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Atiku Says APC Presidential Ticket Is Not A Do Or Die Affairs

Former Vice president and APC presidential aspirant, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar has implored the other aspirants against letting the ticket tear the party apart opining that the contest should be issues-based rather than on primordial sentiments.

 

Mallam Garba Shehu, the media chief to Atiku said this  Abuja on Sunday

Shehu said those clamouring for consensus arrangement should know that Nigerians are no longer interested in leaders chosen through boardroom conspiracies but rather a candidate who emerges openly.

“On the ‘No Buhari, No Victory’ campaign of blackmail against the party, we don’t want to be in the gutter with those type of characters. The Atiku bid for the APC ticket is a battle of ideas against emotions,” he said.

“Given the woeful failure of the current administration, a winning party needs a ready candidate with articulated solutions to the problems, not threat. Atiku is ready. Beside this,  we are quite confident that Buhari  as well as other contestants know what is at stake and will not tear the party apart , no matter what.

“On our part, this is the assurance Atiku has given at every turn and we assure all that we will do everything to ensure that the part remain one.

“Atiku wants to create jobs, secure the nation so that the people will be safe and foreign investment will come. He wants to provide infrastructure and give Nigerians world class education.

“On consensus, our position has been clear all along that for too long, this country has been led by unprepared leaders chosen through board room conspiracies and it has not worked. The country needs a change and our party is in full realisation of this.

“That is why we chose the way of election, not consensus or imposition as did the PDP. We are different from the PDP because we subscribe to internal democracy,” he said.

Shehu said that the comparisons between Buhari and Atiku’s declaration is unnecessary because many of those who attended Buhari’s did so out of respect for him and not because he is the more popular or acceptable.

“Seen in its proper perspective, the show at Eagle Square last Wednesday was more of a national rally than an endorsement of a candidate.

“Many of those in attendance showed up arising from the weight of respect they have for the former military ruler who personally took invitations around.

“He went round to their offices and homes with invitations and many of Turaki’s people said they felt oblige and that they owed it to him and went there.

“We should know that politicians also speak using body language. How many of those at that rally, you can remember said the words ‘I support’ or  ‘I endorse?’

“Take my word, if the General had come home with an invitation to the Turaki, he too would have been present. You can’t say no to a person like that.
As for our own declaration, you were there and saw what we did.

“We wrote letters to all the VIP politicians and the leaders of the party by way of notification only.

“We didn’t ask them to come because our’s was planned as a youth event and we said so. This whole thing is not about the past. It is about the future of this country and the future belongs to the youth. We didn’t choose the path of rally but an interactive forum with the youth, “ he added

Insinuations are rife that Atiku has been schemed out of the party’s ticket with the top echelon of the party preferring the former head of state.

Ogundana Rotimi: Dear Buhari, Don’t Mind the Polls You Have Not Arrived!

As at the time you will be reading this piece, it is my uttermost desire that the Chibok Girls abducted six months ago by the violent Boko Haram sect would have been set free. The hope for their release was brought alive on 17th October 2014 when the Federal Government, through the Nigerian military, said that it had agreed to a ceasefire deal with the violent sect and that the Chibok girls would be released soon. The deal was announced by the Chief of Defence Staff; Air Marshal Alex Badeh.

As the 2015 general election is underway, the two major political parties are warming up, the political system is heating up and the parties are doing all they can to secure victory.

While we`re already sure of the Presidential Candidate of the ruling political party (People Democratic Party) which is President Goodluck Jonathan, four candidates- General Muhammadu Buhari, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, Governor Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso and Leadership Newspaper Publisher- Sam Nda Isaiah, have all shown interests for the opposition party`s (All Progressive Party) Presidential ticket.

On September 24 2014, the former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, officially declared his interest to be the 2015 presidential election flag bearer for the All Progressive Congress (APC) while on October 15 2014 at the Eagle Square Abuja the former military ruler, General Muhammadu Buhari, officially declared his interest for the same position . Kano State Governor Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso and Leadership Newspaper Publisher- Sam Nda-Isaiah are yet to officially declare their interests for the prestigious position.

