Tuesday, 18 December 2012

Zenit St Petersburg fans want black and gay players excluded,

From BBC, 18 December 2012


A Zenit St Petersburg supporters' group has called for non-white and gay players to be excluded from the team.
The Russian champions' largest fans' group, Landscrona, said in an open-letter that black players are "forced down Zenit's throat".
They added that gay players are "unworthy of our great city".
Dietmar Beiersdorfer, Zenit director of sports, said players were selected "without any limitation regarding origin, religion or skin colour".
Zenit were the only top-flight Russian team without a black player until this summer.
Continue reading the main story
Zenit has proven through its work that the club understands what tolerance is
Luciano SpallettiZenit St Petersburg head coach
French midfielder Yann M'Vila reportedly turned down a move to the club in August as a result of racist abuse. 
Nikolai Grammatikov, the secretary of the union of football players and coaches in Russia, believes players can send an important message to the country's football authorities by refusing to join Russian clubs.
"The best way of acting against this is when the players that are invited to come to Russia, the black players especially, say 'Sorry I would love to come as it is probably an interesting Championship, but the Federation has to do something because I am not going there because of the racists,'" he said.
"This is the strongest message the players could make now to the football authorities."
Zenit's Italian head coach, Luciano Spalletti described the supporters' call as "stupidity", saying "tolerance for me is most of all the ability to understand and accept differences".
He added: "I can personally assure you that I will do everything I can to help those who seek to explain to people what tolerance is, and the need to respect other cultures and traditions.
"I think that Zenit has proven through its work that the club understands what tolerance is, and what it means to have tolerant behaviour. The team has gathered players from different countries and ethnic groups who work together to achieve a common goal."
The fans' manifesto read: "The absence of black Zenit players is just an important tradition that underlines the team's identity and nothing more."
Black players in the Russian league have been the target of monkey chants and Anzhi Makhachkala's Christopher Samba had bananas thrown at him by fans. Zenit St Petersburg were fined by the Russian Football Union after one of their fans offered Roberto Carlos of Anzhi a banana before a match between the two sides in March 2011.
Samba said Zenit fans "live in a different century" and admitted he was not surprised by their demands.
Zenit are currently third in the Russian Premier League behind leaders CSKA Moscow and Anzhi. They will play in this season's Europa League after finishing third in Champions League Group C.



