of the cultural dictates up there it may be so for say UI & UNN.( some if my course mates in graduate school in the US for instance dressed in Middle East head dress aroynd campus ( Im not sure with full hijab but full hijab is now routinely comnon in the streets of London with slits only for eyeballs.)

You are right to be apprehensive about use of hijab up there but it IS a legitimate dress code up there ( for instance if the student is admitted for say Islamic studies)

This was the sensibility that informed hypocrite Sani Abacha  ( the one who allegedly died in the company of a prostitute )deciding that ladies who dressed in trousers in public in Abuja be flogged.  Only a dictator could go that far!

The founding Nigerian nationalists understood this very well when they stated each region should westernize at its own pace.  Students and parents who oppose ABUs decision (even if they are notherners) may choose to educate their wards in the South and the Middle Belt.That would be these regions manpower gains.  The demographic  osmosis or reflux will ensure they are vanguard for change in the North in the longer term.

This is the quirky thing about democracy no one can force others to develop at their own pace and people may choose other models apart from the western in any area of develooment.  Much part of the North prefers the Arabian cultural model if not fully but as counterpoint to the excesses of full western mode.  In a democracy they have the right to.  They may also choose to balance their Arabic preference with Chinese rather than western.

  In the South we are more comfortable with westernization but that's due to a long historic ( and continuing) engagement with the West rather than Saudi Arabia and the Middle East.

OAA



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: 'Michael Afolayan' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>
Date: 01/05/2019 10:03 (GMT+00:00)
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Ahmadu Bello University: Dress Code

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Please don't get me wrong, Okey. I am more conservative than you think and I have lived in America for almost four decades. I once sent one of my language/education students home when I went to observe him and he was wearing a pair of jean-pants while student-teaching even though with a nice shirt and standard tie. My student teachers must be professional. Even as a professor, I always visited them in complete suits, even to my discomfort and irritation, and I also did so when teaching them. But all these are commonsensical, not necessarily based on the Mosaic model of the "Ten Commandments." I think a generic announcement of "We expect our students to be decent in their grooming and public appearances" would be sufficient; and individual programs like education, law, medicine, etc., could have more specific guidelines for how their students' carry themselves in public. ABU should transcend this level of rustic simplicity. It's okay for a high school to do so or even some private religious institutions, but let's be real: this is just not good for an institution of ABU status.
MOA 


On Tuesday, April 30, 2019, 4:15:53 PM GMT+1, Okechukwu Ukaga <ukaga001@umn.edu> wrote:


My esteemed broda, I obviously disagree. In your so called civilized society, naked people are found in strip clubs and brothels, not on university campuses. If folks are unwilling to self regulate to maintain a minimum level of decency in terms of dressing, university has both the right and the responsibility to take appropriate steps. After all, university degrees are awarded not just for academic achievement but also character, etc. Notably, dress code is not unusual in universities, even in the West. When I was in school of business in the late 80s for my MBA, business students were expected and required to dress in ways consistent with our profession. So it is not unusual to see business students and law students going to classes, etc in more formal attire than say soil science students. And in some cases there are strict guidelines like no jeans, no sleepers, no T-shirts, etc. Isn't that a kind of dress code?  So even within the same university there is not only an expected minimum standard for the whole, but component units can have their own additional guidelines, norms and expectations. Before zeroing in on the last part of my contribution that you quoted here, you will do well to read and consider the preceding parts that formed the foundation for that last part.
Regards,
Okey

On Apr 29, 2019 5:18 PM, "'Michael Afolayan' via USA Africa Dialogue Series" <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> wrote:
". . . and if this is not the right means to that end, then what better options or strategies are available?" (Okechukwu Ukaga) 

No options or strategies needed to be explored over a bad idea. The dress code at a first generation public university does not belong in a civil society. Pure and simple!

MOA



On Sunday, April 28, 2019, 1:48:51 PM GMT+1, Okechukwu Ukaga <ukaga001@umn.edu> wrote:


Perhaps there should be a balance between allowing folks to come to school "naked" and "policing" how they dress. How do we strike that balance? If students, staff, faculty and administrators fail to self regulate, how is a university supposed to assure that balance? Beyond automatic condemnation of dress code, it would be helpful to understand what made such a policy necessary, what it is designed to achieve; and if this is not the right means to that end, then what better options or strategies are available? 
OU

On Apr 27, 2019 1:19 PM, "'Michael Afolayan' via USA Africa Dialogue Series" <usaafricadialogue@ googlegroups.com> wrote:
So, what is left? Women to wear hijab and men to dress like the Taliban folks. Great progress for a premier Nigerian university. So grotesque, it's not even funny!
MOA  




On Saturday, April 27, 2019, 6:05:50 PM GMT+1, Toyin Falola <toyinfalola@austin.utexas.edu> wrote:




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Okey C. Iheduru

Just published"The African Corporation, 'Africapitalism' and Regional Integration in Africa" (September 2018). DOI: https://doi.org/10.4337/9781785362538.

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USA Africa Dialogue Series - 37 Academic Job Vacancies at the University of Sydney, Australia - Scholarship & Career

USA Africa Dialogue Series - Article: On Nigeria's Regional Disparities

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Link: https://chidioparareports.blogspot.com/2019/05/article-on-nigerias-regional-disparities.html


From chidi opara reports


chidi opara reports is published as a social service by PublicInformationProjects

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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - FG Woos Herdsmen with N100b to Stop Kidnapping : Aiding a Terrorist Croup?

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Obinna,

The news report is highly detailed, stating where and when the meeting with MACBAN, the herdsmen's group, took place, the names of the members of the Nigerian govt and the MACBAN team, the comments of members of these teams and the comments of the state governor on the subject.

A news organisation presenting false information at such a level of specificity would open itself to a libel suit.

I have done my duty in presenting this piece of information to this group.

It is the responsibility of anyone interested in he well being of Nigerians to do further investigation and  analysis of this terrible turn of affairs in Nigerian history.

Toyin

On Sun, 5 May 2019 at 01:59, Obinna . <bizmen@hotmail.com> wrote:
Is this N100bn really true or just speculation or fake news? - how credible is Daily Mail online ... ? Or is this just another case of news that is created to feed biases and escalate tensions ..

 



From:usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com<usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju <toyin.adepoju@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, May 4, 2019 11:18 AM
To: usaafricadialogue
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - FG Woos Herdsmen with N100b to Stop Kidnapping : Aiding a Terrorist Croup?
 

FG woos herdsmen with N100b to stop kidnapping as delegation meets in Kebbi

FG woos herdsmen with N100b to stop kidnapping as delegation meets in Kebbi

May 3, 201917123


In a bizarre fashion, the Federal Government has thrown a huge carrot at the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria, MACBAN, by offering it  N100 billion over two years to stop kidnapping in the country.


The Federal Government delegation was led by the Minister of Interior, Abdul-Rahman Dambazau, and met with MACBAN leaders on Friday. It was a closed door meeting which lasted for over five hours as monetary negotiations according to a source dragged on until N100 billion was accepted.


MACBAN had said it would take nothing less than N160 billion. But briefing news men after the meeting the exhausted Minister said, the "gathering is part of steps we have taken to tackle insecurity and clashes between herdsmen and farmers."


"You should not forget the fact that we have extended the meeting as a regional one when the Economic Community of West African Countries hosted a conference on this. "These issues were discussed, and part of the dialogue was to provide a national action plan on security challenges and solutions by all members of the ECOWAS commission, and to present it to the commission for consideration. "That is the main reason we have come to Kebbi State, to dialogue with leaders of herdsmen as part of the process,'' Danbazzau said.


Herdsmen have been on rampage since 2015 at the ascension of Mr Muhammadu Buhari as Nigeria's President pillaging, sacking, rapping and kidnapping for ransom which always lead to deaths. The orgy of kidnapping has made major national roads especially in the North West impassable. The Abuja/Kaduna road is one major road that has been affected.


Daily Mail reports that the herdsmen also attacked and killed many people in villages and farms in Benue, Zamfara, Plateau, Nasarawa, Kogi, Kaduna, Enugu, Imo, Cross River, Edo, Delta, Abia, Kwara, Taraba, Osun, Ondo, Sokoto and others.


The killings associated with the fulani herdsmen led to the group designation as the fourth most dangerous and deadly terrorist group in the world by the World Terrorist Index.


Also at the meeting was the Acting Inspector General of Police, Alhaji Muhammad Adamu, who few days ago gave a grim picture of the havoc being wrecked on Nigerins by the herdsmen. While nothing that over one thousand people had been killed and a lot more kidnapped in Kaduna, he noted in Bernin Kebbi that, "The criminals have infiltrated the crisis, and we should cooperate and deal decisively with the culprits, hence we called for this interaction. "Those criminals that are beyond redemption, will be dealt with and brought to book," Adamu said.


On his position, the State Governor, Atiku Bagudu, said hosting the meeting in his state "shows the seriousness of President Muhammadu Buhari's administration in tackling the security challenges in the country." Responding, the President of MACBAN, Alhaji Muhammad Kiruwa, said, "This is the first of its kind in the history of this country, for the president to direct his security aides to interact with an aggrieved party to air its views. "This meeting will serve as a foundation for peace between the Fulani herdsmen and farmers; and among the Fulanis themselves," Kiruwa said.


News Agency of Nigeria noted that other members of the Federal Government delegation at the meeting include: Alh. Yusuf Bichi, Director-General (D-G) Department of State Security Services, Alh Ahmed Rufa'I, D-G, National Intelligence Agency; among others.

 

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USA Africa Dialogue Series - jumoyin@gmail.com

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greetings, doc.how are you and yours?

 i dont recall receiving any acceptance letter although i wonder how relevant my abstract is to the theme of the conference since i did not give myself time to fine tune it to the specific conference theme.

 if one's abstract is not accepted, one could attend as a general participant.

On Sat, 4 May 2019 at 22:41, Jumoke, Ola <jumoyin@gmail.com> wrote:

The 9th Toyin Falola Annual International Conference on Africa and the African Diaspora (TOFAC 2019)

https://babcock.edu.ng/tofac/index.php

 

Theme:Religion, The State and Global Politics

Venue: Babcock University, Ilishan-Remo, Ogun State, Nigeria

Date: July 1-3, 2019 (arrival, June 30; departure, July 4th)

 

Conference Information Update No. 1.

Dear Conference Participants,

Congratulations on being one of the more than 350 scholars whose abstracts have been accepted for TOFAC 2019! This conference promises to be an outstanding experience and to keep the tradition of warm, stimulating and enjoyable TOFAC conferences that have held in various universities across Africa. As we make final preparations to welcome you to Babcock University, Nigeria's premier and best private university, situated in a serene, clean and crisp natural environment, please kindly take note of the following information:

Acceptance letters: We have sent acceptance letters to all whose abstracts were received by the submissions deadline. Please do notify us if you have not received yours; we would be glad to re-send it to you.

