Sunday, October 17, 2021

 



 Monday, April 24, 2000



 Michael Folorunso
 michaelf01@email.msn.com

RE: North In Isolation

 Monday, April 24, 2000



 Michael Folorunso
 

 

"North In Isolation" By Aminu Sa'ad Beli: Please allow me to respond to this article. I can understand Mallam Aminu Sa'ad Beli's frustration. If I were a Muslim, and from northern Nigeria, I probably will share my frustration openly too.

It is sad to note that those who have contributed the least to the progress of the Nation, and have had opportunities one after another, both military and constitutionally at ruling and shaping Nigeria are now the one that are complaining. If I were from the north I will feel a great deal of frustration too. The problem here is, his frustration is misdirected. Rather than direct his frustrations to the many leaders they have produced to rule Nigeria, no, he did not. Instead he singles out the Yorubas to bear the brunt of his pains. This man, is really in pain for his people, hence his public search for a scapegoat. Well, the Yorubas, are content and proud of who they are, and have never needed any one or any group to make us feel good.

Let me quote a saying from one of the illustrious sons of Oduduwa, " ka ka ki ndo bale fun gambari, ma kunkun ku" Late Chief Obafemi Awolowo is credited with the quote. It translates, I will die first before I bow to a gambari. It can be likened to the famous American quote " Give me liberty or give me death".

Looking back now, Awo was correct, at the time a lot of people saw him as very rigid, but at least he was very courageous and harbors no fear of any kind. Nonetheless some selfish Yorubas, colluded with the intellectually unprepared north and taught them the trappings of power, these, unfortunately were, the late Sir Ladoke Akintola, and recently Richard Akinjide and the rest of the coward clans.

Chief Akintola may not even be a coward, but he just was willing to give away too much for his own selfish goal. These were Yorubas that put too much faith in working with the tribalistic north who have always had an agenda of their own. Their agenda, as we all know is to spread Islam at all cost without regards for human life. Well, it is all a common knowledge that Chief Awolowo went to jail, more so for what he stood for than for what he was charged with. Awolowo I should say lived well, and died a natural death.

When I look at the Yorubas, I see the image of Lt. Col. A. Fajuyi, may his soul rest in perfect peace. I also see a hero of all heros, Brigadier Ben Adekunle. Today, in the Yoruba land, Akintola's name, is not as better remembered as that of Awolowo. Despite that the largely welfare expecting, beggar north will prefer that Awolowo's name be forgotten. The truth is, Awolowo's name is firmly etched in the heart of his fellow Yorubas, he does not need an edifice or monument to be erected in his name. His name stands for boldness and progress. Awo, unfortunately had the least chance at shaping the nation. Awolowo's contributions, hate him or love him, will live on for posterity to measure.

Let me remind Mallam Aminu Sa'ad Beli, that it was not the Yorubas who butchered innocent Igbos, pregnant women children and all, in 1966. It was indeed the Hausas, instigated by their Fulani masters. This is just a recent history, if my people committed such a barbaric crime, against pregnant women, children etc., just because they were Igbos, I will conveniently erase it from my memory too. History again repeated itself, two months ago in Nigeria, the targets this time around were southern Christians. God and true God does not need anyone to kill or fight for Him. The truth is, poverty and illiteracy, lack of clear awareness for the individual rights of worship and expression has created an environment where some indolent people can kill at will for religion.

Let me say here also, that the southerners recognized the need for mass education. Southern universities often set aside quotas to be filled by the educationally disadvantaged so they can help bring them up to speed. Anyday anytime, an educated customer is a better customer to deal with.

We are all black people, so you can not explain away the lack of decent education that is so visible in the north to genetics. Like one of their leaders rightly pointed out to them, late Usman Katsina clearly told them, that their problem is laziness and nothing more. The south as a whole is guilty of only one thing, appeasing mediocrity. I know well that education is not needed for anyone to be innovative, common sense and vision is. A group that will rather take a bowl in their hands and beg alms from their fellow citizens, it seems to me collectively is lacking in creativity and vision.

Regarding Yorubas looting the national treasury, there really is no truth to that, outside of Chief Obasanjo, no yoruba has ever ruled Nigeria. So I really do not see where the Yorubas have had uncontrolled access to the nation's treasury. Of course, Gen. Buhari is not a Yoruba, yet there is the question of the missing $2.2 billion. The other Generals who gave the Lebanese unrestricted access to the nations treasury and helped themselves to still many untold billions of US Dollars, Babangida and late Abacha are definitely not Yorubas. When pointing fingers, by God, be right.

Michael Folorunso


https://nigeriaworld.com/letters/2000/apr/242.html

Thursday, July 15, 2021

 


The sorry state of the Nigeria State, a terrorist State.