Saturday, 15 December 2012

2012: Year of scam, sleaze and slaughter


  • Written by
  • Nigerian Tribune
  • Thursday, 13 December 2012 00:00
  •  

  • The outgoing year may hold the record as the one in which the country was almost brought to its knees by humongous corruption and horrendous carnage. Sulaimon Olanrewaju reports.
    The Federal Government hit Nigerians hard on the face leaving everyone red-eyed with the surreptitious withdrawal of fuel subsidy on New Year Day. The government, through a terse statement issued by the Petroleum Products Pricing and Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) on January 1, announced to Nigerians that it had ceased to subsidise fuel in the country. With that announcement, premium motor spirit (petrol), which had hitherto been sold for N65, jumped to N141 per litre. The prices of diesel and other petroleum products also rose astronomically.
    The people, spurred by civil society organisations and the labour movement, instantly poised for war. It was a long-drawn battle that set the tone for the government-populace relations in the year.
    Both labour leaders and human rights activists that championed the struggle did not rush into the fight. They took their time to plan to ensure its success, and gave advance warning to the people to stockpile food items at home. By the time the protest took off on January 9, it was total. In Lagos and a number of other cities, the protests paralysed all activities. It was a demonstration of angst against a government policy like never before. Majority of Nigerians rose as one and spoke as one against the policy. The number of protesters kept growing by the day.
    The protest was so fierce that some National Assembly members who were travelling to Abuja to be part of the sitting of theAssembly were manhandled in Ibadan and compelled to return to Lagos despite being escorted by security operatives.  
    Not surprisingly, the continued growth of the army of protesters gave government the jitters and it resorted to blackmail, stating that the protesters were sponsored. But that failed to deter the people. When blackmail failed, the government decided to mobilise the army against the protesters but it was shocked to find out that no gun or armoured tank could kill the resolve of an incensed people. Eventually, the government, which had insisted on having its way, was forced to eat a humble pie, invited labour leaders for negotiation and agreed to reduce the price of PMS to N97 per litre.
    But the damage was already done. The administration lost a good dose of the goodwill it had enjoyed before the attempt to remove subsidy. Since then, sniff and snub has become the attitude of many Nigerians to government activities. That scenario played out when the president, on May 29, announced the renaming of the University of Lagos to Moshood Abiola University, Lagos in honour of the late Chief Moshood Abiola, the nation’s symbol of democratic sacrifice. The move was vehemently resisted by students, staff, alumni as well as a wide range of people and groups. Various reasons were advanced by different interests for rejecting the immortalisation of Abiola with a name change for UNILAG but the most consistent was that the government failed to carry along the stakeholders in arriving at that decision. The government had to back down and put the name change on hold to stave off the protests. The president later sent a bill to the Senate to effect the name change. But since that was done in June, not much has been heard of the bill.
    The same scenario was repeated with the approval by government for the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to introduce N5,000 note that would bear the faces of three Nigerian amazons; Mrs Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti, Mrs Margaret Ekpo and Hajia Gambo Sawaba. The move was intensely opposed by stakeholders who held that such introduction would sprout inflation. They also knocked the government for its failure to engage the people in the process that resulted in the introduction of the new note. Again, the government had to instruct the CBN to put on hold the proposed introduction of the new note.       
    Meanwhile, the attempted subsidy removal and the attendant protest produced a good result as Nigerians began to interrogate the administration of subsidy and this resulted in the opening of a can of worms.
    The House of Representatives set up an ad hoc committee led by Farouk Lawan to probe the subsidy regime. The committee in its 205-page report stated that the subsidy regime, as operated between 2009 and 2011, was “fraught with endemic corruption and entrenched inefficiency. Much of the amount claimed to have been paid as subsidy was actually not for consumed premium motor spirit (PMS). Government officials made nonsense of the PSF guidelines due mainly to sleaze, and in some other cases, incompetence. It is, therefore, apparent that the insistence by top government officials that the subsidy figures were for products consumed was a clear attempt to mislead the Nigerian people.”
    It added that contrary to the official figure of subsidy payment of N1.3 trillion, the Accountant-General of the Federation put forward a figure of N1.6 trillion, the CBN, N1.7 trillion, while the committee established subsidy payment of N2,587.087 trillion as of December 31, 2011, amounting to more than 900 per cent over the appropriated sum of N245 billion.
    The Senate also instituted a probe into the subsidy scandal.
    But the House of Representatives did not come out of the probe exercise untainted itself as the probe chairman, Lawan, was accused by Chairman of Zenon Oil, Femi Otedola, of demanding a bribe of $3million from him, out of which he paid him $620,000. Although, Lawan initially denied taking any bribe from Otedola, he later owned up. The bribery scandal almost made a mess of the efforts of the House to unravel the mystery concerning the fuel subsidy regime. The House suspended Lawan and the police have been investigating the matter since. However, neither Lawan nor Otedola has been arraigned in court over this matter.
    Although some marketers were indicted by the report of both the House and the Senate and some arrests were made, it is instructive to note that none of the indicted companies and individuals has been convicted.
    But the subsidy scam was not the only one that rocked the House; there was also the Embeh/Oteh scandal.
    Arunma Oteh, Director General of the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC), while appearing before the House Committee on Capital Market and other Institutions, alleged that the committee members demanded N39million from SEC to fund the hearing. She tendered documents to back her claim although the committee chairman, Mr Herman Hembe, denied the allegation claiming that it was Oteh that actually wanted to compromise the committee. Hembe was suspended by the House even as his committee was dissolved by the House leadership and another one instituted. Hembe and his deputy, Ifeanyi Azubogu, were charged to court by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the case is however, still pending.
