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Dear Nigerian youth, everything shouldn’t be about the hustle

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By Fredrick Nwabufo

Dear Nigerian youth, I will be brief. Hello from the “woke side”. I hate to knock your hustle, but you are about to give yourself up for conscription into an enchanted army of influencers and social media bugs again.

You did the same thing in the build-up to the 2015 presidential election; you sold a septuagenarian from Katsina state as Mai Gaskiya; as liberal, detribalised, ascetic and as a “reformed democrat” to a famished crowd of young Nigerian men and women who were at sixes and sevens under the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan.

I do not blame you much for your action. Nigeria at the time was sandwiched between two hard choices – choosing between a tested and certified failure and an untested disaster. In fact, I was part of the problem. I will explain why.

In October 2014, in the build-up to the presidential election of the following year, I had an hour interview with President Buhari – then presidential hopeful – at his residence in Abuja. It was an hour of vacuity and vapidity. The president expressed an unmitigated level of intellectual impotence. However, I saw in him candour; it is clear to me now that candour without competence is like a car without an engine.

I spent two days transcribing the audio file. Why? There was nothing I could get out of the interview. It was a jumble of incoherent and unseasoned thoughts. But “we” tried to make the president look good nevertheless in the published copy. And because I was disillusioned with the government of former President Jonathan I became a one-man campaign army for Buhari on Facebook. But now I am “woke”. I know better.

I am aware that some young men and women have constituted themselves into a social media infestation defending and lying for the government for a monthly pittance of N250,000. I do not blame them; Nigeria has one of the highest unemployment rates in the world. The job problem has even worsened under this administration. I beg you Nigerian youth, do not join them because it is unwise to make decisions based on immediate circumstances.

In conclusion, Dear Nigerian youth, the country is in your hands, whatever influence you think you have, do not expend it on any political golliwog or fossil. I believe we can do better, and we must do better.

Stay woke.

Your concerned brother,

Fredrick Nwabufo

You can reach Fred on Twitter @FredrickNwabufo, Facebook: Fredrick Nwabufo

Lagos bans cart pushers and wheelbarrow operators

 

The Lagos State Government has banned cart pushers and wheel barrow operators from the streets of the state.

“The state government has declared zero tolerance for the activities of cart pushers and wheel barrow operators,” Tunji Bello, Secretary to the State Government (SSG), said in a statement issued on Saturday.

He noted that their activities are inimical to the environmental cleanliness in the state.

Bello remarked that the continuous activities of cart and wheel barrow pushers would pose a threat to the success of the recently-flagged-off Cleaner Lagos Initiative (CLI).

He explained that investigations had also revealed that the cart pushers are responsible for most of the illegal dumping of waste in canals and road medians at night, which causes flooding, adding that aside constituting environmental nuisance, they are also traces of security threats.

“What the state government has discovered is that this set of people use the night to perpetrate all sorts of dastardly acts.

“They dump refuse indiscriminately on the median of major roads and highways. They also pose serious security threats because they use those carts to hide arms and ammunitions and hide under the guise of carrying refuse to rob unsuspecting residents.”

He said the state government had finalised plans to ensure that the CLI would cover every area of the state and ensure that refuse are well-packed and collected. He urged residents to desist from patronising cart pushers or risk prosecution.

“Security agencies in the state have been directed to ensure that those found still operating are arrested and prosecuted according to the State Environmental Laws.

“The law also applies to residents who patronise cart pushers. It is an offence and the State Government would not hesitate to enforce the law to put a stop to such practice.”

Mr Buhari, a citizen poses a question!

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By Damilare Olowofela

Good morning Mr President. Sir, did you notice my panglossian optimism? I nurse an incredible hope that one of your aides will probably read this and pass it over to you. I chuckled at my own extreme faith. Well, that optimism apes the extreme belief we had in you in the days leading up to the election of 2015.

I am a medical doctor resident in Ibadan. Apart from occasional scribbling I do at leisure, writing is none of my business; I am not a journalist. But I resolved to undertake this wild goose chase, inspired by the incredible faith of Samantha Smith, although unlike her own scenario, there is no looming nuclear confrontation between Nigeria and any country.