This is really a troubling time, the network of Fula terrorists are the ones who have plunged Nigeria into chaos. They are not even subtle about it; they are in your face about it. First, this terrorist group masterminded the abduction and kidnap of Nnamdi Kanu in broad daylight in Kenya. Without wasting time their spokesman, Abubarkar Malami could hardly contain himself over the kidnap, that he announced the kidnap in Hausa at the Press Conference he held, gloating over it as if it was something to be proud of. Maybe to the Fula ethnic, it was a moment of celebration, to many other Nigerians, it was indeed a very sad moment. What Malami did at that press conference to me is an insult to Nigeria. The focus of my article is however different, the focus is the attack in Ibadan at 1 AM July 1, 2021. 

I want to use this write-up to register a strong protest against the Federal Government’s attack on Chief Sunday Igboho’s home. What happened there in the wee hours of July 1, 2021 was a failed attempt to assassinate a citizen of Nigeria, a gallant son of Yoruba. Regardless of which side of the divide you are on, everyone of us should be troubled by what happened there in Ibadan on that early morning.

Former president Goodluck Jonathan once stated, some people want power, not because they want to serve the people, but because they want to use power to oppress the people. I have to say that GEJ was correct.

Mohammadu Buhari’s government is fast looking like a rogue government that has little or no concern for the wellbeing of “the” other Nigerians, who do not belong to his ethnic group or his brand of religion. Buhari’s government has with determination, and deliberate policy placed themselves at the helm of every government Agency and perfecting a plan to kill the rest of the Nigeria citizens.

Oloye Sunday Igboho suffered unspeakable carnage in the hands of the FG … the whole Yoruba nation is under attack, let us not be mistaken about it. The atrocity that took place in Ibadan city and at the home of Oloye Sunday Igboho, said it all. 

The entire Nigeria citizens are under siege, it has become very clear to all Nigerians that this Buhari government has no understanding of the concept of NATION BUILDING. The people in the current administration sought power just so they can use power to repress and oppress the citizens of Nigeria. 

It is abundantly clear that we have a group in power whose main purpose and goal is to undermine an egalitarian and a just society in Nigeria which some of us still believe is possible. Nigeria appears to be asleep, while these hell-bent ethnic group is relentless at work using the peaceful religion of Islam to cheat, steal and pillage Nigeria. They did not just start yesterday, they started way back in 1979, and they became bolder by the year to the point where they have now made ethnic cleansing/genocide the corner stone of their mission.

All they want is power, and they want it by force, they want power not build a viable Nigeria, but to actually see to it that Nigeria in its present form is destroyed. They want only their ethnic group to be the beneficiary. Their dream is so they can lord themselves over the rest of the Nigeria citizens. Th most annoying part is that we have this Attorney General, Abu Malami who thinks is the attorney general of the Fula people. He truly thinks in his troubled mind that the Igbos are conquered people. I will like to ask him just when did that conquest take place?

Perhaps he does not understand the Civil war of 1967 – 1970. I can not pin point any sector of the war where the Fula people excelled. This is not to mean that the northern soldiers did not excel, they did, I remember Col. M. Shuwa, from the North East, Colonels Gibson S. Jalo, Illiya D. Bisalla, Ibrahim Haruna all of who were gallant soldiers that fought to keep Nigeria ONE. The atrocities the North West soldiers committed in Asaba is still fresh in our minds, the massacre of Delta Igbos youths, which was carried out under Murtala Mohammed’s command, by one Ibrahim Taiwo who fashioned himself as a Fula. In real war these people who found it so easy to kill innocent young Igbo males were no match for what later confronted them at both Onitcha and Abagana, Biafra. The Nigeria Army under Murtala was roundly defeated in Abagana, a whole battalion was eviscerated and totally destroyed by the Bifrans.

I often hear about Karma, it came looking for Murtala Mohammed and Ibrahim Taiwo and served them a fair dosage of their own medicines, they too were killed like rats in broad day light by their fellow northerners.

I will urge Malami to go and study the Nigeria civil war 1967-1970, may be then, he will learn something that will make a human being out of him, something that will truly humble him. The Fula ethnic group don’t understand the value of diversity. They act like spies all over Nigeria, killing everyone they perceive to be in their way. I know without any doubt, that Governor of Ondo State is perhaps on their list of those they want to get rid of. I know they will be watching all of his moves. It is sad that I even allow myself to think in this way, but this is the truth about the Fula people.

At a time when everyone’s hand should be on deck to lift Nigeria out of the ruts it is in, most of us, unfortunately are worried about being kidnap by fellow Nigerians so to put it. We are consumed about our safety, we can’t go and farm, the citizens are in fear of being macheted to death if they went to farm, like they did to Dr. Aborode, a relation of Oloye Sunday Igboho. 

