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UNCTAD calls for $1 trillion in debt relief for developing countries amid COVID-19 pandemic

THE United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) says  Coronavirus pandemic hits developing countries at a time when they have already been struggling with unsustainable debt burdens for many years, as well as with rising health needs.

In a report, UNCTAD called for $1 trillion in debt relief for developing countries, noting that they now face a wall of debt service repayments throughout the 2020s.

In 2020 and 2021 alone, repayments on their public external debt are estimated at nearly $3.4 trillion—between $2 trillion and $2.3 trillion in high-income developing countries and between $666 billion and $1.06 trillion in middle- and low-income countries, the UN body said in the report titled “COVID-19 is a matter of life and debt, global deal needed.”

On 30 March, UNCTAD said it called for a $2.5 trillion coronavirus crisis package for developing countries.

“Even prior to the COVID-19 crisis, many of these countries faced high and rising shares of their government revenues going to debt repayments, squeezing health and social expenditures,” it said.

“The international community should urgently take more steps to relieve the mounting financial pressure that debt payments are exerting on developing countries as they get to grips with the economic shock of COVID-19,” said Mukhisa Kituyi, UNCTAD Secretary-General .

The report showed that the financial turmoil from the crisis has triggered record portfolio capital outflows from emerging economies and sharp currency devaluations in developing countries, making servicing their debts more onerous.

“Recent calls for international solidarity point in the right direction,” said Richard Kozul-Wright, Director of UNCTAD’s globalisation division that produced the report, “but have so far delivered little tangible support for developing countries as they tackle the immediate impacts of the pandemic and its economic repercussions.”

On April 13, the Internation Monetary Fund (IMF) cancelled debt repayments due to it by the 25 poorest developing economies for the next six months. This debt cancellation is estimated at around $215 million.

On 15 April, leaders of the group of 20 leading economies (G20) announced the suspension of debt service payments for 73 of the poorest countries from May to the end of this year.

The UNCTAD in the report suggested that a trillion-dollar write-off would be closer to the figure needed to prevent economic disaster across the developing world.

It also suggested automatic temporary standstills which would provide macroeconomic “breathing space” for all crisis-stricken developing countries requesting forbearance to free up resources, normally dedicated to servicing external sovereign debt.

The standstills, if long and comprehensive enough, would facilitate an effective response to the COVID-19 shock through increased health and social expenditure in the immediate future and allow for post-crisis economic recovery along sustainable growth, fiscal and trade balance trajectories.

While suggesting debt relief and restructuring programmes, it said the programmes would ensure the “breathing space” gained under the first step is used to reassess longer-term developing country debt sustainability, on a case-by-case basis.

The UNCTAD said more systematic, transparent and coordinated measures towards writing off developing country debt across the board are urgently needed, the report says. It suggested that a trillion dollar write-off would be closer to the figure needed to prevent economic disaster across the developing world.

To take the first two steps forward, the UNCTAD report proposed the establishment of an International Developing Country Debt Authority (IDCDA) to oversee their implementation and lay the institutional and regulatory foundations for a more permanent international framework to guide sovereign debt restructurings in future.

This could follow the path of setting up an autonomous international organisation by way of an international treaty between concerned states. Essential to any such international agreement would be the swift establishment of an advisory body of experts with entire independence of any creditor or debtor interests.

 

Ganduje lied, deaths in Kano are increasing, medical assistance unavailable —Shuaibu

SABITU Shuaibu, Kano State Deputy Coordinator of COVID-19 Response Team has confirmed that the state has recorded over 640 deaths in one week.

This was despite initial denial by Abdullahi Ganduje, Governor of Kano State of reports that mass deaths were being recorded in the state.

Shuaibu who spoke during an interview with Channels TV, clarified that the recorded deaths happened in a space of one week and not two days as erroneously reported.

His confirmation was contrary to Ganduje’s earlier stance on the mass deaths in the state which he denied and regarded as complete falsehood.

“We will soon get a complete report but I assure you that information is not correct. Looking at previous burials, there is nothing to show that there is an unusual frequency of deaths in Kano State,” the governor said in an interview.