But much like the tension of the Cold War era, the Nigerian state is in an internal, internecine and equally cataclysmic hot war: Hardmen/Herdsmen who ride on the irenic hump of cattle, with cavalier hubris, to prosecute a slaughtering offensive.

Sir, why it may be unfair to put down the current spate of Fulani herdsmen killing to their tribal identity with you, it is impossible not to notice that the seriality of butchery of men (human beings with equal right to life) by these murderous beings has increased under your watch. I agree, it did not start with you; but their confidence to kill has acquired a rare valency of impunity in recent time.

One reality hits everyone plumb in the face: your silence is an audible indication of silent/loud endorsement. The questions are many and the possibilities of answers too worrisome.

How come the president has not declared this sanguinary institution a terrorist group? How come the president has not made any nationally-televised speech or interview to denounce them and promise safety for all Nigerians? How come these murderers exist under a known umbrella body and that body has not been proscribed, even if only momentarily?

Okay, what if for tokenism, the president abdicated his grand patronship of the group? How do I believe that the recent order of relocation given to the IGP is not an impotent afterthought necessary to save the ashen face of the president?

One more question, and that concern is the provenance of the rage that inspired this writing. Mr. President, I woke up this morning (Thursday) and I saw in the dailies the charnel picture of concatenation of coffins for mass burial of the victims of latest delivery (I think that trophy actually belongs to Taraba) of terror in Benue yesterday. My heart sunk and my conscience was torn. Even in a state of declared war, the sky does not get more sable than this.


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Then the question arose in me: where was Mr. President? Not even the Vice-president? At a burial that is already changing the tenor, the tone and the thrust of national discourse?

Sir, I don’t believe all the allegations against you; that you are heartless and so inhumane, so much so that your aides have to put together a documentary to portray your human sides; that you are so invested in ethnicism, so much so that you proscribed IPOB because it belongs to a tribe different from yours and you could not do the same with Miyetti Allah as blood is thicker than water; that it is all part of the ‘Islamisation agenda’ by your blood-thirsty foot-soldiers.

Mr. President, I don’t believe. I can’t think of believing. Enduring a considerable shower, a long queue and bluff harassment from political imps of the opposition to vote for you in the last election, I can’t believe all these allegations against you are true.

Mr. President, I don’t want to make a verdict. In fact, my opinion may not count, after all. But Mr. President, for the sake of sanctity of human life, and some respect for the dead as well as some sympathy for the bereaved, let us not even mention the harvest of political hay from such presence, why were you not in Benue on Thurday? Not even to make the ritual, impotent, lip-deep (but assuring) commiserations leaders usually do in crisis situation?

People said the moral bulwarks of your administration had long fallen and that we (who believe you blindly, singing Buhari can do no wrong) are just hearing the reports now. Yet, I don’t believe them.

Sir, it will be my joy if you address the moral issues of this personal epistle to you. At least, that way, I can reclaim my sanity that I have not helped put a Frankenstein monster in power.

Mr. President, are you falling or you have fallen?

Olowofela Damilare writes from Ibadan, Oyo State

My choice of candidates in 2019 presidential election

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By Dele Momodu

Fellow Nigerians, thanks for the deluge of messages and phone calls last week after reading my memo to our dear President. I doubt if any article of mine ever generated such amazing interest from the rich and poor, educated and not so educated, alike. The closest to it would be the letter I wrote to our wonderful First Lady of yore, Dame Patient Jonathan at the peak of PDP rascality.

For the sake of those still wondering why I wrote so passionately, and objectively, in my last column, let me say it loud and clear, that memo was an apologia to Nigerians. I had promised to write whenever I’m finally convinced that the APC government has irredeemably flopped like its predecessor PDP. I wish to emphasise that as much as I wish that a miracle can still happen in the next 12 months or so to come before the general election, I’m sorry to inform you that the signs are ominous. The lackadaisical attitude of APC, and in particular, President Buhari, has become unbearably palpable. They are looking like a Party and President on a suicide mission. They keep making mistakes after mistakes, and blunders after blunders.

