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Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Bob Marley and the Wailing Wailers

Award winning Nigerian writer and journalist has penned an interesting thought-provoking piece to Nigerians, it's a must read!
President Buhari
 
There are many reasons you will never find me in politics — either by election or appointment. The one that is relevant to our discussion today is “groupthink”. Have you ever wondered why people are so reasonable and principled… until they join government? And then a few weeks later they are telling you: “Things are not as simple as you people outside think. Forget all these things you are writing.” Their ideals begin to disappear. The philosophers begin to distance themselves from their philosophies. The moment they enter the State House, they have crossed over to another world. They now belong to a new group where everybody unconsciously thinks alike.
 A major disservice caused by “groupthink” is to treat any dissenting voice as that of the enemy. President Muhammadu Buhari had hardly settled down when officials of his government derisively tagged those who criticised him or held a contrary opinion as “wailing wailers”. An alarm went off in my head immediately. It was this same mentality that got President Goodluck Jonathan boxed into a corner from which he never recovered. He treated every criticism that came his way as the handiwork of his political enemies. He became paranoid. The end result was that he lost his balance, went on the defensive and got snookered.
 
By the way, it is very unfair to use “Wailing Wailers” as a pejorative term. For those who may not know, the Wailing Wailers was the debut album by The Wailers released in 1965. It was a compilation of recordings by Neville Livingston (Bunny Wailer), Robert Nesta Marley (Bob Marley, Livingston’s step-brother) and Peter McIntosh (Peter Tosh). They planted reggae as protest music and put the genre into international reckoning against all odds. They were the voice of the voiceless. After Macintosh and Livingston left the The Wailers in 1975, the group became known as “Bob Marley and the Wailers”. Tosh and Marley must be turning in their graves at Nigeria’s aspersion.
 
Let’s face the fact without beating about the bush: in the real world, Buhari will face criticisms. The motives will always be different. It is all too natural. Criticisms will come from those who want him to succeed — as well as those who are desperate to see him fail. Criticisms will come from those who think he can do better than he has done since May 2015 — as well as those think or wish they have already seen the best of him. Criticisms will come from those who have nothing against him but think his policies so far are uninspiring — as well as those who think he needs to be discredited now in preparation for the 2019 presidential election. Motives.
 
However, wisdom dictates that: one, don’t lump all your critics together (as “groupthink” tends to do) because you may become unnecessarily touchy and miss the point; two, listen to even the worst of your enemies because there may actually be some substance in their criticism that you can use to your advantage; and three, the beauty of democracy is the diversity of opinion, and people must never be cowed into shying away from voicing their views. When people become too scared to talk because of DSS and EFCC, the beauty of democracy remains unexplored. The classification of critics as “Wailing Wailers” is, in the end, not helpful to the progress of the president.
 
Criticisms are in two categories: constructive and destructive. Constructive criticism is often done with concern. It could be harsh. But it is more like: “You’re not getting it right. Try something else. Do it another way.” Implicit in constructive criticism is a desire to see things done in a different and better way, even if outright suggestions are not always offered. Ultimately, there is goodwill. Ultimately, the motive is never selfish. Agreed, nobody likes to be criticised. It is only human. But when people criticise me, no matter how uncomfortable I am and how bruised my ego feels, I try to examine my ways. And it has helped me tremendously in my life journey.
 
There is, of course, destructive criticism. We don’t need to google that. Destructive criticism can hide under altruism and fair comment, but the motive is difficult to disguise. Clearly, some people are out to destroy Buhari for political reasons. It is certainly legitimate — after all, APC came to power by destroying Jonathan and refusing to recognise any achievements recorded by him. It would seem then that the PDP is serving APC some tablets from their own medicine by trying to cast Buhari as a failure less than two years in office. Some are also criticising Buhari because they have lost out or are completely uncomfortable under the new dispensation. It is all normal.
 
Unfortunately, the contents of public criticism are virtually the same. Both the constructive and destructive are saying the same thing. So when both camps say, with different motives, that the power situation is getting worse, is it a lie? When they say there is still corruption, is that not true? Is the economy not contracting — even if Buhari inherited a mess? Is the DSS not detaining people without any legal basis? Has there been any legal justification for the continued detention of Ibraheem El Zakzaky, Nnamdi Kanu and Sambo Dasuki? Are state agencies not disobeying court orders? But does it mean anyone who says these things is automatically a “wailing wailer”?
 
I am so eager to see Buhari succeed as president. Aside the fact that I genuinely believe in him and trust his integrity, I am insanely desperate to see Nigeria move up the ladder of development. The world has left Nigeria behind. We are still discussing Introduction to Physics when the world is already doing laser brain surgery. My theory all along, dating back to the military era, is that Nigeria was not developing because of corruption. I’ve always believed that if a patriotic leader puts together a competent team, there would be no stopping our progress. We’ve had brilliant leaders whose brains got poisoned by the lust for filthy lucre.
 
Some of Nigeria’s problems are so basic yet they look insurmountable. What does it take to have constant power? Even if there was no single cable anywhere in Nigeria in 1999, we could have done it in 17 years with all the petrodollars that flooded this economy. Even if there was no road anywhere in 1999, we could have paved 50,000 kilometres by now. Even if there was no single refinery in 1999, we could have built 20 by now! There has been a lack of seriousness and sincerity for ages, and in Buhari I believe we have someone who can still offer true leadership despite a very slow start. But of what use is a competent team if they don’t have access to him?
 
I would love Buhari to pay closer attention to criticism — both the constructive and the destructive. Everything has its value. Criticism represents a strand of opinion, no matter how acidic. You may say my shirt is dirty because you want to ridicule me, but what if it is true? I would have to ignore your motive and change the shirt. That is the point. If Buhari makes positive use of criticism, he will only become a better leader. I know every leader has his or her strategy in dealing with critics. Some believe in fire-for-fire. It may work. It may not work. Jonathan did fire-for-fire, arrow-for-arrow, and bullet-for-bullet. Whatever it is, people must be free to voice their opinion in a democracy.
 