However, shortly after denying reports of a spike in deaths, the governor announced his application to the Federal Government to release N15 billion to his state to enable the fight against Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic.

While the cause of mass deaths in Kano remains unclear, several reports have linked the deaths to  COVID-19.

Meanwhile, the only COVID-19 Testing Centre in Kano has been shut down, due to meagre resources and an understaffed Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) office.

Usman Yusuf, a professor of Haematology-Oncology and Bone Marrow Transplantation in Kano, was among the first to raise the alarm on the increase in deaths in the state.

Yusuf who believed the deaths were linked to the novel virus, said he has received several distress calls and messages from Kano residents.

“One of my staff lost his mother today Friday 24th, April 2020 to circumstances similar to COVID-19 with (sudden fever, coughing, and rapid breathing). When we went to bury her ​at 9.30 am​, we discovered that my mother’s body was the 18th to be buried since dawn (a time span of 3-4 hours).

“Why is the Kano State Governor denying COVID-19 deaths in Kano? People should please speak up and get us help,” one of the messages sent to Yusuf read.

In a statement sighted by The ICIR, the professor said that Kano State Government under the leadership of Ganduje lacks the will, capacity, compassion, transparency, or the trust of its people to arrest the situation.

He disclosed that the governor had initially set up a COVID-19 State Task Force and included his daughter as a member.

“The Governor initially set up a State Task Force with his daughter as a member. Despite being a Medical Resident, she is said to wield so much power that even the Deputy Governor defers to her and the educated views of senior medical professionals are not taken seriously.

“The task force is now virtually moribund since its key members went into isolation after testing positive for the virus,” Yusuf said.

Yusuf also pointed that the Kano State Government was in denial and doing all in its power to hide the deaths.

According to him, reliable reports indicate that cemetery workers in the city have been censored and directed by state officials not to give any interviews divulging the number of burials.

As fear and panic grow in Kano, calls for the medical personnel to be properly equipped with Personal Protective Equipment (PPEs) have been on the rise.

Yusuf recommended that health workers be provided with PPEs and the COVID-19 Presidential Task Force be relocated to Kano and make the city its new theatre of operation.

At the moment, Kano has officially recorded 77 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and one death.

COVID-19: SERAP asks governors to provide details of spending, palliatives expenses

THE SOCIO-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP)  has given the 36 state governors a seven-day ultimatum to respond to its requests to urgently provide information on spending details on COVID-19 in their respective states.

The organisation also urged all the governors to immediately redirect public funds budgeted for security votes and life pensions to public healthcare facilities and access to quality education.

The SERAP’s requests were contained in a Freedom of Information (FoI) request to all the 36 state governors in Nigeria

“We are concerned about the lack of transparency and accountability in the spending of public funds by several states to respond to COVID-19,” SERAP said.

“With a few exceptions, there is a lack of information on what exactly many state governors are doing to respond to the COVID-19. There are also increasing reports and allegations of corruption and mismanagement of resources linked to COVID-19,” the group said.

In the letter dated  April 25, and signed by Kolawole Oluwadare,  SERAP Deputy Director, the organization said: “Redirecting security votes and life pension funds to invest in public healthcare facilities and access to quality education in your state would improve your ability to respond to COVID-19, provide palliatives and socio-economic reliefs to residents, and meet the expectations of Nigerians.”

“Given the rising number of deaths in Kano state reportedly linked to COVID-19, your state and other state governors now have to show leadership, transparency and accountability, if you are to effectively and satisfactorily respond to the COVID-19 crisis, curb the spread of the disease and save lives of Nigerians within your state,” SERAP added.

The organisation further noted that it would be a betrayal of constitutional oath of office by the governors to continue to receive security votes, pay life pensions and other needless allowances at a time of public health crisis in their states.

“Taking these steps, SERAP explained, would not only help save lives but also help ensure that the necessary institutional reforms in the health and education sectors occur within the states.

“According to our information, some states such as Kano are waiting for handouts from the Federal Government and are refusing to take any meaningful action to respond to COVID-19, stop the spread of the disease and save lives,” it said.