From all indications, General Muhammadu Buhari may likely be the All Progressive Congress` (APC) candidate to contesting against President Goodluck Jonathan who is the flag bearer for the ruling party- (PDP) for the 2015 presidential election.

After General Muhammadu Buhari openly declared his 2015 presidential ambition in Abuja, an online opinion poll run through an independent third-party service called POLL conducted a survey.

The survey asked: ‘If the 2015 Nigerian presidential election were held today, with President Goodluck Jonathan as the PDP candidate and General Muhammadu Buhari as the APC candidate, who would win?’

The survey which lasted for 24 hours had 14,314 voters. The result of the survey showed overwhelmingly support for General Muhammadu Buhari, who won the Poll with a rating as high as 78%.

However, the fact is, in the Nigeria of today, majority of those that participate in Polls are the few educated elites of the society, most of which do not participate in real elections.

General Muhammadu Buhari may have won the Polls, but that is not an assurance that he will win the presidential election come 2015.

The 2015 general election will not be about political parties alone but about their candidates and Propaganda will be a powerful tool that would be employed by any of the parties that`s really desperate for victory.

Though, a lot of Nigerians may be interested in the change of governance and may want to see a transition of power but that does not imply that they will vote for a candidate that has been widely tagged as a religious fanatics.

General Buhari has been regarded as being honest and incorruptible, disciplined and principled, with his modest lifestyle acknowledged even by his opponents. With these qualities he is well suitable for the prestigious position of the country.

But on the other hand, he has also been widely criticized as being a Pro North than a Pro Nigeria and also as a religious bigot. Those alone could stand against him in a country that is so polarized along religious and regional lines.

He must therefore not be carried away by the results of the Polls, but rather concentrate on how to get the voters to change the false notion they have about him.

In this case, It is so important to remember that, it was the same Poll that rated the Ex- Governor of Ekiti State; Governor Kayode Fayemi above Governor Ayodele Fayose as the preferred candidate for Ekiti State governor by majority of registered voters in the state. The poll was conducted in May 2014 by one of the Nigerian leading research company- Brand Survey Ltd.

But unfortunately for him, the result was widely different when the election was conducted. Governor Peter Ayodele Fayose defeated him to be the winner of the Ekiti State gubernatorial election.

It was the same Poll that rated Mallam Nuhu Ribadu approximately 90% high over President Goodluck Jonathan and General Buhari in 2011. But the result was not the same when the election was conducted in April 2011. In fact Mallam Nuhu Ribadu didn’t even come second after the election was over and results released, but came last amidst the two other candidates he was rated above by the Polls.

Saying that General Buhari won`t pose a big threat to President Goodluck Jonathan in the forth coming Presidential election is far from the truth but relaxing on the results from the Polls will do him more harm than good.

Buhari must therefore, get his campaign strategies right, and top on the list must be aimed at convincing the people that he`s not a religious fanatics. Especially the people at the grassroots- those market men and women, those religious minded people that still carry the notion as cooked to them by his enemy.

If possible he should try attending the forthcoming Christian religious gatherings like the HolyGhost Congress 2014, Shiloh 2014, Pray your way to 2015, and others. He could also visit the Synagogue, Read up Rhapsody of Realities and the likes, and most importantly meet up Christian religious leaders. These will go a long way to convince those that still believe he is an Islamic religious bigot that he`s not. (Remember Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State applied a similar strategy when faced with the same criticism).

It would be better, if his case is like that of Benjamin Netanyahu- the Israeli politician, and current Prime Minister of Israel, who always lose the election in the polls, and win it on election day.

And until he is declared winner of the 2015 Presidential Election, he should not mind the Polls he has not yet arrived!

God Bless Nigeria!

_______________________________________

Ogundana Michael Rotimi

Follow me on Twitter @MickeySunny

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World Health Organisation Declares Nigeria Ebola Free Today

The United Nation’s World Health Organisation’s (WHO’s) protocol, the UN body will Monday officially declare Nigeria free of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD).