Registration and payment: The registration fee for Nigerian scholars remains N17,500, and N10,000 for students with valid and current ID cards. All international participants pay $100 and will receive registration information separately. This fee covers admission to all plenaries and panels, lunch and tea-break for three days, conference materials, the conference banquet, participation in social events, and transportation from hotels to conference venue. The deadline for payment is 31 May 2019.

Late Registration: A non-negotiable late registration fee of N2,500 is applicable to both scholars and students who register from 1 June 2019, including any on-site payments made at the conference venue.

Bank Payment Details: Nigeria-based participants are to pay registration fees in naira into the following account and obtain a bank teller or payment receipt clearly showing the name of the conference participant and the amount paid.

Account Name: BU Veronica Adeleke School of Social Sciences

Account No: 1014485614

Bank name: Zenith Bank

Please do not make registration payment by USSD (bank #000# code) as only payments with a printable receipt will be acknowledged. Kindly note that bank SMS alerts are not acceptable as evidence of payment.

International participants are expected to pay in US Dollars. Those whose abstracts are accepted will receive information concerning payment method.

Co-authors: Each individual attending the conference is required to pay for their own participation, independently of whether or not their proposed paper is co-authored. This is because each person is only entitled to the above full benefits when fully registered as an individual.

Conference Program: The conference program currently features an opening ceremony, plenaries and other technical sessions, three keynote addresses, several special roundtables, a conference banquet, social events, tourism, movies, and many more. The full draft program will be circulated very soon, at which point you will have the opportunity to make any corrections concerning your paper presentations before we go to press. We will give you more program details in subsequent information updates too.

Conference Keynote Addresses: The confirmed keynote speakers are:

a)     Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah, Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Sokoto, Nigeria

b)    Professor Abdul Karim Bangura, Researcher-in-Residence of Abrahamic Connections and Islamic Peace Studies, American University Centre for Global Peace, Washington DC, USA

c)     Professor Ibigbolade Aderibigbe, The University of Georgia, Athens, USA.

Paper Presentations: Projectors will be available for presenters wishing to make PowerPoint or other visual presentations. Please be sure to bring your own laptop as well as a flash drive as backup in case of compatibility issues.

Publication of papers: This is to confirm that we have every plan in place for quality conference papers to be published after post-conference review and re-submission.

Full Papers Submission: Initial drafts should be submitted by 31 May 2019. For publication consideration, corrected/final drafts are expected latest by one month after the conference, 5 August 2019 for reviews to commence. All papers must be original, with 6,000-8,000 word count, and should follow the APA 6th edition citation style.

Accommodation: There are three categories of accommodation available for this conference:

 

(1)   Babcock student hostels

Very decent, shared en-suite rooms, N2,000-N5,000/night

(2)   Babcock Guest House (BGH): 

Twin Room      @  - N23,000.00

Deluxe 1          @ -  N25,000.00

Deluxe 2          @ -  N20,000.00

Standard Room @  - N12,000.00

(3)   Hotels in nearby towns (transportation provided):

·         SAGAMU:

(i)                             CONFERENCE HOTEL, SAGAMU - www.conferencehotelnigeria.com

Luxury Room   @  -     N18,000.00

Regent Room  @  -     N20,000.00

Diplomatic      @  -     N22,000.00

(ii)                           NANDAS HOTEL – www.nandashotelnigeria.com

Deluxe Room  @  -     N19,000.00

Superior Room @  -    N27,000.00     

(iii)                         CITIZENS SUITES – enquiry@citizenssuites.com

Deluxe Room  @  -     N17,000.00     

Standard Room @  -   N13,000.00

(iv)                          LIPTON HOTEL           

Deluxe Room @  -     N10,000.00

Standard Room@ -     N7,000.00       

·         ILISHAN-REMO :

(v)                            HAVILLA GUEST HOUSE

Deluxe Room @  -  N8,000.00                      

Standard Room @  -  N12,000.00

(vi)                          BU HIGH SCHOOL Guest House @  -  N5,000.00                   

…..

Please contact the Conference Logistics Director, Dr Victor Adesiyan (+234-806-091-6448; avictoy@gmail.com) with your choice and questions.

Airport Pick Up/ Drop-off (for international participants only)

We are making arrangements to pick up international participants arriving at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport (MMIA) Lagos between June 29 and 30, 2019 only. We will also drop off international participants leaving between July 3 and 4 only. International participants who would like airport pickup/drop-off must supply us with their travel itineraries as soon as they make their travel arrangements, and certainly no later than two weeks before the conference start date. Participants whose flights arrive later than 4.00pm on any of the given days should plan to sleep over at a hotel in Lagos at their own expense. We would be happy to provide any needed information to participants arriving outside the conference pickup dates and time. Please contact the Logistics Director, Dr Victor Adesiyan for this.

Conference Website: Please visit the conference website for regular updates and information, at: https://babcock.edu.ng/tofac/index.php.

***     ***     ***

We will keep you updated about other developments going forward. If there is any way at all that we can make your conference experience more pleasurable, please do let us know right ahead of time, and we will try our best. You can reach us by email at tofac2019@babcock.edu.ng or tofac2019@gmail.com, and by phone at the numbers below.

Best wishes,

TOFAC 2019 Local Organising Committee:

*      Convener: Dr Olajumoke Yacob-Haliso, Dean, Veronica Adeleke School of Social Sciences (VASSS), Babcock University; tofac2019@babcock.edu.ng or jumoyin@gmail.com

*      Co-Convener: Professor Mobolanle E. Sotunsa, Coordinator, Babcock University Gender and African Studies Group (BUGAS); bolasotunsa@yahoo.com

*      LoC Chair: Dr Jane Adebusuyi, (+234-803-326-6754)

*      LoC Secretary: Dr Uduak Edy-Ewoh, tofac2019@babcock.edu.ng or tofac2019@gmail.com, (+234-812-908-9044)

*    LoC Logistics Director: Dr Victor Adesiyan, avictoy@gmail.com, (+234-806-091-6448)

Olajumoke Yacob-Haliso, PhD
Department of Political Science and Public Administration,
PMB 4010, 
Babcock University, 
Ogun State, Nigeria.
"Intelligence plus character -- that is the goal of true education" - Martin Luther King, Jr.



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USA Africa Dialogue Series - My Days in Court: Travails and Hullabaloos in a Nigerian University

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My Days in Court
Travails and Hullabaloos in a University
"In so far as the examinations are conducted according to the university rules and regulations and duly approved and ratified by the university senate, the court has no jurisdiction in the matter. A court of law which dabbles or flirts into the arena of university examinations, a most important and sensitive aspect of university function should remind itself that it has encroached into the bowels of university authority. Such a court should congratulate itself of being party to the destruction of the university and that will be bad not only for the university but also for the entire nation."

That's the Supreme Court of Nigeria saying its hands were tied even against the weight of the evidence, by declining jurisdiction in a matter bordering on the very process the court intended to preserve. Here the court is not saying that the student did not deserve his hard earned certificate, since the due process of postgraduate examination was satisfactorily followed, rather that the process followed at University of Agriculture Makurdi for student Magit, though manifestly flawed ipso facto, simply did not matter. This implies that the court was not favourably disposed to overrule the university on matters of postgraduate examination, even if it was clear that the student had been victimized on malicious grounds, as is obvious in the case of Magit. Therefore, the collateral damage is done forever, given the role of Supreme Court as the final arbiter humanly available – collateral because, in fairness to the trio of Umeh, Njike and Gyang, I as the student's supervisor was the primary target intended to be nailed down by them, not student Magit.

Nonetheless, the verdict of Supreme Court in this case is worrisome regarding the plight of the Magits of this world facing oppression in malicious circumstances and at the hand of university authorities. Here I rest my case, as the farthest limit of a supervisor's ability to defend his innocent student has now been reached. The journey was truly tortuous, and strenuous, from the High Court to the Appeal Court and finally to Supreme Court of the land. At this stage, I am but only spirit-bound, to turn over the rest of the matter to the Supreme Being, Almighty God for Him to judge between the righteous and the wicked in the matter of fundamental human right enforcement at the instance of the victim, student Magit and the villain, lecturer Umeh and his associates.

 http://www.bookayoolamydaysincourt.com


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USA Africa Dialogue Series - Exploring the History of the Alliance between the the Right Wing Fulani Led Nigerian Govt and Fulani Herdsmen Terrorists : A Debate on a 2016 Massacres by the Terrorist Group

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Ikechukwu Obi [ Facebook. Click on date of post to reach  original post] 

AN END MUST BE PUT TO THIS FULANI ARROGANCE NOW!

I'm terribly angry this morning. Extremely angry.

The Miyetti Allah Association visited the Chief of Defence Staff yesterday and as I listened to a sound bite from their leader, one Senator Jegeri Alkali, I felt my blood growing hot. My face reddened and I couldn't believe my ears!

These bloody murderers didn't even bother to deny the murders they committed! They had the effrontery to look Nigeria's Chief of Defence Staff and justify all the violence the Fulani herdsmen have carried out.

My goodness!!!

So one can kill Nigerians, pay a visit to the highest serving member of Nigeria's armed forces, look him in the eye and admit to those killings albeit giving excuses! What a failed state!

I think this lays to rest all the stupid denials that have been put up by their defenders on social media. Some of you are inherently evil and should hide your faces in shame...and of course, you know that's why I don't respect you. That's why I give free rein to foul language when you start defending open evil. You're utterly shameless, I swear!

Now, let's look at their excuses for murder.
1) Desertification: If nature has chased you away from your traditional abode, what gives you the right to kill off other people and take their land? Do you think the owners of those lands have no nature challenges they're dealing with without killing your own people?

2) Cattle rustling as justification for carrying arms: Why are Nigerians who have suffered loss from armed robbery not also carrying arms? Why are Nigerians who have lost relatives to armed gangs not also carrying arms and killing everybody in sight?

3) Population explosion has wiped out old grazing areas: If population has increased, whose land do you now wish to take when you drift Southwards? And what gives you the right to kill off local populations to take their lands?
So seeking grazing lands has now become a valid excuse for genocide? Ha! Ha! Ha!

4) The Fulani value their cattle because it is represents all their wealth: Who told you the lands the Fulani are taking do not represent all the wealth of the local peoples? So, by your books, the life of a human being is equated to the life of a cow? Ha! Then we ought not to be in the same country, period!