    The new committee set up by the House to probe the collapse of the capital market, however, recommended the sack of Oteh for violating some rules governing the organisation, saying she was not qualified to head the commission. Although, she was initially asked to proceed on compulsory leave by the board of SEC to enable them probe allegations of financial misappropriation and disharmony in the apex capital market regulator, she was later reinstated by the Federal Government, saying that the audit firm engaged to examine the records of SEC’s transactions covering its Project 50 gave her a clean bill of health and absolved her of all accusations of fraud and criminal breaches, adding, however, that “some administrative lapses were reported, particularly in cases where administrative procedures were not thoroughly observed.”
    The decision of the executive to reinstate Oteh did not go down well with the legislature as the two chambers resolved not to have anything to do with her or her organisation for as long as she remains the DG. The resolve played out recently when the SEC was to defend its budget for 2013 as the members asked the representatives of the DG to excuse them from the exercise as the House would not go back on its vow not to have anything to do with SEC under Oteh.
    But scams and scandals were not restricted to the National Assembly, in 2012, corruption and sleaze became so pervasive in the country and since the system of deterrence is so weak, the corrupt became more emboldened and daring. The country was shocked to its bone marrow to learn that about N32 billion was stolen from the Police Pensions Office by civil servants with N2billion cash found in the house of one of them.
    According to chairman, Pensions Reform Task Team (PRTT), Abdulrasheed Maina, who said his team recovered the total sum of N151 billion looted by officials responsible for managing pension funds, about N300million is looted daily from the Police Pensions fund.
    However, the PRTT was also embroiled in scandals as the Senate indicted the chairman, Maina, and two other members of his team, John Yusuf and B.G. Kaigama, over the misappropriation of pension funds. According to the Senate, the taskforce team fraudulently opened accounts where it deposited money illegally and expended such funds at will.
    Almost on daily basis, Nigerians were confronted with reports of bizarre sleaze in government and this informed their rating of the nation’s leadership as the second most corrupt in the world as revealed by the Gallup Poll released in November.
    According to Gallup in its report on “Global States of Mind: New Metrics for World Leaders”, 94 per cent of Nigerians believe there is widespread corruption in government.”
    To corroborate the Gallup Poll, the KPMG, also in a report made public in November, classified Nigeria as the most corrupt nation in Africa. The audit firm stated that Nigeria accounted for the highest number of fraud cases on the continent of Africa in the first half of 2012, putting the cost of fraud in the country during the period at $1.5billion (N225 billion).
    The report identified the common forms of fraud in the country as “bribes in the private and public sector, misappropriation, and contract inflation.”
    Transparency International also decorated Nigeria with a badge of corruption in its 2012 report on global corruption. In that report, Nigeria scored 27 out of a maximum 100 marks to clinch the 139th position out of the 176 countries surveyed for the report.
    Although attempts have been made by government officials to pooh-pooh these reports, utterances of key government functionaries lend credence to the veracity of the reports.
    Recently, Minister of Trade and Investment, Olusegun Aganga, wrote to the president to report that his signature was forged on the Export Clearance Permit with which the theft of 24 million barrels of crude oil worth $1.6 billion (N252 billion) between July and September was facilitated. Nothing has been heard of that incident ever since the report became public.
    In May, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Finance Minister, revealed that the government lost a fifth of its oil revenues to theft in April. Despite this revelation, nothing has been done. Nobody has been brought to book and it is not clear if anything has been done to discontinue the perpetuation of the crime.    
    Similarly, the Ribadu report on the oil and gas sector puts daily crude oil theft at about 250,000 barrels at a cost of $6.3bn (N1.2trn) a year. Although the government has set up a White Paper Committee on the report, no one is left in doubt that nothing has been done to block the leakage.
    This is especially so given that the government was paying ex-militants N5.6billion every year to secure the nation’s pipelines. This fact was meant to be a secret and Nigerians would have been kept in the dark in the matter if not that Wall Street Journal reported it. The report gave the break-down of the militants involved in the contracts as well as the amount of money involved as Government Tompolo Ekpumopolo,N3.6bn; Asari Dokubo, 1.44bn; Ateke Toms,N560m and Ebikabowei Boyloaf Victor Ben, N560m. When this became public, the government terminated the contract but there are moves for the renewal of the contracts.
    In the KPMG report, Olumide Olayinka, the firm’s Head of Risk Consulting in Nigeria observed that “there have been a lot of cases involving the banking and the oil and gas sectors or government that lead to prosecution. The current noticeable trend is that many cases either end with a plea bargain or are simply closed without any conviction. The general belief in Nigeria is that the legal system is not effective enough.”  
    Nothing confirms Olayinka’s observation that Nigeria’s legal system is not as effective as it can be as the trial of James Ibori, former Delta State governor. Shortly after leaving office as governor in 2007, he was arrested by the EFCC and charged to court for abuse of office, corruption and money laundering. The celebrated case dragged on for two years but the presiding judge, Justice Marcel Awokulehin of Asaba Federal High Court, dismissed all charges preferred against Ibori, saying the EFCC failed to establish a prima facie case against the accused. The judge quashed all the 170 charges against Ibori and others saying that EFCC failed to supply evidence or call witnesses to back up the charges.
    However, in a twist of events, this year, the Southwark Crown Court 9 in London, sentenced Ibori to 13 years in prison for money laundering and corruption after pleading guilty to 10 counts of fraud, money laundering and corruption involving the sale of Delta State Government shares in a defunct mobile phone firm, VMobile, as well as the illicit use of funds belonging to the state government.
    The nation has been scandalised by the ostentatious lifestyle of its leaders despite their failure to fund projects that have the capacity to transform the lives of the people.
    While appearing before the Senate Joint Committees on Appropriation, Finance, Public Accounts, National Planning, Economic Affairs and Poverty Alleviation on the implementation of the 2012 budget on August 2, Finance Minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, disclosed that only 41.3 per cent of the budget had been executed. This rankles because on the contrary, the whole amount of money appropriated for the comfort of the rulers has been released. Budgetary allocation to the state house for 2012 was N18,344,524,169. No kobo out of this has not yet been released, yet the bulk of the money that would have benefitted the general populace has yet to get to the ministries and agencies.
