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USA Africa Dialogue Series - From my archive: The Tortoise Now Drives a Jeep

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The music is only starting. But we can take a look at the archive. One
essay is seemingly a candidate. Just an arbitrary SELECTION, not an
ELECTION!

Second thing, now that Tortoise drives a jeep (It is likely a tokunbo
jeep!), what would happen when auto-tech changes gear and engineless
cars become very common in the market? Is it not likely that the
narrative of the form-changing Tortoise would change again? Anyway, we
are waiting to see how the trickster wrestles with technology!

Here is the essay:

https://x-pensiverrors.blogspot.com/2018/12/the-tortoise-now-drives-jeep.html

Thank you.

Sincerely,
Obododimma.


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Professor of Cultural Semiotics & Stylistics,
Department of English,
University of Ibadan.

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USA Africa Dialogue Series - African Ancestors and the Rough Road to Mathematical Thinking

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If you want to see the effective erasure of the African world from the
production of knowledge, just pick up a mathematics textbook authored
in the West. The only articulation of knowledge from Africa, even to
be drowned in controversies, is Ancient Egypt. And you may be warned
that you are not speaking of Africa, if you are speaking of Ancient
Egypt.

Well, just this piece in which one wrestled with an angel called
mathematics. In fact, an inner disciplinary marginalisation. Is one
claiming to be able to think at all, what more being a mathematician?
Please, click on this link to read the essay:

https://x-pensiverrors.blogspot.com/2019/06/african-ancestors-and-rough-road-to.html

Thank you.
Sincerely,
Obododimma.

--
--
B.A.,First Class Honours (English & Literary Studies);
M.A., Ph.D. (English Language);
M.Sc. (Legal, Criminological & Security Psychology);
Professor of Cultural Semiotics & Stylistics,
Department of English,
University of Ibadan.

COORDINATES:

Phone (Mobile):
+234 8033331330;
+234 9033333555;
+234 8022208008;
+234 8073270008.
Skype: obododimma.oha
Twitter: @mmanwu
Personal Blog: http://udude.wordpress.com/

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USA Africa Dialogue Series - Nigerian Professor arrested; charged with incitement and breach of peace

USA Africa Dialogue Series - CNN: Khashoggi murder: Independent investigation blames Saudi Arabia for “extrajudicial killing” of journalist

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Khashoggi murder: Independent investigation blames Saudi Arabia for "extrajudicial killing" of journalist
Saudi Arabian journalist Jamal Khashoggi was the victim of a "deliberate, premeditated execution," a United Nations special rapporteur has concluded in the first independent investigation into his death.

Read in CNN: https://apple.news/ApdlkbusCSeiWJb7rqcy5EQ


Shared from Apple News


Sent from my iPhone

USA Africa Dialogue Series - The Atlantic: The surreal end of an American college

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The surreal end of an American college
Small schools across the United States are facing budget shortfalls and low enrollment—leading some to shut down in the middle of students' higher-education experience.

Read in The Atlantic: https://apple.news/AHxeQ0sApRDaB6X6Y9gdigw


Shared from Apple News


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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Nigerian Professor arrested; charged with incitement and breach of peace

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Prof. Akurang-Parry

Thanks for bringing this to our attention. I am curious how the academic community in Ghana  is responding to the arrest human rights activist.  It is a shame that this is happening in Kwame Nkrumah Ghana.  We are going to mount  pressures on the Ghanian government release our professor who is fighting dignity of the African personality. 

Abdul Salau 


On Wed, Jun 19, 2019, 10:00 AM Kwabena Akurang-Parry <kaparry@hotmail.com> wrote:

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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Is Nigeria now an African immigration hub?

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As a pan-Africanist, too, I pray that Nigeria will eschew the policy/policies implemented following the end of the oil boom of the late 70s and early 80s directed at our African brothers and sisters who were in the country. Our leaders should take special note of the ubiquity of Nigerians worldwide before they act!  


IKE UDOGU


On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 8:51 PM Toyin Falola <toyinfalola@austin.utexas.edu> wrote:

There are now large clusters of immigrants from Egypt, Gambia, Senegal, and Mali in Nigeria.

 

I have someone collecting preliminary data on some of these clusters. If you live in Ibadan, you find many opposite the UI campus.