5) Nigerians love meat and the 20m heads of cattle provide that meat: I've never been more insulted in my life as a Nigerian. Whaaat! Ah, now I see reason to join the #boycottbeef campaign. What an egregious insult! It clearly suggests that eating beef today is akin to eating human blood.

Listening to that Sen. Alkali, I heard a most grating arrogance, a most aggravating sense of entitlement and an extremely annoying tone of "what-can-Nigerians-do-to-us". 
So this is it, eh? So this is the open declaration of war that some of us have suspected all this while, huh?

I think it is clear to even the worst cynic that Nigeria is sailing in boiling waters and headed for a port of perdition. I'm sure ethnic groups are already putting on their life-jackets (read bulletproofs). Enough said.

Comments
  • Eric Uchenna Chimara
    Eric Uchenna Chimara When we call them the chosen race and the born to rule, you guys termed us bigots.
  • Lazarus Obinna
    Lazarus Obinna I guess you have seen why i wrote an article some days back with the caption: ETHNIC SUPREMACY.

    For those of you who still beleive in one indivisible Nigeria, Continue.
  • Ikechukwu Obi
    Ikechukwu Obi @Eric: The urge to eat my breakfast died after listening to that arrogant bastard on the radio this morning.
    Whaaaaaaat! I couldn't believe my ears!
    So this is it? Well...
  • Innocent Chinedum Onwuka
    Innocent Chinedum Onwuka Eric Uchenna Chimara. Chosen race for their kind of people not for the rest of the country. This is another case of ISIS. People who does not have respect for another human life especially if that is not a moslem. The moron at the helm is just an empty brain
  • Rimanskep Andekin Roland
    Rimanskep Andekin Roland I beg chop ooo. 

    Desertification: there is a green belt project they should tell Buhari to pursue it
  • Chukwuma Eze
    Chukwuma Eze They are nothing but bunch of arrogant idiots.
  • Ja'afar Baba Muhammad ...You ought not to be in the same country, then run, it's that simple!
    Hide 15 replies
    • Ikechukwu Obi
      Ikechukwu Obi I ought not to be in the same country does NOT mean I want to leave. That's plain English, isn't it?

      And isn't it strange that that was all you saw in the post? Typical!
    • Okiemute Paul
      Okiemute Paul Same arrogance.
    • Joseph Eleke
      Joseph Eleke @Ikechukwu....what did u expect to hear from one of them? Are u suprised?
    • Austine K Chidi
      Austine K Chidi Public display of arrogance and insanity. Not your fault. Just matter of time.
    • Nzeakor Atulomah
      Nzeakor Atulomah The apple hardly falls far from the tree, does it?
    • Chinedu Anayokafor
      Chinedu Anayokafor Shame on you!
    • Nwachukwu Maduabuchi Davids
      Nwachukwu Maduabuchi Davids Na the same people!
    • Ja'afar Baba Muhammad I know you definitely will react, someone aired his views, I bet none of you commenting read all he said, but as usual, that's all you wanted to hear to lose your fragile temper. The Fulanis may be arrogant but not dishonest and dubious, just have to dSee more
    • Abubakar Liman
      Abubakar Liman After all, can he prove it that the people were actually attack by fulani herdmen? Is sad when u read comments from people that claim to be educated and how the reason.
    • Chukwuemeka Alphonsus
      Chukwuemeka Alphonsus Guys please ignore this folks they are just who they are and will never change we should be thinking of how best to deal with the issues at hand now. Since we cannot trust the government any longer to secure lives and properties we must collectively deSee more
    • Nnamani Onyekachy
      Nnamani Onyekachy @ Ja'afar and @ Abubakar....... you guys should just log out of this life please. You both are the disgusting example of what is wrong with Nigeria. Just imagine? >:O
    • Onyedikachi Mitchel Ibeji
      Onyedikachi Mitchel Ibeji You are asking for prove, while the senator is giving reason for such impunity. By listing all those reasons for the killings, are trying to say he was stupid for not having enough proves before venting or what?

      @abubakar, the educated one pls answer.
    • Joseph Eleke
      Joseph Eleke What did u guys expect from killers himself? He has made u guys to know where he came from and what he stood for.
    • Akin A. Ajose-Adeogun
      Akin A. Ajose-Adeogun Abubakar Liman, you lack common humanity and a sense of justice. May you also experience what the victims of this genocide are experiencing.
    • Akin A. Ajose-Adeogun
      Akin A. Ajose-Adeogun Ja'afar Baba Muhammad, you lack common humanity and a sense of justice. May you also experience what the victims of this genocide are experiencing.
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Francis Akpaekong
    Francis Akpaekong We foresaw this and warned, but no one listened.
  • Ezuruike Nneka Joy
  • Ezeh Pius
    Ezeh Pius No ethnic group is superior to other,fulani are cowards who attack at night
  • Daniel Emenike
    Daniel Emenike Me i'm not against them or what they want or stand for. But they must keep off South East/South South And all Southern states. Even if they want to take over all the North for their precious cows that is their business. I rest my case
  • Iyke Onyeabor
    Iyke Onyeabor This thoughts are worth sharing though, thanks.
    All of you go and share this on your walls. Takia
  • Ikechukwu Obi
    Ikechukwu Obi Lazarus Obinna: Bros, I believe in one united Nigeria but it has to be on negotiated terms and not this useless unitary type of state where people are murdered for no other reason but their being non-Fulani.
    • Joseph Eleke
      Joseph Eleke U believed in "One" united nigeria abi, then u are still living in illusion cos nigeria will never be united talk more of being "One".....#hardtruth so wake up.
    • Abubakar Liman
      Abubakar Liman U? I doubt much. May be in another life.
  • Alfred Okechukwu Ogu
    Alfred Okechukwu Ogu it is unbelievable
  • Alvin Lovin
    Alvin Lovin When some of us call for the release of Nnamdi kanu,everybody thinks it's because we want Biafra...BUT NO,we want justice...

    How can a section of the country do whatever they want and go free while those considered to be from a conquered region of the same country be punished for speaking their mind? 


    There is injustice in this land and where there is injustice,claiming to be one is a LIE...
  • Mazi Amuruonyenaego
    Mazi Amuruonyenaego Ikechukwu Obi you guys keep on believe in one Nigeria while fulani goes around killing our people.
  • Stpaul Abianulia
    Stpaul Abianulia Add there response to IGP at the meeting about Agatu Genocide....
    It is becoming clear
  • Enyioha Tochi TeCk
    Enyioha Tochi TeCk So they value there cows than our lives (I see)... They should let us be (south south/south east) because, if they push us to retaliate this beef then they should be expecting full cow.. (Hope say dem fit finish am oo)
  • Emmanuel Ogbeche
  • Ebunu Nnachi Cfr
    Ebunu Nnachi Cfr I wrote somewhere yesterday that ( from the look of things) if a fulani herdman's cow gets missing or is stolen by unknown persons in a village or an area where you live, simply pack yourself (and your family if you have one) away from the place until the cattle is found. The violence their militias visit on innocent persons are getting everyone worried.
    • Joseph Eleke
      Joseph Eleke ..........then we should keep runing from one place to the other because of them abi? After killing us up north and we ran home, we should also packed our belonging and run away from our homes too? Igbos sef........our forefathers wasn't like this so we should look inwards to find solution cos with these always runing up and down, the carnage will continue cos they felt we are afread of them. #Puretruth.
    • Ebunu Nnachi Cfr
      Ebunu Nnachi Cfr Joe, i reject being a coward!! Lol. 
      Anyway, my comment is meant to be a sarcastic one. 
      Udo.
  • Stephen Adinoyi
  • Joseph Eleke
    Joseph Eleke Right from onset, is there anything like "One" nigeria before? If some of u still believed in this illusion called One nigeria, i guess you are digging your grave too early. Nigeria is another version of sodom and gomorah just that she found herself onSee more
  • Valentine Okache
    Valentine Okache This is so sad.
  • Charles Ogbu Lol! Make I follow Uncle OBJ laugh small.

    When we dey talk this thing dey shout on top our voices, una think say we just dey talk because we get access to internet. 


    These Fulani vampires looked our no1 police officer -Solomon Arase in the face and told him face to face.....kolokolo...no be for film oooo....that they killed Agatu villagers to avenge their over 1000 cows killed by the Agatu people. They told him this in a so called reconciliatory meeting the I.G P organized between them and the Agatu people after they killed over 500 villagers there.

    Did the I.G arrest any of them???

    Imagine a govt organizing a reconciliatory meeting between a gang of blood sucking terrorists and the family of their victims??? Imagine that nonsense!!!

    When I say that the impunity with which these Fulani beasts operate is state-sponsored, politically correct folks call me bigot.

    E don set nah!
  • Alex Odemena
    Alex Odemena They should be demystified aslo. People believe that they have charms that makes them invisible and can turn them to stones or other inanimate object as they wished.Even other non fulani northerners believes this.
    • Nwevo Osibe Nwevo
      Nwevo Osibe Nwevo No, it has nothing to do with their charms. If so, why did they not try all these nonsense during OBJ or GEJ regime? Abi their charm dey work only when one of them dey power?

      The only thing that is embolden them now is that they feel that their brother is in power and thus are assured of state-cover.
    • Alex Odemena
      Alex Odemena It is just a false believe that furthers their impunity
  • Bigman Eluojo Onwudinjo
    Bigman Eluojo Onwudinjo Thats to show you the shit Nigeria is in! But the painful part is that when it happened, some stupid and foolish Southerners were giving a thousand and one reason why they believe the lunatics arent Fulani herdsmen, and how the whole thing was arranged by Igbos to tarnish Buhari's image! Do you blame the lunatics when they kill more??? #SMH
  • Joseph Eleke
    Joseph Eleke Please if u've not come close to #ABUJADECLARATION1989.... please just go ahead and google it now.

    Their actions on u is not planned today or under the present adminitration, it's way back.


    Remember what their forefather Usman Dan Fodio told them in his speech back in the days. 

    My problem here is that nigeria version of christianity is not like that of Isrealites. 

    We always wait to be killed before we rant endlessly over and over again. 
    We claimed we are even holier than the pope himself yet wait for God or call his name on everything that we suppose to solve with comon bare hands as if we are the only one created by him.
    ...................southerners, when are you going to speak with one voice, unify yourselves and fight for one purpose instead of waiting for someone to anihiliate you and family before acting?

    Is it until u all get killed through modern genocide? 