The outgoing Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu, had informed newsmen two weeks ago that Nigeria would be declared Ebola-free by WHO once 42 days had passed after the last case of the virus was discharged from the hospital. Nigeria according to WHO, will be joining Senegal as the only two countries, since the current outbreak of the virus in Guinea, which have successfully contained the disease.

Other countries still combating the virus include Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the United States of America (USA) and Spain. The strain of Ebola which has claimed almost 50 lives in the DRC is different from the one that afflicted West Africa, the US and Spain.

Onyebuchi had however cautioned that though there is a WHO protocol for declaring a country Ebola-free, he termed it theoretical.

He said: “Like I said in my speech at the UN General Assembly, as long as there is a single case of Ebola in any part of the world, every country is at risk.

“So this is really theoretical and countries would still have to take the necessary measures to guard against the outbreak of the virus in their territories.”

Since the outbreak of the virus in Nigeria, the country has recorded 19 confirmed cases and seven deaths. The country has also won praise from WHO and the international community for its quick response in the containment of the virus.

Despite the strides Nigeria has made in containing Ebola in the country, the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) has asked the federal government to establish Community Ebola Surveillance Units, saying that this is not the time to relax in the fight, as the virus remains a global disease.

The NMA President, Dr. Kayode Obembe, made the call during a press conference in Abuja at the weekend to kick off this year’s physicians’ week in Nigeria, reported the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

He said: “Community-based Ebola Surveillance Units should be established. Ebola is no longer a local but a global disease that must be eliminated from the terrestrial habitat.”

He, however, commended government’s effort at containing the virus.

Obembe called for alertness in community-based surveillance, illnesses with the onset of fever and anyone of bleeding, diarrhoea, bleeding when urinating, once identified, should be reported to the surveillance team or the closest health centre.

The association also recommended the establishment of at least one isolation unit in each senatorial district or state of the federation.

“For proper function of these isolation units, ambulance transfer services must be provided to convey probable and suspected cases to these units for evaluation and treatment.

“Ambulance staff must be trained and equipped to reduce the risk of patients-staff cross-infection while states should provide information on help lines and sources of information on the disease,” the NMA president said.

The NMA further recommended that communities should provide cremation sites while the states provide resources and instructions for the safe disposal of bodies and other bio-hazardous materials.

We’ll Return Missionary Schools Once The Assembly Repeals The Applicable Law – Kwara Governor

Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed, has said that the Kwara state government would return the missionary schools to the owners as once the state Assembly repeals the law on the matter.

Some churches and Christian denominations had raised alarm over the week asking for the return of the schools to their owners.
Ahmed said it will amount to contravening the law if the government returns the schools without the Assembly passing the law.

Speaking further, the Governor said that the government have urged the Assembly to repeal the kwara state education law of 2006. If repealed, the government would have the power to return the schools to their owners.

“There are two types of schools; the first one is government owned and the second one is privately owned but government-grant aided. The government owned are straight-jacketed; the grant aided ones had entered into agreement with the government under Kwara State Education Law on how grant-aided schools are supposed to be run. Once you build a school either a faith- based, community-based, individuals or groups and you desire to seek for grant aiding by government, then it would be run under Kwara State Education Law on grant aiding of schools. And those schools give the proprietors limited power and give government limited power.This is how schools have been run so far.” Ahmed said.

Jonathan May Formally Announce His Candidacy To PDP Governors Tonight

President Goodluck Jonathan may announce his 2015 presidential ambition in a meeting tonight at the State
House with all PDP governors

THISDAY reports that one of the PDP governors said he received a circular for the meeting from the Protocol Office of the President.
“We just received signals that the President would be meeting all PDP elected governors at the State House at 9pm,” the governor
said.
The source also said that the governors would use the opportunity of the meeting to
discuss the issue of consensus governorship candidates which the National Working Committee has refused to agree to.
Most of the governors are also bothered about their post 2015 status. Many of them have served their full terms as Governor and want a straight ticket to the senate. This request has likewise met with opposition from the NWC