In Rebel Music, Bob Marley sang: “Why can’t we be what we want to be/We want to be free.” Those values are at the core of constitutional democracy. Once these freedoms are curtailed, it takes away the “demo” from democracy and replaces it with “auto”. And can we deny the fact that many Buhari supporters are losing their patience and singing “I don’t wanna wait in vain for your love” along with Marley? The Wailers famously sang: “Get up stand up/stand up for your rights.” If you legitimately demand for your rights and you are classified as a “wailing wailer”, that should be taken as a compliment. Buhari’s team members must consciously deal with the pathologies of “groupthink”.

AND FOUR OTHER THINGS…
 
MANGLING MAGU
 
Satirist and singer Tom Lehrer famously said political satire became obsolete when “war criminal” Henry Kissinger was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1973. Now that the National Assembly is at the forefront of the fight against corruption in Nigeria, satire has gone into coma. The same National Assembly that lampooned the DSS for raiding the homes of judges, insisting that financial crimes are not under the agency’s purvey, has now used a “financial crime” report by the same DSS to halt the confirmation of Mr. Ibrahim Magu as EFCC chairman. I’ve not said Magu is a saint, but I have lost my sense of humour since Thursday when the lawmakers joined the anti-graft war. Hilarious.
 
‘CRACK YA RIBS’
 
Two of my favourite Nigerian comedians are currently in President Muhammadu Buhari’s cabinet. One is Comrade Solomon Dalung, minister of youth, sports and comedy. The other is “Pastor” Babachir Lawal, secretary to the government of the federation and laugh-master general of the federation. There is no time he talks that I don’t laugh away my sorrows. So an engineering firm founded by him got N200m payments from a grass-cutting contract awarded by an agency under his office and people are calling on him to resign. Can’t people see that he has disengaged from the company? The only thing he does now is sign the cheques and collect dividends. Balderdash.
 
MY, MY, MY (MMM)
 
When I was a tiny little boy, I heard about the activities of “money doublers”. If you gave the native doctors one naira, they would double it to two naira, I used to hear. I always wondered how they did it — and why they were not doing it for themselves. But I was not intelligent enough to know that I was not supposed to understand how it works. Now, money doubling has gone online. From your smart phone, you can double your money. All you need do is go on a website, register, transfer money to some account and your money will double in no time. As easy as ABC. The seduction by native doctors has gone digital. My, My, My. You sure look good tonight. Greed.
 
SWEET MOTHER
 
All (the bad) roads lead to Umuokoro Eziama, Ngor Opkala LGA, Imo state, on December 27-28, 2016, when my friend, brother and partner-in-crime, Chidi ‘Uzor, buries his sweet mother, Mrs Grace Chinyere Uzor Anugwa, who recently died at 101. The real story, though, is that Mama, through sheer tenacity and courage, sponsored all her five children in school — singlehanded. This was after the devastating civil war when nobody in the south-east had food to eat, much less scholarships. Chidi clearly inherited his mother’s never-say-die gene. He has moved from being a journalist to owning a microfinance bank — by hard work, discipline and imagination. Inspiration.
 
About the Author:
Simon Kolawole is the Founder/CEO, TheCable.ng; writer and journalist
 
***Written pieces and contributions on this platform are the opinions of the writers



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Who Will Be the Next US President? 5 Things to Know About Today's Electoral College Vote in America

As America decides who will officially be the country's next President, these are some things you need to know about the electoral college votes coming in.
 
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton
 
The 538 members of the US Electoral College meet Monday in the capital of each of the 50 states to designate a successor to Barack Obama as president of the United States.
 
A candidate must obtain an absolute majority of the vote — or 270 of the 538 –– to claim the presidency.
 
Why an Electoral College?
 
The system originated with the US Constitution in 1787. It establishes the rules for indirect, single-round presidential elections by universal suffrage (not entirely universal: blacks and women could not vote at the time).
 
The country’s Founding Fathers saw this as a compromise between direct presidential elections with universal suffrage, and an election by members of Congress — an approach rejected as insufficiently democratic.
 
Since then, hundreds of amendments have been proposed to Congress in efforts to modify or do away with the Electoral College, but none has succeeded.
 
Who are the electors?
 
There are 538 in all.
 
Most are local elected officials or local party leaders, but their names do not appear on ballots, and their identities are almost entirely unknown to the general public.
 
Each state has as many electors as it has members in the House of Representatives (a number dependent on the state’s population) and in the Senate (two in every state, regardless of size).
 
Populous California, for example, has 55 electors; Texas has 38; and sparsely populated Vermont, Alaska, Wyoming and Delaware have only three each, as does the District of Columbia.
 
The Constitution leaves it to the states to decide how their electors’ votes should be cast. In every state but two (Nebraska and Maine), the candidate winning the majority of popular votes theoretically wins all the state’s electors.
 
Why are they in the spotlight this year?
 
In the November 8 election, Donald Trump won a majority of electors (306 of the 538), but his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton won the popular vote by a margin of nearly three million.
 
While this situation is not unprecedented (see George W. Bush’s victory over Al Gore in 2000), this year’s particularly nasty election campaign exacerbated the tensions and ill will over the outcome.
 
Millions of Americans who consider Donald Trump unfit to occupy the Oval Office have signed an online petition calling for Republican electors to block his election. Thirty-seven of them would have to do so to prevent the real estate mogul from being elected.
 
The Republican camp, for its part, has denounced this as a desperate attempt by bitter Democratic militants unable to accept defeat, and has complained that some electors have been badgered and harassed ahead of the Monday vote.
 