    .....i see,,,, una weldone oo
  • Agnes Ekpenyong Okon
    Agnes Ekpenyong Okon I say blood for blood
  • Theophilus Cornerstone Okonofua
    Theophilus Cornerstone Okonofua Whoever is looking in the direction of regional emancipation or geopolitical secession will be speaking the obvious. Naija don tire many pple.
  • Zuo Zuokumor
    Zuo Zuokumor I was labelled a tribalist...

    I was labelled a bigot...


    I was label to be islamaphobic ..

    All because I predicted the happenings today.
    I predicted... Their true nature.
    I was thrown out of groups..
    I was abused and scorned at by my southern people..
    I was told to have an open mind...

    I was told to separate religion and politics...
    I was told to be tolerant of other tribes..

    BUT SEE NOW......IT IS BACK TO THE DRAWING BOARD FOR ME TO LECTURE THE SO CALLED EDUCATED FOOLS...that tribalism, religion and politics in the north are triplets from a single mother called EVIL...!!!
  • Prevailer Lovless Morningstar
    Prevailer Lovless Morningstar I won't waste my comment on what a murderous Ohanaeze criminal has posted You are just an agent provocateur
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Obinna Ohalete
    Obinna Ohalete They claim their sambisa forest is bigger than the south east,I just wonder why that space is not enough for them!
  • Emmanuel Acha
    Emmanuel Acha Biafra Oduduwa Arewa is the answer Lets not pretend about it
  • Stephen Ade-Lawal
    Stephen Ade-Lawal Ikechukwu Obi my brother. Please lets just continue to defend and protect our own individual lives and families from these vampires. Its obvious we've got no government to defend our course and protect our lives from prey. The worse is that, the bulk of our own people are still deep in their slumber of an utopian One-Nigeria outside the practice of Justice, Equity and fairness to all. For those of us who had forewarned against all these, we have done our civic duties; the rest is for posterity.
    • Bethel Chidozie
      Bethel Chidozie Yoruba And Their Hypocrisy! Have U Stopped Hating The Igbo?
    • Stephen Ade-Lawal
      Stephen Ade-Lawal Bethel Chidozie, that was the most stupid comment of the day you just made. Look through and thoroughly too before you comment. Such as your stupid comment is the bane of our unity problems in Southern Nigeria.
    • Okonkwo Osamedua Allen
      Okonkwo Osamedua Allen We cant protect our individual lives and families my brother, else we will all perish individually. It seemed that many of us predicted this same evil days long ago and yet nobody listened- Now i understood why Prophets of old were not taken seriously. Nevertheless, these fulani would be shocked by the the level of resistance they would encounter this time. I shall say it again- great evil move in the shadows now and until we form a formidable force united against them, we will be overwhelmed. But i see these fulanis being vaquished
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Kent Olayemi Olaleye
    Kent Olayemi Olaleye I had long lost fate in the government of Nigeria since the 3rd year of the Obasanjo regime. It is unfortunate that the enlightened ones amongst Nigerians sat back with the mindset that politics is a dirty game and allowed all these riff-raffs take over our political environment and inadvertently take over the country. The only solution to all the ills that assail us is for everyone to get deeply involved in politics in their wards all across the nation. The earlier we make this move and then take over the political platforms from all the parties, thereby putting a permanent stop to the fraud called imposition of candidates by god-fathers, and effect a gradual replacement of ALL politicians from councillor-ship level in the wards up to the senate, the better for this country. We have the numerical strength to achieve this and if we want to totally free in this country, then this is a must do for all of us! Let's take back Nigeria from these senseless leaders please!! Get ready for 2019!!!
    • Osama Ighodaro
      Osama Ighodaro Permission to copy and post.
    • Kent Olayemi Olaleye
    • Joseph Eleke
      Joseph Eleke And u think it's possible ? 

      With all these wealth they've acumulated over the years from me and you which belong to all us? 

      With corruption as a sign post right here in nigeria? 

      With tribalism as an identity/ flagship everywhere u go in nigeria ? 
      With religion as arrow head here? Now, with born to rule atitude from those who believed they owned nigeria? 

      And you think that what u wrote up there is possible in this century? Hahaha
      Comon! let's get some senses into our heads before commenting on national issues because the above statement is not fissible at all.

      They would rather die than allowing anyone take over the position the've been enjoying since the creation of nigeria.

      #Nigeria is irreedeemable take it or leave i so the ealier u prepare your mind the better. 
      #hardtruth.
    • Kent Olayemi Olaleye
      Kent Olayemi Olaleye Joseph Eleke, the first sense we must get into our heads is that nothing is impossible. If you think something is not possible, you have already lost before even starting. This set of Nigerians are not needed in the Nigeria of today. Any Nigeria that thinks Nigeria is irredeemable should please leave Nigeria for us and move to any country of their choice. We don't need people who will drag us back in the battle to save Nigeria with their type of negative mindset. Things are VERY BAD. But to think that this country can't be saved is an attitude that bothers on sabotage!
    • Kent Olayemi Olaleye
      Kent Olayemi Olaleye Practice love to have more love, practice hate to have more hate. Practice kindness to have more kindness, practice depression to have more depression. The choice is yours as always.
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Anthony Eze Okwumó-nsô
    Anthony Eze Okwumó-nsô Of course, you don't need a soothsayer to tell you that Nigeria is long gone. Only novice people will loose their properties and wealth, Clever ones have long made arrangements to protect theirs.
  • Eberechukwu Ikemenogo
    Eberechukwu Ikemenogo What did the chief of Defense staff do after that self indictment? Nigeria, a failed state. Period!
  • Mercy Attih
    Mercy Attih Whaaaaaat! Is it not the population explosion that the north benefits from in times of voting for a Fulani idiot like Buhari. ..? ....does the northern population help any region other than the northern part of Nigeria. ...may God punish Buhari and hisSee more
    No photo description available.
  • Ja'afar Baba Muhammad Biafra wall, spreading hate, lies and mischief! Self acclaimed civilized folks still reeling from the pain of losing election. Spare me the hypocrisy of loving your own people and thinking ahead of others when worse things have been said and done to your kind, by your kind yet you kept mute. Forming one's own country or breaking away from the existing one is very simple in modern times, do the needful and stop harassing our intelligence with ancient songs of victimisation. A Senator was reported to have said stuff you don't like all hell was let loose on SM, you want to fight, go kidnap the Senator or any Fulani leader of repute to compensate for the damages caused by his brethren. Go get referendum, time is ripe, reorganise your polity and rule over your clans. Some Senator talks, not all is reported, you picked some issues and begin to rant, what for? Even those who have lost thousands in an avoidable war supervised by Ihejirika under Jona's command ain't insulting anybody but doing all that's necessary to restore peace and stability. You've everything at your disposal right? Use them please, so we can have peace or war, not threats.
    • Ebubechukwu Chukwujekwu
      Ebubechukwu Chukwujekwu Oga, your whole write up is incomprehensible. Didn't you study lexis and structures, grammar etc in school. Anyway I guess you are a product of quota system and national character. If not for that am sure you would not be on Facebook but would rather be tending to your cattle as a nomad. Please go back to school
    • Ja'afar Baba Muhammad Hahaha! when you run short of ideas, that's how you react, what structure or lexis do you have in Igbo? Speak of what you know or just sit by and watch. I'll rather remain a nomad all life than an imbecile who can't differentiate his right from left!
    • Chioma Jeff Amaechi
      Chioma Jeff Amaechi He listed what your Fulani elites are giving as excuses to murder, maim and destroy people in their own land ....after all the claims that these marauders are not Fulani....and now you call it spread of hate?? Please who is hating who???. 

      We have alw
      ays known that the herdsmen are too poor to own the cattle and do not have the resources for the kind of firearms they carry. So these idiots visited the top security officer of the nation and acknowledged such crimes giving reason and it is ok right...because they are your people?? #May calamity overtake every supporter of evil!!
    • Ja'afar Baba Muhammad Amen, to your prayer, it doesn't matter where the evil is supported whether it's Abia, Sambisa, Onitsa or anywhere else in the world.
    • Chioma Jeff Amaechi
      Chioma Jeff Amaechi Ja'afar Baba Muhammad Yes, any supporter of evil deserves calamity in hundred folds measure!! Enough of all the blood shed!!
    • Ibeawuchi George Ogueri
      Ibeawuchi George Ogueri Ja'afar Baba Muhammad, you should try and address issues head on. Lumping the ills of others doesnt make what tje fulanis are doing right. The effrontery is mimd boggling, who does that? 
      If you follow my responses you will notice that i say things as 
      See more
    • Ja'afar Baba Muhammad What atrocities are there to condemn? I haven't seen a criminal arrested and put on trial yet you're asking me to just jump the gun and condemn everybody bearing the name Fulani or Herd man. Does it make sense to you? How can an educated people claim ignorance of crime investigation, detection and prevention?
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Ikechukwu Mathew
    Ikechukwu Mathew Ikechukwu Obi I thought you stand by buhari we said it but someof you think is a joke now you are here complaining
  • Mazi Maduabuchi Onye-eze
    Mazi Maduabuchi Onye-eze I can't believe my eyes when I saw it at first. It seems i did not read the post correctly. I tried re reading it up side down to understand it. Heehhhh!!! Uwa na acho imebi. Ka owu na omebiela. 
    Asiwaju Egombute Onyeuwaoma clicked like on a post that trashed his Fulani brothers. It is finished. 


    I ThankGod for making me see this ooo!!!
  • Akindele Onaolapo
    Akindele Onaolapo Hehehehe. See twisting. If you like go and steal fulani cow or kill one. You go suffer. Why shld fulani not complain against cattle rustling. Bishop asked you to retaliate against fulani without assurance that they are the criminal. Fayose threatened to poison waters to kill fulani. Why shld fulani not retaliate against those killing them too?
    • Nnamdi Ekweogu
      Nnamdi Ekweogu Are you saying Olu Falae rustled cattle, before he was abducted and his farm destroyed? *smh
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Lola Adekanye
    Lola Adekanye Let's not politicize everything and blindly allocate blame! Buhari is not Nigeria's problem! Nigerians collectively are Nigeria's problem! Does the president need to tell a law enforcement officer what his duty to the Nigerian people is? over time we set very low expectations for performing law enforcement duty and public service generally thanks to corruption or did it start in 2015 when Buhari became president? We need to #takebacknigeria
    • Josiah N. Izuchukwu
      Josiah N. Izuchukwu @Lola, just thinking on your post in defence of buhari. The first question I asked myself is "who appointed these security chiefs? What is the role of a President in a country where hundreds of lives were lost? Poor attention and non challant attitude of the President in this situation portrays ineptitude and poor leadership. Can you still defend him when these barbaric animals attack your village and kill your loved ones? Pls try to be rational and remove ethnic hatred. We're one entity.
    • Lola Adekanye
      Lola Adekanye Josiah N. Izuchukwu I take strong exception to being accused of ethnic hatred and for the record my post was not meant to defend Buhari but to out the spot light on the real problem we face which is weak institutions. Presidents have come and gone before Buhari yet law enforcement and defense institutions have become less competent and unable to serve the people - more on this point later if you care. 