There was no better time to rescue itself from the kamikaze slide than during the mass funeral in Benue State two days ago. What should have been a special occasion for national rebirth and reformation was frittered away by the sheer arrogance of the ruling class. What should have been a day of national mourning was treated with such recalcitrance, and possible disdain. It is difficult not to see or feel that this government is a victim of some witchcraft and hypnotism. A government that rode into power on the supersonic jet of goodwill of the people is barely struggling to survive a swim in the gutter of ill-wind. It is more like it has embarked on a predictable slide down a giant abyss, as by its very demeanour and offhanded posture it insults and belittles those very same people that it relied upon for the much vaunted change it promised but has found difficult to deliver. In many, albeit different ways, we seem to have gone back to the arrant impunity of the Jonathan era. What exactly is wrong? Anyway.

Pardon my digression, but the recent devastating and sad events in Benue State in which some herdsmen went berserk and attacked innocent indigenes of that State deserves condemnation of these terrorists by every Nigerian. I join others in offering my condolences to the families of all those who died in the unfortunate incidents. May the souls of the departed rest in peace.  I commiserate with those injured and affected by the dastardly rampage. The time has come for President Buhari to act swiftly and decisively to curb this menace which has the potential to tear our country apart, despite the strenuous and vociferous protestations by the President about our unity being non-negotiable.

Now to the matter at hand. A few people suggested last week that I was working for Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, probably because of our recent meeting and also partly because he is the main candidate who has declared his interest, and that is why I wrote that memo to President Muhammadu Buhari. Let me say with all the emphasis at my command that I’m not working for anybody. I’m too independent to be used by anybody. The time has not come for me to jump into the game. I have my eyes on a few bright guys of Nigeria but what if they don’t get the ticket? And what happens if we have Buhari and Atiku as frontrunners in the next election? You may wish to know who between the two I will support. When I’m faced with such option, I will not shy away from declaring my position publicly. I’m not the kind that would hide my support. When Chief Olu Falae contested against Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, I supported Falae, as a matter of personal principle. He did not have cash to throw around and I even spent my meagre income to travel to Vienna to try and persuade that cerebral gentleman, of blessed memories, Dr Rilwan Lukman, who was the kingpin at OPEC headquarters in Austria, to run as Falae’s Vice-President. Though the arrangement fell through, I still returned home to support Falae. Only one person can win at a time.

I never supported any PDP candidate in their sixteen years in power though I admired a few of their action-packed Governors. The last election that catapulted them out of power finally convinced me that behaviourally and ideologically, the difference between APC and PDP was between six and half dozen. There was no way APC would have emerged triumphantly without the epic support of the PDP dissenters. Anyone can say whatever they like today, I was an eye-witness, and active participant, in the making of that spellbinding, suspense movie. Amaechi, Saraki, Kwankwaso, Atiku, Wamako, Tambuwal, and others from the PDP made so much difference when they added their weight to those of the godfathers from the other Parties that formed the APC conglomerate.

My decision to support APC, though never a member of the Party till this day, was primarily to get rid of the PDP fiefdom that was stylishly manifesting and bourgeoning into a veritable catastrophe for the country. Two, to stop the profligacy that had characterised the government of the day. I have met some key actors who said President Goodluck Jonathan was never a corrupt man personally but he lacked the strong will to challenge his thieving acolytes. That was the major weakness that guillotined his regime. Most reluctantly for some of us, Buhari became an option and a stopgap. Anyone who followed my support for President Buhari would have seen how I regularly referred to him as the Mandela option. I didn’t expect him to become a permanent feature. I’ve always believed that anyone above the age of 65 is a high-risk option, and I said this about Buhari during our Presidential race in 2011.

However, since the last Presidential election was a straight fight between Jonathan and Buhari, the choice was totally limited. Many of those who supported Buhari also considered his anti-corruption credentials though, in retrospect, I believe we downplayed his anti-democratic records and proclivity. I still have no doubt that he’s one of the most honest Nigerians alive today, although like Jonathan he seems to be surrounded by people in respect of who that is difficult to say.