I am very careful, to make clear that, it is not the North that is on rampage – it is the Fula people who are going everywhere killing, raping and pillaging people’s lands, destroying lives and properties. Their fingerprints are all over the place, from Plateau to Adamawa and now the Southern States. 

For me as a Yoruba person, the attack on Chief Sunday Igboho is one act of State terrorism too much. Let no one be deceived about it. I make bold to say that there will not be a situation in Nigeria again, where the Nigeria Militarily will be used to engage any section of the Federation like it was done during the Nigeria vs Biafra war. It will NEVER happen again. What will happen is, individual ethnic group will stand to defend itself against their killers. The Buhari’s government should hide itself in shame and should be seen and treated as a pariah in the community of nations.

I miss Gani Fawehinmi … if Gani were alive today, he would have been in the courthouse filing suit against FG regarding this unwarranted attack in Ibadan. It is an attack on all Yoruba people and it is just that clear.

We have one nation to call our own, we either work to build it or die destroying it.

 

Michael O Folorunso

Dallas, Texas, USA


Monday, June 28, 2021

 

VPN works, it is safe to use, and it does not expose your Data.

I am moved to write this technical article to refute and dispel the misinformation which Minister Lai Mohammed put out there during his very combative attempt to explain the suspension he placed on Twitter to the Nigeria NASS. I could not believe my ears, what I heard from that man, Lai Mohammed, more so that a Minister will make such a brazen inaccurate statement about a popular technology among internet users. It is okay to not know, it is unforgivable to make factually WRONG technical statements.

 

What that man said in that hearing with bold face is a disservice to all the technically aware/savvy Nigerians. It was shameful no one in that room knew enough about VPN to correct him up front.

 

I am going to try and explain VPN in its most basic form and its benefits to everyone that uses this technology, including our people, the Nigeria population.

For the record, VPNs are very safe, all packets through it are ENCRYPTED and no one can intercept it, except the intended person at the destination point.

 

Long before VPN became popular among ordinary users, VPN (Virtual Private Network) has been in use for many decades in Corporations. VPN is the tool by which employees of most Institutions and Corporations connect remotely to their home offices and process company’s information/data safely and securely. I suspect that the use of VPN will even get to be more popular in Nigeria because of the avoidable gaffe of the government banning Twitter. 

 

What is a VPN (Virtual Private Network)

VPN is the process or the technology which allows your data to go over an encrypted connection (tunnel) from your house or your Smartphones/Handsets to another point on the Internet, through a designated VPN server, which may probably be in another country, and then make its way onto the public Internet.

  

The advantage of this encrypted connection is that your data has the IP address that is assigned to the other end of the tunnel, not your home IP, but <VPN IP: 172.30.50.1>.

 

That means that when you connect to a web server the IP address seen by the server is that of the VPN endpoint <VPN IP: 172.30.50.1>, not your home IP address. By doing this, the user is offered some PRIVACY.

 

How Does a VPN Work? 

Here’s how VPN works for the user. A VPN client (software) is launched to initiate a VPN connection through your VPN service. This software encrypts your data, and makes it invincible to even your Internet Service Provider (ISP). VPN shields and protects your information when you use those Coffee Shop/Airport/Hotel Wi-Fis. The data then goes to the VPN Server, and from the VPN Server to your online destination. This could be anything from your bank website to a video sharing website to a search engine and the likes.

 

The online destination sees your data as coming from the VPN server and its location, and not from your computer and your home/location. 

When you connect to the web without a VPN, here’s how your connection looks like:

This is the standard, and this is how most people access the internet, i.e without VPN. This type of connection has some flaws and your information can be pried  open and be viewed and even altered by unintended persons. All of your data is out there in the open, and anyone who is interested can peek at what you’re sending. 

 

Just like most of us know, the internet is a collection of servers responsible for

(a) storing websites and

(b) serving the website information to anyone who has requested and wants to view them.

 

Those servers do as a matter of design talk to each other all the time, including sharing your data with each other and to ultimately allow you to browse a requested page. If you are only interested in surfing the internet, this is great, this may be all that you need, but it is not great for privacy.  If it’s just a fun website that you’re looking at then, there may not be any need to worry about privacy. With this type of simple needs, it may not matter if someone sees your data. 

 

But if you are looking to access your banks for more complex transactions, your business emails, or some other online functions which carry sensitive information, then you need a VPN, and not just any VPN, you need a very secured VPN. 

 

Illustrated below is what connection looks like with VPN enabled: 

 



 


When you use a VPN service, your data is encrypted. The data travels in encrypted format from your device (Handsets/Phones, Laptops. Desktop etc) to your ISP. 

From your ISP, it will then travel to the VPN server. The VPN server for the most part, is a third-party equipment that connects you to the web or the internet. The end-to-end provision helps to ensure:

(1) the privacy of the user and it also

(2) eradicate the data's security problem. 