      Before you accuse me of ethnic hatred and lack of objectivity maybe if you knew better you may think different - FYI the recent attack hit very close to home - Enugu State; I am from Enugu state and have family scattered around Enugu and Nsukka area who could have been victims. Yet I maintain my position about a long term solution to ethnic violence and general insecurity and crime in Nigeria. When the north was being ravaged I hope you were also as vocal as I was ?
    • Chibuzo Amaefule
      Chibuzo Amaefule Does he have to be vocal when the north was ravaged? Everyone has a right to pick their battles and defend their kin; even GMB cannot legislate or decree that.

      Unlike him, I will accuse you of politicizing the issue. Buhari, that you are defending mad
      e threats and gave orders to the security forces when boko haram and Niger Delta militants were involved and you are now trying to place the blame on a law enforcement officer.

      His body language was clear; he was not going to move against them except he was forced. The security officers did not hear a wimp or condemnation from the presidency and they decided their choice was to play the ostrich.

      Please stop this nonsense of defending evil and don't even pretend you can argue against the truth. You will lose.
    • Lola Adekanye
      Lola Adekanye Funny you think I support or defend Buhari and ignore the real problem - why don't we hold the police commissioner who knew about the impending attacks in Enugu state and did nothing accountable? He was transferred not sacked not indicted not accused of conspiracy. 

      I have said countless times Buhari is not the best president we need in Nigeria but we have a rotten public service so it really doesn't matter who the president is the system is rotten - testament to that is the budget padding episode. I want to see the IGP respond with more aggressive posture because that is primarily his job. No matter how evil Buhari is as you suppose he won't be able to reprimand an IGP who take his job seriously to further an ethnically bias agenda of he has one. 

      And if my brother Josiah wasn't vocal when the north burned under GEJ who responded slowly even to the kidnapping of the girls until the international community was too loud, he has not basis to require objectivity from me or accuse me of ethnic hatred. 

      Or is it not the truth that GEJ like Buhari was also quiet for more than a month when Baga burnt? Did the children not deserve to have a voice like my people in the east north central too? Yet we had public servants charged to uphold the law and peace chilling in air conditioned offices in Abuja waiting for orders.
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Abdulsalam Abubakar
    Abdulsalam Abubakar I just wish this Biafra nightmare will actually come to pass.. I'm sick and tired of this unholy matrimony where the Igbos look at every one else with disdain despite the immense benefit they derive from their host communities.. I wonder why my idiotic Fulani brothers would leave the vast grassland of the North for the swampy forests in the South..
    • Ikechukwu Obi
      Ikechukwu Obi That's not the issue. In any case, you can't plant arrogance (like the Senator's sentiments) and expect slavish obedience, do you?

      Or you expect to lord over people, kill them at will and expect no challenge?
    • Abdulsalam Abubakar
      Abdulsalam Abubakar Do you have solid evidence to back the allegation? I thought the matter is still being investigated? What about the Igbo Policeman that was alleged to have led the attack on the Igbo community?
      Why are you in a haste to vilify the whole Fulani race over the action of unknown persons?
    • Ikechukwu Obi
      Ikechukwu Obi Abdulsalam: These guys have said "we did it" and you're still asking for evidence! 
      In Agatu, they owned up; in Nimbo, they owned up. Why are you still seeking evidence? I wish you listened to that Sen. Alkali! I just wish!


      And it seems you're behind the news, my old friend. There's no such Igbo Police officer! They simply created a non-existent policeman and gave him a very Igboish name 'Corporal Chukwu' just to slant the narrative. Pls don't believe me, do your own checking and confirm this. 

      And what do you make of the removal of that lying CP?

      Am I in a hurry to villify the whole Fulani race? Hell no! First, how can someone who reacts to this attack, the nth in the last decade, be said to be in a hurry? These guys have repeatedly killed, killed and killed and on this wall, i've reacted so many times...how can this one be "in a hurry"? Moreover, my reaction is restricted to the killers...that's obvious, not so? If my friend, Abdul, was in the country right now, we would have had our usual hang-out this evening...he's Fulani and has never poisoned my drink in all the years i've known him, so why would I villify him?

      Clearly, I refer to the herdsmen killers and all who support them. I can't like people who don't like me. Not possible.
    • Abdulsalam Abubakar
      Abdulsalam Abubakar I've not heard the statement by the senator but i will do so , Asap.. The normal Fulani herdsmen have been living peacefully in all parts of this country for decades. I know they get involved in little skirmishes with farmers over destruction of crops and other farm inputs, but the scale of the recent attacks in Agatu and Nimbo is beyond what can be termed normal.. A careful and dispassionate investigation must be made to find out the root cause of the matter.. 
      A situation where the whole Southern States would start threatening all Fulani herdsmen cannot bring the desired solution to the crisis.. You can't sack a particular race from your region and expect your people to continue living peacefully in their own lands. 
      Any person or group of persons that kill innocent people must be brought to justice, and that is what PMB has directed security operatives to do.. Should we not allow the rule of law to prevail?
    • Ja'afar Baba Muhammad I wonder ooo! How do you even go about ending Fulani arrogance as you call it? I think you're even more arrogant than an average fulani I know. None of us here is privy to exact situation that led to all these violent confrontations, no tribe no matter how strong or weak in Nigeria that haven't experienced one form ethnic crisis or the other in the last two decades. The orchestrated plan to demonise and demolish a whole region couldn't work, another evil scheme of propaganda is now unveiled. From the caption, I know this chap can do anything to poison gullible minds just to get cheap applause. If today a Fulani man should write a piece titled "Igbos deserve what they are getting" I bet even UN must hear a fabricated story of how Fulanis intend to carry out genocide on the whole Eastern Nigeria.
    • Basil Oforbuike Emeokoro
      Basil Oforbuike Emeokoro Are Fulani Nigerians? They should go back to their land in Futa D'Jallon.
    • Ifeanyi Ubaru
      Ifeanyi Ubaru At least three people have been killed in Aba, Abia State, in clashes that started at the popular Ariaria Market, several witnesses have told PREMIUM TIMES.
      The clashes began in the afternoon mostly between Igbo traders and their Hausa counterparts, th
      ey said.
      One witness said the crisis started after a member of the Hausa community stabbed and killed an Igbo trader who reprimanded him for urinating near his store.
      Other Igbo traders rounded the assailant and lynched him, the witness said.
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Emmanuel Nicholas Goji Hammana
    Emmanuel Nicholas Goji Hammana Ahmad Sajoh the Hon Commissioner of Information, Adamawa State wrote: "Can't trust the Nigerian Ruling Elite with any "Reserve" the colonial masters created forest reserves that were gazetted, the ruling elite appropriated them without regards to the law. Today all the reserves in Adamawa belong to individuals. If they legislate grazing reserves they will eventually take them from communities and later send the grazers away and appropriate them as well, then the circle of violence will continue. But once people acquire their own land for grazing, no one will take them away so easily. What we can do is to ease the process of ownership of grazing lands and it's documentation. Forceful acquisition of land through whatever means including legislation is a recipe for further unending crisis."
  • Eberechukwu Ikemenogo
    Eberechukwu Ikemenogo Unholy matrimony, good you understand now. Your idiotic fulani brothers, good you called them exactly what they're. Leaving vast grassland of the North for the swampy forest in the south.... for their evil agenda. Talking as if you weren't part of it. I think it's time you gathered your idiotic fulani brothers and may be talk sense into them. Remember, it's not just south. Abdulsalam Abubakar
  • Chukwuemeka Orji
    Chukwuemeka Orji What a hug wash!
  • Agoro Patrick O
    Agoro Patrick O Ike av lost my voice, av lost interest in writing, av lost interest in the entity called NIGERIA. If Nigeria is a business enterprise owned by me I would short it down 11months ago. It is illegal to be law abiding in a country where lawlessness thrive sadly it will continue like this till 2019 if Nigeria still exist. So pathetic
  • Rodd Stevens
    Rodd Stevens When Arwa bloder dey power....?
  • Auwal M. Tela
    Auwal M. Tela mts, these Igbo's.....
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Julius Ayewa
    Julius Ayewa Only a dummy wouldnt know that these are boko haram
  • Èwåëñ Jønâthåñ Vîctør
    Èwåëñ Jønâthåñ Vîctør Imagine the odacity and arrogance! Payback is here! The push back is a must! Period! we must push them back our lands is not ur right. The hate is palpable and our response is sure
  • Jbfboy Chelsea Jbfboy
    Jbfboy Chelsea Jbfboy hmmmm viewers this people are really inquizitive in making sure that the biafrans are frostreted and cause many damage to the biafra land because they have seen that biafra republic is almost at the conner so my brothers it's high time we wage war against them before they silently kill all of us
  • Christian Chinedu
    Christian Chinedu Our igbo brothers and sisters in the senate n house of Rep are only mindful of their stomach! Let start with them first before we start looking for solution outside our jurisdiction. We have morons and daff as senators n house of Reps
  • Èwåëñ Jønâthåñ Vîctør
    Èwåëñ Jønâthåñ Vîctør They think they have the monopoly of ability to spill blood. Enough is Enough! I will expect d igbo's to get private investigators that would trace those responsible 4 d blood shed in Enugu and submit finding to d govt who if they refuse to act will leave us no other option
  • Amaka Bessie
    Amaka Bessie You were warned,you didn't listen, where are all the people who called me all sorts of names,hmmm,this is just the beginning!,you were scammed!
  • Akindele Onaolapo
    Akindele Onaolapo Nnamdi Ekweogu, are you saying those who attacked falae are herdsmen?
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Akindele Onaolapo
    Akindele Onaolapo Nnamdi Ekweogu, Falae is a confirmed liar and tribal bigot.
  • Nedum C Nedum
    Nedum C Nedum God bless Biafra and those fighting for her freedom.
  • Abubakar Iya Girei
    Abubakar Iya Girei It isn't about Fulani men attacking Igbos..But why aren't you so inundated with the bomb in Onitsha the other day..?..Why aren't you so bothered with Hausas killed for every IPOB protest..?..Why are you unsympathetic with Northerners that were killed and buried beneath a church as ritual..?..Why are you so indifferent to Northerners abducted,killed,and buried in a forest by IPOB terrorists which was corroborated by the DSS..Nevertheless,it is all about politics..It is sheer frustration of the election..I supports Man United, but whenever my team loses,i blame everyone else..Can you blame the North for you woes..?..It is archaic..The Igbos always cries of marginalization..?..Who is marginalizing who in the Nigerian arrangement..?..It is a fight,and only the fittest survives..The Igbos are buyable..The North is formidable,and the Yorubas are so alert to what they want..Then the Northern Talakawas broke free from their elites,who supported Jonathan,to vote for Buhari..Tinubu galvanizes his kinsmen with promises..The Igbos were stuck to Mr Jonathan..The rest is history..The Igbos were never one among themselves..What do they want..?..Biafra..?..Presidency..?.. or restructuring..?.. You can be boiling..Perhaps,you will evaporate Ikechukwu Obi
    Hide 16 replies
    • Ikechukwu Obi
      Ikechukwu Obi All you wrote there are lies. You started with lies and ended with lies. Typical.