 

As a Pan-Africanist, I welcome this development as long as the government does not scapegoat innocent citizens seeking legitimate means of livelihood.

 

Hope the relevant agencies of government are collecting data for us to understand the effectiveness of regionalism.

 

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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Nigerian Professor arrested; charged with incitement and breach of peace

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UPDATE 1:

 We Supply Ghana Manpower, We Get Insults Back –Nigerian Professor Arrested By Ghanaian Police

The don urged the Nigerian government to swiftly respond to reports of crimes and kidnapping attributed to Nigerians by withdrawing its investment to Ghana.


BY SAHARAREPORTERS, NEW YORKJUN 19, 2019
 

A Nigerian Professor of English, Prof. Austin Nwagbara, has lamented the ways Nigerians are treated in Ghana.

In the video obtained by SaharaReporters, Nwagbara was seen talking to a group of Nigerians in the video about the poor quality of Ghana's varsities and unfair treatment to Nigerians in Ghana.

Nwagbara recounted how he heard some Ghanaian leaders abuse Nigerians despite the country's contributions to their economy.

"They (Ghana) are using our manpower. We have an advantage that we supply to them. What are we getting back? Insults!"

The don urged the Nigerian government to swiftly respond to reports of crimes and kidnapping attributed to Nigerians by withdrawing its investment to Ghana. 

He said, "Our people (Nigerians) will come here (Ghana) and pay $10,000 (as tuition) but they will not pay N20,000 in the University of Lagos…what an average student pays in the University of Lagos in one session to get a degree in English is N12,000.

"If you ask Nigerians to donate N50,000 every year to contribute to that University, they will riot but the same Nigerians will come here and pay $10, 000 for something 80% inferior to Nigeria. I won't pay 10% of that sum ($10,000) for my child to study to get a degree in a Ghanaian university. I am in the system, I know. The quality of education here (Ghana) is 80 per cent inferior to what we have in Nigeria.

"No Ghanaian degree is 20% up to the quality of a Nigerian degree. All our federal universities are better than any universities here (Ghana). What makes a university? It's not buildings, it's not trees; it's the quality of staff that will recycle and produce others. They don't have it."

For criticizing Ghana's varsities and exposing unfair treatment to Nigerians in Ghana, a Nigerian Professor of English, Prof. Austin Nwagbara, was arrested by the Criminal Investigative Department of the Ghana Police Service yesterday.

SaharaReporters gathered that Nwagbara was arrested –later granted bail – in Ghana for a viral video in which he criticised Ghana's varsities and the way the Ghanaian media has been painting Nigerians black in the wake of recent kidnappings in Ghana.

Reacting to negative reports about Nigeria being peddled by Ghanaians, Nwagbara said, "I've been a pressman, there is no absolute truth in the media. The truth is the truth as it is presented. Let us use our own media and get back to them (Ghana). Let us see life cases, let our media with this story say we want to go to their prisons to see Nigerians, of course, they will turn you back, you broadcast it. And by the time you're through, you run series of documentaries on Nigerians-Ghana relations and sir, we'll make history.

"We're highly skilled, highly talented and blessed people but many at the time we lack strategy, Nigerians tend to lack strategy. You can have good skills, if you don't know how to let people know it, it is there; it dies, like having a factory full of items in the warehouse. If you don't advertise it remains in the warehouse".

"They have harassed us a lot, I know that... What I'm saying is we need strategies. I'll suggest something which the embassy can think about. There is a bad image for Nigeria; we can take it back through the press. We can reverse it. We have powerful Nigerian media stations, ChannelsTV broadcast all over the world, there's active social media. Let them come here (Ghana) and run documentaries on the experiences of Nigerians and blast it all over the world. In three days Ghana would respond.

"I have been a media person, you cannot be here and suffering. Let the leaders get our media persons to come here to cover what has been happening. Go to the student community, go to the business community, go to everywhere; go to the embassy. Go and confront the officials with the information, air it, within one week I can tell you part of worse happening. I'm sorry to say it but this is within us, the present government in Ghana came on the grounds of Nigeria bashing. I've listened to things some of their top leaders have said all over the world in major places. We did not take it back, if we take it back they will sit up, so media strategy is one."

Nwagbara called for the introduction of help lines at different embassies, airports and immigration offices to address cases of human right abuses against Nigerians.