  • The destination site sees the VPN server <VPN IP: 172.30.50.1> as the traffic origin, not you.
  • It makes it impossible for anyone to steal your information or even sees it. This is because no one can (easily) identify you, or your computer as the source of the data, nor what you’re doing (what websites you’re visiting, what data you’re transferring, etc.). 
  • Your data is encrypted, so even if someone does look at what you’re sending, they only see encrypted information and not the raw data. 



What is not safe however is the Federal Government instituted NIN, where enormous power is given to Patanmi, a government functionary, who is acting in bad faith against the citizens of Nigeria. An unelected Patanmi, ascribes the all knowing power to himself, to do as he please with citizens data. Patanmi is the Minister who has confessed to being terrorists sympathizer, in my view, such a person should never have been allowed to go near anyone’s information, let alone, the personal information of every Nigerian. If I may make a wild guess, Patanmi may know a lot about the killing of Gen. Owoye andrew Azazzi and the late Kaduna Gov. Patrick Ibrahim Yakowa --- December 15, 2012,  this is a subject for another time.

 

Conclusion: A very good VPN provides privacy and security and it is much safer than connecting to the web/internet the traditional way.

Please don't believe what Minister Lai Mohammed said at the NASS. VPN is safe and it helps protect the integrity of your data. The man doesn't know what he is talking about.

 

 Author: Michael O. Folorunso, Plano Texas, USA.

Monday, May 10, 2021

 ... Please focus on the song and not the persons, and you may be blessed.


Celestial Church Of Christ


Thursday, March 4, 2021

US VISA POLICY AND RACKETEERING

 US VISA POLICY AND RACKETEERING

AT EMBASSY/CONSULATES IN NIGERIA AND GHANA


or those who do not travel much and those who just do not know what Visa is. Visa is the entry permit document which is issued by a destination country to all a traveler entry. The purpose of entry could be as varied as there entry options. A traveler's entry could be as: 1) Visitor, 2) Business 3) Students and it might even be as a migrant worker etc.


In the year that I came to the United States, it was relatively straight forward to obtain the US Visa, all you have to do is, go to any US embassy/Consulate in the country of your residence. This was 1979, everything was relatively simple. Once you were at the embassy, you then proceeded to apply for your Visa based your intended purpose of traveling. The Embassy will review your documents and grant you or deny you an entry permit (Visa) into the United States. Once a determination to grant you a visa has been made, you would then proceed to pay the Visa fee. These were the good old days a friend once told me, my response to him, was that is the way it should or better definitely not worse.

Of course, the emergent of the internet as preferred medium for worldwide communications has changed the way people do business. It has become relatively easy for people to hook up with one another. I get connected to the world over the internet through my Yahoo Messenger and some other instant messaging portals. What I learned during some of these IMs will surely astound all of you. I have had a rare opportunity to learn how visa is now granted in Nigeria and in Ghana. Every two weeks or so someone from these two countries would IMS me, of course because I am curious as to why anyone would IMS someone they did not know, I would chat with them long enough to know what it was that they needed. In most cases they were soliciting for money so they could get visa to come to the United States. They were mostly ladies, young and educated, educated up to the University level.

During chatting period I would learn how much they needed for the Visa, in all the cases each ladies said the same amount. It was $500 for a one entry visa, and $5,500 for a five year multiple entry Visa. This outrageous amount which they often asked for, gave me a sense of been a very luck person. During my days as a student both at the State University of New York Institute of Technology, Rome, NY and Case Western Reserve University, I did a bit of traveling mostly to the UK and Nigeria. Because I traveled frequently, I was offered a five/seven year multiple entry visa. If my memory will serve me well, I can not remember ever paying more than $70 for the visa. In a way I feel very sad for all these young African who are so desperate about traveling overseas that they can not even recognize that they are been unnecessarily exploited.

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What is troubling here is not the misplaced desire of these young women seeking to travel out of Nigeria and Ghana. To me it is the fact that a super power Nation, the United States is now selling access to people wanting to come to the US. The US is helping in no small measure to exploit these poor citizens of West African countries. I take issue with the United States, Britain, Switzerland and many more who are subverting our culture clandestinely. They have found a dubious way to exploit individuals who are seeking to travel out from these host countries. The United States along with Britain are actively helping to corrupt our women and exploit the desperation of these young women to travel out. In many cases I am told that these young women were sexually exploited all for the opportunity to get visa out of Nigeria to the US.

One will think that in the era of 9/11 the US would have learned a lesson or two. The US it seems to me is perpetrating Visa racketeering in the countries of West Africa. The question is why? What is the purpose? Why are these Western countries victimizing these poor African men and women all because these young, mostly naïve, mostly Nigerians and Ghanaians have desires to travel outside of their home countries.