    A consequence of the pervasive corruption in Nigeria is the near collapse of the security system. The current year has successfully exposed the limited capacity of the security agencies to curtail insurrection or insurgency. On January 6, terrorists armed with automatic weapons, stormed a town hall in Mubi, Adamawa State where people had gathered to mourn three Christians shot the previous day. No fewer than 18 persons were confirmed killed in the encounter. About the same time in Yola, an ambush laid for Christians leaving a church service in the state left at least eight people dead.
    The nation had yet to recover from the shock of that when on January 20, Kano burned while the security agencies were having a nap. It started after the Jumat prayer on Friday as some gunmen took over five police stations and freed all the cell inmates. They later took the battle to the police on the street, leaving many dead in their wake; policemen as well as pedestrians.
    They also stormed the Immigration office as well as the office of the State Security Service. The gunmen had a field day and there was nobody to stop them. At the end of the attack, the casualty figure was put at 185 people, 150 of whom were civilians and at least 32 police officers, including three members of the SSS.
    Terrorists and gunmen have become more daring and deft. They carry out their operations with precision that can only come from well developed minds that pay attention to details. They no longer consider anywhere sacred or impregnable. They attacked the Special Anti Robbery Squad headquarters in Abuja on November 26 and released a number of detainees from the detention facility. They also humiliated the Nigerian Army when they bombed a military protestant church inside the Armed Forces Command and Staff College, Jaji in Kaduna State, leaving 11 persons dead.
    While terrorists are advancing against security operatives with the ease of a hot knife in butter, the security forces have been finding it difficult to locate and arrest them. Even when they do arrest, they find it a serious challenge to keep them. Kabiru Sokoto, who was said to be the mastermind of the 2011 Christmas Day bombing of Saint Theresa’s Catholic Church, Madalla, Niger State, where 43 people were killed, escaped from police custody in January this year. He was, however, later rearrested. Another Boko Haram leader, Sani Mohammed, was also said to have escaped recently from police custody but the Police High Command denied this.
    Nothing signals the lack of will of the state to take the terrorism challenge seriously as the confusion that has enveloped the leadership of security agencies. The Inspector General of the Police, Mohammed Abubakar, recently said the police could not prosecute suspected terrorists because there was no anti-terrorism law in the country. But in a swift reaction, the Senate, through its spokesperson, Enyinnaya Abaribe, said the country had an anti-terrorism law.
    According to him, “Senate was surprised and flabbergasted that the Inspector General of Police will say there is no Anti- Terrorist law.”
    He added that “The Act was passed by the Senate and the House of Representatives 1st of June 2011, and on the 2nd of June it was forwarded by the Clerk to President Jonathan. The Bill was so important to President that he signed it into law on the 3rd of June 2011.”
    However, terror activities are so profound in the country that the Global Terrorism Index (GTI) has classified the country as the seventh most terrorised country in the world. According to the report, Nigeria recorded 168 incidents of terrorism in 2011 from which 437 persons died, 614 persons sustained injuries and 33 property were destroyed.
    Similarly, the United States of America has named three Boko Haram leaders as Specially Designated Global Terrorists and blocked their assets. They are; Abubakar Shekau, Abubakar Adam Kambar and Khalid al Barnawi.
    As the country is battling with terrorism, so is it battling with other violent crimes such as armed robbery and kidnapping. Perhaps the worst armed robbery incident in the year was the one that took place in Auchi, Edo State, where dare devil armed robbers immobilised policemen before attacking three banks. The attack left no fewer than 10 persons killed.
    Kidnapping, which witnessed a decline after the amnesty programme of the Federal Government, has again become a very serious challenge in the country. Hardly will a day pass without a case of kidnapping being reported. The kidnappers have so perfected their act that they are always a step ahead of security agencies.  
    Another black spot in the year was the crash of a Dana Air aircraft. The crash, which claimed the lives of the 153 passengers on board as well as the crew members and some residents of Iju Ishaga, where it occurred, was caused by the failure of the two engines of the aircraft. The licence of the airline was immediately suspended to allow for full investigation. The authorities did not find the airline culpable and its licence was restored. However, six months after the crash, the relations of the victims are still running from pillar to post to get the compensation that should be paid to them.
    Governor Danbaba Suntai of Taraba State and five of his aides were also involved in a crash while travelling in a private aircraft belonging to the governor. Suntai, who is said to be brain dead, is in a German hospital.     
    It has also been a year of floods. The country experienced flooding this year like never before in its history. Areas which were hitherto thought to be safe from flooding were ravaged by angry floods. From Lagos to Oyo, Ogun, Anambra, Edo, Bayelsa, Kogi, Benue, Kwara, Cross River, Niger and Delta, it was unfettered flooding all the way.   
    According to the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), no fewer than 363 lives were lost to floods this year, while 2,157,419 people were displaced. The agency added that 7,705, 398 people were affected by floods between July 1 and October 31, while 18, 282 people were treated for injuries occasioned by floods. The agency also identified Adamawa and Kogi as the two states with the highest casualty figures. The floods also washed away many farms but the Federal Ministry of Agriculture has assured that there would not be food scarcity in the country.
    The Federal Government responded to the flooding by releasing N17.6 billion intervention funds to state and some agencies as well as setting up a committee to raise funds for the affected states.    
    It was not all gloom all year round. A few developments gave Nigerians reasons for cheer. One of such was the successful conduct of the governorship elections in Edo and Ondo states. The two elections were adjudged free and fair by local and international observers, an indication that the era of conducting questionable elections in the country may be in the past.
    Another joyful thing is that eventually the government was able to make up its mind to stop the daily carnage on the Lagos-Ibadan express road by terminating the concession granted Bi Courteny and instantly awarding the repair work on the road to both Julius Berger and Reynolds Construction Company (RCC) with an ultimatum that the bad portion of the road be fixed before the year ends. It has been argued in many quarters that there is more to the revocation than the failure of Bi Courteny to deliver on agreed terms. Whether that is true or not will be determined by events in the ensuing year. 