 "Do we have help lines? If I am in a problem, who do I call? Can't we have Nigerian help lines at entry points in different countries? If we have contacts, it will be easier. They have sold us as criminal and we have bought it."





On Wed, Jun 19, 2019 at 7:00 AM Kwabena Akurang-Parry <kaparry@hotmail.com> wrote:

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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 - Nigerian Professor arrested; charged with incitement and breach of peace

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UPDATE 2:
I would recommend that folks take the time to read the comments section of this story on Ghanaweb through the 
URL below--to get a sense of the mind of what some Ghanaians think of Nigeria and Nigerians:


General News of Tuesday, 18 June 2019

Source: classfmonline.com

UG disowns 'mischievous' Nigerian professor in viral video



The management of the University of Ghana, Legon (UG) has disassociated itself from Professor Austin Nwagbara, a Nigerian Professor of English who was captured on video denigrating the university and other Ghanaian tertiary institutions at a meeting.


"Professor Nwagbara is currently not a member of faculty at the University of Ghana," the university disowned him in a statement.

Professor Nwagbara claimed in the video which has gone viral on social media that he was a lecturer at the English faculty of the university.

The university said beyond the many "provocative statements" Prof Nwagbara made, he also launched into a tirade against universities in Ghana in general, and the University of Ghana, in particular.

He said: "…Our people will come here and pay $10,000 but they will not pay N20,000 in the University of Lagos ... What an average student pays in the University of Lagos in one session to get a degree in English is N12,000. Ghanaians are there paying N12,000… if you ask Nigerians to donate N50,000 naira every year to contribute to that university they will riot but the same Nigerians will come here and pay $10,000 for something 80 per cent inferior to Nigeria."

"I won't pay 10 per cent of that sum for my child to get a degree in a Ghanaian university, I am in the system, I know the quality of education we receive here is 80 per cent inferior to what is in Nigeria. I can tell you authoritatively," he added.

"No Ghanaian degree is 20 per cent up to the quality of a Nigerian degree. All our federal universities are better than any universities here. What makes a university? It's not buildings, it's not trees, it's the quality of staff that will recycle and produce others; they don't have it," he said.

The UG management in its statement said its records show that Prof Nwagbara was a visiting scholar at the Department of English during the 2011/12 academic year from 8 August 2011 to 30 July 2012.

Nigerian Professor hatches plot to tear up Ghana
Volume 90%
 


The UG statement noted that the claims Prof Nwangbara made in the video relating to the University's sources of income are incorrect and do not in any way represent the true facts and figures of the university's income and state of affairs.

"The University of Ghana disassociates itself from the claims Professor Austin Nwagbara makes in the video which we find as mischievous and intended to mislead the public and harm the reputation of the university," the statement said.  






On Wed, Jun 19, 2019 at 9:51 AM Okey Iheduru <okeyiheduru@gmail.com> wrote:

UPDATE 1:

 We Supply Ghana Manpower, We Get Insults Back –Nigerian Professor Arrested By Ghanaian Police

The don urged the Nigerian government to swiftly respond to reports of crimes and kidnapping attributed to Nigerians by withdrawing its investment to Ghana.


BY SAHARAREPORTERS, NEW YORKJUN 19, 2019
 

A Nigerian Professor of English, Prof. Austin Nwagbara, has lamented the ways Nigerians are treated in Ghana.

In the video obtained by SaharaReporters, Nwagbara was seen talking to a group of Nigerians in the video about the poor quality of Ghana's varsities and unfair treatment to Nigerians in Ghana.

Nwagbara recounted how he heard some Ghanaian leaders abuse Nigerians despite the country's contributions to their economy.

"They (Ghana) are using our manpower. We have an advantage that we supply to them. What are we getting back? Insults!"

The don urged the Nigerian government to swiftly respond to reports of crimes and kidnapping attributed to Nigerians by withdrawing its investment to Ghana. 

He said, "Our people (Nigerians) will come here (Ghana) and pay $10,000 (as tuition) but they will not pay N20,000 in the University of Lagos…what an average student pays in the University of Lagos in one session to get a degree in English is N12,000.

"If you ask Nigerians to donate N50,000 every year to contribute to that University, they will riot but the same Nigerians will come here and pay $10, 000 for something 80% inferior to Nigeria. I won't pay 10% of that sum ($10,000) for my child to study to get a degree in a Ghanaian university. I am in the system, I know. The quality of education here (Ghana) is 80 per cent inferior to what we have in Nigeria.

