THE Digital Rights Lawyers Initiative has sued the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) over the recent directive by the apex bank banning cryptocurrencies trading.
Last week, a memo from the CBN had warned Deposit Money Banks (DMBs), Non-Bank Financial Institutions (NBFIs), Other Financial Institutions (OFIs and members of the public to desist from dealing in cryptocurrencies and other related transactions because of the “risk associated” with the coins.
It further ordered banks to close all the accounts of customers transacting and dealing in Bitcoin immediately.
In a bid to attend to the public outcries that greeted the decision and further justify itself, the CBN released a statement on Sunday to say it prohibited banks from dealing in cryptocurrencies because of the unregulated nature of the business. The bank also cited the loss of investments, money laundering, terrorism financing, illicit fund flows, and criminal activities.
Why some persons have made arguments in favour of the CBN, some financial experts have also argued that the CBN should have put regulatory frameworks in place instead of prohibiting banks and Nigerians from trading it.
In a 2020 report, Nigeria emerged as the second biggest market for bitcoin, trading over 60,000 bitcoins, valued at $566 million, between 2015 and 2020.
Since 2017, the bitcoin trade volume in Nigeria has increased by 19% while the highest volume of trade (20,504.50) was recorded in 2020, Quartz Africa reports.
The country trails behind only the United States on Paxful, a leading peer-to-peer bitcoin market place. The sharp rise in bitcoin trade, particularly in 2020, has been attributed to the lockdown and the #ENDSARS protest across Nigeria.
However, in Suit No. FHC/L/CS/ 188/2021 filed on Monday, February 8, before the Federal High Court, Lagos, the group, said the CBN, the first defendant, lacked the power to restrict financial institutions from dealing in cryptocurrency transactions.
The digital rights lawyers argued that the second defendant, SEC, had in a circular dated September 14, 2020, declared cryptocurrencies as legal digital assets “protected under section 44 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended)”.
Therefore, the lawyers asked the court to validate the Investments and Securities Act 2007, which made SEC the apex regulatory body of the Nigerian capital market.
They also prayed the court to declare the CBN action as “ultra vires, unconstitutional, null and void” while also seeking a “perpetual injunction restraining the 1st defendant from regulating and/or further regulating virtual currencies/ cryptocurrencies in Nigeria.”
The suit, which has not yet been assigned to any judge, was filed by the group’s counsel, Irene Chukwukelu.
ON February 5, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) sent a circular to financial institutions, instructing them to immediately close the accounts of persons or entities transacting in or operating cryptocurrency exchanges.
The CBN said breaches to the directive would attract severe sanctions. The CBN’s action has since sparked reactions from many Nigerians, with some agreeing with the apex bank and others attacking it for stifling a thriving market. Most of the criticisms of the CBN’s policy have come from young Nigerians participating in the cryptocurrency market who leverage the bulging market. Nigeria is the world’s second-biggest crypto market after the United States.
Cryptocurrency and How It Works
Cryptocurrency is believed to have been founded by Satoshi Nakamoto, an enigmatic character, in 1998. Up till today, nobody knows whether Nakamoto is a real name or pseudonym, and many players in the industry believe it belongs to a group of people, according to Investopedia, a financial and investment dictionary. Generally, cryptocurrency is a digital currency based on an asset distributed across a network of computers, according to Investopedia. Cryptocurrencies are decentralised based on blockchain technology, and central banks do not issue them. They are unregulated and use online ledgers with strong cryptography to carry out transactions, according to Nerdwallet.com, a cryptocurrency website.
There are 6,700 cryptocurrencies worldwide, but the most popular ones are bitcoin, etherum, tether, ripple and litecoin.
Crypocurrencies are very complicated because they are created through a process called mining, which involves using computers to solve complicated mathematics to generate coins, according to the Telegraph.
Like the stock market, users buy the currencies from brokers, store and spend them via wallets. The crypo market’s upsides are that it gives investors some level of anonymity and investments are mostly secure. However, they are not legal tenders, are speculative and volatile, as prices can nosedive within the shortest possible time.
Moreover, they can be used to launder funds, and carry out illegal transactions, which is why it has been banned in China, Vietnam. Russia, Ecuador, Columbia, Bolivia and now Nigeria. Hackers have also targeted the crypto market.
Why CBN Banned Cryptocurrency
The CBN on February 7 explained why it banned cryptocurrency transactions. According to the apex bank, it could be used to launder money and fund terrorism.
In a statement, Osita Nwanisobi, acting director, corporate communications, CBN, said the ban on such transactions would not have any negative impact on fintech.
“The use of cryptocurrencies in Nigeria is a direct contravention of existing law. It is also important to highlight a critical difference between a Central Bank issued digital currency and cryptocurrencies. As the names imply, while Central Banks can issue digital currencies, cryptocurrencies are issued by unknown and unregulated entities,” Nwanisobi said.
“The question that one may need to ask therefore is, why any entity would disguise its transactions if they were legal. It is based on this opacity that cryptocurrencies have become well-suited for conducting many illegal activities, including money laundering, terrorism financing, purchase of small arms and light weapons, and tax evasion,” he noted.
Nwanisobi further said that many banks and investors who placed a high value on reputation had been turned off from cryptocurrencies because of the damaging effects of the digital currencies’ widespread use for illegal activities.
He noted that the role of cryptocurrencies in the purchase of hard and illegal drugs on the darknet website called ‘Silk Road’ was well known, stressing that there had also been recent reports that cryptocurrencies were used to finance terror plots, further damaging its image as a legitimate means of exchange.
Experts Disagree
Financial experts have disagreed with the CBN directive, saying that it could kill an emerging industry that has created thousands of jobs for young people.
“My response as someone who is versed in risk management will be that there is a reality today that the world is going digital and there is a lot of innovation in the world and cryptocurrency are part of it,” Kingsley Moghalu, former CBN deputy governor, said on Channels TV on Sunday. He noted that the CBN’s directive was legal, but he was unsure that it was the right step.
“We have to go back to understand what cryptocurrencies actually are, which are virtual currencies that can be exchanged online to purchase goods and services, and the value of legal tender currencies does not determine the value.
“But you would have to use legal tender currencies to purchase those cryptocurrencies, the most popular which is bitcoin. Also, they don’t have an underlining value, so many people would say it is speculative because unlike a normal currency, that currency is not backed up by either foreign reserves, the productive nature of the economy of the country that owns the currency and various other elements,” he further said.
“I interpret it as a directive to financial institutions under the control and supervisory remit of the central bank not to deal with these cryptocurrencies, and the directive is targeted at exchanges of cryptocurrencies. It makes it difficult, but it does not criminalise it.”
Senator Ihenyen, president of Stakeholders in Blockchain Technology Association of Nigeria (SiBAN), said on his Twitter handle that the “total ban, unlike its January 2017 letter, is arbitrary, illegal, irresponsible, and with all due respect rather lazy.”
He said the CBN might not have the statutory or regulatory power to order banks to deny services to a set of people or an entire emerging industry.
Bitcoin Market Movement as of 05:41 pm on Feb 9, 2021, Source: Coindesk
Obiageli Ezekwesili, former World Bank vice president, said on her Twitter handle on February 6 that it was often difficult for Nigerian and African policymakers to understand disruptive technology.