    Thursday, 13 December 2012

    Interview with Dino Melaye



    Interview with Dino Melaye

    A systematically plundering of Nigeria wealth by the people in power, instead of building, roads, rails and internet, the people in power were so interested in short changing Nigerian in every aspect of the economic. They are interested in allocating funds for the renovation  and building of mansions for themselves, instead of allocating funds to the development of agriculture, the are busy allocating funds for food and entertaining themselves while millions were going hungry everyday. 
    Instead of allocating funds to build hospitals and medical centers across the nation, they are busy flying all over the world for medical check-ups... etc

    check it out,       



    http://www.naijapundit.com/component/allvideoshare/video/latest/interview-with-dino-melaye

    Nigeria's bank governor Sanusi 'threatened with arrest' From BBC


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    Nigerian central bank chief Lamido Sanusi at a meeting in Paris (11 June 2010)Lamido Sanusi has called for Nigeria to have fewer MPs
    Nigeria's House of Representatives speaker has threatened to order the arrest of the central bank chief and 14 others over the fate of $8bn (£5bn).
    The office of speaker Aminu Tambuwal said he had signed arrest warrants for Lamido Sanusi and the other officials.
    The warrants will be executed if they fail to appear before MPs to explain the whereabouts of money allegedly owed to the treasury, a spokesman said.
    Mr Sanusi said he was unaware of the warrant and denied any wrongdoing.
    He is widely respected in banking circles in Africa and the West. In 2011, he was named the Central Bank Governor of the Year by the global financial publication, The Banker.
    'Nothing personal'

    Start Quote

    No government agency or department even comes near our contribution to the budget”
    Lamido SanusiNigeria's central bank chief
    Earlier this month, he called for the size of the House of Representatives, the 360-member lower chamber, to be reduced to free up money for development.
    He also called for the number of public servants to be cut by half.
    Mr Tambuwal's spokesman, Imam Imam, said other officials for whom warrants have been issued include Andrew Yakub, group managing director of the state-owned Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation's (NNPC), and National Pension Commission Director-General Muhammad Ahmad.
    He said MPs would enforce the arrest warrants if the officials failed to appear before a parliamentary committee to account for the money.
    The officials apparently have until Thursday to appear before MPs, reports the BBC's Chris Ewokor from the capital, Abuja.
    The warrants were issued because the 15 officials are accused of refusing to honour several invitations to explain to MPs the alleged failure to transfer about $8bn to the treasury, he says.
    However, a police spokesman told our correspondent he had no knowledge of the warrants.
    Mr Sanusi told the BBC he was out of Nigeria, but the deputy governor would appear before MPs.
    He said he was unaware of an arrest warrant for him.
    "I personally don't believe the speaker signed such a warrant as these things are not personal," he said.
    Mr Sanusi said the Central Bank of Nigeria has made remittances to the treasury in accordance with the law.
    "Our accounts are audited by two reputable external auditors... No government agency or department even comes near our contribution to the budget," he said.
    Nigeria is Africa's biggest oil producer, but most of its population lives in poverty.
    Critics say corruption is endemic in the government and there is a lack of financial accountability.