Is it a real vote or a simple formality?
 
Nothing in the constitution or in federal law requires electors to vote one way or another.
 
Laws in some states do require electors to respect the popular vote (the so-called “faithless electors” who defy the popular vote generally face a simple fine), while other states impose no such requirement.
 
History shows that it is extremely rare for an elector to defy the expressed will of his or her state’s voters.
 
While a few have done so, they have never changed the final choice of the person to occupy the White House for a four-year term.
 
When will results be announced?
 
While Electoral College members vote on Monday, the states have until December 28 to transmit their “Certificates of Vote” to the Congress and the National Archives in Washington, which will then immediately post them online.
 
The formal announcement of the name of the next president will be made by the Congress on January 6.
 
***
- The Punch



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Was Jesus Born on December 25th? Here is What Researchers Discovered

Bible scholars and researchers have revealed that Jesus Christ was not actually born on the 25th of December as popularly thought.
Scholars have revealed that Jesus was not actually born on the 25th of December
 
Although millions of people celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ on Dec. 25, most scholars agree that he wasn't born on that day, or even in the year 1 A.D.
 
Researchers believe the Roman Catholic Church settled on Dec. 25 for many reasons, such as that date's ties to the winter solstice and Saturnalia, a festival dedicated to the Roman deity Saturn. By choosing this day to celebrate Jesus' birthday, the church could co-opt the popular pagan festival, as well as the winter celebrations of other pagan religions.
 
But nobody really knows exactly when Jesus was born.
 
Some scholars think that he was born between 6 B.C. and 4 B.C., based partly on the biblical story of Herod the Great. Not long before Herod's demise, which is believed to have occurred in 4 B.C., the ruler of Judea supposedly ordered the death of all male infants who were under the age of two and lived in the vicinity of Bethlehem, in an attempt to kill Jesus.
 
But historians disagree about Herod's actual year of death. What's more, the horrific mass infanticide is legend, not fact, Reza Aslan, a biblical scholar and author of "Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth" (Random House, 2013), told PolicyMic.
 
To pinpoint Jesus' birth year, other scholars have tried to correlate the "Star of Bethlehem," which supposedly heralded Jesus' birth, with actual astronomical events. For example, in a 1991 article in the Quarterly Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society, astronomer Colin Humphreys proposed that the fabled star was actually a slow-moving comet, which Chinese observers recorded in 5 B.C.
 
Scholars also debate the month of Jesus' birth. In 2008, astronomer Dave Reneke argued that Jesus was born in the summer. The Star of Bethlehem, Reneke told New Scientist, may have been Venus and Jupiter coming together to form a bright light in the sky. Using computer models, Reneke determined that this rare event occurred on June 17, in the year 2 B.C.
 
Other researchers have claimed that a similar conjunction, one between Saturn and Jupiter, occurred in October of 7 B.C., making Jesus an autumn baby. 
 
Theologians have also suggested that Jesus was born in the spring, based on the biblical narrative that shepherds were watching over their flocks in the fields on the night of Jesus' birth — something they would have done in the spring, not the winter.
 



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

2018 Election: Zimbabwe's Ruling Party Endorses 92-year-old Mugabe

The sit-tight syndrome of African leaders has reared its ugly head again with an elderly President Mugabe being endorsed for re-election.
 
Robert Mugabe
 
Zimbabwe’s ruling ZANU-PF party’s congress endorsed on Saturday President Robert Mugabe as its candidate for the 2018 election, which could extend his 36 years in office.
 The leader was endorsed by all party structures at the meeting held in Masvingo. The congress voiced “its support to the president and first secretary comrade Robert Mugabe as the sole candidate for the forthcoming 2018 elections,” said deputy secretary Eunice Sandi Moyo.
 The endorsement was met with resounding applause from thousands of supporters attending the annual conference, chanting in Shona language “tongai, tongai baba” meaning “rule, rule father."
 Mugabe, 92, has been in power since independence from British colonial rule in 1980 has avoided naming a successor or laying out plans to retire. He once joked that he would rule until he turned 100.




When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Saturday, December 17, 2016

Committee to Protect Journalists Indicts Cameroon, Says Press Freedom Under Attack

Abuja, Nigeria, December 16, 2016-The Cameroonian government and security services should immediately reverse a series of repressive measures that have produced a crisis of media freedom in the country, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.
In recent weeks, authorities arrested a journalist covering protests; suspended dozens of newspapers and broadcasters permission to operate; permanently banned three newspapers from publishing and their publishers from practicing journalism; and sanctioned dozens more journalists. The speaker of the National Assembly in November called the use of social media "a new form of terrorism." The Ministry of Communications, according to media reports, last month asked companies to cut the internet. Sixteen months after his arrest, Radio France Internationale journalist Ahmed Abba remains in prison, awaiting a verdict in his military trial.
                                                                                         
"Each day that Cameroon's government perpetrates ever-wider attacks on the press, the more it appears repressive and desperate," CPJ West Africa Representative Peter Nkanga said. "Cameroon should immediately and unconditionally release radio journalist Ahmed Abba and stop trying to muzzle the media."
Masked security officers on December 11 arrested Zigoto Tchaya, a reporter with the broadcaster France 24, after Tchaya interviewed barrister Harmony Bobga, who articulated demands of demonstrators from predominantly Anglophone regions of Cameroon who say the Francophone central government has marginalized English-speaking Cameroonians, according to media reports. Tchaya was released after a day, according to media reports. Anglophone regions of Cameroon have seen street protests, sit-ins, and labor strikes in recent months. Last week, at least four people were killed when police forcibly dispersed a protest in the city of Bamenda, near the Nigerian border, according to press reports and human rights groups.
 