Having Successfully Ended The Biafra War, I’ll Never Thought We’ll Fight Insurgency Again – Gowon

Former Head of State,General
Yakubu Gowon, has said that he fought the Nigerian civil war in 1967 to keep the country as one indissoluble entity.
He said this at a youth on mentorship, to mark his 80th birthday celebration.
Gowon also he didn’t think he will become Head of state at the age of 31.
“Honestly, it was not my intention to be a Head of State; it was by providence. I never planned to be the Head of State. If there is anything I planned to be, it was to rise up to be General officer Commanding the Nigerian Army but not becoming the Commander-in-Chief of the Nigerian Armed Forces,” Gowon said.
He said that he told the young coup plotters that he was not interested but they insisted.
“I told them I did not want that, and that they should give it to any other officer that was disciplined and loyal in his approaches However, they insisted it should be me,”
He advised the youth to shun violence and corruption, describing the Boko Haram insurgents as unfortunate,
saying after the Civil war, he never thought that there was going to be another uprising in Nigeria where people would be killed and maimed.
The former Head of State also warned against the moves to create additional states saying that the recommendation by the just concluded 2014 National Conference for the creation of 19 more states along the lines of ethnic nationalities was not good for the country.

Gowon was the Head of state between 1967-1975. He led Nigeria in the Nigerian civil war.

Donald Trump Labels Obama ‘A Total Mad Man’ Over Ebola Response

American business magnate and TV personality, Donald Trump believes US President, Barack Obama is a lunatic. He made this remark on Twitter while reacting to Obama’s recent statements about America being less safe it bans flights from West Africa.

Donald Trump has openly been calling for a ban of flights from West Africa so as to stop the spread of the deadly ebola virus to the USA. And now that Obama has a contrary opinion, he believes the President is mad. Check out his tweets below:

Don Jazzy, Tiwa Savage, Dr. Sid & Others Storm London For Mavin Records UK Tour

All is set for the much publicized Mavin Concert UK. The Mavin stars led by the enigmatic producer and label executive arrived at the Heathrow airport in London yesterday.

The Mavin stars who arrived with Don Jazzy are: Di’ja, Dr. SID, Reekado Banks and Tiwa Savage. D’Prince and Korede Bello are expected to join them soon.

Check out these photos which Don Jazzy shared on his Instagram page

Mavin-Concert-UK-3

Mavin-Concert-UK-2

Mavin-Concert-UK-0

’33 Million Nigerians Practise Open Defecation’

The Federal Ministry of Water Resources on Friday said no fewer than 33 million people practise open defecation in Nigeria.

The Director, Water Quality Control and Sanitation, Mr. Samuel Ome, in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria in Abuja, stated that it was sad that open defecation was still a big challenge in the country.

He said many urban settlements lacked hygiene facilities, resulting in open defecation, which posed a threat to life as faeces are washed into drinking water sources.

According to him, basic access to sanitation in Nigeria still stands at 41 per cent coverage.

Ome, who is also the Chairman, National Task Group on Sanitation, stressed the need for attitudinal change to reduce water-borne diseases.

He said it was important that Nigerians cultivate clean habits, pointing out that good hygiene, often termed as ‘a personal thing,’ should reflect in the life of Nigerians.

“Sanitation starts with the individual; those things you do involuntarily become your attitude. You wake up in the morning, you use the toilet, you flush the toilet, you brush your teeth, you wash your body before going to work; nobody prompts you to do it, you do it voluntarily.

“In a sense, sanitation is personal; those personal things you do and the attitude you cultivate to improve your cleanliness, sanitation starts from the family point.

“The garbage you bring out must be disposed of properly. Sanitation has a huge role to play in the family, community and to the nation,” Ome said.

He said government was doing a lot to improve access to sanitation. Ome said water was important in the development of a nation as water is life.