“I believe in technology much. My biggest worry about disruptive technology was always how much harder it would be for regulatory authorities in our country and continent to understand, gain mastery on their value to economic growth and development to be champions for it,” she said.
Some experts believe that the CBN’s directive was in response to its policy on foreign exchange (FX) market, forcing Nigerians abroad to bypass the official route to send money to their relatives in Nigeria cryptocurrencies. Nigeria’s diaspora inflow is around 24 billion dollars in 2020.
Binance, Providus Bank, Others React
On February 8, Binance, world’s biggest cryptocurrency exchange, announced the removal of Nigerian naira from its platform-a big blow for many Nigerians trading via the exchange.
In a statement, Binance said its Nigerian naira payment partners had suspended deposit services until further notice, starting from 7 p.m. of last Friday. It noted that it was monitoring the situation closely.
“Withdrawal services remain normal and will continue to be processed but might take longer time than usual slightly,” the statement said.
Similarly, following CBN’s directive, Providus Bank has deactivated virtual accounts of PiggyVest, Cowrywise and Monnify, meaning that these fintechs can no longer carry out transactions via Providus Bank. The move immediately created panic in the market, but in a swift reaction, Providus Bank released a statement saying that it was a temporary situation.
“Please be informed that the Virtual Account platform has not been permanently shut down as we are currently reviewing them in line with new regulations. Rest assured we would notify the general public via our social media platforms once this review is completed,” Providus Bank said.
Genuine Concerns on Use of Crypto for Fraud, Terrorism
There are genuine concerns across the world that cryptocurrency transactions could fuel fraud. Imran Khan of Fraud Magazine wrote that some virtual currencies, such as eCache, were completely anonymous. “According to its operators, eCache doesn’t link a person to their transactions; it works like a Digital Bearer Certificate (DBC) that can be transferred to another party just like any other data on the internet,” she said. Khan noted that other virtual currencies, like bitcoin, would store all transactions in a public ledger called ‘The Blockchain.’
“The Blockchain only records the transactions, not the identities, of the users,” she said. In April 2019, two Nigerians were charged in the United States for defrauding victims in an online bitcoin scheme. ThisDay newspaper reported that the federal government and the CBN were warned by the United States’ Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) on the activities of fraudsters using cryptocurrencies to move hundreds of millions of dollars illegally into Nigeria.
These digital currencies can also fuel terrorism funding. In a research entitled, ‘Terrorist Use of Cryptocurrencies: Technical and Organizational Barriers and Future Threats,’ Cynthia Dion-Schwarz, David Manheim, Patrick B. Johnston noted that current cryptocurrencies were not well-matched with the totality of features that would be needed and desirable to terrorist groups but might be employed for selected financial activities.
“The authors’ research shows that should a single cryptocurrency emerge that provides widespread adoption, better anonymity, improved security, and that is subject to lax or inconsistent regulation, then the potential utility of this cryptocurrency, as well as the potential for its use by terrorist organizations, would increase,” the research-report said.
Any New Channel?
As of the time of filing this report, many Nigerians were looking for ways of circumventing CBN’s directive, saying the apex bank would not stop them from leveraging global opportunities.
Lagos-based Sandra Okums, who plays in the cryptocurrency market, told The ICIR that transactions would continue to go on as the market was unregulated and online. She noted that the CBN directive would not stop her as the bank did not declare cryptocurrency transactions illegal.
As of the time of filing this report, the Bitcoin price was high at 47,802 dollars. Elon Musk, the founder of Tesla and world’s richest man, has purchased 1.5 billion dollars in bitcoin and plans to accept it as currency.
Nigeria is among countries that could be sanctioned by the United States in line with a foreign policy memorandum signed by President Joe Biden to promote the rights of lesbians, gays, bisexuals, transgenders, queers and intersexes (LGBTQI+) across the world.
The ‘Memorandum on Advancing the Human Rights of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer and Intersex Persons Around the World’, which Biden issued on February 4, 2021, directed heads of US executive departments and agencies to invoke a range of punitive diplomatic actions, including financial sanctions and visa restrictions, on countries that ‘abuse’ the rights of LGBTQI+ persons.
Anti-gay law places Nigeria at risk
Gay rights are not recognised in Nigeria.
The Same-Sex Marriage Prohibition Act, which criminalises gay relationships, was signed by former President Goodluck Jonathan in 2014 despite misgivings by the US and the United Kingdom.
The law provides 14-year jail terms for persons convicted for engaging in same-sex relationships in Nigeria.
In December 2019, 47 Nigerian men were charged with public displays of affection with members of the same sex, an act which violated the Same Sex Marriage Prohibition Act.
Nigeria and other countries with similar disposition towards LGBTQI+ persons are likely to experience difficult times in their relationship with the US, as Biden, in the memo, stressed: “I am directing all agencies engaged abroad to ensure that United States diplomacy and foreign assistance promote and protect the human rights of LGBTQI+ persons.”
There are about 70 countries around the world, including Nigeria, that criminalise same-sex relationships, according to the Human Rights Watch.
The agencies, through which the US would fight for the rights of LGBTQI+ persons, according to the memo, include the Departments of State, the Treasury, Defense, Justice, Agriculture, Commerce, Labor, Health and Human Services, and Homeland Security, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the United States International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), the Millennium Challenge Corporation, the Export-Import Bank of the United States, and the Office of the United States Trade Representative.
Countries that violate rights of LGBTQI+ persons face ‘swift’ US response, including financial sanctions, visa restrictions
Specifically, Biden directed ‘swift and meaningful United States responses to human rights abuses of LGBTQI+ persons abroad.’
“The Department of State shall lead a standing group, with appropriate inter-agency representation, to help ensure the Federal Government’s swift and meaningful response to serious incidents that threaten the human rights of LGBTQI+ persons abroad.
“When foreign governments move to restrict the rights of LGBTQI+ persons or fail to enforce legal protections in place, thereby contributing to a climate of intolerance, agencies engaged abroad shall consider appropriate responses, including using the full range of diplomatic and assistance tools and, as appropriate, financial sanctions, visa restrictions, and other actions,” the memo said.
Further directing US agencies to ‘combat’ criminalisation of LGBTQI+ status, Biden ordered that existing efforts to combat the criminalisation by foreign governments of LGBTQI+ status or conduct should be strengthened with special attention on checking discrimination, homophobia, transphobia, and intolerance.
Biden also directed the US Department of State to, on an annual basis and as part of the annual report submitted to the Congress pursuant to sections 116(d) and 502B(b) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2151n(d) and 2304(b)), report on human rights abuses experienced by LGBTQI+ persons globally.
“This reporting shall include anti-LGBTQI+ laws as well as violence and discrimination committed by both state and non-state actors against LGBTQI+ persons,” the memo added.
US agencies to consider impact on rights of LGBTQI+ persons when making funding decisions in foreign aid
Another key aspect of the memo is the directive that US agencies involved in foreign aid and assistance should consider the impact of their programmes on the rights of LGBTQI+ persons when making funding decisions.
“Agencies involved with foreign aid, assistance, and development programs should consider the impact of programs funded by the Federal Government on human rights, including the rights of LGBTQI+ persons, when making funding decisions, as appropriate and consistent with applicable law,” the memo said.