It is likely that age, as well as the reality and practicality of how he attained power, have jointly humbled and mellowed his almost sacramental vows against corruption. It would be tantamount to monumental hypocrisy and superlative ingratitude to bite the fingers that fed one in our hour of acute need. It has become critically obvious that what has confronted Buhari in power was never what he anticipated or bargained for. This is why I advised him last week to bow out with whatever honour he has left, instead of squandering everything away. If he stubbornly contests the next election, he would be forced to compromise and capitulate on a number of things. He would have no choice than to play the erstwhile PDP card, by opening the vaults of the Central Bank of Nigeria to political vultures who are not known to be patient or merciful in respect of primordial interests. That was my honest and candid appeal to Baba out of genuine concern for his future and legacy. Let us, at least, continue to dream that we have one selfless and incorruptible leader in Nigeria.

The truth, is that my preference would be for younger candidates in both major Parties and my criteria would be as follows. The candidate must be well educated. Nigeria has produced more than enough graduates from every part of the country for us to be continuously and endlessly led by near-illiterates. The candidate should have managed people and resources, whether in a private or public capacity or both. The candidate is expected to be seriously exposed to modern trends. Ability to communicate well would be appreciated since he would have to interact with world leaders. I want a Nigerian candidate and not a sectional leader. Anyone who cannot feel at home in any part of Nigeria is not fit to lead our otherwise great nation. Anyone still relying on zoning, quota and Federal character to become anything in Nigeria is certainly an enemy of progress. We must consider the brightest people from every part. There are enough people in Nigeria who fit this bill. We can’t simply say that we cannot find one such person. Our search should in reality be moving on to finding the very best of the best. Once we find our Leader and his deputy then we should not care too much about engaging others, including foreigners, who are the best at infrastructure and facility building of the type we so desire and need. Dubai is not solely managed by Emirati citizens. The UK allows foreigners to manage critical sectors, including the economy, a good example being the Bank of England (their Central Bank) headed by a Canadian, Mark Joseph Carney.

I will not totally disqualify exceptional elders who have distinguished themselves under most of my above criteria lest I fall victim of the same bigotry I’ve been preaching against. Some elders are more reasonable, less corrupt, more business-savvy, more exposed to international standards, more efficient, less cantankerous, more focussed, and  more visionary than our so-called youths. We have since come full cycle by trying sinners and saints but we have not yet succeeded in having great and big thinkers. We cannot, and must not, continue to delude ourselves that we can find saints from anywhere to lead us. What we need, as a matter of urgency and desperation are competent performers from wherever we can seek and find them. By now, we should be tired of exchanging the baton of backwardness and mediocrity every four years. Like joke, like joke, nothing spectacular has happened to us for decades now while smaller countries across Africa are marching forward confidently and admirably. Our own leaders seem to be very comfortable in our squalid, desolate and unsavoury conditions. No qualms. No urgency. No new ideas to copy, borrow or buy. We are permanently stagnant and sanguine about our perpetual state of inertia.

The next election should be a turning point. We can no longer afford to play politics of ethnicity, money and religion. I reiterate that we must search frantically, extensively and productively for the best. The world would leave us very far behind at the rate we are going. We are already desperately behind and trying to play catch up. We do not need to lose more ground.  I’m appealing to everyone who loves Nigeria to free Nigeria from the bondage of oppression, suppression, ethnic jingoism, religious fanaticism, terrorism, Satanism, and all forms of retrogression. 2019 cannot, and should not, be business as usual. It should be our year of true liberation and independence. Yes. The time has come to assemble our proven performers in a government of national unity. Nigeria cannot be handed over, or handled anymore by professional politicians who have no other business or job they do, and who merely see their stay in government as an opportunity for self-aggrandisement, and unashamed and unabashed looting of our collective wealth. Rather we want Nigerian leaders who are committed and passionate about their country.

Our chosen leaders must be willing to sacrifice their all to ensure and enhance the comfort of their fellow citizens by providing the simple basics of life.  Nigerians have never been a demanding people.  We merely want education for our children, decent wages for our hard labour, good health care, electricity, water, food, security and above all peace. For now, every single one of these matters evade and elude us notwithstanding our vote for change! The President and his Vice President must provide evidence of what they have done and accomplished in their lives. Merit, productivity, passion and vison must be our watchword. Irrelevant considerations, like religion, ethnicity or even gender, have no place in this equation.

May Nigeria be victorious.