      There was no bomb in Onitsha, everyone saw it was a fuel black market.
      See more
    • Ja'afar Baba Muhammad Ikechukwu Obi, DSS is now a liar, you dont kill but murder in cold blood, keep on deceiving yourself. The on going mass murder of innocent Northern traders with your tacit approval are well documented. You can select your own lie and paint it as truth,See more
    • Abubakar Iya Girei
      Abubakar Iya Girei Lolllllz.. There was a bomb blast in Onitsha in which 6 were killed and many Injured..I spoke to friends in Onitsha-i did my NYSC in the area..The pics went viral..Hausa Keke Napep riders were hammered,and their bodies were used for church foundation. It was dug,and this went viral too..Northerners were abducted,killed, and buried in forest by IPOB terrorists..The DSS said this much..What are you saying..? You believe in herdsmen killing Igbos..?..It means there exist first class and second citizens..
    • Abubakar Iya Girei
      Abubakar Iya Girei As I type this..Aba was boiling..After a bloody fight between Hausa and Igbos,youths went on rampage attacking innocent Hausas..About 15 of them killed..How about that..?
    • Ikechukwu Obi
      Ikechukwu Obi @Ja'afar: I like to believe i'm discussing with people who have at least, some sense. I'm still trying to understand how you arrived at the senseless allegation that i'm supporting any killing. I would have thought you will SHOW proof but you went on trying to indict me (or trying to involve me) in your baseless allegations.

      Look, SHOW PROOF. 

      I've told you that the DSS in Abia, along with the Police, Army and security agencies in Abia, do not know anything about the so-called mass grave! Thei information is out there, look for it.
    • Ikechukwu Obi
      Ikechukwu Obi @Abubakar: You're an experienced liar but i'm also an experienced lie-buster.

      SHOW PROOF or just go to hell. Your lies are as stupid as they're vacuous. Show us where we can read about these folk tales you're telling. SHOW us or just shut your lying m
      outh.

      The incident in Aba yesterday is available everywhere for you to read. If you can't, that's your funeral. All the info is easily available so it is only a fool that will disregard the mass of info to believe a hater like one Abubakar whose lies i've busted on his wall too many times in the last few years. No-one, reasonable or unreasonable, can take your lies for anything.
    • Udo Ngwu
      Udo Ngwu The incident in aba arouse when a Fulani man stabbed an igbo trader in the stomach during a war of words he brought out a dagger and stabbed, ran away. In pursuit he was mobbed.
    • Ja'afar Baba Muhammad That's how it all get started, you taunt on the street and mob them, then turn around to play victim. When it gets to a level you don't expect, you still concoct a lie to blame others.
    • Kennedy Dada Fieldmarshal
      Kennedy Dada Fieldmarshal See polarized Nigerian youths, instead of thinking of how to come out of our economic woes we r here discussing ethnicity.
    • Ikechukwu Obi
      Ikechukwu Obi @Ja'afar: Abeg, where is taunting an offence? If it were, then Ndigbo should have murdered all northerners by now going by your assertions.

      Bro, whoever is taunted should taunt back! Taunting has been on since 1914, no-one needs to die from it.
      See more
    • Ja'afar Baba Muhammad We have argued this over and over again, your truth is a fallacy propagated to deceive the populace in a bid to cause chaos. Ask yourself, how come it's only you that correctly captured Senator's interview, no links, nobody corroborates what you've said, just you saying what catches your fancy. You see, I have been following you for a while, few times you tried sounding objective but most times its nothing but sentimental bullshit to get emotionally unstable people to cheer you. You don't proffer solution to any problem, you, as a matter of factly have become an agent provocateur hired to disseminate wrong and inciting information.
    • Aminu Y. Bombiyo
      Aminu Y. Bombiyo It's pointless trying to argue with a Biafraud Ja'afar Baba Muhammad. Just leave them to their shallow unthinking devilish devices. 
      And then wait for them to start an action and then come on hard and pay them back in the currencies they consider as le
      See more
    • Ikechukwu Obi
      Ikechukwu Obi How stupid, Aminu Y Aminu Y. Bombiyo...you appear to take glee in thoughtlessness. smh
    • Aminu Y. Bombiyo
      Aminu Y. Bombiyo Thanks Ikechukwu Obi for discovering one of my greatest endowments. I give more credence to action than cacophonous verbosity when dealing with boisterous Biafrauds.
    • Justus Okey
      Justus Okey What a stupid digression. The piece by Ikechukwu Obi was about Fulani killings and the official accreditation it appears to be receiving. Yet not one of these bingos has refuted his claims. Instead they are bringing their eternal enemies igbos into it.
    • Ikechukwu Obi
      Ikechukwu Obi Today who is getting killed by "bandits"? Hehehehehe
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Umar Dukku
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Udo Ngwu
    Udo Ngwu The worst is that most of the cattle are bought from Morocco and the rest.
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Chinyere Echefu Adeleke
    Chinyere Echefu Adeleke Did I not tell you guys to by cut cow eating? They know what they are doing.
  • Ogidi Laja
    Ogidi Laja When and where did you watch/hear this Ikechukwu Obi?
    • Ikechukwu Obi
      Ikechukwu Obi Political Platform on Raypower FM yesterday between 9.15am and 9.45am.

      There's another edition of the program on right now! They're treating reactions to that sound bite. Pls tune in NOW
    • Ogidi Laja
      Ogidi Laja Ikechukwu Obi I dey Lokoja enroute Ibadan, I no sure day I go get am. It is infuriating though.
    • Ogidi Laja
      Ogidi Laja I tried, e no work.
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Ikechukwu Obi
    Ikechukwu Obi @All: Political Platform is on Raypower FM right now. Pls tune in now and listen to reactions from the soundbite from that Sen. Alkali.

    TUNE IN NOW!
  • Nwabiafra Viviane
    Nwabiafra Viviane Nigeria is worst than a zoo.... indeed, Nigeria is an EVIL forest......
    • Ibrahim A. Malgwi
      Ibrahim A. Malgwi It was the zoologist that ruled for 6 years that tried to make the country zoo by fixing zoo Boko Haram at Sabisa Game Reserve (forest) but it has been rescued. What is herdsmen? Is it not the same coded name like Boko Haram in the north, biafra in the south east, Niger Delta militants in the south south and opc in the south west. All these groups are agent of the devil just to cause havoc in the country since one cannot call them Pressure group.
    • Daniel IG Obasi
      Daniel IG Obasi Ibrahim will you close that smelly rotten gworo mouth, who has BIAFRANS KILLED FROM ANY PART OF NIGERIA.
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Ezeji Promise Charles
    Ezeji Promise Charles Its unfortunate how we all as educated as we are would see and know the obvious truth and yet choose to bury our heads in lies. It is clear even to a blind man that Nigeria as presently constituted was built on a false foundation. Most of us making hat statements today on social media where not born during the civil war so how come we now spit such hate? It's simply because those things that led to the civil war still abound and even growing worse. It is far beyond a PDP/APC problem, the problem is simply that we need to restructure the sociopolitical system of this country or we peacefully break up. It's high time we stop deceiving ourselves and face the obvious truth because one wether we like it or not, if we refuse to confront th truth which is reality, one day the truth would confront us and it would be more disastrous.
  • Mahmud Abdulwahab
    Mahmud Abdulwahab IF YOU HATE NIGERIA OR THE FULANI MAN THIS MUCH YOU CAN DECLARE WAR ON EITHER. AND LETS CONTINUE FROM WHERE WE STOPPED IN 1969........
    • Okoro Chimaeze
      Okoro Chimaeze Illiterate
    • Aminu Y. Bombiyo
      Aminu Y. Bombiyo Better be illiterate than a Lilly livered coward who trembles to death several times over at gun cocking point, before a short is even fired.
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Nwabiafra Viviane
    Nwabiafra Viviane u are a compound fool @ muhmud abdulwahab.. do u fink 1969 is 2016? why are u afraid on hearing the word BIAFRA?
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Kennedy Dada Fieldmarshal
    Kennedy Dada Fieldmarshal Mahmud Abdulwahab I will love it so much if we start from where we stopped in 1969 pls let's do it.
  • Gimba Patrick
    Gimba Patrick Boko Haram started like this with accusations and counter accusations.
    Our Northern leaders were behind the scene fueling the madness. Now where are we? The northern states especially the BH ravaged states are many decades behind their southern counte
    rparts.
    Let's tell ourselves the truth, the ? fulani herdsmen ? the unknown foreign herdsmen or the new B haramist need to be curbed immediately before things get out of hand period.
  • Chibuzo Amaefule
    Chibuzo Amaefule Mahmud, you might still be living in 1970 but the world has moved on. If there is ever a need for break up it will not require a war. 
    I understand that you and your ilk lust after blood but you will drench yourselves in that of your kinsmen and closes
    t relatives.

    One thing I assure you is that you have lost a Nigeria of complete slaves. People like you will speed up a disintegration that will lead you quickly to the path of Niger and Chad.

    Thank Southern Nigeria for giving you the opportunity of a lifetime - of being human.
    • Ibrahim A. Malgwi
      Ibrahim A. Malgwi Then ask people from Southern Sudan after the break up. I hardly see people from South South commenting nonsense but the youth from ote miris that cannot eat coal are the ones talking. Have you ever see people up North parking foodstuffs, meat and fish on their journey backward from the North like my ote miri country men. Ordinary greeting na hunger, in fact a dog said it will never be belly full except if it's owner die.
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Ikechukwu Obi
    Ikechukwu Obi A year ago, Fulani politicians dared Nigeria as a whole...