Nigeria may lose out in donor funds if US agencies feel funds they provide in foreign aid have no positive impact on the rights of LGBTQI+ persons in the country.
US to favour ‘vulnerable’ LGBTQI+ asylum seekers
Biden, in the memo, directed that LGBTQI+ refugees and asylum seekers should be given priority status for purposes of resettlement in the US.
Ordering improved protection for LGBTQI+ refugees and asylum seekers, the memo added, “the Departments of State, Justice, and Homeland Security shall ensure appropriate training is in place so that relevant Federal Government personnel and key partners can effectively identify and respond to the particular needs of LGBTQI+ refugees and asylum seekers, including by providing to them adequate assistance and ensuring that the Federal Government takes all appropriate steps, such as potential increased use of Embassy Priority-1 referrals, to identify and expedite resettlement of highly vulnerable persons with urgent protection needs.”
The implication is that Nigerian LGBTQI+ persons who cite ‘discrimination’ imposed by the country’s anti-gay law are likely to get favourable considerations from US authorities when seeking asylum.
Barely a month since he came into office, Biden has repealed some decisions taken by his predecessor, Donald Trump, including the ban on transgender people serving openly in the army.
To underscore the reversal of policies of the Trump administration that relate to LGBTQI+ persons, Biden further directed that within 100 days, or as soon as possible, “all agencies engaged abroad shall review and, as appropriate and consistent with applicable law, take steps to rescind any directives, orders, regulations, policies, or guidance inconsistent with this memorandum, including those issued from January 20, 2017, to January 20, 2021, to the extent that they are inconsistent with this memorandum.”
The heads of the concerned US agencies were also directed to, within 100 days of the date of the memorandum, report to the President on their progress in implementing the directives and recommend additional opportunities and actions to advance the human rights of LGBTQI+ persons around the world.
Former President Barack Obama had, in 2011, issued the first presidential memorandum directing US agencies abroad to promote LGBTQI rights globally.
Biden said his memorandum “reaffirms and supplements” the principles established in the presidential memorandum earlier issued by Obama.
The federal government under Jonathan had gone ahead to sign the anti-gay law, after it was unanimously passed by the National Assembly, despite the Obama administration’s threats to cut off aid to Nigeria. It is expected that the Biden administration will resume efforts by the US government, under the Democratic Party, to get Nigeria to recognise gay rights.
BUA Group and Coalition against COVID-19 (CACOVID) are in a disagreement over the purchase of 1 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines.
The disagreement began following an announcement by BUA Group that it had donated 1 million doses of coronavirus vaccine to the federal government of Nigeria.
“BUA decided to secure these 1million vaccines by paying the full amount for the vaccines today because these vaccines became available only last week through AFREXIM,” BUA stated.
Disclaiming BUA’s stand on the payment for the vaccine, CACOVID, a private sector-led group, in a statement released Monday, said there was no such agreement that the BUA group would singlehandedly make the purchase.
“CACOVID is dismayed to learn of reports on social media today alleging that BUA is singlehandedly purchasing 1 million Covid-19 vaccine doses for Nigeria. Alhaji Abdulsamad must have been misquoted because these claims are not factual as CACOVID operates on a collegiate fund contribution model. There is no agreement between BUA, CACOVID and Afreximbank,” the statement read in part.
In its explanation, CACOVID further said that Godwin Emefiele, governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), had informed the team that he held a call with Aliko Dangote, CEO of Dangote Group,
“During the CACOVID weekly call of February 8th, Governor Emefiele, relayed to the larger group a call that he held with Alhaji Aliko Dangote and Herbert Wigwe, CEO of Access Bank Group and Benedict Oramah, president of Afreximbank, where they were briefed on two billion dollars facility set up by the Apex bank with the African Union Vaccine Taskforce.”
According to CACOVID, Oramah said 1 million doses were ready for shipment to Nigeria in the next two weeks if a down payment was made by Monday, February 8th.
CACOVID stated that the 1 million doses, being the first tranche, were worth 3.45 million dollars and the team agreed to contribute 100 million dollars for that purpose.
CACOVID further said that the purchase of the vaccine was only possible through the federal government and no individual or company could do so on its own.
“CACOVID would like the Nigerian public to understand that vaccine purchase is only possible through the federal government of Nigeria, and that no individual or company can purchase vaccines directly from any legitimate and recognised manufacturer,” the statement further read.
Against the stance of CACOVID, BUA, in a statement made available to The ICIR, warned the private sector group against playing politics with the lives of Nigerians.
According to the BUA group, it took the initiative to pay for the vaccines after other members of the group refused to donate towards purchasing them.
“After extensive deliberations, there was no agreement reached and despite members being offered the opportunity to donate funds towards procuring the doses, none offered.
“BUA then took it upon itself to offer to pay for the 1 million doses at the agreed rate of 3.45 dollars per dose totalling US3.45million dollars which translates to 1.311billion naira,” the BUA statement read in part.
BUA further said it noticed that a ‘prominent member’ of CACOVID was unhappy that it took the initiative to make the payment.
“We find this release by CACOVID to be very petty and unbecoming of seemingly serious corporate citizens because it is tantamount to playing politics with the lives of Nigerians. This is no time for politics.
“It is time for us to come together to help Nigerians and it does not matter who is helping or paying,” the statement further read.
CACOVID was launched in March 2020 as a task force consisting of private sectors in partnership with the CBN and the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) to eradicate COVID-19 and its effect on Nigeria.
SINCE the assumption of office by President Muhammadu Buhari in 2015, there have been several cases of the breach of the Nigerian constitution and other laws in the process of appointing public officials.
The administration has made controversial and illegal appointments, sometimes due to the vetting authorities’ carelessness, or sheer disregard for the rules and regulations. The ICIR highlights some of such appointments that have raised questions from many Nigerians.
Appointment of dead persons into political office
On December 30, 2017, Buhari sent names to be appointed into the governing boards of federal government agencies and parastatals. The list contained 209 nominees for chairpersons and 1,258 for board membership positions. However, eight of them are dead persons.
One of the individuals was the late Christopher Utov, a Reverend, appointed as member of the Nigerian Institute of Social and Economic Research. Utov, the proprietor of Fidei Polytechnic, Gboko, passed away since March 17, 2017, nine months before his appointment.
The President also appointed Donald Ugbaja, a former Deputy Inspector General of Police, DIG, of the Nigerian police as a board member of the Consumer Protection Council (CPC) but Ugbaja had passed away several months before the appointment.
Francis Okpozo was also appointed as Chairman of the Nigerian Press Council.He was a senator in the Second Republic but had died on December 16, 2016.
Other dead personalities in the list of appointees include Garba Attahiru, Umar Dange, Magdalene Kumu, Nabbs Imegwu, and Ahmed Bunza into several key positions in federal government agencies.
Repeating the same action, in 2020, Buhari, again appointed a dead person into the Federal Character Commission, (FCC).
The president appointed late Tobias Chukwuemeka Okwuru from Amudo in Ezza South local government area, Ebonyi state. Okwuru aged 59 was a member who represented Ezza south/Ikwo federal constituency.
In a country of almost 200 million, the president appointed nine dead persons in three years.