"No Ghanaian degree is 20% up to the quality of a Nigerian degree. All our federal universities are better than any universities here (Ghana). What makes a university? It's not buildings, it's not trees; it's the quality of staff that will recycle and produce others. They don't have it."

For criticizing Ghana's varsities and exposing unfair treatment to Nigerians in Ghana, a Nigerian Professor of English, Prof. Austin Nwagbara, was arrested by the Criminal Investigative Department of the Ghana Police Service yesterday.

SaharaReporters gathered that Nwagbara was arrested –later granted bail – in Ghana for a viral video in which he criticised Ghana's varsities and the way the Ghanaian media has been painting Nigerians black in the wake of recent kidnappings in Ghana.

Reacting to negative reports about Nigeria being peddled by Ghanaians, Nwagbara said, "I've been a pressman, there is no absolute truth in the media. The truth is the truth as it is presented. Let us use our own media and get back to them (Ghana). Let us see life cases, let our media with this story say we want to go to their prisons to see Nigerians, of course, they will turn you back, you broadcast it. And by the time you're through, you run series of documentaries on Nigerians-Ghana relations and sir, we'll make history.

"We're highly skilled, highly talented and blessed people but many at the time we lack strategy, Nigerians tend to lack strategy. You can have good skills, if you don't know how to let people know it, it is there; it dies, like having a factory full of items in the warehouse. If you don't advertise it remains in the warehouse".

"They have harassed us a lot, I know that... What I'm saying is we need strategies. I'll suggest something which the embassy can think about. There is a bad image for Nigeria; we can take it back through the press. We can reverse it. We have powerful Nigerian media stations, ChannelsTV broadcast all over the world, there's active social media. Let them come here (Ghana) and run documentaries on the experiences of Nigerians and blast it all over the world. In three days Ghana would respond.

"I have been a media person, you cannot be here and suffering. Let the leaders get our media persons to come here to cover what has been happening. Go to the student community, go to the business community, go to everywhere; go to the embassy. Go and confront the officials with the information, air it, within one week I can tell you part of worse happening. I'm sorry to say it but this is within us, the present government in Ghana came on the grounds of Nigeria bashing. I've listened to things some of their top leaders have said all over the world in major places. We did not take it back, if we take it back they will sit up, so media strategy is one."

Nwagbara called for the introduction of help lines at different embassies, airports and immigration offices to address cases of human right abuses against Nigerians.

 "Do we have help lines? If I am in a problem, who do I call? Can't we have Nigerian help lines at entry points in different countries? If we have contacts, it will be easier. They have sold us as criminal and we have bought it."





On Wed, Jun 19, 2019 at 7:00 AM Kwabena Akurang-Parry <kaparry@hotmail.com> wrote:

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



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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 - LETTER TO OBASANJO AND JONATHAN

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Don't jeopardise Nigeria's existence, concerned citizens write former presidents ON JUNE 19, 201911:58 AMIN NEWSBY VICTOR OGUNYINKA49 COMMENTS Former presidents Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan have been cautioned against jeopardizing the country's existence in a bid to propagate their selfish agenda. President Jonathan and former President Obasanjo Some concerned Nigerians gave this counsel in a letter signed by Rev Musa Fomson and Prince Raymond Enero, Convener and Secretary respectively and addressed to the former leaders. According to the group, the comments of the pair has reached the head and can no longer be condoned. ALSO READ: Leah Sharibu's father reacts to Saraki's donation Read full letter below: Your Excellencies, please permit us to extend our heartfelt and warm greetings to you. And may we also congratulate both of you on the June 12, 2019, Democracy Day celebration. We believe President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR took the appropriate steps by redefining and normalizing Nigeria's most suitable date for the commemoration of our Democracy Day. We all celebrated in grand style, as we fondly remembered our struggles for the entrenchment of democracy in Nigeria with the Late Chief MKO Abiola as the national and international symbol of this historic date. And we pray God Almighty to bless and protect every Nigerian leader who has either benefitted from democracy or have had the opportunity to lead us under a democratic government. We especially salute you, our former leaders for the rare privilege to lead Nigeria, a nation of over 200 million people. Leadership is a great burden and whether you discharged your responsibilities to the Federal Republic of Nigeria (FRN) responsibly as the exigencies of the time demanded or neglected it, we cannot say more than to thank each one of you for the service to fatherland. However, we have certain observations to make publicly your thoughts on national issues in a manner that is unbecoming of former Nigerian leaders. We have observed that you often plant landmines directly or indirectly on the path of the incumbent Presidency through inciting and derogatory public comments. It is becoming unbearable for the rest of us to bear and we thought it wise to let you know. You had the golden opportunity to lead Nigeria, and in Chief Obasanjo's case even twice. So, we cannot discern why you should decide to overtly or clandestinely to ensure that President Buhari is not allowed to also use his wisdom in the leadership of this great country and be held accountable for his actions or inactions?