    Tuesday, 11 December 2012

    JOY COMES IN THE MORNING


    Written by Chief Femi-Fani Kayode on 10 December 2012




    Joy Comes In The Morning

    Today our nation stands at a crossroad and it is left for us to decide which path we choose to take. Do we take the path of despair and dishonour and give up on our country? Or do we rise above it all and latch on to the promises of God for our land and for our people? With biting poverty, mounting hopelessness, a bleeding economy, youth restiveness, unprecedented violence, brazen acts of terror and all manner of vices and evil thriving in the land one wonders how things got so bad. The foundation for our current situation was laid many years ago and since that time we have seen so much suffering and failure at virtually all levels. We were plagued with leaders who lacked vision, who lacked intellect, who lacked sincerity of purpose and who were antagonistic to those that dared to challenge their vision-less and purposeless policies. Our country is currently bedeviled with so much negativity that it is easy to look around and just give up. Yet I say that we must never give up because ''hope springs eternal''.  The bible says though the night may be dark yet ''joy comes in the morning''.  The wise ones say you cannot have a message without a mess. You cannot have a testimony without a test. You cannot get to the top of the mountain without first going to the bottom of the valley. This is true. And out of Nigeria's ''mess'' shall surely come her ''message''. Out of Nigeria's ''test'' shall surely come her ''testimony''. We have been to the ''bottom of the valley'' and therefore we shall get to the ''top of the mountain''. Our dream for a better Nigeria shall never die and neither can our collective prayers be in vain. I refuse to give up because I know that the God that I serve never fails. He alone rules in the affairs of men. He alone forges the destiny of nations. Out of a deep void and formlessness He ordered the creation of the world. He established it by the power of His word and He gave us dominion over it. 
     
    In the same way He created Nigeria for His purpose and for His glory and that purpose and glory shall surely be established. It shall come to pass and it will be manifest to the entire world. We shall see it and we shall be established in it as a nation and as a people. If God can do it for others, He can do it for us too. We can be great and, by the grace of God, we shall be great. This is my dream and this is what I see. And believe me when I tell you that it is prophetic. A Nigeria where every man and woman, regardless of faith, ethnicity, status or political persuasion finds a common cause and relishes in our collective humanity. A Nigeria where the rich have a conscience and the poor have hope. A Nigeria where joy and peace reign supreme and where bombings and killings are a thing of the past. A Nigeria where the descendants of Ishmael and Isaac and the adherents of the two great Abrahamic faiths of islam and christianity live together in peace, harmony and mutual respect. A Nigeria where the secularity of the state is respected yet where God is reverred and honoured by all. A Nigeria where the knowledge and fear of the Living God reigns in the hearts and minds of the people. A Nigeria where every man is His brother's keeper, where leaders show compassion to those that they lead, where justice is done to all and where political persecution has no place. A Nigeria where decency is rewarded, where dissent is tolerated, where non-conformity is encouraged and where equity is enthroned. That is the Nigeria of my dream. A Nigeria where youth unemployment is low and where every individual, no matter how high or low, can aspire to any position and live his or her dream. That is the Nigeria of my dream. A Nigeria where human life and human dignity is sacrosanct and where fairness is the watchword of every soul. That is the Nigeria of my dream.
     
    I have no fears about the future of this great nation because the God that I serve never fails. The bible says the nations are ''as a drop of water before Him''. He sits above the circles of the earth and He counts the earth as His footstool. Yet despite His sheer awesomeness and majesty, with Him lies great compassion and mercy. Once we return to Him, acknowledge Him, honour Him and are led and guided by Him, He will restore us and shower us with His blessings. The Lord awaits us to make the right choice. We either continue to wallow in self-delusion, wickedness, greed, murder, the persecution of perceived enemies, the abuse of power, evil and insenstivity or we desist from our wicked ways and turn to Him. I am persuaded that once we make the right choice our date with destiny, as a people and as a nation, will come far sooner than we can possibly imagine.  In his book titled ''The Wretched of the Earth'' Frantz Fanon said the following- "each generation must, out of relative obscurity, discover it's mission and fulfill it or betray it." Past generations in Nigeria have not lived up to expectation. This is the bitter truth.
    Yet there is still hope as long as we have faith. That hope and faith is our blessed assurance and it lives in our minds and hearts. We know that the Lord will fix it.  We know that He is ''more than able''. We know that He is a man of war whom none can resist and we know that He restores, redeems and rebuilds even the most broken and wretched walls.  Dr. Martin Luther King jnr., after delivering his celebrated and inspiring ''I have a dream'' speech, was felled by an assassin's bullet on April 4 1968. To those that killed him, his dream died with him. Yet they were wrong. They did not know that great dreams, once birthed, never die.  That is why the Word of God said ''if the princes of this world had known they would not have crucified the Lord of Glory''. If those that murdered Jesus, and the devil that inspired them to do it,  had known that He would honour His word and rise up three days later they would not have crucified him.  They persecuted Him, they humiliated Him, they beat Him, they tortured Him, they spat on Him and they killed Him yet they could not kill His dream or abort His mission.  His dream lived on and became a reality for all mankind to see. It was the same with Martin Luther King. They killed him but his mission had already been achieved and his vision came to pass 45 years after his sacrificial and selfless death. This is indeed the stuff of which dreams are made. Great things are birthed in great dreams and if you dare to dream nothing is impossible.
     