SERAP lamented that many state governors were spending scarce state resources to pay themselves security votes and their predecessors’ life pensions rather than using public funds to invest in public healthcare infrastructure and improve access to quality education in their states.

According to SERAP, the situation in Kano State was reportedly linked to lack of effective leadership, transparency and accountability in the state, which would lead to grave human rights violations and crimes against humanity if not urgently addressed.

It demanded that state governors should disclose the exact amounts that have so far been received from the Federal Government, private donations and other sources and details of spending of any such funds.

This, it added, must include details of palliatives and other socio-economic reliefs that they have so far provided to the poorest and most vulnerable people, including the list of beneficiaries of any such palliatives and reliefs.

 

WHO rejects immunity passport plan for recovered COVID-19 patients

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THE World Health Organisation (WHO) has warned against the use of immunity passports being considered by countries to be issued to people who have recovered from Coronavirus disease (COVID-19).

With the global death toll from the Coronavirus pandemic beyond the 200,000 mark on Sunday, the global health body said the move by some countries to re-open their economies by granting “immunity passports” to recovered COVID-19 patients was unscientific.

In a scientific briefing note, the WHO warned that there was currently no evidence that people who have recovered from COVID-19 and have antibodies were protected from a second infection.

It further warned that the passports could pose a health risk by providing unjustified assurances of protection to individuals and their communities.

“At this point in the pandemic, there is not enough evidence about the effectiveness of antibody-mediated immunity to guarantee the accuracy of an ‘immunity passport’ or ‘risk-free certificate.

“People who assume that they are immune to a second infection because they have received a positive test result may ignore public health advice. The use of such certificates may, therefore, increase the risks of continued transmission,” WHO said in the note.

Several countries have suggested a gradual return to work, as restrictions imposed on movement to curb the spread of the virus have crippled economies around the world.

Chile has also announced plans to give “health passports” to patients who have recovered from COVID-19 if checked for the presence of antibodies, they would be allowed to go back to work, officials stated.

Tarik Jaserevic, WHO spokesperson in an interview said the idea of granting an immunity status was unscientific.

“We understand the intention of trying to see who can go safely back to work or who could be eventually risk-free of infecting other people but, unfortunately, from a scientific point of view, we simply don’t know if a person who has been infected by the Coronavirus gets this immunity, and if a person gets this immunity, how long it’s lasting,” he said.

Confirmed cases of COVID-19 infections across the world rose to 2.86 million and deaths rose beyond the 200,000 mark which has doubled since April 10.

Europe is the hardest-hit region recording 122,171 Coronavirus deaths, while the US toll rose by 2,494 over the past 24 hours to hit 53,511 deaths.

The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the United States also rebounded by nearly 46,000 to 936,293 since Friday.

In Italy, the number of COVID-19 fatalities rose to 26,384, Spain 22,902, France 22,614 and the United Kingdom 20,319.

The world is on tenterhooks as companies and governments are racing to develop treatments and, eventually, a vaccine for the virus, which first surfaced in China in late 2019.

Obiano suspends COVID-19 lockdown in Anambra

WILLIE Obiano, Governor of Anambra State,  has ordered the suspension of the 14-day lockdown imposed in the state to contain the spread of Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic as he contemplates reopening of schools and offices.

Obiano made this pronouncement during a broadcast to residents of the state on Saturday evening.

“When to re-open the schools as well as when civil servants will be allowed to go back to offices will be announced soon,” he stated.

The governor also said religious services should resume across the state as he advised adherence to World Health Organisation (WHO) recommendations.

“With regards to religious groups, leaders of the church should ensure that worshippers comply with the standards protocols of COVID-19 which include wearing of face masks to church, use of hand sanitizers, social distancing and regular washing of hands,”Obiano said.

He stated that the mode of observation of church activities shall be left at the discretion of church leaders.

“Church leaders should decide how best to conduct mass and service in strict adherence to the principles of social distancing to ensure that worshippers are not endangered,” Obiano said.

“Please note that there should be no crusades and vigils for the time being.”

He added that on Monday 27, he would meet with market leaders for extensive discussions.