He said 70 per cent of ailments were water related, including cholera which affects people living in unhygienic environments or those who consume bad water. Ome called on Nigerians to also cultivate the habit of hand washing to reduce unnecessary deaths from water-borne diseases.

He said, “As you go on your daily activities, before you eat your food, after shaking hands, you can wash your hands up to four times in the office to improve your hygiene and to minimise the transmission of diseases.

“Washing your hands with soap or ashes in running water helps to break the transmission of water-borne diseases. What we are advocating is that if we can do it for Ebola, we can do it for cholera and others.”

Social Democratic Party Backs President Jonathan’s 2015 Re-election Bid

The Social Democratic Party (SDP) says it will support President Goodluck Jonathan during presidential election in 2015 because of his performance in his first tenure of office.

Mr Rafiu Salau, the National Secretary, SDP, said this in Abuja on Saturday during an interview, reports the News Agency of Nigeria, NAN

He said the party’s primaries to elect candidates for the National Assembly and the State House of Assemblies would begin on Nov. 16 and end on Nov. 30.

According to him, the party will begin to verify the credentials of various candidates after the primaries.

“There are some people that have shown interests but we, as party members, are contemplating accepting Jonathan as the party’s candidate.
“He is carrying out the dream of our founding fathers, Chief Obafemi Awolowo and we are going to adopt him and work with him,’’ Salau said.
He said the party was also working to educate Nigerians on the essence of building a pure democratic platform, where the electorate would dictate who would rule over them.

He urged the electorate to ignore the habits of some politicians who were fond of inducing the public with stipends to get votes.

“The politicians should be the servants while the people should the bosses in this case; receiving N5, 000 from a politician is because the voters do not know their values.

“If the voters realise this, politicians will desist from teasing the public with stipends at the expense of national development,’’ he said.

He, therefore, urged the voters to use their powers to bring people that will govern them well into power in 2015.

Outrage At Nigerian Law School As Over 70% Students Fail Bar Exam

Over 4000 students of the Nigeria Law School have decried the mass failure at the Bar examinations. The students who paid over N300, 000 for the one year programme lamented that over 70 per cent of them failed the examination, that is a prerequisite for them to be called to Bar

The students blamed their failure on the Director General of Nigerian Law School, Olarenwaju Adesola Onadeko. They claimed that Onadeko wants to destroy their career by failing them en masse. The students called for a review of the examination as well as their results.

Some of the students who sent text messages and email to PM News explained that some lecturers also want the results to be reviewed. “Save Law School Students: The DG Olarenwaju Onadeko has come to destroy the future of over 70 per cent of students who wrote exams in August and has run to the United Kingdom to seek solace,” a text message read.

Having endured long academic strike while in school some of the students who had spent over seven years in tertiary institutions before they could attend Law School accused the DG of marking them down on purpose. “#Please save the future of 5000 law school student, so that the results may be reviewed because some lecturers are in support of this movement as they know the DG asked for a lot of scripts to be marked down. Please this is the least you can do,” another text read.

Another student said: “the mass failure at the Nigerian Law School is an insult to the legal system. Kindly help address this issue by calling the attention of authorities that matters; while another simply read: “#Please save the future of 5000 law school students”.

“We the law students of Nigerian Law School protest the poor handling and marking of our Bar 2 final exam. Please we need the media to come to our aid,” an email read.

“The Nigerian Law School released the 2013/2014 August result. It was a Tsunami! Out of 6000 candidates who registered, about #2172 passed. We are talking of about #4000 students who failed”.

Another student then pointed out the financial implication of going to the Law School. “Do we say 4000 students paid N300,000 not counting expenses for one year, feeding, books, then prepared to FAIL?

At the time of filing this report, our correspondent was unable to reach the DG or any member of management.

Onadeko was the former Deputy Director General of Lagos campus and the former secretary to the council of Legal Education and Director of Administration of the Nigerian Law School.