     
    I have a dream for Nigeria. I have a dream that one day Nigerians will see themselves as Nigerians before anything else and they will not regard their country and its people as a collection of strange bed-fellows that do not love or trust one another. Yet this dream can only be fulfilled when those amongst us that call ourselves leaders preach, practice and display discipline, temperance, holiness, morality, restraint, tolerance, mercy and the fear of God in the conduct of our affairs. It can only be made manifest when we stand up and fight against evil, tyranny, injustice, indeceny, bad governance, the abuse of power , political persecution and sheer wickedness. Our dream can only be brought to reality when love is the motivating factor in all that we do.  The Lord commands us to love our neighbour as we do ourselves. That is the cornerstone and the foundation of  our faith and it is in that faith and that resolve that our hope for a better and greater Nigeria lies. I have a dream that Nigeria will be what God wants her to be, a great and powerful nation that is dedicated to the Living God and that will act as a shining example and a beacon of light for all to see.  
     
     
    I assure you that despite the dashed hopes and unbearable suffering of millions of our people over the last 52 years, our dream still lives and the Lord shall not forsake us. Our land and our people may seem blighted, in despair, depressed, repressed and confused. It may appear as if there is no hope for a better tomorrow and that nothing will ever change. It may seem as if the Lord has forgotten us and it may appear that our story is one of recurrent failure and shattered dreams. Yet this is not so. I have come here today to tell you that, despite all we see and hear, it is not over for us as a people and as a nation. I have come here today to tell you that we as a people have a date with destiny. I have come here today to tell you that Nigeria and the Nigerian dream lives on and that it shall be made manifest for all to see in the fullness of time. I therefore urge you to be strong, to hold your heads up high, to be proud of who and what you are and to stand firm. The vision is for an appointed time. Though it may tarry it shall not prove false. Just hold on.
    God bless you and God bless Nigeria.

    Tuesday, 30 October 2012

    Bone marrow hope for African patients

    This article appeared in the final edition of the BBC Focus on Africa magazine.



    Olabisi Bokinni and Seun Adebiyi Olabisi Bokinni (l) and Seun Adebiyi (r) had different personal reasons for their interest in bone marrow

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    Cancer dramatically changed the outlook of one Nigerian and prompted him to save countless other lives, writes US-based journalist Frederica Boswell, in this article published in the BBC Focus on Africa magazine
    In August 2010, Olabisi Bokinni was 24 years old and working at a management consultancy in Ikeja, Lagos, when she learnt that her brother, who lived in the United States, was diagnosed with leukaemia.
    "At the time, I did not have a clue about cancer," she says. After several weeks of tests and chemotherapy, she was told that his doctors were looking for a match for a stem cell donation to restore his weakened cells.
    Doctors focused on his siblings, and sent a package for blood samples to be taken. Weeks later, Ms Bokinni was told that she was a possible match.
    Her brother's hospital prepared her paperwork for a US visa, but it was denied. She remembers the day vividly: "The last thing I asked my interviewer was: 'You want him to die?'"
    It was obvious that they needed another plan, so she was sent to the bone marrow registry in Cape Town, South Africa for the procedure.

    Start Quote

    I wanted to start a registry in Nigeria for diaspora Africans to be able to draw from a pool of donors”
    Seun Adebiyi
    When she finally saw the package of her stem cells that would be delivered to the hospital in the US, Ms Bokinni recalls pleading with the doctors: "Deliver it to save my brother's life!"
    Family connections are the likeliest match for stem cell transplants. If a patient does not have a sibling, doctors search within the same ethnic group because there is a higher compatibility for certain genes called Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) markers.
    This means that Ms Bokinni's brother could have found it difficult to find a donor in the US. African Americans make up only 8% of the bone marrow registry in the US, and according to the National Marrow Donor Programme, African-American patients have less than a 17% chance of finding a bone marrow match, compared to 70% of white patients.
    Bone marrow registry
    While working in the finance industry in the US, a Nigerian-American lawyer, Seun Adebiyi, was faced with these odds.
    Sunday Ocheni, Seun Adebiyi and Ifeoma OkoyeMr Adebiyi (centre) joined forces with doctors Ocheni (left) and Okoye (right) to start the bone marrow registry
    He was diagnosed with lymphoblastic lymphoma and stem cell leukaemia in January 2009.
    "Chemotherapy would buy me time, but not save my life. I needed a system reset," he explains.
    Unfortunately, this was not going to prove easy to find in the US, and so he started looking to the country of his birth.
    Mr Adebiyi knew that one in five black people in the world is Nigerian, and the country is home to a quarter of Africa's population.
    With almost 400 distinct ethnic groups, the size and diversity made it the perfect place to establish a bone marrow registry.
    "I decided that I wanted to start a registry in Nigeria for diaspora Africans to be able to draw from a pool of donors," he says.
    There was no registry or infrastructure in Nigeria to help with his goal, but Mr Adebiyi is not one to shy away from a challenge.
    He passed the bar exam, required to qualify fully in the US, while undergoing chemotherapy. "I wouldn't take no for an answer," he says simply.
    South Africa had the only other registry in Africa, and he made a deal with them to store his initial data.