Buhari appoints Personal aide, party member as INEC Commissioner
Earlier in October 2020, during a Senate Plenary, Ahmed Lawan, the Senate President, read a letter from Buhari nominating Lauretta Onochie as a state commissioner for the Independent Electoral Commission (INEC).
Onochie, who is a current Special Assistant on Social Media to Buhari, had on multiple times,demonstrated blatant partisanship and her affiliation for All Progressives Congress (APC), The ICIR had reported.
Buhari made this nomination against the constitutional provision of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as amended.
According to the Nigerian Constitution, Paragraph 14 of Part 1 of the Third Schedule as amended, Section 30, Act No 1 of 2010, a member of the Independent National Electoral Commission “shall be non-partisan”.
Breach of Agencies Act and illegal extension of tenure
In October 2020, President Buhari violated the establishment Act of the National Pension Commission (PenCom) by nominating a Director-General of the Commission from a different geopolitical zone.
The President sent a letter seeking confirmation of Aisha Umar as the DG of PenCom following the suspension of the former DG Chinelo Anohu-Amazu before her tenure elapsed.
Against the President’s action, the PenCom Act of 2014, part (5), section 21 (2) states clearly that “In the event of a vacancy, the President shall appoint a replacement from the geopolitical zone of the immediate past member that vacated office to complete the remaining tenure”.
Umar went on to become the PenCom Director-General against the establishment Act of the agency.
Apart from Umar’s appointment, THE President recently extended Mohammed Adamu’s tenure by three months despite the completion of his term as the Inspector-General of Police (IGP).
The extension was made in violation of the 2020 amended Police Act, signed into law by Buhari in September.
The Act says the service of any police force personnel shall end when it reaches the retirement age of 60 years or 35 years of service.
As earlier reported by The ICIR, Part 111 Section 7 (6) of the Act, repealed the Police Act Cap. P19, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004, prescribing a four-year single tenure for a person appointed to the office of the IGP subject to the provisions of clause 18 (8), which stipulates that every police officer shall, on recruitment or appointment, serve in the Nigeria Police Force for a period of 35 years or until he attains the age of 60 years, whichever is earlier.
Femi Falana, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) and Human Rights lawyer, said Buhari breached the Armed Forces Act by extending the Nigerian service chiefs’ tenure who recently resigned. Before their resignation a few weeks ago, Buhari extended their tenure despite reaching 60 or completing their 35 years of service.
Falana added that against the President’s action, the extension of tenure is not contained in the Armed Forces Act.
“Under the public service rule, under the harmonised rules for military officers in Nigeria and under Section 6 of the Armed Forces Act, which empowers the President to make rules and regulations for the military, there is no provision for extension of tenure (for Service Chiefs) beyond the period stipulated by law.
“It has been done in the past, but that does not make it right. There is equality before the law, so you can’t extend the service of certain officers while you ask others to go after 35 years of service or the attainment of 60 years of age,” Falana said.
Appointment of unqualified public official
On December 1, 20020, Garba Shehu, the Presidential spokesperson announced that Buhari had approvedImaan Sulaiman-Ibrahim’s appointment as the new Director-General of the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP). However, Sulaiman-Ibrahim does not possess the required qualification to hold the position.
Suleiman-Ibrahim does not have any record of attaining the director cadre in Nigeria public service as she had never held a major office in the country’s civil service. Still, she was appointed against the stipulation of the law.
According to the NAPTIP Act, the agency’s DG shall be someone of the director cadre in the Nigerian public service or its equivalent in any law enforcement agency.
“There shall be for the agency a Director-General who shall be from the Directorate cadre in the public service of the Federation or its equivalent in any law enforcement service and shall be appointed by the President on the recommendation of the Minister,” the section 8 (1) of the NAPTIP Act 2015 reads.
While there have been divergent views on appointments made by the president, some have in the past accused him of making ‘lopsided appointments’.
Abubakar Umar, a retired Army colonel and former military governor of Kaduna State, had warned Buhari about giving undue preference to some sections of the country over others in national appointments.
Some youths on Twitter are planning the #DefendLagos rally to counter the #OccupyLekkiTollGate protest scheduled for February 13.
The plan to #OccupyLekkiTollGate came on the backdrop of the controversial ruling of the Lagos Judicial Panel of Inquiry to reopen the Lekki toll gate.
The Doris Okwubi-led panel ruled in favour of the Lekki Concession Company (LCC) to repossess the toll plaza for repairs and insurance claims at its last sitting on Saturday.
The ruling was supported by five members out of the nine-man panel, with four other members, including Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa, a senior advocate of Nigeria (SAN), and the youth representatives opposing the ruling.
The Lekki toll gate has been shut by the panel since last October 20, 2020, when armed soldiers opened fire on unarmed protesters, allegedly killing some and injuring several others.
In addition to the #DefendLagos hashtag on the social media, the youth are also trending #DemNoBornYourPapaWell, a threat to protesters to stay away from the toll plaza.
“Let us protect what the destroyers left behind while we rebuild Lagos. Join the ‘Defend Lagos’ rally at the Lekkitoll plaza,” read the #DefendLagos banner shared on various social media platforms.
The banner also has pictures of facilities destroyed during the violence that followed the #EndSARS protest in the state.
Show your love for our Lagos. Get your friends and your neighbors to be there. Join The Defend Lagos Rally at the Lekki Toll Plaza on the 13th of February. We will not cede our city to criminals and insurrectionists. Lagos is our Pride.#defendlagos#DemNoBornYourPapaWellpic.twitter.com/NdRE77zHet
I like this latest move being employed by Lagosians & people of conscience to PROTECT & DEFEND the Economic & Territorial Integrity of Lagos against the antics of certain influencers (abi influenzas) which same EKO nurtured & brought to stardom. #EkoEgbaje#DemNoBornYourPapaWell
Can't we true born Nigerians mobilise against these terrorists? We can't just sit back and watch these anarchists who have nothing to lose destroy our country.
The Lagos State Govt and/or the Nigerian Police Force will release a statement soon banning any protest on Saturday based on “security concerns” due to reports of “possible violence”.
That’s the real aim of the #DefendLagos noise. It’s all part of a bigger plan.
This is a repetition of what OBJ and Awo did during the civil war making sure Biafra soldiers never progress beyond Ore town thereby preventing Lagos the economic strength of Yoruba land as a theater of war. #DefendLagos
The #ENDSARS protest, which started as a peaceful demonstration by thousands of youths against police brutality in October, 2020, degenerated into chaos after the protests were hijacked by hoodlums who unleashed mayhem in the streets of Lagos, burning and vandalising property worth billions of naira.
The Lagos State government revealed that 27 of the burnt Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) vehicles in the Oyingbo and Ojodu Berger areas of the state cost 200,000 dollars each, while 57 of them cost 100,000 dollars each, giving a total of 3.9 billion naira as of then.
Femi Gbajabiamila, speaker of the House of Representatives, shortly after the assessment visit to some of the property destroyed during the protest, had disclosed to newsmen that Lagos State would need about 1 trillion naira for the reconstruction and repair of the property and infrastructure vandalised and destroyed by hoodlums.
