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Friday, January 27, 2017

Taming inciters

…also published in Daily Trust

The recent widely circulated video clip in which Apostle Johnson Suleiman, Founder and President of Omega Fire Ministries Worldwide is seen inciting his church congregation against Fulani Muslims, and indeed confirming that he had ordered his followers to kill and behead any Fulani man they see around them, is yet another real threat to Nigeria’s already increasingly fragile stability and social harmony, notwithstanding his subsequent and futile attempt to deny making the inciting remarks. 

Apostle Johnson Suleiman

Besides, some other religious clerics e.g. David Oyedepo, Bishop of the Living Faith Church Worldwide International and Ayo Oritsejafor, President, Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Pastor Bosun Emmanual among others made similar or even more inciting comments on different occasions.

Friday, January 20, 2017

Worries over Trump’s presidency

….also published in Daily Trust

Today the dramatic political developments that define the Donald Trump phenomenon in American politics culminate in his inauguration as the 45th President of the United States of America. As arguably the most controversial President in the country’s more than 200-year old democracy, all eyes are on him to see how he will go about pursuing his many controversial campaign promises, or rather, threats, so to speak.


On the world stage, President Trump’s equally controversial foreign policy agenda, confrontational approach, principle-free pragmatism, inconsistency and unpredictability, represent new dynamics in the US foreign policy and indeed international politics and diplomacy. However, his inexperience, superficial perception of the intricacies of international politics, his simplistic and unrealistic solution proposals to many complex challenges in different parts of the world, his know-it-all attitude and tendency to disregard appropriate advice from the country’s various intelligence sources raise worries about the implications of some of his foreign policy actions on both the United States and the world at large.

Friday, January 6, 2017

Reflections on whistleblowing

….also published in Daily Trust 

Notwithstanding the controversy over the impartiality of the Buhari administration’s anti-corruption drive, the recent Federal Government’s adoption of whistleblowing as a tool to curb corrupt practices and promote transparency in Nigeria’s corruption-ridden system is a welcome development. Now, under this newly adopted anti-graft tool, a whistleblower is not only assured of protection against any form of victimisation, but is also entitled to 2.5 percent (minimum) or 5 percent (maximum) of the total amount of the stolen public funds recovered thanks to his whistleblowing.
Though, offering monetary incentive for whistleblowing is one of the most effective and indeed cost-effective anti-corruption tools, it was quite ironic that, its recent adoption in Nigeria did not elicit befitting public enthusiasm, which raised doubts over Nigerians’ supposed detestation of corruption, and indeed the extent of their collective commitment to fighting it.