Every right thinking Nigerian must recognize that these Western Nations are at war with our sense of well being, they are at war with our value of decency and fairness. They have within their very narrow self interests gone over the line of moral codes and ethics. They have chosen to work with a very small cabal to abuse our people. We the people of Nigeria must not fold our arms we must fight back. I challenge the PRONACO, and all the other NGOs to recognize the harm that these Western Nations are doing to our people. The people must rise up and demonstrate against all these abuses. The people must march everyday to their Embassies and sustain peaceful demonstrations until the problem of Visa Racketeering is stopped. The governments of these countries are also with their rights as the host countries to petition these evil foreign nations to stop these abuses of our people immediately. Enough is enough.


First published on Nigeriaworld.com Friday, October 6, 2006

...OBSESSION WITH COMPREHENSIVE HIGH SCHOOL, AIYETORO

 OGUN STATE GOVERNOR AND HIS OBSESSION WITH COMPREHENSIVE HIGH SCHOOL, AIYETORO

etting together to give back to your High School is good and noble. This is a phenomena whose time has come, at least for those of us who were privileged to have attended CHS, Aiyetoro, this is what we want to do. The ex-students of Comprehensive High School, Aiyetoro have been working out a model by which they can collectively rebuild and transform the old school to meet with the challenges of the 21st century. The Alumni is actually working together to give back to the school where most of us had our early adult developments.


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In those days, students as young as ten years of age and sometimes as old as thirteen years were admitted to begin their secondary education. Most students usually graduated at ages between fifteen and eighteen years old. This is also the age when we sat for the West African School Certificate Examination popularly known as WAEC. Upon successful completion of the WAEC, most proceeded for further education in the form of Higher Secondary Certification, some went on to the Polytechnics\Colleges of Technology or to Colleges of Education. Many more went on to the various Universities all across Nigeria through what was then referred to as Prelim. Those who successfully completed the HSC will in most cases were absorbed into the various Nigerian Universities where they began the remaining of their lives after Compro.

I, my self spent a great deal of time in Aiyetoro. I attended the last two years of my primary school in Aiyetoro, before I got enrolled at the school in January of 1968 amongst the class of 1972. I also did HSC which really meant that I was in that school longer than most students were. These I must say, were my formative years. This was the period in which I mostly thought and did stuffs for my self. It was infact a learning period of my life. It was the place where early in life I was determined to be resilient, to be self assured and be self confident.

It is important to note that several years after we all left Aiyetoro, those little but very ambitious young students are now very well accomplished men and women in their own rights both within Nigeria and in the Diaspora. The first time I learnt about theAlumni Association for CHSA was in 2001. I was in the DC area for a conference, Muyiwa came to see me at the Marriott Hotel where I was staying. He gave me a brief overview of the intents and goals of the Alumni Organization in the United States.

Muyiwa Konigbagbe, was a 1973 graduate of Comprehensive High School, and he was the first President of the Alumni Association in the United States. After talking to Muyiwa on this particular day in 2001, I was convinced the Association was a vehicle by which we can begin to give back to the school which had shaped our young adult worldview. Right there, I welcomed Muyiwa's idea of Alumni Association, and gave him a check for my dues as a sign of support for the Association. The dues then was a paltry $50 per year, it has since been improved to $100 per year.

For me I remember the colorful exercise books, the Crimson House T-Shirts of course the Blue and Green House T-Shirts too. I remember the sports activities at Aiyetoro when many school would gather at the premises of Aiyetoro to get a taste of the comfort and special student life style which was at that time was unique to Aiyetoro. Aiyetoro was where many wanted to be for sporting events, but we were the ones who were there and actually experienced it, while others simply dreamed about being there. The food was excellent. The buildings were handsome and well laid out, the fields were expansive lush and green. I also remember the risk of taking double and the shame you experienced when you got caught. Most everyone participated in this rather harmless risk, going in the line for a second set of food. It is being caught that could be traumatic. If you did not get caught, you were celebrated among your peers.

Aiyetoro was a place where people actually studied Basic Electronics and Applied Electricity. Aiyetoro was the first school where students sat for these examinations at the West African School Certificate level. I was in the first ever group of student who sat for Basic Electronics and Applied Electricity at the West African School Certificate level. The year was 1972.

Many years have since passed. We are now fully grown men and women of varied interests and are in countless professional pursuits. There are countless Teachers, Engineers, Medical Practitioners which include Doctors and Nurses, Career Diplomats. There are Successful and Accomplished Business men and women, and there are perhaps some too who have not faired very well. Still, we are all Compronians, we are unique, we are different we are proud in a humble manner and the world was ours to take.