“I will meet with market leaders on Monday, 27th April, for further discussion,” he added.

As at the time of filing this report, Anambra State has recorded only one case of COVID-19 according to data from the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC).

Governors’ Forum writes Buhari over lockdown, demands compulsory wearing of facemasks, others

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The Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) has asked President Muhammadu Buhari to include compulsory wearing of facemasks for all Nigerians, interstate free movement with restrictions, and lockdown of flights in his next presidential announcement on Coronavirus disease (COVID)-19 pandemic.

The NGF also demanded that over night curfews and interstate lockdown excluding movement on essential supplies  such as  foods, beverages, medical and pharmaceuticals, petroleum supplies and agricultural products be also included in the president’s address.

The demands were contained in a letter signed by Kayode Fayemi, Chairman of the Forum and Governor of Ekiti State addressed to Boss Mustapha, Secretary to the Government (SGF) and Chairman, Presidential Task Force on COVID-19.


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Fayemi explained that the demands in the letter followed a teleconference meeting with Vice President Yemi Osibanjo on April 22.

He stated that it was agreed during the meeting that the NGF would be allowed to articulate issues it would want to be included in the next presidential pronouncement on the COVID-19 so as to have uniform and coordinated policy at both national and state level.

The meeting which was chaired by the Vice President focused on how to coordinate the plans of the states with those of the Federal Government on management of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

It would be recalled that President  Buhari on March 29, after due consultations with the PTF ordered a 14-day lockdown in Lagos, Ogun states and the FCT which was extended by another 14 days on April 13.

Some states have followed suit by shutting their boarders to all intending travellers, imposing ban on religious and large gathering and other measures listed by health authorities.

According to the Nigeria Centre of Disease Control (NCDC), Nigeria now has a total of 1, 095 confirmed cases of COVID-19, 208 discharged with a death toll 32 persons.

 

Cooperate, pay your taxes before due date, FIRS tells business owners

THE Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) has appealed to some sectors of businesses flourishing during the lockdown to cooperate and pay their taxes before the due date.

Executive Chairman of the FIRS, Muhammed Nami, in a press statement, urged the business owners who, according to him, are ‘experiencing boom’ in their businesses to meet their tax obligation before the due date.

“I wish to appeal to a section of taxpayers, whose sectors are experiencing a boom and significant increase of income at this point in time for a high level of cooperation in payment of their taxes,” Nami said.

He added that the agency’s appeal is part of measures to ease the economic outcome of the pandemic on taxpayers and the government.

The Chairman listed Telecommunication companies, E-Commerce, Supermarkets, Financial Institutions, and manufacturers of certain products as business enterprises that have seen increase in patronage during the ongoing COVID – 19 lockdown.

According to Nami, the listed business owners are experiencing an increase in number of transactions due to the lockdown in many parts of the country.

He urged the business owners to make ‘special arrangements’ in paying their taxes so as to reduce the burden of revenue generation on agencies such as FIRS.

“They may consider, for instance, a situation where they can commence payment of their annual returns earlier the due date apart from their normal obligations,” he noted.

Coronavirus: Sanwo-Olu, Ayade, other public officials who have turned face masks into fashion statements

THE Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic has disrupted some of the world’s largest economies, killed thousands of people, weakened the health care system of many nations but somehow, it has also improved the fashion sense of Babajide Sanwo-Olu, Governor of Lagos and Ben Ayade, Cross River State Governor.

Since the outbreak in Wuhan, China in December 2019, COVID-19, which spreads through droplets has made necessary the use of face masks and other personal protective equipment, at first for the frontliners but now for the general public.

The use of surgical face masks which started as a necessity to protect people from contracting the novel virus is gradually becoming a fashion accessory and the likes of Sanwo-Olu and Ayade are spearheading the movement in Nigeria.


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Asides championing the fight against COVID-19 in their states, both governors have made headlines for embodying a new form of sensitization; by wearing fashionable face masks in a bid to encourage its use among their residents.

For Ayade, Governor of Cross River State, who is a microbiologist, the fight against COVID-19 could be won if people religiously wear face masks.