President Muhammadu Buhari had vowed to do whatever it would take to ensure that there was no repeat of #ENDSARS protests in Nigeria again.
AS part of measures to promote transparency in the management of diaspora payments, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) recently announced an amendment to procedures for receipt of diaspora remittances through International Money Transfer Operators (IMTOs) that would now allow beneficiaries to receive such inflows in US dollars either as cash or in their domiciliary accounts held at designated banks of their choice.
Governor of the CBN, Godwin Emefiele, while justifying the amendment, said investigations and analysed data on IMTO inflows into the country revealed that some IMTOs encouraged the use of unsafe unofficial channels, which also supported diversion of remittance flows meant for Nigeria, thereby undermining the country’s foreign exchange (FX) management framework.
“Some IMTOs, rather than compete on improving transaction volumes and create more efficient ways for Nigerians in the Diaspora to remit funds, resorted to engaging in arbitrage arrangements on the naira-dollar exchange rate, which to a large extent resulted in significant drop inflows into the country,” he said.
Our findings reveal that Nigerians in the diaspora are receiving this policy adjustment with mixed feelings. Nene Oseiwe, who resides in New Jersey with her family, told The ICIR that the regulatory agency’s move was necessary to check the problem of the dual exchange rate in the country.
“I think it should fix the FX crisis. The way it used to work was, if I sent you dollars, they would pay you at CBN’s rate, which is N390. But if I came with that same dollars and gave it to you, you would exchange it at N450 in the open market, so it was problematic,” she said.
“It’s problematic for a country to be having many exchange rates. People would buy dollars from the CBN at N380 and sell it at N460. No value-added, no products, no road, no electricity, nothing; just because they have access,” Oseiwe added.
US dollars against the Naira. Credit: nairametrics.com
Augustine Ogidan, residing in Hurts Texas, told our reporter that the new procedure for diaspora remittance was a welcome development as it was convenient and removed the middlemen short-changing beneficiaries.
“I think it’s the best way to go. It might be a little bit inconvenient to those that wouldn’t know what to do, but it would remove the middlemen that cut into the actual amount that is due to the recipients. There are Western Union and MoneyGram locations in grocery and convenience stores in every city here. One can do it online as well,” he said.
On Twitter, however, the reception is different. Most comments on the diaspora remittance policy adjustment reveal that there is still a gap in understanding the implications of this reform expected to, among other things, help finance a future stream of investment opportunities for Nigerians in the diaspora, while also guaranteeing that recipients of remittances would receive a market-reflective exchange rate for their inflows.
Osaretin Victor Asemota using the handle @asemota wrote: “Dear @cenbank, I am in the diaspora and I have relatives at home that I send money to. I want to use whatever remittance channel works best for me and not what works best for you because IT IS MY MONEY. My money can be sent the way I want it to be sent because it is MY RIGHT.”
Another tweet by @theafrobeats read: “@cenbank need reverse this new remittance policy because it does (not) benefit both Nigerians in diaspora and home! This is inconvenient, to say the least! If CBN thinks any IMTO cheating Nigerians in the exchange rate, please revoke that IMTO licence! Moreover, we were not complaining!”
According to @lloydatiku, “CBN is only fighting to keep its monopoly power…on diaspora remittance ($26billion annually).” A Twitter user with the handle @ganXE called for an outright reversal of the policy: “I think the regulator should reinstate direct to naira accounts for IMTOs. This was an own goal against diaspora remittance.”
The Single/Multiple FX Rate
It would be noted that economic experts and business leaders in Nigeria have long argued that a single exchange rate for the naira will put Nigeria at a competitive advantage for the cross-border open trade.
Amine Mati of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) had emphasised that exchange rate unification should be a policy-driven decision that the government must make, arguing that multiple exchange rates had different implications across different countries in the world.
“The IMF’s policy has been consistent on this issue, such that we advise for the unification of exchange rates and the Central Bank of Nigeria and Economic Recovery and Growth Plan are already working in this direction to ensure that the country has a unified exchange rate,” he said during a Special Policy Dialogue Colloquium held in Lagos in 2019.
Managing Director of the Financial Derivatives Company (FDC), Bismarck Rewane, also stressed that unifying the exchange rate would positively impact the Nigerian economy than the current multiple exchange rate regime, which created arbitrage opportunities, would do.
Moving to the Cryptocurrency Market
Many Nigerians say that since 4th December 2020 when the policy took effect, they have turned to cryptocurrencies which are easier, more convenient option for sending money to their loved ones back in Nigeria.
Using the handle @obi_sage, Obi Sage Okoli tweeted: “We now remit through cryptocurrencies and not CBN because it’s easier and much more efficient. Remittance from the diaspora hasn’t dropped, rather it’s remittance thru CBN that tanked.”
@SuperEmbee also wrote on Twitter: “Foreign currency inflow into Nigeria is at a 4-year low. Nigeria isn’t making $£€. Banks are unable to meet the demands of diaspora remittance withdrawal. Nigeria is unable to pay in foreign currency. Citizens of Nigeria are now remitting funds through crypto exchanges bypassing the banking system. This act does not improve foreign currency supply in the economy. This will affect economic development, our naira value etc.”
“Remittances – It’s all about the benjamins. Diaspora remittance dropped drastically last year signalling one of two things: 1. People were finding non-official channels to send money (e.g. crypto) 2. Covid impacted diaspora earnings so much that people couldn’t send money back,” Hachi @senor_hachi wrote.
In recognition of the escalation in the use of cryptocurrencies by Nigerians and to protect the integrity of the financial system from the risks inherent in crypto assets transactions, the CBN in a statement released on Sunday reiterated that the use of cryptocurrencies in Nigeria was a direct contravention of existing law and remained prohibited.
The acting director of corporate communications, Osita Nwanisobi, said, “In light of the fact that unregulated and unlicensed entities issue them, their use in Nigeria goes against the key mandates of the CBN, as enshrined in the CBN Act (2007), as the issuer of legal tender in Nigeria.”
Meanwhile, as part of measures to improve diaspora remittance flow visibility, the CBN is planning to launch a central reporting portal for all foreign remittances. The portal will be managed by the Nigerian Interbank Settlement System (NIBSS).
AKON Bassey Ikpeme has been sworn in as chief justice of Cross River State after many months of protests by civil society organisations (CSOs).
Ikpeme, a native of Akwa Ibom State but married to a citizen of Cross River, was rejected twice by the Cross River House of Assembly over what the legislators described as a ‘security threat’ to the state.
Her rejection drew public condemnation both from National Judicial Council (NJC) and CSOs, with the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) calling on the NJC to compel the state government to do the right thing.
Her nomination was rectified and confirmed by the legislature late last month after allowing two of her junior colleagues to serve in acting capacity for about one year.
Governor Ben Ayade, state governor, who administered the oath of office on her at the government house, said the exercise had brought an end to the internal crisis created by the judge’s initial rejection.
”Today brings to an end the internal concerns of Cross Riverians as it concerns the stability of our Judiciary,” he said.
“God has chosen a woman and not just a woman of God but a covenant child. She is here at the right time and she is the right person for the job. We must put behind all the challenges in the process of getting back here.
“God touched my heart and the heart of every other person in the decision-making process. It was God that fought your fight and not any man,” Ayade said.