    The procedure

    Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of a bone marrow stem cell (beige).
    Bone marrow transplantation and peripheral blood stem cell transplantation are procedures that restore stem cells destroyed by some types of cancer, and other blood diseases like sickle cell anaemia.
    After being treated with radiation or high-dose drugs, the patient receives the harvested stem cells, which travel to the bone marrow and begin to produce new blood cells
    While still searching for a match of his own, Mr Adebiyi made the trip to Nigeria with the goal of finding 10,000 donors.
    He held the first drive at the Nigerian Law School in Lagos. After addressing about 400 students, he handed out information and testing kits, and wrote in his journal of the day: "I am crushed in a sea of outstretched hands. We are completely swamped. History."
    Seeing the number of people who came forward ready to save lives convinced him that a registry would work.
    He joined forces with two doctors at the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital in Enugu - Ifeoma Okoye and Sunday Ocheni.
    The greatest challenge in getting started was finding the funds to buy the necessary computers and software.
    "Seun had to buy everything with his personal money," explains Dr Ocheni, while asserting that, "funds still remain our greatest challenge impeding the growth of the registry."
    Dr Okoye adds to their list of challenges: Getting reliable internet access and trying to maintain an independent uninterrupted power supply.
    "The main thing is, I am so passionate about it now, in a way that I was not passionate about my prestigious job on Wall Street," says Mr Adebiyi.
    "For the first 26 years of my life, I had it all planned out. Then I felt that I was going to die for six months, now I am healthy again and ready to embrace life."
    He has high praise for the doctors who are working with him, but hopes that one day he will be able to pay them a salary. "I don't need one because my own gratitude is enough," he adds.
    Anonymous donor
    Mr Adebiyi's drive and energy is fuelled by appreciation for his own donor. A Nigerian woman living in the US had a baby and found out that she could donate the umbilical cord blood to the public bank.
    That simple act led to the eventual transplant that would save his life. Due to American regulations, he was unable to meet the woman or child who donated to him, but he says that he hopes "they hear my story and connect the dots".
    University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital in EnuguThe University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital in Enugu is home to Africa's second bone marrow registry
    Mr Adebiyi is passionate about the benefits of cord blood for African patients and the growing success of these transplants has also made him think about how the opportunity to help patients with cord blood was literally being thrown away.
    "I know so many mothers whose kids have died because they couldn't find a stem cell transplant. Just across the Atlantic Ocean, there were millions of cord blood units which are being thrown away as medical waste. It is heartbreaking and so easy to fix," he says.
    His team in Nigeria decided to add setting up a cord blood bank to their efforts - something that he was told by an American medical doctor "would not happen in her lifetime".
    Dr Okoye disagrees, asserting that she believes that a cord blood bank will be fully functional in the next year.
    "There are already significant resources in place at the teaching hospital of the College of Medicine [the proposed site]. So we feel that only modest infrastructure enhancements are needed for a cord blood bank with a minimum of cost," she says.
    Mr Adebiyi also believes that the information that the bone marrow registry and cord blood bank holds will allow Nigeria to connect with international donors and patients but he is still realistic about the road ahead.

    Start Quote

    He hugged me and said: 'You are the closest person I can relate to as a donor since I cannot know mine. It feels like you donated to me'”
    Olabisi Bokinni
    "Nigeria did its first stem cell transplant last year. There are only six doctors who can do it in the country. The US has all the doctors and facilities but not the donors."
    Millions of Africans suffer from blood disorders which could be successfully treated through transplants that will be available thanks to the fruits of Mr Adebiyi's team's efforts.
    As the registry is public, patients from across the world will also be able to access potential donors. To date, the Bone Marrow Registry has received requests for donor searches for patients from Ghana, Kuwait, Singapore, Nigeria and India, and three potential donors were identified for the Nigerian patients. They are currently undergoing testing to determine their full compatibility.
    Ms Bokinni met Mr Adebiyi nearly a year after she learnt that her brother had survived his transplant procedure and was in recovery.
    "He hugged me and said: 'You are the closest person I can relate to as a donor since I cannot know mine. It feels like you donated to me'."
    Dr Ocheni emphasises that stem cell donation "is very safe". Volunteers can choose to donate directly from their bone marrow, or from peripheral blood which is similar to giving blood.
    New mothers can also agree to donate their child's cord blood immediately after delivery rather than just throwing it away.
    "This will lead to double satisfaction for parents - bring a baby into the world, and keep a patient alive," he suggests.
    For Ms Bokinni, donating is the most important thing that you can do. "Saving someone's life is no kids' play! It is a deep and fulfilling act," she says.
    "I don't know what your goal in life is, neither do I know your aspirations, but I want to let you know that I have never felt so much joy in the simple sacrifice of being able to give someone a second chance at life."
    This article appeared in the final edition of the BBC Focus on Africa magazine.

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