Ben Ayade – Governor of Cross Rivers wearing fashionable face masks
CREDIT: Twitter

In fact, the governor, once said there is no need to observe social distancing in preventing coronavirus, once citizens wear face masks in public.

“You don’t need social distancing when you are properly protected because for mucal gland that secretes the mucus and the mucin has already formed a network of coats that, of course, attack the virus.”And to enforce its use, he ordered that defaulters would be fined N300,000 if caught.

Ayade’s belief in the effective use of face masks has birthed the mass production of face masks made of ankara in Cross River Garment Factory in Calabar, Cross River State.

With materials sourced from Abia State, the ankara face masks are said to be made with 100 percent cotton and are fast gaining ground in the state that is yet to record a single case of COVID-19.

On the other hand, Lagos state which has recorded the highest number of COVID-19 (657) cases in Nigeria only just recently mandated the use of face masks.

To encourage its use, Sanwo-Olu, the governor of Lagos State adopted the use of fancy, colourful face masks to express individuality as well as promote a cause.

Babajide Sanwo-Olu – Governor of Lagos State wearing fancy face masks
Photo: Twitter

While facemasks are the ultimate symbol of protection and safety in a pandemic, its emergence as a fashion statement is gradually becoming a global phenomenon.

COVID-19: Lockdowns are ineffective in Africa, without sustainable economic plans for citizens – Charles Soludo, Former CBN Governor

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PROFESSOR Charles Soludo, former governor of Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, and a member of President Muhammadu Buhari’s Economic Advisory Council in an article has faulted Africa’s response to the Coronavirus disease(COVID-19) by issuing lockdowns without creative solutions suited for its people as an ineffective approach.

He described the lockdown/closure of the borders in Africa as ineffective posing a  two-pronged problem that has the potential to worsen the continent’s health and economic challenges if not handled with creative solutions.

“All lives matter and African governments must do everything to protect or save every life from the pandemic. The challenge is how. Africa faces two unsavoury options: the conventional template, including lockdowns versus heterodox (creative local), approaches without a lockdown,” he said.

According to him, lives would be lost in both approaches as Africa has no credible exit strategy aside from the lockdowns that have no reasonable timeline which is a suicidal approach to its economy.

“The idea of a lockdown (and border closure) implies that you will continue to do so (with extensions) until such a time that you are satisfied that the spread of Covid-19 has been arrested or on the decline (with the possibility of imposing another round of lockdown if new infections surge).

“The length of time required for such lockdowns to ensure “effectiveness” in arresting the spread would make it near impossible in much of Africa. If the strategy is to lockdown until infections stop/significantly decline or so, then we would have a suicidal indefinite waiting game,” he stated.

Professor Soludo outlined the problems associated with the disease which has made it difficult for African countries to effectively address because of its economic capacity and cultural disposition to communal living.

“African states cannot pay for lockdowns. Many countries depend on budget support from bilateral and multilateral donors, and with its acute balance of payments problems. Most are now begging for debt relief and applying for urgent loans from the IMF and the World Bank. In Africa, both the governments and the people are begging for “palliatives”.

“The most that African states and their private charities can do is “photo charity” with much fanfare, drop a few currency notes or grains here and there for some thousands when millions are in desperate need, just to be seen to have “done something”, he said.

In a report, the World Bank warns that Sub-Saharan Africa, the world’s largest rice-importing region, could be heading from a health crisis straight into a food security crisis due to the disruptions caused by the coronavirus.

The former CBN governor stated that the African continent cannot identify its vulnerable to benefit from its “palliatives” because of its inability to harness a credible demographic data of its citizens.

“At a fundamental level, most African states do not have credible demographic data to identify and target the most vulnerable. In the western societies from where we copied the lockdown/border closure, their citizens are literally paid to stay at home (by silently dropping monies into their accounts plus other incentives),” he said.

On the social distancing, Soludo highlighted it is impractical to practice in Africa because social clustering amongst people on the continent has an economic advantage.