This article by Dele Momodu, publisher of Ovation Magazine, was first published on thisdaylive.com

I am alive and well, says El-Zakzaky

 

Ibrahim El-Zakzaky, leader of the Islamic Movement of Nigeria (IMN), also known as the Shiite Islamic sect, says he is alive and well.

According to Channels Television, El-Zakzaky said this when he addressed journalists on Saturday.

He thanked Nigerians for their prayers and the Department of State Services (DSS) for allowing him access his doctors.

El-Zakzaky has been in the DSS custody since December of 2015 following a clash between his followers and soldiers in Zaria.

More that 300 Shiite Muslims were killed in the clash and hundreds more, including El-Zakzaky, were injured.

There have been many protests by members of the IMN calling for his release, and claiming that he may go blind if not released for urgent medical attention.

Femi Falana, El-Zakzaky’s lawyer, had also written to President Muhammadu Buhari, urging him to obey the December 2016 order by the  Federal High Court in Abuja, which awarded the sum of N50 million in favour of his client, while ordering the Federal Government to release him and his wife, and provide them accommodation at a location of their choice.

Garba Shehu, senior presidential spokesman, had said that El-Zakzaky is being kept in “voluntary custody”, as the government was worried that there could be a major breakdown of law and order should he be allowed to return home.

“Government has a responsibility to ensure his safety. He is not in a prison type of detention,” Shehu had stated. “He is in the company of his wife and children voluntarily. Government is being compassionate on this matter. There is an overall public good that government is looking at in this matter.”

Fayose, Sani slam seven govs for endorsing Buhari while Benue mourns

 

Ayodele Fayose, Governor of Ekiti State, and Shehu Sani, Senator representing Kaduna Central, have described the endorsement of President Muhammadu Buhari for a second term in office by seven northern governors as the height of contempt and lack of empathy.

Governors Nasir el-Rufai (Kaduna), Abubakar Bello (Niger), Ibrahim Gaidam (Yobe), Yahaya Bello (Kogi), Abdullahi Ganduje (Kano), Jibrilla Bindo (Adamawa) and Simon Lalong (Plateau), paid Buhari a solidarity visit on Friday at the Aso Rock Villa, after which el-Rufai, the group’s spokesman told journalists that they have no apologies to anyone for endorsing Buhari’s re-election bid.

“We believe in Mr President; we want him to continue running the country in the right direction. People can speculate about 2019; we have no apologies,” El-Rufai said.

“We are politicians and those of us you see here want the president to contest the 2019 election, we have no apologies for that.”

But Fayose, who has been a vocal critic of the Buhari administration, thinks the endorsement is a clear demonstration of the contempt that government at the centre has for ordinary Nigerians.

“No fuel, killings in Benue, Taraba, Adamawa, Rivers, etc. But some people’s response to all these is to endorse President Buhari for second term. What a way to treat Nigerians with contempt,” Fayose wrote on Twitter on Saturday.

Similarly, Sani expressed his displeasure at the endorsement thus: “Seven Governors in the Villa asking President Buhari to run at this material time when all hands should be on deck to advise or support him to end the mindless bloodletting & carnage in the country is most unfortunate. Human reasoning and human conscience where art thou?”

Many Nigerians have condemned Buhari for not attending, or sending a representative to, the mass burial of almost 80 Benue State residents murdered by herdsmen between January 1 and 6.

In his weekly article, The Pendulum, Dele Momodu, veteran journalist and publisher of Ovation Magazine, said Buhari’s absence at that funeral was a missed opportunity for him.

“What should have been a special occasion for national rebirth and reformation was frittered away by the sheer arrogance of the ruling class,” he wrote. “What should have been a day of national mourning was treated with such recalcitrance, and possible disdain.”

Nigeria should have no more than eight federating units, says Anyaoku

 

Emeka Anyaoku, former Secretary General of Commonwealth, says Nigeria should be restructured to solve its increasing security and economic challenges.

“We should have no more than eight federating units,” Anyaoku told The Nation in an interview.

“These will be better able to plan their development, benefiting from healthy rivalry and competition between them, and check corruption, which has been one of the greatest drawbacks we have had in the country.”

He recalled that when Nigeria had a true federation of four regions, the country was doing better, as there was greater security, greater development and less corruption.