The Alumni Association is making it possible to connect with people with whom you shared your teenage years. Every year since 2001 the Alumni Association has organized a reunion. I have attended only two. I attended the one that was hosted in Dallas, Texas in 2004. I also had the good will to invites those who were in the '70 - '75 sets to our home where my wife and I entertained them. Later on that year, on one of my projects with Cingular Wireless in Atlanta, GA, I myself was treated to a much sumptuous dinner by a 1971 Alumni, Dr. Dayo Falase. These gatherings provided for reminiscence of what we all used to be or look like. So many funny jokes complete with name callings.

The second reunion that I would attend took place in Atlanta, GA on September 1st, 2007. It was by every indication a very successful one. The success of the 2007 reunion is something that is worthy of mention and must be replicated in future reunions. The Alumni gather together for one purpose only. The purpose was to see how we could make life better for the students who are there now and the students who will be there in the future. The truth is, many of us who were at the reunion will never send our children to Aiyetoro. All we wanted to do was to say thank you to those dreamers who made Aiyetoro possible. We also wanted to give something back to help make things nicer for those student who are there now. On the night of September 1, 2007, a total of $32,000 dollars was raised. This was our first ever fund raising and it went rather well. It can only be made better from now on.

In the midst of all the renewed energy to stand up and be counted, and provide needed help to make Comprehensive High School a better place for the current and future students. Then we keep hearing about what the Governor of Ogun State, Mr. Gbenga Daniel has embarked upon. The governor wants to turn the enitre High School into a University and the alumni in Nigeria are playing dead and are allowing this rogue governor to walk all over them. What is worst is that the people of Yewa have found a way to convince themselves that anyone who is opposed to the governor's irreverent act is against them. The Yewa people have without a doubt bought into the cheap propaganda of this destructive governor.

What is wrong with the Yewa people having both the school and also the University? Why must one give way for the other? This of course is coming from a governor who will not even send his own children to attend Comprehensive High School in its present form, while he is fashioning it good enough for a University for the Yewa people. C'mon now people!, think for yourselves. Is there nobody in the entire Yewa country who is capable of thinking out of the box? One who is capable of seeing through the shenanigans of this visionless governor. I would like to remind the people of Yewa that we are also part of them.

We spent a good portion of our lives in the area. It is wrong for us to allow Governor Daniel to erase our history. Comprehensive High School has in various ways contributed to the advancement of the Yewa people. We must come together and oppose this governor. We must stand on the side of what is right and not allow cheap promises and exigency of time to cloud our vision of demanding excellence from our public office holders. If the NNDP government of 1963 can fund such a school for a High School, this was at a time when the entire Nigeria budget was much less than one year of the Ogun State budget. It then becomes much clearer that Ogun State government can do better than to steal from the sweat and hard work of other people in an effort that is calculated to appease the people of Yewa.

It makes me wonder how Africans think. It seems they are a people who run down the value of properties. The Americans built the school even though with good portion of the funds coming from the the late Chief S.L. Akintola's government and the rest coming from the USAID (aka CIA) and the Ford Foundations. If the CIA can envisage something good for rural African children back in 1963. The least we, the Africans who were the beneficiaries can do, is to keep the standard where it is and not degrade it.

The governor recently made his net worth public. He boasted of being worth 4 billion dollars, and no one in the entire Ogun State let alone Nigeria challenged him to explain exactly what he did to acquire such an enormous wealth within four or five years of becoming the Ogun State Governor. Four billion dollars in his pocket and an inferior University for the people of Yewa.

Are the people of Ogun State so gullible that they are afraid to ask tough questions? This is the state that can boast of so many enviable achievers to name just a few - Ogun State is the home State of the late Chief Awolowo, the late Simeon Adebo, the late Bisi Onabanjo (aka Aiyekoto), Prof. Soyinka, and countless of others.

Why will an African State Governor in 2007, in a modern African Country, Nigeria not know how to improve upon what the CIA plus the Ford Foundations have done? This man is perhaps one of the most "bozo" looking human being I have seen. Everything about him fits well with the typical Idi Amin like image of an African statesman. Thick lips, round face and very lacking in originality. Of course the people around him, though may well be far more sophisticated than Gbenga Daniel, they have little courage in helping him think out of the box. The man who sees himself as a performing governor is in fact to me an emperor with no clothes on.

Gbenga Daniel should leave our school alone and be innovative. He can still build a University for the Yewa people without destroying what other people have done. I hope that the Alumni of Comprehensive High School will not fold their arms while this evil governor is bent on a full scale assault on our collective heritage. We are Compronians, we must not play dead and have this governor blackmail us into stealing our heritage.