Read more at: https://www.vanguardngr.com/2019/06/dont-jeopardise-nigerias-existence-concerned-citizens-write-former-presidents/  

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USA Africa Dialogue Series - Enugu !

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Greetings from Enugu, beautiful city to behold. Located on the hills, Enugu is a city of beautiful people smiling at you. With lots of hotels, pepper soup joints, eateries, Enugu makes you want to come back for more experience.

Enugu has good road networks. From Akanu Ibiam Enugu International Airport, we drove through Thinker's Corner, joining the Enugu-Abakiliki Express-road. The road networks are well-laid, though not without 'artificial road bumps ' created by the 'khaki boys' at 82 Division. We got to Ogui roundabout, turning right, we got to 'Otigba roundabout', the then centre for commercial sex workers at night. We passed through government house until we arrived at Nafelis Hotel, along Ezeilo Street, Independent Layout. The road networks within the city is very good compared to what is obtainable in other cities in Nigeria.

The city has lots of ugba and ishi-ewu joints where one can spend his/her money to the last penny without knowing. The city is not only busy in the day but also at nights when people come out from 8pm to spend some parts of the money made during the day in different ugba, ishi-ewu, among other local streets restaurants.

It is a cosmopolitan city, with diverse peoples from South-south, south-west and northern Nigeria. The people are cosmopolitan, industrious and accommodating. Certainly, Enugu City is a place to always visit in Southeast Nigeria.

Sent from my iPhone

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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Enugu !

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In January 2016 when I was dropping off my son for is return flight to the US on Ethiopian Airlines, we made a quick drive around town before heading to the airport. After about 20 minutes drive, the young lad said: "Dad, why did you build your house in Owerri?" Startled, I asked why, to which he responded: "'Cos, this is a really cool city. You should have built here." Yes, there's a charm effect that Enugu has on the first-time visitor!

Btw, Sir, I hope you didn't just zoom past the women at Otigba Roundabout and head straight to the Isi Ewu joints. You don't have to "do" anything with them...just drop some "Azikiwe's" and get five genuinely appreciative "Gbozaas!!!!! They have to eat, too. :).

On Wed, Jun 19, 2019 at 1:58 PM Toyin Falola <toyinfalola@austin.utexas.edu> wrote:


Greetings from Enugu, beautiful city to behold. Located on the hills, Enugu is a city of beautiful people smiling at you. With lots of hotels, pepper soup joints, eateries, Enugu makes you want to come back for more experience.

Enugu has good road networks. From Akanu Ibiam Enugu International Airport, we drove through Thinker's Corner, joining the Enugu-Abakiliki Express-road. The road networks are well-laid, though not without 'artificial road bumps ' created by the 'khaki boys' at 82 Division. We got to Ogui roundabout, turning right, we got to 'Otigba roundabout', the then centre for commercial sex workers at night. We passed through government house until we arrived at Nafelis Hotel, along Ezeilo Street, Independent Layout. The road networks within the city is very good compared to what is obtainable in other cities in Nigeria.

The city has lots of ugba and ishi-ewu joints where one can spend his/her money to the last penny without knowing. The city is not only busy in the day but also at nights when people come out from 8pm to spend some parts of the money made during the day in different ugba, ishi-ewu, among other local streets restaurants.

It is a cosmopolitan city, with diverse peoples from South-south, south-west and northern Nigeria. The people are cosmopolitan, industrious and accommodating. Certainly, Enugu City is a place to always visit in Southeast Nigeria.

Sent from my iPhone

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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 - Enugu !