    Something will give soon...sure.
  • Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
  • Stephen Adinoyi
    Stephen Adinoyi If a murderer come and tell you, a law enforcement officer, that he is a murderer and you remains silent. That means the murderer is a friend to your superior, and who's that superior? PMB!
  • Adam Baba Yamani
    Adam Baba Yamani I don't think all those who posed as FulaniHerdsmen are really Fulani, some are not.
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Abiodun Kuforiji Nkwocha
    Abiodun Kuforiji Nkwocha I have been down this road. I walked it several times and now I am just sitting. Fulanis are ultra citizens
  • Ikechukwu Obi
    Ikechukwu Obi We're seeing the outcome of this Senator's boasts and posturing today, are we not?
  • OJ Hosea
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Ikechukwu Obi
    Ikechukwu Obi Abdullahi Sani, do you remember when this happened, sir? If you don't, i do!

    That's why when you guys try to play those games of denial you play, i wonder if you think everyone has a leaking memory.
  • Ezeh Pius
    Ezeh Pius Permission to share
  • Ikechukwu Obi
    Ikechukwu Obi Today, the same Miyetti Allah has been contracted by this FG to "help clear the forests of bandits".

    Ever heard anything more ridiculous in this life?
    Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju
    Write a reply...

  • Stephen Adinoyi
    Stephen Adinoyi Iyke, the buffoonery and drama going on in this government is like watching nollywood. I am tired of being shocked

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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Fw: Prof. Olukotun's Column

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Funmi.

Thanks for your response. How would you suggest government should handle the matter differently  now that it is considered a regional crisis even by ECoWAS.?

How do you think another leader say Johnathan or Obasanjo would have handled the matter differently than the returned leader Buhari?

Do you follow those who think a dissolution of Nigeria will be the ultimate solution and by what means in order to avoid even more apocalyptic  violence in that dissolution?

Do you think defying the people's representatives at the national assent my and insisting on restructuring at all cost as some people suggest will solve the problem or turn  the situation into a catastrophic all out war of unimaginable proportions whose final cost no one knows and which will dwarf the suggested. figures in this I initiative exponentially?

QAA



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: Funmi Odusolu <eleda.odusolu@gmail.com>
Date: 05/05/2019 11:41 (GMT+00:00)
To: OLAYINKA AGBETUYI <yagbetuyi@hotmail.com>
Cc: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com, Royal Gardens <royalgardensnet@gmail.com>, May <mayortk@yahoo.com>, Toks Olaoluwa <olaoluwatokunboh@gmail.com>, bukkydada@hotmail.com, Ayo Banjo <profayobanjo@yahoo.com>, mdayansola@gmail.com, Mary Kolawole <memkolawole@yahoo.com>, Margaret Solo-Anaeto <soloanaeto.margaret@gmail.com>, Noel Ihebuzor <noel.ihebuzor@gmail.com>, oibidapoobe@gmail.com, ibrahim.gambari@gmail.com, FON Roberts <fonroberts@yahoo.com>, fonaiyekan@yahoo.com, Willy Fawole <fawolew@yahoo.com>, Fola Oyeyinka <fola.oyeyinka@gmail.com>, offlinenspri@gmail.com, foegbokhare@yahoo.com, Sheriff Folarin <sheriff.folarin@covenantuniversity.edu.ng>, Dele Seteolu <folabiset@yahoo.com>, charlieedema@yahoo.co.uk, Eesuola Kayode <foomoterribly@yahoo.com>, Cynthia Samuel-Olonjuwon <cynthiafunmi@gmail.com>, Prof Olufemi VAUGHAN <ovaughan@bowdoin.edu>, gloryukwenga@gmail.com, Rotimi Suberu <rotimisuberu@yahoo.com>, Rebecca Adugbe <omoadugbe@gmail.com>, waleadebanwi@gmail.com, "Prof. W.O. Alli" <alliwo@yahoo.co.uk>, Ademiluyi Wole <woleademiluyi@gmail.com>, waleadebanwi@yahoo.com, anujah@yahoo.com, Wunmi Toke <wunmitoke2@gmail.com>, tadeakinaina@yahoo.com, Chibuzo Nwoke <chibuzonwoke@yahoo.com>, Michael Adeyeye <madeyeye2002@yahoo.com>, ozoesonpi@yahoo.com, obadare@ku.edu, oluyinkaesan@gmail.com, Solomon Uwaifo <so_uwaifo@yahoo.co.uk>, aribidesi.usman@asu.edu, dijiaina@yahoo.com, OLAYODE OLUSOLA <kennyode@yahoo.com>, Kayode Soremekun <paddykay2002@yahoo.com>, stiker88@hotmail.com, "Emeagwali, Gloria (History)" <emeagwali@ccsu.edu>, bukkystars@gmail.com, babsowoeye@gmail.com, Ayo Olukotun <ayo_olukotun@yahoo.com>, akinsanyaadeoye@gmail.com, akinosuntokun@yahoo.com, jadesany@yahoo.co.uk, David Atte <david_atte@yahoo.com>, Dele Alake <alakedele@yahoo.com>, Dr Oluwajuyitan <ecjide@yahoo.com>, Sat Obiyan <satobiyan@yahoo.com>, Ayobami Salami <ayobasalami@yahoo.com>, lereamusan@gmail.com, Yusuf Bangura <bangura.ym@gmail.com>, Dr Yemi Dipeolu <dipeolu.a@statehouse.gov.ng>, diekoye@gmail.com, tundejaiyeoba@yahoo.co.uk, Bola Sotunsa <bolasotunsa@yahoo.com>, Solomon Akinboye <solomon_akinboye@yahoo.com>, Peyi Soyinka-Airewele <pairewele@ithaca.edu>, Sola Isola <sola_isola@yahoo.com>, Dr Nathaniel Danjibo <danjib@yahoo.com>, Daniel Bach <d.bach@sciencespobordeaux.fr>, Moshood Omotosho <mashomotosho@yahoo.com>, ffk2011@aol.com, Redeemer's University Vice-Chancellor <vc@run.edu.ng>, Senatormamora <senatormamora@yahoo.com>, enyiabaribe@yahoo.com, Ibiwumi Saliu <saliuibiwumi@yahoo.com>, Lanre Idowu <lanreidowu@gmail.com>, ibini_olaide@yahoo.com, dam_nik@yahoo.com, Adebayo Salami <adebayosalami2015@gmail.com>, salawuabiodun@yahoo.com, Remi Raji <remraj1@googlemail.com>, abiodunraufu@yahoo.com, Stephen Bolaji <stephen.bolaji@cdu.edu.au>, nimiwari@msn.com, vadetula@gmail.com, Vincent Adugbe <vadugbe@yahoo.com>, Fola Arthur-Worrey <folaaw@yahoo.com>, funmiolorunfemi@gmail.com, Funmi Soetan <funm_soetan@yahoo.com>, Olufunke Adeboye <funks29adeboye@yahoo.co.uk>, Funke Egbemode <egbemode_funke@yahoo.com>, Michael Sokupa <sokupam@gc.adventist.org>, Funmi Odusolu <eleda.odusolu@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Fw: Prof. Olukotun's Column

In a bizarre fashion, the Federal Government has thrown a huge carrot at the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria, MACBAN, by offering it  N100 billion over two years to stop kidnapping in the country.* 

The Federal Government delegation was led by the Minister of Interior, Abdul-Rahman Dambazau, and met with MACBAN leaders on Friday.

It was a closed door meeting which lasted for over five hours as monetary negotiations according to a source dragged on until N100 billion was accepted.

MACBAN had said it would take nothing less than N160 billion.
But briefing news men after the meeting the exhausted Minister said, the "gathering is part of steps we have taken to tackle insecurity and clashes between herdsmen and farmers."
"You should not forget the fact that we have extended the meeting as a regional one when the Economic Community of West African Countries hosted a conference on this.
"These issues were discussed, and part of the dialogue was to provide a national action plan on security challenges and solutions by all members of the ECOWAS commission, and to present it to the commission for consideration.
"That is the main reason we have come to Kebbi State, to dialogue with leaders of herdsmen as part of the process,'' Danbazzau said.

Herdsmen have been on rampage since 2015 at the ascension of Mr Muhammadu Buhari as Nigeria's President pillaging, sacking, rapping and kidnapping for ransom which always lead to deaths.
The orgy of kidnapping has made major national roads especially in the North West impassable. The Abuja/Kaduna road is one major road that has been affected.
Daily Mail reports that the herdsmen also attacked and killed many people in villages and farms in *Benue, Zamfara, Plateau, Nasarawa, Kogi, Kaduna, Enugu, Imo, Cross River, Edo, Delta, Abia, Kwara, Taraba, Osun, Ondo, Sokoto and others.* 

The killings associated with the fulani herdsmen led to the group designation as the fourth most dangerous and deadly terrorist group in the world by the World Terrorist Index.
Also at the meeting was the Acting Inspector General of Police, Alhaji Muhammad Adamu, who few days ago gave a grim picture of the havoc being wrecked on Nigerins by the herdsmen.
While nothing that over one thousand people had been killed and a lot more kidnapped in Kaduna, he noted in Bernin Kebbi that, "The criminals have infiltrated the crisis, and we should cooperate and deal decisively with the culprits, hence we called for this interaction.
"Those criminals that are beyond redemption, will be dealt with and brought to book," Adamu said.
On his position, the State Governor, Atiku Bagudu, said hosting the meeting in his state "shows the seriousness of President Muhammadu Buhari's administration in tackling the security challenges in the country."
Responding, the President of MACBAN, Alhaji Muhammad Kiruwa, said, "This is the first of its kind in the history of this country, for the president to direct his security aides to interact with an aggrieved party to air its views.
"This meeting will serve as a foundation for peace between the Fulani herdsmen and farmers; and among the Fulanis themselves," Kiruwa said.
News Agency of Nigeria noted that other members of the Federal Government delegation at the meeting include: Alh. Yusuf Bichi, Director-General (D-G) Department of State Security Services, Alh Ahmed Rufa'I, D-G, National Intelligence Agency; among others.


ANY BETTER PROOF THAT THE REST OF NIGERIA HAS BEEN TOTALLY EMASCULATED AND BURIED ALIVE BY THE FULANI OLIGARCHY?

On Thu, Mar 21, 2019, 7:20 PM OLAYINKA AGBETUYI <yagbetuyi@hotmail.com wrote:
Timely piece.  Now that elections are over politicizing all events needs to stop and political jobbers must return to their day jobs.  Government needs to now justify its renewed mandate.  It cannot claim 8 years is not enough to make a difference.