“From the shanties in South Africa’s townships to the crowded Ajengule or Mararaba in Abuja/Nasarawa, or Cairo or Kinshasa to the villages and poor neighbourhoods in much of Africa, social clustering, not distancing, is the affordable, survivalist culture.

“The question is the end game for a poor society such as Africa? New infections have re-emerged in Wuhan, and both Singapore and South Korea are going back to the drawing board. Since we cannot sustain lockdowns indefinitely or even until the spread declines, it means that we would sooner or later remove the restrictions. What happens then?” he queried.

Without adaptable sustainable solutions suited for the African continent, Soludo said opening the borders of the African continent is a smart solution consistent with Africa’s financial and social realities.

“Our model should be learning-by-doing while mainstreaming basic common-sense tips such as the mandatory wearing of masks in public, basic hygiene, disinfection of all open markets every early morning and all places of public gatherings, practical social distancing tips, etc,” he affirmed.

Stating that the pandemic was an opportunity for Africa to exploit its economic survival options without putting the lives of people on hold.

“Can you imagine the thousands of jobs to be created in producing face masks, hand sanitizers, gloves, etc for 1.3 billion people? But this cannot happen under a lockdown. New opportunities! Everyone wants to live, and Africans will learn and adapt quickly.

“Staying at home will become a choice, not a compulsion. The slogan could be: “stay at home if you can, or smartly go to work if you must”. We can only defeat the challenge by confronting it, and not by playing the ostrich only to still confront it the day after,” he said.

Psychology behind the unexpected beatification of Abba Kyari

By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.


Many people are troubled by what appears to be a carefully coordinated cascade of cloying, revisionist, and, in some cases, outright mendacious posthumous rhetorical rehabilitation of Abba Kyari by people who had misled their readers into seeing them as disinterested sentinels of the wielders of power.

The summary of all the gushy Kyari tributes is basically this: Abba Kyari was an uncommonly kind, deeply intellectual, obsessively bibliophilic, fiercely loyal, hardworking, cosmopolitan Nigeria who had more loyalty to Nigeria than he had to his primordial ethnic, regional, or religious constituencies, and who didn’t have even a fraction of the power and influence often attributed to him.

Every empirical evidence that contradicts the torrents of synchronized, saccharine, superhuman portraits of Kyari, his friends want the world to believe, is mere conspiratorial whisper that is wholly dissociated from reality.

Kyari, his friends imply, was a nearly flawless saint. Lack of access to him caused some people to unjustly demonize him. But his confidence in the favorable judgement of history—and of his boss, to whom he was loyal like nobody had ever been in human history—restrained him from correcting reputationally injurious falsehoods against him that took firm roots in the media and in the national popular imagination.

If my recapitulation of the tributes strikes you as annoyingly hagiographic, exaggeratedly mawkish, and overly disingenuous, it is because they really are. And they are dangerous for at least three reasons.

One, there is no one on the surface of this earth who is that perfect. Most people are smart enough to know that. People who peddle a narrative that a human being is untouched by any stain, and that evidence to the contrary is a consequence of “sponsored attacks,” are two-bit spin doctors. It’s worse if they’re journalists.

Two, the minority of people who believe effusive, sanitized, pumped-up portraits of people often suffer self-esteem deficits. They vicariously compare themselves to the perfect person and come up short. They can’t relate to perfection because perfection is not a human quality.

Third, when unassailable and irrefutably firm evidence emerges that contradicts the unrealistic idealization and deodorization contained in posthumous tributes, the reputation of the target of such tributes falls precipitously and irrecoverably.

Nonetheless, I know why people who personally knew Abba Kyari have chosen to venerate him after death. Personal access reveals a part of people’s personality traits that is often concealed to the public.

The English proverb that says “Familiarity breeds contempt” is not always true. Familiarity can also activate warmth and deep connection. It allows some people to become captives of other people’s charm offensives.

In the late 1990s, a senior northern journalist who used to be censorious of Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida finally met him for an interview. That meeting radically overhauled his opinion of the general. He told me—and other young reporters—that anyone who wanted to sustain his hatred and resentment of IBB should not get close to him. “You might go from hating him to loving him,” he said. For some reason, those words have stuck in my mind like glue.