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"Btw, Sir, I hope you didn't just zoom past the women at Otigba Roundabout and head straight to the Isi Ewu joints. You don't have to "do" anything with them...just drop some "Azikiwe's" and get five genuinely appreciative "Gbozaas!!!!! They have to eat, too. :)"

If that had happened, Prof's original reason for being in Enugu would have been seriously jeopardized!

CAO.

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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Enugu !

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TF,
It nice you are in Enugu and we can trust your assessment of the environment.
Please send pictures of those places you have beautifully described so that we can also appreciate its aesthetic ambience.
We look forward to seeing you back to Texas.
Segun Ogungbemi.

Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 19, 2019, at 3:04 PM, Toyin Falola <toyinfalola@austin.utexas.edu> wrote:



Greetings from Enugu, beautiful city to behold. Located on the hills, Enugu is a city of beautiful people smiling at you. With lots of hotels, pepper soup joints, eateries, Enugu makes you want to come back for more experience.

Enugu has good road networks. From Akanu Ibiam Enugu International Airport, we drove through Thinker's Corner, joining the Enugu-Abakiliki Express-road. The road networks are well-laid, though not without 'artificial road bumps ' created by the 'khaki boys' at 82 Division. We got to Ogui roundabout, turning right, we got to 'Otigba roundabout', the then centre for commercial sex workers at night. We passed through government house until we arrived at Nafelis Hotel, along Ezeilo Street, Independent Layout. The road networks within the city is very good compared to what is obtainable in other cities in Nigeria.

The city has lots of ugba and ishi-ewu joints where one can spend his/her money to the last penny without knowing. The city is not only busy in the day but also at nights when people come out from 8pm to spend some parts of the money made during the day in different ugba, ishi-ewu, among other local streets restaurants.

It is a cosmopolitan city, with diverse peoples from South-south, south-west and northern Nigeria. The people are cosmopolitan, industrious and accommodating. Certainly, Enugu City is a place to always visit in Southeast Nigeria.

Sent from my iPhone

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USA Africa Dialogue Series - I HEAR AND SENSE A DANGEROUS TREND IN ACCRA

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In July 1938, or thereabout, Nnamdi Azikiwe's West African Pilot newspaper wrote a long and moral critique of the Nazi behaviour of holding the "sins" of a few Jews against the entire Jewish people of  Germany. I wish the press in Accra, with a few exceptions, will mount a similar moral mission against what is becoming a creeping and dangerous trend in Accra: the ascription of the criminal conduct of a few Nigerians in Ghana, to "Nigerians" as a group of people.

Yes, there have been apprehensions of some Nigerians by the Ghana police for criminal conduct that includes kidnapping of foreign nationals. I hear too, as I move around Accra, cautionary whispers to be careful of the "Nigerians" who have flooded the country.  I wonder how Ghanaians in the capital city are able to make facial recognition of who is, and is not Nigerian. Nevertheless, while every nation is obligated to secure the welfare of its citizens, and visitors, it is equally obligatory for every nation to tamp down any potential descent of its citizenry into the demonization of a national group from the invidious conduct of a few.

I don't like this tendency when it is used to demonize and criminalize a racial group in America. I have looked at the same with scorn in my study of Nazi racism and antosemitism, and I will not be faithful to my intellectual and moral creed if I did not express my dismay at the same creeping trend in my own country Ghana. This time, it is about Nigerians. Somewhere in the world, it could be about Ghanaians.  I remember the wise words of Father Niemoller: First, they came for the Communists.

Edward Kissi
Accra

USA Africa Dialogue Series - I HEAR AND SENSE A DANGEROUS TREND IN ACCRA

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In July 1938, or thereabout, Nnamdi Azikiwe's West African Pilot newspaper wrote a long and moral critique of the Nazi behaviour of holding the "sins" of a few Jews against the entire Jewish people of  Germany. I wish the press in Accra, with a few exceptions, will mount a similar moral mission against what is becoming a creeping and dangerous trend in Accra: the ascription of the criminal conduct of a few Nigerians in Ghana, to "Nigerians" as a group of people.

Yes, there have been apprehensions of some Nigerians by the Ghana police for criminal conduct that includes kidnapping of foreign nationals. I hear too, as I move around Accra, cautionary whispers to be careful of the "Nigerians" who have flooded the country.  I wonder how Ghanaians in the capital city are able to make facial recognition of who is, and is not Nigerian. Nevertheless, while every nation is obligated to secure the welfare of its citizens, and visitors, it is equally obligatory for every nation to tamp down any potential descent of its citizenry into the demonization of a national group from the invidious conduct of a few.