OAA



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: 'Ayo Olukotun' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>
Date: 21/03/2019 15:54 (GMT+00:00)
To: Digest Recipients <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>
Cc: Royal Gardens <royalgardensnet@gmail.com>, May <mayortk@yahoo.com>, Toks Olaoluwa <olaoluwatokunboh@gmail.com>, bukkydada@hotmail.com, Ayo Banjo <profayobanjo@yahoo.com>, mdayansola@gmail.com, Mary Kolawole <memkolawole@yahoo.com>, Margaret Solo-Anaeto <soloanaeto.margaret@gmail.com>, Noel Ihebuzor <noel.ihebuzor@gmail.com>, oibidapoobe@gmail.com, ibrahim.gambari@gmail.com, FON Roberts <fonroberts@yahoo.com>, fonaiyekan@yahoo.com, Willy Fawole <fawolew@yahoo.com>, Fola Oyeyinka <fola.oyeyinka@gmail.com>, offlinenspri@gmail.com, foegbokhare@yahoo.com, Sheriff Folarin <sheriff.folarin@covenantuniversity.edu.ng>, Dele Seteolu <folabiset@yahoo.com>, charlieedema@yahoo.co.uk, Eesuola Kayode <foomoterribly@yahoo.com>, Cynthia Samuel-Olonjuwon <cynthiafunmi@gmail.com>, Prof Olufemi VAUGHAN <ovaughan@bowdoin.edu>, gloryukwenga@gmail.com, Rotimi Suberu <rotimisuberu@yahoo.com>, Rebecca Adugbe <omoadugbe@gmail.com>, waleadebanwi@gmail.com, "Prof. W.O. Alli" <alliwo@yahoo.co.uk>, Ademiluyi Wole <woleademiluyi@gmail.com>, waleadebanwi@yahoo.com, anujah@yahoo.com, Wunmi Toke <wunmitoke2@gmail.com>, tadeakinaina@yahoo.com, Chibuzo Nwoke <chibuzonwoke@yahoo.com>, Michael Adeyeye <madeyeye2002@yahoo.com>, ozoesonpi@yahoo.com, obadare@ku.edu, oluyinkaesan@gmail.com, Solomon Uwaifo <so_uwaifo@yahoo.co.uk>, aribidesi.usman@asu.edu, dijiaina@yahoo.com, OLAYODE OLUSOLA <kennyode@yahoo.com>, Kayode Soremekun <paddykay2002@yahoo.com>, stiker88@hotmail.com, "Emeagwali, Gloria (History)" <emeagwali@ccsu.edu>, bukkystars@gmail.com, babsowoeye@gmail.com, Ayo Olukotun <ayo_olukotun@yahoo.com>, akinsanyaadeoye@gmail.com, akinosuntokun@yahoo.com, jadesany@yahoo.co.uk, David Atte <david_atte@yahoo.com>, Dele Alake <alakedele@yahoo.com>, Dr Oluwajuyitan <ecjide@yahoo.com>, Sat Obiyan <satobiyan@yahoo.com>, Ayobami Salami <ayobasalami@yahoo.com>, lereamusan@gmail.com, Yusuf Bangura <bangura.ym@gmail.com>, Dr Yemi Dipeolu <dipeolu.a@statehouse.gov.ng>, diekoye@gmail.com, tundejaiyeoba@yahoo.co.uk, Bola Sotunsa <bolasotunsa@yahoo.com>, Solomon Akinboye <solomon_akinboye@yahoo.com>, Peyi Soyinka-Airewele <pairewele@ithaca.edu>, Sola Isola <sola_isola@yahoo.com>, Dr Nathaniel Danjibo <danjib@yahoo.com>, Daniel Bach <d.bach@sciencespobordeaux.fr>, Moshood Omotosho <mashomotosho@yahoo.com>, ffk2011@aol.com, Redeemer's University Vice-Chancellor <vc@run.edu.ng>, Senatormamora <senatormamora@yahoo.com>, enyiabaribe@yahoo.com, Ibiwumi Saliu <saliuibiwumi@yahoo.com>, Lanre Idowu <lanreidowu@gmail.com>, ibini_olaide@yahoo.com, dam_nik@yahoo.com, Adebayo Salami <adebayosalami2015@gmail.com>, salawuabiodun@yahoo.com, Remi Raji <remraj1@googlemail.com>, abiodunraufu@yahoo.com, Stephen Bolaji <stephen.bolaji@cdu.edu.au>, nimiwari@msn.com, vadetula@gmail.com, Vincent Adugbe <vadugbe@yahoo.com>, Fola Arthur-Worrey <folaaw@yahoo.com>, funmiolorunfemi@gmail.com, Funmi Soetan <funm_soetan@yahoo.com>, Olufunke Adeboye <funks29adeboye@yahoo.co.uk>, Funke Egbemode <egbemode_funke@yahoo.com>, eleda.odusolu@gmail.com, Michael Sokupa <sokupam@gc.adventist.org>
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Fw: Prof. Olukotun's Column

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On Thu, 21 Mar 2019 at 14:29, Tobi Adewunmi

LAME RESPONSE TO UNENDING SECURITY JITTERS

by Ayo Olukotun                                                          

 

"In 2019, violence could intensify, triggering more displacements and exacerbating food insecurity for millions of Nigerians".- International Rescue Committee Report, December 2018

Insecurity of lives and property has returned to the front burner of national conversation, with the ongoing Kajuru crisis in Kaduna state, and the killing in Benue state a few days back, of farmers in Guma Local Government by suspected herdsmen. The prediction of the International Rescue Committee appears to be coming to pass, without much being done to avert it. Conceivably, at the time the Report was published, the politicians, having contacted an overdose of election fever, had little or no time to take seriously, the fundamental reason for the existence of states, namely, to act as a shield against the Hobbesian state of nature.

 

The IRC Report, quoted in the opening paragraph also informed that the past year featured, 'persistent attacks from armed gangs and communal violence', in which over 2 million Nigerians were displaced. It went on to say that Nigeria is one of 10 countries with the highest risk of humanitarian emergency this year. It will be interesting to know what the projections and scenario building of our own security institutions and our government are. That, at least, would be a signal that there is security planning, which begins with a mapping of challenges and remote sensing of possible flashpoints. This columnist's reading of the deterioration of security is that, it has to do with the divorce between policy science and the actual work of security organizations. There is also, the shift from governance to politics and political competition, because it is easier to shout slogans, utter clever ripostes, than the hard grind of governance interventions, built upon a study of the problems, thinking through them, and providing cogent solutions.

 

On Wednesday, the Federal Executive Council in its weekly meeting approved 8.5 Billion Naira to succour states ridden by internal conflicts, with its harvest of displaced persons. These states include Adamawa, Benue, Bornu, Taraba, Yobe and Zamfara. There are of course, other theatres of conflict. such as Kaduna, which do not feature on this list, but more importantly, which is more consequential, administering remedies after the harm has been done, or proactively and expeditiously acting to prevent humanitarian emergencies?

 

The other point to be made concerns the administration of these resources, in the light of earlier experience regarding the mismanagement and outright looting of such funds. But that is a matter for another day. Who was not shocked by the revelation, a few days ago, by the governor of Zamfara state, Abdulaziz Yari, that the bandits which have terrorized that state, for over one year, are better equipped than the military sent there to ward off incessant attacks? Explained the governor, "they (the bandits) are in control of the kind of weapons that the (army) command in Zamfara does not have. In one armoury alone, they have over five hundred AK 47, we saw them". One of the issues to investigate would be, how this significant military build-up by bandits occurred under the very nose of Yari himself, who had governed the state for a number of years. It also draws attention to whether as a nation, we have given enough thought to the upgrade and maintenance of our security infrastructure, hardware and software, in the midst of ever rising challenges.

 

If you thought that what Yari had to say was an isolated case, then, consider the ongoing distress of criminal challenges by armed pirates in our maritime sector. In the wake of the murder of a naval rating, Chinedu Osakwe, by armed pirates, a fortnight or so ago, a former Senior Special Assistant on Maritime Affairs to the Presidency, Gbenga Oyewole, informed that, "The Nigerian Navy lacks enough platforms to man the nation's waterways. If as the time the last attack was happening, the naval personnel escorts on the boats under attack could radio any other platform, I'm sure the pirates would not have gone that far." In other words, key security infrastructure are in terrible disrepair with no decisive action, as far as we know, being taken. The untoward development mirrors the situation in the North East where our boys are reportedly beginning to dodge posting to the front because they are underequipped and carrying on heroically against better equipped insurgents. There was some discussion about this at the end of last year against the backdrop of a savage attack on our Metele stronghold, but the election, still ongoing, shoved that discussion out of the headlines (see Ayo Olukotun, 'Defence Sector Spending: Have We Come Full Circle?', The Punch, Friday, December 28, 2018).

 

Now that the elections are being concluded, hopefully, it is time to revisit the nation's foundational problems, several of them vexing, rather than being drowned out by party hacks attacking one political warlord or another, as if that is what will save the nation from its current status. Elections, are supposed to be about national renewal and a reimagining of the social contract, but one doubts seriously if the politicians know that, from the way they carry on, more or less fiddling while Nigeria bleeds. In the heat of the previous election, it was easy to demonize social critics and Rights advocates, by alleging that they were working for one party or another, but since the problems they raised have not gone away, and are in some cases getting worse, there is now nowhere to hide, except to act forthrightly concerning the citizens' unrelieved woes. We need to pose serious questions to those who govern us, while on their own part, they need to tell us what they are doing about spreading security jitters.

 

 Interestingly, the rising vortex has also produced casualties within the military organization, including for example, the murder, last Sunday, of an army garrison commander in Bauchi, Colonel Muhammed Barack. Of course, fresh in our memory is the murder, in December, of former Air Chief marshal, Alex Badeh, and former Chief of Administration in the Army, Gen. Idris Alkali. This dimension raises the spectre of possible disloyalty within the military, to which President Muhammadu Buhari alluded some weeks back. If a security think tank exists beyond the conventional defence institutions, then it is time for it to sit up to come up with strategic solutions, as well as short and medium term panaceas. For example, we can no longer afford to treat the challenge as a police action problem, in which, security contingents are simply putting out fires breaking out here and there. Instead, we must see it as a governance problem, related to high unemployment, unacceptable level of poverty, which, according to World Bank data, is higher in the North, where most of the theatre of conflicts are, than in the South. Communities, long excluded from the orbit of governance, and abandoned by an incompetent state will sooner than later breed monsters that are hard to slay. That means, a holistic response must see crime as a social, rather than a law and order problem.

 

Finally, Buhari has demonstrated that he can win elections, but he must now increasingly worry about how to govern and secure the nation, so that history can have something substantial to record in his favour.

 

-        Prof. Ayo Olukotun is the Oba (Dr.) Sikiru Adetona Chair of Governance, Department of Political Science, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye

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