The Cameroonian government had previously attempted more sweeping measures to confound the protests. The government-run daily newspaper The Cameroon Tribune on November 1 described social media as "fast becoming a threat to peace and a secret instrument of manipulation." Cavaye Yeguie Djibril, the speaker of Cameroon's National Assembly, in a November 10 speech to parliament, went further, calling the use of social media "a new form of terrorism...as dangerous as a missile," according to media reports. According to the pro-opposition Cameroon Journal,Cameroonian Information Minister Issa Tchiroma on November 17 met with leading mobile phone and internet service providers to urge them to suspend access to the internet in the country. The reported request was not implemented.

Cameroonian journalists told CPJ that the Ministry of Communications on December 1 had written to private broadcasters instructing them to stop broadcasting political debates. "Owners of private radio and TV stations are called upon to stop all roundtable discussions on their networks concerning the current political atmosphere in the southwest region," the directive read, according to a photograph of the document published to Twitter by Cameroonian journalist Comfort Moussa.

Meanwhile, Radio France Internationale Hausa-service correspondent Ahmed Abba is scheduled to appear again before a military tribunal on charges of "complicity" with and "non-denunciation of acts of terrorism" on January 4, 2017, according to press reports. RFI told CPJ that the journalist was arrested on July 30, 2015, as he left a press conference, and denied access to his lawyers until October 19, 2015, when the military tribunal asked computer forensics experts to examine his computers and mobile phones. Those experts have not yet returned their report, according to France 24. In the meantime, according to press reports, interrogators questioned him about the activities of the militant group Boko Haram, which has renamed itself the Islamic State in West Africa. If convicted, Abba could face the death penalty, according to media reports.

On December 6, the National Communication Council (NCC)-Cameroon's media regulator, made up of members appointed by the president-handed down 24 sanctions imposing varying penalties on 14 publishers and their newspapers, one radio station managing director, and 15 journalists from 10 print and online newspapers, radio, and television stations for reports the council called "unfounded, offensive, and insinuating allegations" regarding government officials, business executives, and private individuals, according to media reports and CPJ's review of the 111-page document.

Among the most stringent sanctions were the permanent banning of the weekly Aurore Plus and Aurore newspapers from publishing, and the imposition of a permanent ban on the newspapers'publisher, Michel Michaut Moussala, from practicing journalism because of the newspaper's repeated publication of "unfounded allegations" against the former CEO of Cameroon Airlines, according to media reports. The weekly Dépeche du Cameroun newspaper and Gilbert Avang, the newspaper's publisher, were similarly permanently banned, the reports said.

Ndi Eugene Ndi, editor of the bi-monthly NewsWatch newspaper, told CPJ that several of the newspapers defied the suspensions to continue publishing. Ndi said the NCC could ask courts to enforce the sanctions.
The National Union of Cameroonian Journalists called the sanctions "unacceptable and incomprehensible," and called for press solidarity in rejecting the sanctions, according to media reports
###
CPJ is an independent, nonprofit organization that works to safeguard press freedom worldwide.



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

President Buhari Gives Out Daughter in Marriage in an Elaborate Ceremony for 12 Gold Coins

Zahra Buhari has finally married son of millionaire mogul, Ahmed Indimi in a ceremony held in Abuja today.
Zahra Muhammadu Buhari was given in marriage to Ahmed Indimi today
 
President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday gave out his daughter, Zahra Muhammadu Buhari, in marriage to Ahmed Indimi. 
 The wedding Fatiha took place after the Deputy Chief Imam of the National Mosque, Sheikh Ibrahim Makari, performed the two Jumma’at Prayer.
 A representative of the Indimi family whose name was not disclosed, paid 12 gold coins which was converted and valued at N250,000, the amount for the dowry.
 The Sarkin Fulanin Daura, Alhaji Yusuf Sani, gave out Zahra on behalf of the Buhari family.
 Dignitaries who attended the wedding included former Lagos State Governor Bola Tinubu, former Vice President Namadi Sambo, Senate President Bukola Saraki and Chief Bisi Akande.
 The dignitaries also included governors Rauf Aregbesola, Nasir El-rufai, Umaru Almakura, Yahaya Bello and Aminu Masari, among others.
 