I don't like this tendency when it is used to demonize and criminalize a racial group in America. I have looked at the same with scorn in my study of Nazi racism and antosemitism, and I will not be faithful to my intellectual and moral creed if I did not express my dismay at the same creeping trend in my own country Ghana. This time, it is about Nigerians. Somewhere in the world, it could be about Ghanaians.  I remember the wise words of Father Niemoller: First, they came for the Communists.

Edward Kissi
Accra

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - LETTER TO OBASANJO AND JONATHAN

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On Wed, Jun 19, 2019 at 10:58 PM Anthony Akinola <anthony.a.akinola@gmail.com> wrote:
Don't jeopardise Nigeria's existence, concerned citizens write former presidents ON JUNE 19, 201911:58 AMIN NEWSBY VICTOR OGUNYINKA49 COMMENTS Former presidents Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan have been cautioned against jeopardizing the country's existence in a bid to propagate their selfish agenda. President Jonathan and former President Obasanjo Some concerned Nigerians gave this counsel in a letter signed by Rev Musa Fomson and Prince Raymond Enero, Convener and Secretary respectively and addressed to the former leaders. According to the group, the comments of the pair has reached the head and can no longer be condoned. ALSO READ: Leah Sharibu's father reacts to Saraki's donation Read full letter below: Your Excellencies, please permit us to extend our heartfelt and warm greetings to you. And may we also congratulate both of you on the June 12, 2019, Democracy Day celebration. We believe President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR took the appropriate steps by redefining and normalizing Nigeria's most suitable date for the commemoration of our Democracy Day. We all celebrated in grand style, as we fondly remembered our struggles for the entrenchment of democracy in Nigeria with the Late Chief MKO Abiola as the national and international symbol of this historic date. And we pray God Almighty to bless and protect every Nigerian leader who has either benefitted from democracy or have had the opportunity to lead us under a democratic government. We especially salute you, our former leaders for the rare privilege to lead Nigeria, a nation of over 200 million people. Leadership is a great burden and whether you discharged your responsibilities to the Federal Republic of Nigeria (FRN) responsibly as the exigencies of the time demanded or neglected it, we cannot say more than to thank each one of you for the service to fatherland. However, we have certain observations to make publicly your thoughts on national issues in a manner that is unbecoming of former Nigerian leaders. We have observed that you often plant landmines directly or indirectly on the path of the incumbent Presidency through inciting and derogatory public comments. It is becoming unbearable for the rest of us to bear and we thought it wise to let you know. You had the golden opportunity to lead Nigeria, and in Chief Obasanjo's case even twice. So, we cannot discern why you should decide to overtly or clandestinely to ensure that President Buhari is not allowed to also use his wisdom in the leadership of this great country and be held accountable for his actions or inactions?

Read more at: https://www.vanguardngr.com/2019/06/dont-jeopardise-nigerias-existence-concerned-citizens-write-former-presidents/  

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USA Africa Dialogue Series - The Courage to say NO

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This is my piece for the forthcoming weekend. In case I go for a
wedding this weekend and forget. You know, ironically, in wartime,
people still attend parties. What more in Nigeria where the sound of
cutlery on plates in one's imagination reminds one about a party!

Please, click on this link to read "The Courage to Say NO":


https://obododimma-oha.blogspot.com/2019/06/the-courage-to-say-no.html

Thank you!

Sincerely,
Obododimma.


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B.A.,First Class Honours (English & Literary Studies);
M.A., Ph.D. (English Language);
M.Sc. (Legal, Criminological & Security Psychology);
Professor of Cultural Semiotics & Stylistics,
Department of English,
University of Ibadan.

COORDINATES:

Phone (Mobile):
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USA Africa Dialogue Series - Omolara Leslie Ogundipe

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???????


Sent from my iPhone

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Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Omolara Leslie Ogundipe

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TF,
What happens to Prof. Molara Ogundipe? We were together at Ogun State University in the 80s.
Segun Ogungbemi.

Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 19, 2019, at 8:28 PM, Toyin Falola <toyinfalola@austin.utexas.edu> wrote:

???????


Sent from my iPhone

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