Simon Kolawole: A Peace Deal Long Overdue

Mrs. Oby Ezekwesili, former minister of education and a leading figure in the Bring Back Our Girls movement, called me on Friday afternoon, clearly desperate to hear some good news about the Chibok schoolgirls. She had heard that the girls, kidnapped by Boko Haram since April, were about to be released under a ceasefire agreement between the government and the insurgents. Immediately I saw her call, I knew what it was about.

“Simon, is it true?” she asked, and for one second you would think I actually held the key to the truth.
“Well, the chief of defence staff himself addressed the media to announce it, so it must be true,” I said, authoritatively.
“But we have heard all this before, Simon, haven’t we? How do we know it is true this time around? Will these girls return?” she said. By now, her voice was cracking, and I sensed she had broken down in tears.

I, too, was getting emotional. Earlier in the day, I had looked at the still images of the girls from a Boko Haram video and said to myself: “God, where are these girls? Will they ever return home? What is going on in the heads of their parents and siblings right now?”

The reported peace deal, or ceasefire agreement, means different things to Nigerians. To Ezekwesili, it is an opportunity to see the safe return of the teenagers who are thought to be 219 in all. Anything that would bring them back alive is welcome. To many, this is the beginning of a negotiated end to the insurgency and other evils associated with it. They think that for the insurgents, or some of them, to be ready to dialogue at all is a good sign. To the soldiers on the warfront and their families, this could be a big relief after so many deaths on the battlefield.

In some circles, however, a ceasefire represents the ultimate surrender of the Nigerian state to terrorism, a huge dent on national ego and a sign of how weak the Nigerian government has become. To the military hierarchy, this may be viewed as a humiliation, for how can we be discussing with terrorists who deserve nothing but death after all the horror they have inflicted on soldiers and civilians? I also heard several comments that President Goodluck Jonathan agreed to the peace deal because he is desperate to be returned to office next year. We all have our opinions, of course.

My opinion on this, which I started expressing in the last four years, is that we cannot defeat Boko Haram with military force alone. In a series of articles that I did on the insurgency, I camped with those who wanted government to engage in dialogue, offer amnesty to those who are ready to defect from Boko Haram, and engage those who refuse to surrender in military action. To be honest, I was only being realistic.

We were fighting a war that we were ill-prepared for, further complicated by its unconventional nature. That the insurgents probably enjoyed sympathy from some security, political and religious leaders also made it difficult for Nigeria. This is to say nothing about the state of the Nigerian armed forces, the difficult terrain in the north-east and the vulnerability of several towns and villages to the insurgency. I clearly favoured a negotiated end to the militancy. There is certainly a downside to negotiation ─ it could offer a perverse incentive for many groups to spring up, but the secret would be to improve our security capacity to nip such things in the bud.

My viewpoint, first expressed in 2011, was rejected by many readers. Some said I was out of my mind; many said I was playing to the gallery; several others said I was trying to be politically correct. A reader accused me of always pandering to “these Northerners”. Another reader warned me not to compare Niger Delta militants to Boko Haram. “The militants only killed soldiers. Boko Haram terrorists are killing civilians,” a reader wrote in an email. The consensus among those who opposed my view was: we must deploy military action to crush Boko Haram.

Fellow Nigerians, between the time I wrote that article and today, the militants have gone from hit-and-run attacks, in form of bombings, to putting boots on the ground, capturing towns and villages and hoisting their flags and proclaiming a caliphate. They have killed an emir. They have killed thousands. They have bombed churches and mosques. They have killed hundreds of soldiers. They have kidnapped schoolgirls and women. They have destroyed whole villages. They have acquired surface-to-air missiles. They have brought down a fighter jet. Imagine if we had pursued a peace deal years ago. Imagine the calamity we could have saved this nation.

For those who are still opposed to a peace deal, maybe they need to project into the next three years. It is either of two things ─ we successfully wipe out the terrorists and there will be peace forever, or the insurgency grows worse and we lose the whole of Borno and Yobe states to Boko Haram. Have opponents of a peace deal ever wondered why the more we say we have killed the terrorists, the more they come at us? As I write this, many Borno villages and towns are still under Boko Haram. If military action was that easy, we would not be here discussing ceasefire.