We must for all good purposes fight back. We should in fact begin some legal actions to restrain this visionless governor from perpetrating further damage on our alma matter. In the last WAEC results, the percentage of those students who passed was below 10%, I have never known the result to be this bad in all of the entire history of the school. At the same time, schools like Kings College and Queens College Lagos all still retain their competitive edge. This is the time to invest on the future of the students and not destroy their focus and confidence building. In the year that I attended the school the children of the very rich competed to be at Ayetoro. Ayetoro was simply the school to be. Today, even the governor will not send his own children there and yet he wants to make a University for the Yewa people.

The Alumni of the school in both the USA and the UK have actually done a great deal of renovations in the school between 2006 and 2007, we in the United States have painted the school to give it a decent look while the UK alumni fixed the toilets. The school have been left unattended and neglected by the various successive State governments since 1985. The USA Alumni was in fact responsible for providing the school with cricket sport material which in fact allowed them to compete in that game successfully last year and this year. Where is the State government in all these? No where I might add, except for the governor to conceive in his shallow mind to further pillage the school and replace the school with a 3rd rate infrastructures in his efforts to convert the school into his dubious University.

Let us collectively come together and stop this governor from destroying the school which made most of us what we are today. This is not to mean that the Yewa people should not get their University. Yes indeed, the people of Aiyetoro and it environments deserve a University, and they must demand for a first class University and not a High School for a University. What we the Alumni in the USA are saying is that the University for the Yewa people must in fact be bigger and better than a school which for all practical purpose was built as a High School in 1963. The Yewa people must not buy into the propaganda of this governor. That those of us who want Comprehensive High School to remain as is, are against them, is preposterous to say it nicely. This is a cheap blackmail against the Alumni of Aiyetoro, it is not true. If the governor were thinking correctly, he should in fact be using some of his so called personal wealth to build the propose University for the Aiyetoro people and remain immortalized. He is too typical of an African to think in such a noble way. Africans will rather steal the wealth of their nation and put it away in the Western European countries while offering inferior services to their impoverish people. No wonder the young people are risking their lives everyday to get out of the country.

In the period when people with vision were running the affairs of Nigeria, even during the civil war, which was a very dark period in the Nigeria history when Chief Awolowo was the Finance Minister and the Deputy Chairman of the then Supreme Military Council, young Nigerians didn't run out of the country, they were simply proud to be Nigerians, and those who went overseas to study did not stay a day longer after their graduations, they came home, despite the war, they all came home. The leaders offered them hopes, hopes of a better Nigeria that is second to none.

Today Nigerians are forced to accept an inferior vision of Nigeria. People need to demand for higher standards in all things. These current leaders are offering poor leadership concepts of what Nigeria should be to the people, and we the people are accepting substandard level of living while people like Gbenga Daniel enriched themselves at our expense. If we continue to keep quiet and not fight back, we will have ourselves to blame.

In conclusion, we the Compronians must fight back. We must fight this uncircumcised Goliath to a stand still, and expose him for who he is. A lazy con man, who is not capable of original thinking.

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Thursday, February 25, 2021

Sheik Gumi is why we all need tribalism ... 

Abimbola Adelakun, Ph.D, Nigeria Punch, February 25, 2021

 

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If, by now, Islamic cleric, Sheik Abubakar Gumi, has not categorically denied he told the Muslim bandits he has been meeting in recent times that their enemies are Christian “outsiders,” it means he said what he said, and he is not taking it back. Gumi has been garrulous since he gave himself the job of negotiating with domestic terrorists supposedly on behalf of the country. He has even blamed Niger Delta militants for teaching Fulani herdsmen the criminality with which they are ravaging the whole country. Gumi is acting blind, and that is not because he is deformed. He wants to justify using a walking stick and then poke everyone’s eyes with it. His pronouncements give him away, not as someone looking for peace for Nigeria but merely pandering to an emerging power base in his neck of woods. Power has changed hands in northern Nigeria, and the formerly respected voices like Gumi can no longer find a relevance commensurate with that of those who speak with AK-47s.

READ ALSO: Why people like Gumi thrive

The millions of almajiri children whose destinies the northern elite stole to feather their private nests have now grown up, and they are upsetting the social order through sociopathic ferocity. They have morphed into all shades of terrorism. The same weapon of violence their leaders have always used to assert power has fallen into the hands of these plebeians, and they are making their leaders quake with trepidation. These barbarians have tasted blood, and are no longer content to be summarily corralled into rigging their theocentric leaders into power during election periods. They have found new relevance, and they are making huge sums of money out of it. These terrorists have not only managed to reduce the myth of the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), and his once-touted military expertise to rubble, but they are also now bracketing the nation’s choices to either paying them ransom for their abducted victims or giving them official roles. For people like Gumi to remain relevant in this emergent political order, he has to find a way to be in the good books of these brutes. That is why he is practically grovelling before them and forming their mouthpiece. Gumi is not looking for peace; he is a dangerous clout-chaser.