In her speech, Ikpeme said it was with deep appreciation that she thanked God who rules in the affairs of men.
“It is with deep appreciation in my heart that I want to thank God who rules in the affairs of men, who has made this day possible.
“God uses men to fulfil His purpose. I also thank His Excellency, Prof. Ben Ayade, from the depth of my heart, for making this day a reality. In my interactions, I have discovered that he is very humane.
“I want to assure His Excellency and Cross Riverians that the Judiciary under my watch will collaborate with other arms of government to move Cross River State forward.”
Olumide Apata, president of the NBA, who described the swearing-in ceremony as a fitting climax to a long process, expressed delight that the judge became the CJN of the state.
” We are extremely delighted that Justice Akon Ikpeme has finally been sworn in as the chief judge of Cross River State. It is a fitting climax to a long process. In life, the problem is not that there are challenges but what is, however, important is how effectively we are able to solve them,” he said.
“I am glad that between the dramatis personae we have been able to come to this fantastic outcome … and so at the end of the day, all is well that ends well,” Akpata further said.
“Democracy runs on three arms of government, that tripod, and they stand independently, but they must also collaborate for democracy to succeed. She is inheriting a judiciary with issues. I am praying that Lord will give her the strength and have the wisdom to navigate the stormy waters and I expect her to work effectively with other arms of government, but she must uphold the independence of the judiciary which is critical.
“We will continue to watch, and we will continue to be the watchdog, which is the role of the NBA. We will continue to take a special interest in what is happening in Cross River judiciary.
“We will continue to stand on the right side of the law, justice and constitutionality and so we are happy, the NBA is satisfied with the outcome, we cannot rest on our laurels, and we will make sure we will continue to do what is right,” he added.
MY State of origin is Ekiti. Of the thirty-five other states which make up the federation called Nigeria, Ekiti State is known and generally revered by all as the ‘fountain of knowledge’. It is that State where the only industry that thrives is education. The myth, which still thrives to date, is that there is no home in Ekiti State where you will not find a graduate either a polytechnic or a university. However, we need first to excuse the arrogance that informed the appellation, ‘fountain of knowledge’ since no State be it in Nigeria or anywhere else in the world or any institution for that matter can make such a loud monopolistic claim. There is no one choice among the states in Nigeria that owns the right to legitimately call itself the fountain of knowledge if the word ‘fountain’ means source or origin. As for being at the vanguard of education and probably topping the list of literate (not educated) people, the State has perhaps useful statistics to defend itself and parade the information as accurate.
On the latter claim, however, this paper would insist that far from generalizing that the people of Ekiti are educated, what is assumed and paraded as education is neither comprehensive in its processes and instruction nor is it fit to be called education. What exists, on the contrary, is a long-established tradition of a successful literacy programme. It follows, therefore, as this paper seeks to show, that Ekitis are only very literate but not in any conclusive unequivocal sense educated. A large percentage of the population can, in fact, read and write. Records show that the State has an intimidating number of professors compared with numbers of professors from the other States of Nigeria, but this does not translate to asserting that they are all therefore educated or that Ekiti State is the fountain of knowledge. This paper explains the reason.
The observations made concerning Ekiti State and her peoples with regards to education can exactly be made about Nigeria, namely that while it is true that Nigerians are deemed educated using varied of data, it is not the case, especially when we critically appraise what is conceived and paraded as education, that they are in fact educated. The level of literacy is certainly high a fact attested to by the varieties of positions occupied by Nigerians overseas over and above figures from other countries lending credibility to the success of the support instructional structures and systems put in place, and the numbers of persons with stacks of laminated certificates secured in briefcases.
With available statistical data on numbers of learning institutions; nurseries, primary and secondary schools, teachers training, colleges of education, polytechnics and universities be they federal, state, private and faith-based academics and tutorial centres, Nigeria is acclaimed to be up to her eyes in education. This paper claims that passing for education is only a successful literacy programme and not education.
What is: The Status Quo.
Before the colonial masters landed in Africa and spread hinterland, sequel to the scramble for Africa by explorative teams from Britain, Portuguese, Italy, Germany and France, the claim could perhaps be made that native Africans knew nothing of the English alphabet and by extension that if they saw a book written in the English language, they could not read it. Neither could they write a simple statement in the English language and clearly understand its meaning. Same would go for other colonies where the new language was French, German, Italian or Portuguese.
As the West and Europe met Africa, what was a priority for the colonialists was learning the alphabet by the natives, especially if communication must go beyond mere sign language accompanied by guttural sounds. Besides, there existed the urgent need by the new arrivals to train clerks, interpreters as vital go-betweens the imperial powers and the natives, catechists and technicians. The administration was key, so too was communication. Learning was the bridge of interaction, and knowing the alphabet to the point of using it was eureka to culture and agenda of colonization.
Learning the English alphabet, knowing and using it to make statements meant of course adopting the masters’ language, the English language. Prowess in it made the natives think in the English language, adopt English concepts and use English idioms. Very soon, through a gradual process of teaching and learning, a knowledge base was created. This would be the birthplace of the native elite class and the birthplace of what constitutes education, the sine qua non-condition if the natives must dine with their colonial masters and join with some degree of relevance in the administration of their native land. The colonization hypnotic process was thus firmly established. In exchanging the natives’ local language for that of the colonial masters, the latter was granted the fiat and final pronouncements on what is right or wrong, what is good or bad what is courteous what is barbaric and vulgar, what is tenable and acceptable for religion and what in particular would pass for education.
It was not just that Africa was partitioned, a fact demonstrated by the physical distribution of her lands, mountains, rivers and seas, there was also mental colonization through which the natives now saw the white men as the sole bearers and distributors of values enjoying the “unilateral right to define and delimit the meaning of experience, knowledge and truth”. The inference of the whites’ mental superiority would soon serve as justification for slavery, women’s oppression, and proselytisation, among other projects.
As laid down by the colonizers, education was book education, and its method of execution was by teaching; the giving of instruction. The goal was to provide a set body or units of knowledge, not a little more not a little less. These are facts hitherto not known or assumed not to be present to the receivers, ab initio. This was and still is the pedagogy, the science and method of teaching through which the ignorant pupil is provided with supposedly useful or relevant knowledge and skill. Not insight is not wisdom and certainly not that which best interest and releases the receiver of instructions’ potential. Both he and the knowledge released are secondary. They are strictly specific knowledge about specific issues. This was and still is what constitutes education. The legacy that the third world colonized nations received hook, line and sinker from their colonizers, and it is what is practised even as we speak. A little more still on the choice of pedagogy and why it was considered pragmatically most appropriate by the colonizers.
To facilitate colonization, there was the urgent need not only to change the language of the people as earlier noted but also to re-orientate the people and make communication and one understanding possible. The strain of particularity may not have been broadcast and force-fed by a catechism; nevertheless, the underpinning philosophy behind the adopted pedagogy is that Whiteman’s language is better and superior quality. By extension, it follows that the Whiteman’s way of thinking and doing things are equally the best when compared to that of the primitive, barbaric savage natives.
With an appreciative dosage of rude awakening and conviction very notable African scholars have since vehemently argued to the contrary, even crowning their revulsionary revolt with a philosophy, an African Philosophy which both in content, ethos and rigour compare favourably with Western philosophy which was inherited from the colonizers.