If indeed we are able to reach a ceasefire, it will offer us a great opportunity to develop a comprehensive plan to secure our territory. We need to re-appraise our current approach, retool the military, re-organise our border patrol mechanism and generally improve the capacity of the state to tackle insurgency. Niger Delta militants and Boko Haram have proved to the world that our military capacity is highly limited, and we need to face that fact and act accordingly.

Assuming the ceasefire deal works out (some Boko Haram factions, I understand, are not a party to it), we must change tact. The National Security Adviser, Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd) has already given us a few hints. We must get ready to rehabilitate the insurgents who come forward to surrender their weapons. We must develop a counter message to the doctrine of religious hate and extremism. We must develop early warning mechanisms and legal frameworks to deal with preachers and religious leaders who incite their followers to murder. Ultimately, though, President Jonathan must fast-track his intervention programmes to deliver skills and livelihoods to millions of unemployed youths.

Those who oppose ceasefire, dialogue, peace deal and amnesty need to enlighten us on how we can defeat an idea with military action. The US and its allies have been bombing and bombarding the Taliban, Al-Qaeda and ISIS, but the very idea of fundamentalism remains alive and kicking. It keeps producing terror gangs in different shapes and forms. This can only show that something deeper and broader is needed to counter this ideology. To think military tanks and fighter jets alone will end terrorism is very unrealistic.

And Four Other Things…

DUBAI DEATHS
When sportscaster, Aisha Falode, cried out that her son, Toba, had been murdered in Dubai earlier this year, she said it was becoming a common occurrence, but nobody listened to her. Officials at the Nigerian embassy in the United Arab Emirates even warned her to be careful with her agitations in order not to jeopardise a bilateral agreement the two countries were about to sign. Such wickedness. Now, another Nigerian has died in suspicious circumstances in Dubai. Oyamuyefa, son of former Bayelsa governor, Chief DSP Alamieyeseigha, is the latest casualty. Young Nigerians are routinely dying abroad. Co-incidence?
BUHARI VS JONATHAN
With due respect to Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, it is increasingly looking like the 2015 presidential election is going to be a rematch between President Goodluck Jonathan and Major-Gen. Muhammadu Buhari. Both of them squared up in 2011. They are exchanging brickbats again. Buhari, at his declaration on Wednesday, said economy was going down. Manufacturing, agriculture and power supply were “going down”, he said. Jonathan’s men have swiftly replied, citing facts and figures to counter his claims. I’m praying fervently that the presidential campaign will be healthy and will be based on issues with concrete evidence ─ and in good spirit. Amen.
EBOLA SCARE
Guyana has placed a travel ban on Nigerians to protect its citizens from Ebola infection. Trinidad and Tobago, another Caribbean country, has followed suit. Is it right? Is it wrong? Some will argue that if Nigeria had taken a similar measure, Patrick Sawyer would not have brought Ebola to the country all the way from Liberia. Others will argue that since Nigeria was no longer having any Ebola case, and will soon be certified so, those countries should not have included us in the blacklist. Whatever, why didn’t these Caribbean countries also place a travel ban on the US? Lol.
KESHI’S EXIT
The sacking of Super Eagles’ coach, Stephen Keshi, was a bit of a surprise to me. He looked irremovable! I’ve adored Keshi all my life, but he lost me with his ‘resignation’ after winning the Africa Cup of Nations in 2013. Again, he ‘resigned’ after the World Cup in Brazil and the drama continued. Keshi somehow made it look like the world revolves around him ─ the prima donna always reminding us that several countries are begging to hire him as their coach. What was that about? As it has turned out, we now know one of those heavyweight countries. Ethiopia.

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Article written By Simon Kolawole, and Culled from Thisday Newspaper.. Email: [email protected]

Disclaimer

It is the policy of NewsWireNGR not to endorse or oppose any opinion expressed by a User or Content provided by a User, Contributor, or other independent party.
Opinion pieces and contributions are the opinions of the writers only and do not represent the opinions of NewsWireNGR