Personal familiarity with people changes perspectives about them. I can guarantee that people who have met Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau have a view of him that departs radically from the mainstream characterizations of him.

This might seem like a wild stretch, but people who want to engage in a guilt-free denunciation of Shekau for all his atrocities should do so now while he is alive because in the aftermath of his death, we might be deluged with a cornucopia of syrupy tributes from people who had personal access to him and who can attest to his charm, warmth, humanity, faculty of humor, pan-Nigerianism, and intolerance to injustice. We might read how he was misunderstood and maligned by people who didn’t know him.

No one—not even Shekau, Hitler, Mussolini, etc.— is entirely bad. Personal, often privileged, access to otherwise notorious, reviled personages allows us to see their good sides. But should journalists court and cultivate the friendship of people in power to the point of becoming their spin doctors?

Anyone with even the most rudimentary familiarity with the ethics of journalism would know that journalists should not be chummy with the people they cover or comment on. The Society of Professional Journalists Code of Ethics enjoins journalists to “Refuse gifts, favors, fees, free travel and special treatment, and avoid political and other outside activities that may compromise integrity or impartiality, or may damage credibility.”

Many of us who write critical commentaries about governance have rejected opportunities to have privileged personal access to the people we write about. For instance, between 2018 and 2019, I repulsed invitations to meet with Atiku Abubakar or to join his campaign.

Similarly, a few northern governors and a minister had told me they had arranged a meeting between Buhari and me to “reconcile” our “differences.” I politely rebuffed their overtures. Sometime last year, a friend who is close to the inner circles of power in the Villa told me Abba Kyari had proposed to give me a “juicy” appointment that I couldn’t resist but that a minister and a top Buhari aide who know me personally said I would not only reject the appointment, I might disclose it publicly.

I don’t know how true this claim is, but the minister and the presidential aide certainly know me well enough to know that my criticism of the government isn’t animated by self-aggrandizement. If I wanted to be wealthy from access to people in government, the Buhari regime is one government where I would have “hit it big.”

I know more people at close quarters in the regime than I ever did in any government in Nigeria. I admit, though, that it is easy for me to sustain my independence and spurn invitations to partake in the looting of the public treasury because I have an independent source of livelihood as a university teacher in America.

You can’t say the same of journalists who work for newspapers that don’t pay salaries and that brazenly tell their reporters and editors to use their work ID cards as their “meal tickets.” For such reporters and editors, privileged personal access to people in power is an existential necessity. Their very survival depends on it.

The flurry of frenzied posthumous canonizations of Abba Kyari—and the revelations of the privileges that access to Kyari conferred— by supposedly detached, non-partisan journalists speak to the death of any pretense to ethical journalism in Nigeria.

Nonetheless, I’m generally an advocate for posthumous kindness to the dead, not so much because of the dead for whom such kindness is actually pointless but for the survivors of the dead. I lost my wife to a car crash in 2010. I can’t tell you how much the kind words written about her sustained me in my most difficult moments.

Whatever Abba Kyari was, he left behind a wife and children who didn’t make for him the choices that made him a byword for scorn and opprobrium. His family members deserve to read celebrations of his good deeds from people who are familiar with them.

In my December 3, 2011 column titled “Femi Kusa’s Perverse Dance on Ibru’s Grave,” I wrote that “it’s distasteful and insensitive to the survivors of the dead to so carelessly traduce their departed kin just days after his passing. Of course, clearly evil people who brought death and misery to large swaths of people are exempt from this consideration.”

Abba Kyari was a public official who directly influenced public policy, whose choices had consequences for millions of Nigerians. I have no problems with people who traduced him in death even though I wouldn’t do that, but I also have no problems with people who have chosen to celebrate the good sides of him that weren’t available to the public.

What I have a lot of problems with is bending the truth to defend him, such as saying he had no influence in the Buhari regime, which is undermined by the fact that even serving governors, ministers, and senators want to occupy his position.

I also have problems with the demonization of people who are giving expression to their genuine angst over the untoward choices he made when he was alive. Kyari might not have been the devil, but he was no saint either.