-NAN



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

MEMORANDUM OF ANGLOPHONE TEACHERS OF THE WOURI DIVISION ON THE ON GOING TEACHERS SIT IN STRIKE

More than 125 Anglophone teachers working in the Wouri Division of the Littoral region, 23 proprietors (representing lay private schools, 4 representatives of denominational schools, 17 representatives of Parents Teachers Associations met in Douala on Thursday 15 December 2016 in response to an invitation from the WOURI ASSOCIATION OF GENUINE ANGLOPHONE TEACHERS.
Very important statistics came out from the meeting concerning schools that run the anglo saxon system of education in the Wouri
There are 6 Government Secondary High schools existing in the Wouri About 80 Privates Secondary schools
About 312 Primary schools (62 Government and the rest Private by profit driven proprietors)
About 45 Commercial / Technical Secondary schools Private initiative.
Curiously no Government Technical / Secondary school.
We the Anglophone teachers living in the Wouri, with representatives of proprietors and PTA’s are scandalized by the government hypocrisy concerning the memorandum presented by the union of teachers associations of the North/South West. Over the years the authorities have received well drafted proposals on measures to take to stop the adulteration of the Anglo-Saxon system of education and in return we have had officials declare no problem exists leading to senseless killings, rape, creation again of a committee to review the problems, a lot of disinformation etc
THE MEETING RESOLVED AS FOLLOWS?
1- From January 2017 all Anglo Saxon style schools in the Wouri and the Littoral will join the sit in strike in solidarity with our brothers and sisters of Anglophone regions.
[16/12 22:45] ‪+237 93223622‬: 2- Call on all parents and proprietors to follow the peoples call and respect the sit in strike
3- Congratulates the Union of teachers associations at the forefront of this challenge to remain resolute and no retreat.
4- Reminds the union leaders that any solutions to salvage the Anglo-Saxon system of education must be extended to schools operating the same system in East Cameroon.
5- Calls on the GCE Board not to associate school officials be they principals who have not been groomed up in the GCE spirit not to have anything with the conduct of our exams. The Office de Bac does not empower Anglophones in their exams.
6- Calls on the Government to avoid hypocrisy and stop the training at ENS Yaounde, Maroua Latin, Spanish and now Chinese teachers when Anglo-Saxon schools lack teachers of basic subject like English, French, etc...
7- Calls on the eventual Education Board to be created to have the right to VISA/Approve and CONTINUOUS FOLLOW UP for the creation of Anglo- Saxon schools as proprietors this way are only interested in profit and recruit any tom and dick as teacher.
8- Reject the call for the recruitment of 1000 bilingual teachers as another ploy to pollute our school system. Where are bilingual teachers trained in this country and what obliges one to teach in the second language?
9- Thousands of University graduates of the GCE system are jobless and can be recycled in two months after a special recruitment in Bamenda and Buea to make up for the lack of science, technical, commercial teachers to salvage our school system.
10- Note that during the recruitment of 25000 teachers, francophone’s were recruited (with no knowledge of the Anglophone sub system education) to accelerate the assimilation in Buea, Kumba, Bamenda.
[16/12 22:45] ‪+237 93223622‬: 11- A representative of Anglophone PHD holders without jobs announced that there are more than200 of them in Cameroon who are ready to teach as volunteers in Buea, Bamenda, Kumba to preserve our system of education. He also announced that thousands of Anglophones in top Universities in America, UK, CANADA, already provide video conference classes or come as volunteer teachers and stay each for two months to lecture.
12- Calls on Teachers Trade Unions to stand strong to fight to few francophone adventures who use the radio, television to say what teachers have not said and to put fear/doubt in the minds francophone’s.
13- Congratulates our francophone’s brothers who in their numbers are standing along with Anglophones by publicly affirming that the English Sub system of education should remain intact.
14- No to harmonization of the two systems of education, Canada is talking to Cameroun.
Signed :
- Representative of teachers
- Representative of parents
- Representative of Proprietors
Douala, 15th December 2016.
- Representative of volunteer lecturers with PHD



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Mola Njoh Litumbe: LIKE A SPARTAN says Ayah Paul

Njoh Litumbe
The teething puzzle about Mola Njoh Litumbe is his physical alertness in his nineties. Smarter than persons ten years younger, his physiognomy much more, this “simple accountant”, (using his own very words), submits in legal jargon very like the twin brother of Lord Denning of the Judicial Committee of the House of Lords. Few doubt he coined the phrase “jumba marriage” to depict the de facto relationship between the Republic of Cameroun and Southern Cameroons. This “come we stay”, he succinctly explains, fails to amount to marriage (union) for want of consummation or even a marriage certificate.

A man who has nothing to gain or lose, some typical Camerounese whose Cameroun is now and now only would simply sit back at that age and enjoy the fruits of his many years of drudgery. But NO! He is on television, on radio, on newspapers, on foot, at the United Nations, in Nigeria – just everywhere – at his expense: in terms of time, energy, the use of the intellect and money… All this for a cause that is not his – the general cause – indefatigably, consistently! A workaholic slave to doing good! Doing good in defiance of adverse consequences – at his own risks and perils! Holding out till the end as the Bible prescribes! Very like “the Spartan that dies but never surrenders “!
A venerable patriarch difficult to find on the social media, Mola is a model – unique as to age, unbreakable resolve, and altruism. A hero that humility has distanced from self-praise, apprehension and corruption! A man of enviable integrity holding high the torch for us all to see the way to follow!
YES! Njoh Litumbe is a hero, a model and a sage! He deserves our acknowledgement!




When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Nigeria: MMM Surfaces Amidst Crash Rumours

 There is the strong possibility that the popular Ponzi Scheme from Russia - MMM has not crashed and could be back in operation at the stipulated date of 13th of January, 2017.

 
 
Following the freezing of active Mavrodi accounts by the leadership of the suspicious Mavrodi Mundial Moneybox cash-doubling scheme on the 13th of December, 2016, Nigerians caught unawares have been thrown into a state of panic and limbo.
 The media has been awash with reports that the scheme has crashed and the account restriction communique issued by the administrator was a subtle way of announcing the end of the scheme in the country.
 Reports have it that MMM has since moved to Kenya with an attractive offer of 40% return on investments advertised to Kenyans to lure the vulnerable masses.
 A research by TORI NEWS revealed that when a similar account restriction was issued in South Africa on the 3rd of May, 2016, the scheme later returned amidst fears and became operational again.
 Below is a circular issued by the administator to the participating South Africans:
 
"Mavro Freezing is Cancelled

Dear participants!

We are glad to inform you that from now on, all the types of Mavrodi freezing are COMPLETELY CANCELLED - both the freezing of bonus Mavro (except Registration Bonus and Bonus for Testimonial Video) and the freezing of the contribution itself! Your bonuses and contributions are available for withdrawal instantly upon confirmation.

Things are going so well in the system that there is no need in Mavro freezing anymore.

Yours sincerely.
 
Administration

Together we change the world".
 
 
Meanwhile, a South African source revealed to TORI NEWS that the scheme has crashed in the country and it was indeed fraudulent. The source who is a Nigerian living in the country failed to provide facts and figures to back his claim.
 The screenshot above could improve the hopes of Nigerian participants of a resumption of the scheme in January 13, 2017.