While not willing to appraise the African scholars’ nationalistic uprising with this paper, since it never was its intention, the posture, however, remains unconditionally justified albeit rated a little late. But then again, the Yoruba adage says you do not ask how your father met his death until you have the full weapons to fight a retaliatory battle. In the Nigeria case, however, there is neither the will nor the weapon. Neither would I spend time in this paper identifying the half-truth that the Whiteman’s position contains because indeed when the natives are closely appraised, as the history of nations growth and development vividly attests, there is very little to show for critical logical and purposeful thinking, goodwill, egalitarian service, justice, fairness, probity and accountability which, despite the Whiteman’s ill will towards Africa and its peoples they still have and parade in enviable quantity. Suffice to say using Nigeria as a case study that very little is indeed praiseworthy in good governance, purposeful leadership and impartial critical thinking. Her 58 years of independence has so little to show for administrative maturity, purposeful growth, and people’s well-being. Some have for these reasons and more have called Nigeria a failed state.
There is more to this choice of pedagogy by the Whiteman and the adoption of the same by the colonized nations. For the pressing administrative concern and in clear pursuit of the colonization agenda, there was the urgent need to train clerks, interpreters who will serve as go-betweens on policy and day-to-day information, catechists to translate homilies to the faithful, and technicians to handle specific chores. Domestically, there was the need to train the cooks and stewards, gatemen and drivers.
If there existed sufficient justifying arguments for the reasons raised above, very little of pleasant ones could, however, be found for the need to give the natives the little and narrow restricted ‘education’ that they were given. Regardless of the pragmatic need that drove the instructional system, there was too much imperative to keep the natives dependent on the whitemans’ ways and means, thus underscoring still the feelings of superiority – inferiority and that of the insufficiency of the natives mentally and physically. The natives will continue therefore to serve the imperial power. To provide their efforts with some colour as administrative service providers, they were styled civil servants, a nomenclature that they bore with understandable pride and is still very much in use today.
Again, the dependency agenda allowed exploitation, oppression and subjugation to thrive; particularly exploiting the natives’ mineral resources. Short on actual knowledge and the technical information on how things were done, the natives stood at the Whiteman’s mercy for national growth and development. Whatever the acquired independence provided was not entirely what was promised. As pointed out by Jane Kelsey, what we have is rather defective and limping sovereignty, that is to say, political sovereignty benefit of economic sovereignty. In this way, the structural and systemic impoverishment of Africa (counting Nigeria) is sustained.
Put if there was any independence, it was merely honorific flag independence. The dependency programme and agenda would further find sure footing in global funding institutions that insist on structural adjustment programmes such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the globalization initiative. No doubt some African states benefited and have continued to benefit from the exploitative agenda in some degree. However, those that were very intoxicated and fixated on nationalization and indigenization policies have very little to show for efficient fiscal management and constructive national growth. South Africa will qualify as a good example for the first category while Nigeria, Uganda, and Zimbabwe fit the second category where nationalism went berserk.
The claims and observations that are made regarding international global funding initiatives can rightly be made about globalization or the borderless region initiative. A careful analysis would reveal and underscore the charge of exploitation and marginalization of the African nations the colonized people. In reality, the nations are still firmly tied to the apron string of the West never negotiating from the position of knowledge and political power. Education, that is, authentic education that guarantees true freedom and provides generous bandwidth for creative purposeful thinking would have constituted the gateway for proper enlightenment and development. However, in its narrow book-driven compartment, there is a heavy lid on progress. What is worse, as it is being suggested, the posture is deliberate and alive and well even as we speak.
What ought to be
The book-driven education that is served through colonization would seem to be fully entrenched with the frequent summersault of policy initiatives and budget allocations, the number of an existing educational institution, their interesting varieties and the energy and thirst of the people who by all means possible and available wanted so badly this impoverished and undignifying limiting instructional process.
That education is the key is the mantra that is forced to imbibe and recite for human capital upliftment, national growth and global civilization. As the title to one of my papers queries “What education”? This education?” what presently passes for education is veritably stunting mental growth and less supportive of national development.
It is narrow partly because its curricula concerns are book based backed with the gratuitous assumption that knowledge so provided by the books on specific subjects are useful and therefore relevant for personal growth and national development. This is not of itself an absolute truth. The claims are not founded on reality checks. To put it bluntly, it is bogus. From early year education programming to the University level, the entire curricular is book-based, and as the programme develops, the curricular gets more narrow, restrictive, irrelevant and redundant. Being subject-based, students must read, force-fed instructions, and gain specific knowledge and get an education and be educated through the exercise. To demonstrate that the subject has in fact successfully received education and is thus affirmed educated, he is provided with a certificate with a little remark on it stating his grade and class. To arrive at this glorious point which some celebrate with masquerade dances, you must sit for regular examinations where you are expected to repeat to the examiner things that he/she has instructed you upon and what you have read.
The exercise at all levels of education produces at once two classes of human beings, namely those that responded as appropriate and as expected to the questions asked and those that responded poorly and very badly. The former is said to have ‘passed’, and the latter is said to have ‘failed’. These classifications remain permanent. They are indelible scars which in the positive, do in fact open opportunity doors within existing socio-existential structures to better survival options and in the negative, aid low self-esteem or low self-worth. Society endorses both responses. It must be emphasized with celebrations and shameful disgust, respectively.
Perceived serious institutions are set up to regulate proceedings concerning curricular relevance, adequacy of the teaching and instructional personnel, availability of enabling facilities, ratio distribution of staff and students. Such include the Nigeria Universities Commission (NUC), West Africa Examination Council (WAEC) and Joint African Matriculation Board (JAMB). There are accreditation and deaccreditation rituals to underscore both the seriousness these bodies and institutions attach to themselves and the participants of the book-driven education and how it is important to validate the quality of products churned out every year.
Jamb Photo Credit: sunnewsonline
As we speak, the book-driven-certificate-issuing-education industry is booming. Private individuals who have the means now have schools from the early years to the University level. Licenses are given when the set conditions are purported to have been met. The upsurge of private universities that are in part faith-based attests to the seriousness attached to providing and making available the book driven education available to those that can afford the exorbitant fees.
The book driven education, within the subject area taught and examined, provides knowledge only in the specific area covered by the instructor. It guarantees, therefore, only specialized knowledge hence it is correctly and appropriately described as a literacy programme. By serious measurement and candid understanding, literacy is not synonymous with comprehensive education, if it is education at all. Disinterestedness is explained by the preferences of candidates in carrier pursuits just as it is evident when questions of relevance and meaning are raised about the lives of the candidates themselves and the impact on their environment.
In graphic terms, a first-class scholar in statistics is literate, and as the certificate in his hands will validate quite knowledgeable in statistics. Still, seriously that does not mean by any measure that he is therefore educated. He has been taught, he has read, he has been examined in statistics and has been found worthy of being awarded a degree in statistics. Going through these motions is not an indication of having received an education. He is only literate. As a human being, his knowledge is still seriously limited, and some times, in some different situations, where another range of knowledge is required, he could, in fact, pass for a fool.