First, we must thank him for unravelling quickly enough for us to know his true agenda. It would have been terrible to be fooled by his previous criticisms of northern politicians’ failures and imagine he has sincere intentions only to discover he is just another duplicitous negotiator using the precarious security situation to burnish his credentials as a powerbroker. His intervention in recent times has been a shameless dance of religious and ethnic irredentism. Gumi, however, is not the only northerner speaking on the mounting violence in Nigeria and refusing to disguise their real motives. Northern governors and prominent politicians have been no different. If they cannot subsume the larger interests of the nation under their identity matrices of religion and ethnicity, the rest of us should regress into our tribal enclaves as well. It will be a negative reaction to a negative attitude, but it takes two negatives to make a positive.

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At this point, one wonders why the Nigerian security forces and the dis-Information Minister Lai Muhammed did not respond to Gumi when he blamed Christians for violence against Muslims. Given Nigeria’s volatile history, they must know such inciteful comments are instigation to violence against Christians, especially the vulnerable ones. Why did the Nigerian Army not debunk Gumi’s slander and speak up for its soldiers’ integrity? Why not tell Gumi pointedly that the soldiers warring against these terrorists are first and foremost detribalised Nigerians; also, they are not classified according to religious leanings, and Gumi’s “animal talk”, as Fela would call it, will not stop them from going about their professional duties in the proper manner? These are people who issue juvenile press statements each time two or three IPOB supporters gather, but they are quiet on this. What of Muhammed who said the Federal Government uses “backchannels” like Gumi to reach criminals? By asserting you use him as a negotiator and not disavowing his claims, you indicate official support for his stance. So, does the Federal Government that Muhammed works for also believe that terrorists are victims of Christian military officers?

When you compare the official silence that met Gumi’s baloney with the thunderous outrage that greeted Bishop Matthew Kukah’s more positive and more forward-looking homily on Nigeria’s situation, you realise how deeply institutionalised ethnic and religious prejudices are in this country. What exactly did the Bishop say that made him deserving of opprobrium but leaves Gumi intact? Muhammed and his fellow attack dogs that hounded the Bishop are suddenly quiet. Is Kukah’s assertion that some people get away with atrocities in this country for ethnic and religious reasons not over-justified now? Where are those that attacked Pastor Enoch Adeboye for being “unpatriotic” when he spoke on restructuring Nigeria? What exactly did Adeboye say at the time that he deserved all that barking from the rabid dogs of the presidency but lets Gumi get away with practically inciting vandals against fellow Nigerians? It is funny that even some Yoruba, people whose heads are for carrying loads and who joined the pillorying of these Christian clerics, have somehow lost their tongues.

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 At this point, one can only hope that southern politicians have their notebooks out and they are learning significant lessons. These people have no concept of Nigeria as anything other than their feeding trough. They do not love the country. They never have, and it is doubtful they will ever love this bastard child. They care about Nigeria only as long as its resources fill their pockets. They will not hesitate to sacrifice all of us, and that is why we should not put ourselves in a default mode of espousing a pan-Nigerian vision when they have made it abundantly clear where their loyalties lie.

While a South-West governor issues a press statement saying that our enemies are criminals, not fellow Nigerians who happen to be Fulani/Hausa, Senate President Ahmad Lawan will still have the mind to blame South-West governors for emboldening criminals to attack northerners. Lawan’s home state of Yobe is a place that international agencies classify as “unsafe” and severely warn their citizens never to go near there. You do not hear the same Lawan talk about the multi-generational leadership failure in his home state that has made the place one of the world’s worst habitations for humanity, but he will have the chutzpah to blame South-West governors for being failures.

A South-West governor, in the name of “one Nigeria,” will exculpate herdsmen from being stereotyped as criminals by pointing out how long they have lived together peacefully, and a North-East governor will respond that the forests where herdsmen graze -and which are in contention- is a no man’s land. A South-West governor will say the Seriki Fulani in his state speaks more Yoruba than he himself does, while their northern counterparts justify herdsmen carrying military-grade weapons. They do not reciprocate by telling us how much the southerners in their domain have been acculturated into their communities. Instead, they double down on their clannishness. The South-West governors will leave their offices to visit Seriki this-and-that to sue for peace, but you do not see their northern counterparts doing the same when violence breaks out in their region.

By now, it should be evident that we are operating on different wavelengths on this Nigerian identity. What is the point of such unreciprocated liberalism? We are giving too much of ourselves and we are getting too little back. Nigeria does not exist for these people unless, of course, there is a federal allocation attached to the discourse. Southern leaders should stop sacrificing their people’s dignity and adopt the strategy of being shamelessly tribalistic too. Sustaining this farce of being a “detribalised Nigerian” makes one look naïve. Tribalism is a viable countermeasure if we do not want to end up as unfortunate dupes of a national vision that has long been aborted.

Thursday, January 7, 2021