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Here is the List of 20 Top Richest Pastors in the World

Five Nigerian pastor have made it to the list of top 20 richest pastors in the world and their estimated net worth.
Pastor E.A Adeboye is General Overseer of Redeemed Christian Church of God.
 1. Edir Macedo is a Brazilian pastor and preacher worth $1.1 billion. Macedo is the founder of Universal Church of the Kingdom of God. He is also the founder of Grupo Record and Record News. Macedo is the richest pastor in the world.
 
2. Kenneth Copeland is the founder and owner of Kenneth Copeland Ministries. His church is located on a 1,500 acre campus and the property has loads of structures. He has a net worth of $760 million.
 
3. Pat Robertson's net worth is $500 million. Pat Robertson is an executive chairman, media tycoon, and a Southern Baptist minister. Robertson has amassed this wealth from setting up many corporations and organizations, and a University too. The International Family Entertainment Inc. (ABC Family Channel), the Christian Broadcasting Network (CBN), the American Center for Law & Justice (ACLJ, the Christian Coalition, Regent University, Operation Blessing International Relief and Development Corporation, a Boeing 757 Flying Hospital, and CBN Asia were founded by Pat Robertson. 
 
4. George Foreman is a former professional boxer who is worth $250 million. He is a preacher at the The Church of Lord Jesus Christ in Houston. Recently, he released a book entitled God in My Corner: A Spiritual Memoir. 
 
5. Bishop David Oyedepo is a Nigerian preacher. He is the founder of Faith Tabernacle, Canaanland, Ota; Living Faith Church Worldwide A.K.A Winners Chapel International World Headquarter. Oyedepo has two universities - Landmark and Convenant University. He is worth $150 million. He is the richest pastor in Nigeria and Africa. 
 
6. Pastor E.A Adeboye is General Overseer of Redeemed Christian Church of God. He is worth $130 million. He has exotic lifestyle like many other rich Nigerian pastors. His net worth is $130 million
 
7. Bishop Ayodele Oritsejafor is one of the richest pastors in Nigeria. He is also worth $120 million he has investment in banking, real estate, transportation and also media.
 
8. Prophet Uebert Angel is the founder of the Spirit Embassy Church. He is very popular and associates with both the less privilege and widows in his country. He is rumored to be worth $60 million.
 
9. Chris Oyakhilome is the founder of Christ Embassy and his church boast of up to 40,000 membership. He is worth up to $50 million. Many of his church members are politicians and entrepreneurs.
 
10. Benny Hinn runs a program tiled Miracle Crusade and the programs are usually held in big stadiums. He is worth up to $42 million.
 
11. Joel Osteen is a pastor, televangelist and has also written a number of Christian books. The  name of his church is Lakewood church Houston Texas. His net worth is $40 million.
 
12. Pastor Tshifinwa Irene is Divine Truth World Restoration Services for World peace by Jesus Christ. She is a televangelist and her church is situated in Venda.
 
13. Creflo Dollar is a pastor and a teacher of the Word of God. Name of his church is World Changers Church International. He is a popular pastor in the United States and he is worth up to $27 million.
 
14. Pastor Ray Macaulay is based in South Africa. The name of his church is Rhema Bible Church. He received his training in 1979 and he started his church afterwards with his family.
 
15. Billy Graham is a very popular televangelist and preaches on many radio and television stations. His net worth is $25 million.
 
16. Rick Warren is the founder of Saddleback Church Lake Forest California. He is worth $25 million.
 
17. Bishop T.D. Jakes is worth $18 million. He produces movie and he is a preacher and a writer. His house costs up to $1,700,000.
 
19. Prophet T.B. Joshua is among the most controversial pastors in Nigeria and he is a philanthropist. The name of his church is Synagogue Church of All Nations. He is worth up to $15 million.
 
20. Pastor Matthew Ashimolowo is the founder of Kingsway International Christian Center located in the United Kingdom. He is worth over $10 million.
 
20. Juanita Bynum is an American televangelist, author, singer and actress. She is worth $10 million.
 
20. Chris Okotie was a pop star before switching to preaching as a pastor. His hit song 'Show Me Your Backside' was popular in the 80s. The name of his church is Household of God Church. He is worth $10 million.



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Les fauteurs de troubles et leurs complices rendront compte car le Cameroun est un Etat de droit- Atanga Nji

 Interview Courtesy of Hot News No. 278 of Wednesday December 14


LES EMEUTES DE BAMENDA

Les fauteurs de troubles et leurs complices rendront compte car le Cameroun est un Etat de droit.

Atanga Nji Paul
Monsieur le Ministre, comment avez-vous vécu les émeutes de Bamenda ?

Contrairement à ce que racontent les inconscients dans les réseaux sociaux, je suis resté sur le site où la réunion du RDPC devait se tenir pendant au moins 4 heures 30 minutes pour encadrer mes militants et porter secours aux blessés. Les manifestants étaient tous des vandales recrutés par certains meneurs qui depuis trois semaines ont lancé des mots d’ordre irresponsables dans les Régions du Nord-Ouest et du Sud-Ouest. Ces vandales drogués, encadrés par les repris de justices dangereux et les bandits de grand chemin, ont lancé toutes sortes de projectiles en direction des forces de l’ordre. Les éléments de la Gendarmerie et de la Police ont fait preuve de beaucoup de sang froid pour contenir ces manifestants drogués et manipulés qui avaient pour objectif de perturber le meeting du RDPC.

Quels pouvaient être le motif  de ces violentes manifestations ?

Ceux que vous appelez manifestants étaient des vandales et des bandits de grand chemin recrutés pour piller les biens d’honnêtes citoyens, détruire des édifices publics, brûler des voitures, agresser les militants du RDPC et perturber l’ordre public. Et pour atteindre leurs objectifs diaboliques, ils ont bénéficié de nombreuses complicités. Il y a des radios privées qui étaient payées pour diffuser des messages de haine, de division et de retour au fédéralisme de 1961. On pouvait lire sur les tracts imprimés par les hors la loi que la seule solution du prétendu problème anglophone est le fédéralisme de 1961 qui demeure « un » on sens pour tout Camerounais patriote.