Several specialized scholars in education have made arguments about the obvious inherent inadequacies of this kind of education. In fact, research studies continue to show the disturbing mismatch of degrees awarded and the importance of knowledge produced with needs for the 21st-century world. The endless long lines of graduates queuing up for employment pointers to an abnormality and the irrelevance of the education system as it is being practised. What this author finds abysmally self destruct is the fact that with every seriousness we are in fact carrying on as if we are unto something good a nation; as if all is well and that the inherited system of education that we are running with is the best that we can have. The frenzy of the desire for this restrictive maiming form of education is mind-boggling. If it is a case of outright ignorance, that in fact, we have not thought about the poverty and narrowness of it all and therefore that we do not know, then perhaps the criminal charge is minimal. But if it is not a case of ignorance, then the charge of bad faith is fostered by lazy, uncritical thinking sticks.
The book-driven education is run by rote learning or the banking, savings and loan pedagogy. Students who wish to succeed and earn a pass to obtain a degree with a certificate must keep track of the teachers’ ideas, absorb and maintain them for later regurgitation. Facts about specific subjects (history, biology, electrical engineering, biochemistry, medicine, mathematics etc.) are poured into empty heads to be poured out when required to do so at the examination. If the colonizers, particularly the British have adopted this system, it is robust thanks to the British philosopher John Locke who taught that the human being is born with a blank slate to be written on by whoever with whatever. Some of our teachers of philosophy still strangely pass this bogus claim to fresh students. The world now knows better that John Locke was not only generically mistaken; he was ignorant of the elements at play. Far from being a blank slate, each human being carries within through conception gestation and births a coded autobiography that sums up holistically who and what he or she is, the impact of nurture and the environment only adding varieties and heightening some details. This holistic attention and enabling interrogation that the book-driven education being practised today totally misses and have remained impotent and nearly redundant.
The word “education” is derived from the Latin word “Educare” which is “to deliver of”, to birth, to draw or brought out”, “to call forth”. Authentic comprehensive education, therefore, should deliver the individual what was coded within. To do this requires careful planning, knowledge and experience as would be found with a midwife at the hospital. Only trained personnel with genuine interest and love for the trade can succeed at it. Understanding aptitudes and precisely sourcing and mapping out their developmental graphs would be key to the curriculum handed to teachers. Technical instructions would be used to gain hands-on knowledge. It would not be for regurgitation at examinations rather for the singular purpose of cultivating the art of creative, critical thinking and the development of the capacity to solve practical problems. The target is to develop the whole person for growth by tapping into those things or chores through which imbued with self-confidence he better expresses himself and flourishes. There are no failures here because no person is born useless. Each has something unique within that he/she would gladly and readily deploy in service to humanity. Of course, there is also the added advantage of channelling discovered and development resources to meeting the challenges and needs of the time. There is simply no room for redundancy or obsoleteness.
Just as there is no room for failures, there is no space either for the feeling of low self-worth or low self-esteem. True and holistic education will cultivate and develop the best in everyone according to their gifting, talents and interests. This still does not in any way make specific knowledge packages unrequired. On the contrary, such would only receive a greater boost since ideas and creative thinking only the best would emerge from the multiple sources. This is what education in Europe and the United States of America advocates and encourages. It is all about capacity building wooing everyone’s best from the early years and encouraging creative and innovative thinking.
Conclusion
In 58 years of Nigeria’s existence as an independent nation, ask how far education has taken her in human capacity development, corporate growth and prosperity. The answer is minimal. What is disturbing is the dull realization that the seeming sanity that prevailed while the colonizers were still around, perhaps and a few years of the first republic, vanished. What is left is decay, fiscal indiscipline, political banditry, chaos and endemic corruption. Yet we are deemed educated. We are considered to have received some education, and there are certificates to validate the claim. However, if what is presently paraded as education is what it is claimed to be, no one should subscribe. In fact, it is a disservice to Nigerians as a people and a dent on their dignity as human beings. If this same book driven education that the college of philosophers wish to pursue regardless of the cultural nuances given to it, since, I am a member, we might as well debate other serious and meaningful concerns.
Prof. Wale Olajide write from the Department of Philosophy at the Ekiti State University
SOME Nigerians are planning to protest the reopening of Lekki toll gate in Lagos following the decision of the state’s judicial panel on police brutality to hand over the property to Lekki Concession Company (LCC), which manages it.
The mass protest currently trending on Twitter with the hashtag #OccupyLekkiTollGate has been planned to hold on Saturday to stop the toll gate from being re-opened.
Trending with over 30,000 tweets, the Nigerians are insisting that the toll gate remains closed till justice is given to victims of the October 20, 2020 shooting by officers of the Nigerian Army.
One Twitter user, identified as Obikoya Adebowale, said he and others would not allow the government to reopen the toll gate until justice was served.
“We will not allow these (sic) government to brainwash us, we need justice for those heroes that sacrificed there (sic) lives at the Lekki massacre. Enough of these oppression and tyranny,” Adebowale tweeted.
Another user, identified simply as Kaylechi, while taking the same stance as most users on the hashtag, said reopening the toll gate meant the government was insinuating that issues surrounding the Lekki shootings had passed.
“Re-opening of Lekki Toll Gate is the govt saying “forget it, that one has passed.” But what they don’t know is that youths are determined to get justice. Lekki Toll Gate must remain closed until investigations are concluded and justice is served,” Kaylechi wrote on Monday.
As observed by The ICIR, most users on the hashtag were aggrieved Nigerians seeking justice over the shooting at peaceful protesters at the Lekki toll gate on October 20.
Why another protest?
The ICIR had reported that the judicial panel chaired by Doris Okuwobi approved the hand-over of Lekki toll gate to the LCC.
The Lekki toll gate has been shut by the panel since last October for forensic examinations in connection with shooting of protesters.
Defending her stance on the hand-over of the property to LCC, Okuwobi said the forensic examinations had been concluded and there was no need to stop the company from assessing it.
“The report is ready as the panel has been satisfied and the assurances from the forensic team that it will no longer require any visit to the plaza,” Okuwobi said.
The panel has decided that it would not await the termination of the petitioners before it hands over control of Lekki to LCC,” she further said.
In contrast to her view, some panel members and youth representatives insisted that the toll gate be closed until justice was served.
Ebun Adegboruwa, a lawyer and senior advocate of Nigeria (SAN), who is also a member of the panel, said the decision to hand over the property was hasty, premature and would overreach the panel’s report.
“It will overreach whatever decisions the panel may reach and foist a situation of complete helplessness and a fait accompli, on members of the panel, in respect of any recommendation that it may make, on the general operations of the plazas,” Adegboruwa said.
Unhappy with the decision of the panel, Nigerians, again, are planning to express their grievances through a protest at the same venue where peaceful protesters were shot at, and some allegedly killed last October.
As of the time of filing this report, the Lagos State’s judicial panel had not concluded its sittings or made recommendations to the government on the victims of police brutality and the October 20 shooting but had concluded plans to hand over the property as requested by the legal counsel to LCC, Rotimi Seriki.
When contacted by The ICIR, Gbenga Omotoso, Lagos State commissioner for information, said the government had not been informed of the planned protest.
“We have not been informed of the protest,” Omotoso told The ICIR during a telephone conversation