Qu’est ce que vous pensez des revendications des enseignants ?

Les enseignants sont manipulés et ceux qui font ce mauvais jeu auront des comptes à rendre. Le Chef de l’Etat a fait un décaissement supplémentaire de 2 milliards de Fcfa le 30 novembre auquel il faudrait ajouter la subvention habituelle de 2,3 milliards de Fcfa. Le Secrétaire général de CATTU a dit à la CRTV que sur les onze points de discussion, si le Gouvernement réglait un seul, il allait lever le mot d’ordre de grève. Le Gouvernement a fait 03 concessions majeures. Le Premier Ministre a créé un comité interministériel ad hoc présidé par le Ministre, le Professeur Ghogomu Paul, Directeur du Cabinet du Premier Ministre. Au lieu de lever le mot d’ordre de grève, le Secrétaire général de CATTU a plutôt signé un document rendu public par le soi-disant « Cameroon Anglophone Civil Society Consortium », qui recommande la création d’un Etat fédéral. Soyons sérieux, de qui se moque t-on ? Le Ministre Paul Ghogomu a été très clair dans sa déclaration. Le Gouvernement a fait ce qu’il devait faire. Le Gouvernement a fait même plus qu’il devait faire. Dès que les syndicats des enseignants vont lever le mot d’ordre de grève, les discussions vont reprendre.

Vous êtes resté avec vos militants pendant les émeutes de Bamenda. C’est courageux de votre part ?

En politique, il faut être courageux lorsqu’on défend une bonne cause et surtout quand il faut défendre les institutions républicaines. Les Avocats et les enseignants ont trahi la confiance du Gouvernement. C’est très grave. Ils sont à la base de tout le désordre et toutes les manipulations des consciences dans les réseaux sociaux : mensonges, affabulations, images fabriquées et truquées contre la République. A qui profitent ces crimes ? Ils répondront certainement un jour. Ils ont brûlé une militante du RDPC ; ils ont détruit la voiture d Colonel de la Légion de Gendarmerie du Nord-Ouest et plusieurs autres voitures. Ils ont brûlé un Commissariat de police ; plus grave, ils ont brûlé le drapeau national. Le Ministre de la Communication a prévenu  que les complices de ces actes barbares et leurs complices seront confrontés aux rigueurs de la loi. J’ajouterai que force restera à la loi et personne n’est au-dessus de la loi. L’Etat a pour mission de protéger les personnes et leurs biens. L’Etat assumera pleinement cette mission comme il sait si bien le faire.
Le Cameroun est un, uni et indivisible. Les fauteurs de troubles et leurs meneurs rendront compte car le Cameroun est un Etat de droit.

Je vous remercie.

Courtesy : Hot News No. 278 of Wednesday December 14




When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

The Yahya Jammeh Problem - by Reuben Abati

Columnist of foremost Nigerian newspaper, Reuben Abati has analysed the political climate in Gambia as outgoing President Yahya Jammeh makes dramatic U-turn about defeat concession.
 
President Yahya Jammeh
 
When President Yahya Jammeh of The Gambia conceded defeat after the December 1, Presidential elections in that West African country of 1.9 million people, the gesture was widely hailed and described as an indication of great hope for democracy in Africa and particularly for The Gambia, which Jammeh had ruled with an iron fist for 22 years.
 
That election was also perhaps the most important political development in The Gambia in 52 years - the first change of government through democratic elections. The winner of the Presidential election, Adama Barrow, was the product of a coalition of opposition parties who provided the platform for the people’s yearning for change. Adama Barrow (the British press should please stop referring to him condescendingly as a former Argos’ security guard!), became the symbol of the people’s hopes, and of freedom from Jammeh’s tyrannical rule that was benchmarked by its brutality, love of witchcraft and human rights abuses. Jammeh’s concession made it seem as if all his past sins would be forgiven.
 
 But on December 9, he made a volte-face going on state television to say he could no longer accept the results of the election and that he had decided to annul the results. It is alleged that Jammeh may have resorted to this because of an alleged missing 365, 000 votes and the adjustment of the final results by the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) which showed that Adama Barrow had won with less than 20, 000 votes, hence Jammeh cited “unacceptable errors” which had come to light. This, if of any consequence at all, seems contrived. 
 
If Jammeh as candidate in the election has any grouse, the appropriate place to seek redress is in court, and the Gambian Constitution provides for a 10-day window within which to file a petition. That 10-day period of grace expires today. By annulling the election single-handedly without recourse to the courts (the promise to do so by his party, the APRC, is an after-thought), Jammeh is guilty of an assault on the sovereignty of the Gambian people.  His conduct is objectionable and should be considered an act of high treason. Jammeh suffers from the delusion that his love of power and personal ambition is more important than the stability and progress of his country. The people’s will as confidently expressed on December 1 is supreme. Jammeh should be made to realize that he is just another citizen and that The Gambia is not his personal estate. 
 
The African Union, ECOWAS and the UN Security Council as well as the international community in general have condemned the infamy that Jammeh is seeking to foist on his people. But the AU and ECOWAS should take the lead in coming to the rescue of The Gambian people. The long-term objective, in case Yahya Jammeh does not relent, is to invoke the Constitutive Acts and Principles of both bodies on democratic transition and thus “criminalize” any further attempt by Jammeh to violate the democratic process.
 
We appreciate the fact that ECOWAS leaders: chairperson Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia, and the Presidents of Nigeria (Muhammadu Buhari), Sierra Leone (Ernest Bai Koroma), Ghana (John Dramani Mahama) and Guinea (Alpha Conde) are in fact meeting with President Jammeh today in Banjul. They will also meet with opposition coalition leaders. The primary task of that team should be to bring all parties concerned to the negotiating table, insist on the supremacy of the people’s will and advise Yahya Jammeh to obey the rule of law. 
 
 It is possible that he would refuse to listen. Before now, this Gambian anti-hero has shown a capacity to defy the international community. He once turned himself into a herbal doctor and claimed he had found a cure for HIV/AIDS. In 2013, he pulled his country out of the Commonwealth. He is also opposed to the International Criminal Court (ICC). Ironically, the current chief prosecutor of the ICC is a Gambian, Fatou Bensouda. Yahya Jammeh is also an incurable megalomaniac, given his love of titles: H.E. Sheikh Prof. Dr. Alhaji President Yahya AJJ Jammeh Babili Mansa. On many occasions, he wanted to be Chairman of the ECOWAS, but his colleague-Presidents always turned him down in favour of much junior Presidents who met him in office. For a while he shunned many international engagements, sending his Vice President instead. To be fair to him though, he is not as stupid as he is made to appear internationally and he has probably realized that the game is up. But could Yahya Jammeh be playing a game, to negotiate, to gain amnesty? 
 
 His relapse out of that moment of lucidity that saw him conceding defeat on December 2 may well have been caused not by his claim of “unacceptable errors”, but fear. The Gambian situation may end up providing special lessons in how triumphant opposition parties should manage victory in order not to provoke a succession crisis. Dictators in general are afraid of what will happen to them when they are no longer in power and hence, many of them hang on to office until they die or they are disgraced out. While the antidote to this is good governance, it is also pragmatic to situate certain responses within the context of post-election realities. 
 
 In The Gambia, the post-election situation has been poorly managed. Jammeh and Barrow have met only once since the election was won and lost. They are practically not on speaking terms. The opposition, apparently due to lack of knowledge and tact, has also been busy threatening to deal with Jammeh as soon as he hands over power. Fatoumata Jallow-Tambajang, who led the victorious coalition has been busy taunting Jammeh. She is a perfect illustration of how much damage reckless windbaggery can do to opposition politics. 
 
 Madame Fatoumata says Jammeh will be prosecuted.  Gambia will rejoin the International Criminal Court and Jammeh will be sent to The Hague for trial. Jammeh says he’d like to retire to his farm in his native Kanilai, Madame says he will not be allowed to do so, because he has “bunkers and treasure” there and enough weapons to start an insurrection. He won’t even be allowed to go abroad. “He can’t leave. If he leaves, he’s going to escape us”, she says. And she adds: “we don’t trust him. The longer we leave him, the more possibilities he has to leave the country to escape the country and even do an insurgency…Senegal is very alert. Nobody trusts him…” She further referred to Jammeh’s wife as a “gold-digger” who should be put on trial and jailed. It is precisely this kind of reckless post-election rhetoric that threatens peaceful ruling-party-to-opposition-transition in Africa. Fatoumata Jallow-Tambalang’s tactlessness has to be managed. She and Samsudeen Sarr should shut up, at least for now! 
 
Yahya Jammeh’s response has just been as vengeful. He quickly promoted loyal officers in the military and got the military hierarchy to recant. He also sent soldiers onto the streets of Banjul and Serekunda and other parts of the country to subdue an already frightened populace. He had admitted the result of the Presidential election as the “will of Allah”, but now he is relying on his own will to protect and preserve himself. The early exposure of the mind of the opposition has driven Jammeh back into the trap of tyranny and unless the situation is well managed, we may have a serious crisis in The Gambia with a well-resourced dictator turned rebel. What is playing out in The Gambia right now is a two-way politics of vengeance, which leaves both the people and the governance process stranded. Getting the country out of that logjam should be the main remit of the ECOWAS mission.
 
The ECOWAS leaders visiting Banjul must engage The Gambian military hierarchy. Jammeh is in the process of using them to carry out another coup. His first coup was against Dawda Jawara, 22 years ago, the current effort is designed as a coup against the people and the opposition. And even if he does not get away with it, he is determined to plant enough problems that would make The Gambia impossible to govern after his exit. Right now, The Gambian military has lost its mind. Chief of Defence Staff General Ousman Badjie endorsed the outcome of the 2016 Presidential election and pledged loyalty to the people and the elected in-coming government, but after the bribery of military promotions, the same CDS started insisting on another election. A divided, psychopathic military is a serious problem to any country. We saw that in Guinea-Bissau and Mali. The ECOWAS team must make it clear to The Gambian military leaders that there will be no regional backing for any act of lunacy.  
 
ECOWAS has its own problems. Oftentimes, ECOWAS leaders succumb to unnecessary compromises. They should not return from The Gambia with any unholy compromise. Yahya Jammeh lost the election on December 1. He boasted before then that any election in The Gambia is “rig-proof” and “fraud-proof”.
 
In four previous elections, he won with a landslide. Now, all of a sudden, elections conducted under him are no longer “rig-proof”. He should pack out of the Presidential Villa and allow The Gambia to move on without him. He is the latest victim of coalition opposition politics in Africa. His defeat should send a clear message to the other sit-tight, royalist leaders across the continent. The long-term solution to the Yahya Jammeh problem should be the introduction of a Constitutional term limit for The Gambian Presidency to prevent Jammeh from ruling as he once claimed for “one billion years!”  
 
 Above all, Yahya Jammeh is a spoilsport. He jumped out of his moment of lucidity just when we were celebrating the good news from Ghana. John Mahama is Ghana’s first one-term democratically elected President since 1992, but he has been gallant in defeat and most gracious. There is no chance he will behave like Jammeh. He is educated. He has a good head. He is a thinker and a writer. He certainly has a brighter future ahead of him




When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)