Anyaoku noted that the current structure is not sustainable because as much as 80 per cent of the country’s revenue is spent on administration.

He pointed out that the country is already having the negative impact of the bloated federal system, as most of the states cannot pay their civil servants with many being owed their salaries for many months.

“Instead of focusing on producing, we now go to share allocations from the federal government. I believe that in this country, given its character of multi-ethnicity, multi-religion and multi-cultures, we need a true federation where the federating units should be more viable than what we have now.”

He said Nigeria was doing well at the time of independence but began to derail in development strides since oil became the mainstay of the economy.

“Now the countries that were at par with us at independence are way ahead of us. South Korea is more than one generation ahead of us. Malaysia is very much ahead of us. If you look around in virtually all sectors of our national life, we are underperforming.”

Anyaoku expressed hope that the upcoming generation would restore the country to its glorious past.

He also lamented the wanton destruction of lives and property across the country, saying: We are gradually losing consciousness of the sanctity of human life.

“There is general insecurity and the value placed on human life seems to be going down and down. It saddens me because most of my working life was in societies where if one human being dies under questionable circumstances, the government, the law enforcement agencies, will rise to action.”

 

BAD NEWS: You can no longer use Facebook to grow your website

 

Facebook, the social media platform, will henceforth restrict the amount of public content — posts from businesses, brands and media — that the users are exposed to.

The restriction will significantly prevent publishers (particularly of startups) from using Facebook to redirect traffic to their websites, and will hand big readership advantage to established brands whose websites are directly visited by users.

Mark Zuckerberg, the Facebook founder, announced the new measure on his Facebook page on Friday.

He said public content had crowded users’ news feed and denied them the opportunity to stay connected with people.

Zuckerberg explained that since helping people stay connected is the core objective of the social network, Facebook would henceforth restrict public content that prop up on users’ news feed.

“We started making changes in this direction last year, but it will take months for this new focus to make its way through all our products,” he said.

“The first changes you’ll see will be in News Feed, where you can expect to see more from your friends, family and groups.

“As we roll this out, you’ll see less public content like posts from businesses, brands, and media. And the public content you see more will be held to the same standard — it should encourage meaningful interactions between people.”

He said the decision to reduce public content on news feed was taken following academic research and various researches that Facebook conducted with leading experts at universities.

“Based on this, we’re making a major change to how we build Facebook. I’m changing the goal I give our product teams from focusing on helping you find relevant content to helping you have more meaningful social interactions.”

He said Facebook had also been getting feedback from the users that public content — posts from businesses, brands and media — is crowding out the personal moments that lead us to connect more with each other.

“It’s easy to understand how we got here. Video and other public content have exploded on Facebook in the past couple of years. Since there’s more public content than posts from your friends and family, the balance of what’s in News Feed has shifted away from the most important thing Facebook can do — help us connect with each other.”

Zuckerberg said that by restricting the public content, users will maximise their experience on Facebook, pointing out that the changes could reduce the time people spend on Facebook and some measures of engagement would also go down.

“But I also expect the time you do spend on Facebook will be more valuable,” he said. “And if we do the right thing, I believe that will be good for our community and our business over the long term too.”

He reiterated that Facebook has always been about personal connections, saying: “By focusing on bringing people closer together — whether it’s with family and friends or around important moments in the world — we can help make sure that Facebook is time well spent.”

Facebook, founded in 2004, is the largest social network with over two billion users globally.

Shekau ‘set to release videos on Chibok girls and NAF helicopter’

Boko Haram is planning to release fresh videos about the abducted Chibok schoolgirls and the Nigeria Air Force helicopter that crashed last week, says Ahmed Salkida, a journalist with extensive knowledge and coverage of the insurgents.

Salkida made this known on Friday via his verified Twitter handle.

“Sources close to the Shekau led-terror group (Boko Haram) say they shall be releasing a string of videos on the abducted Chibok girls, Police wives and crashed helicopter,” Salkida wrote.

Salkida said Boko Haram claims to have gunned down the helicopter “amid unrelenting push by the Army”.

Authorities of the Nigeria Air Force announced that one of its helicopters suffered a mishap on Monday, January 8, but said no life was lost in the incident.

“The incident which occurred today, (Monday), 8 January 2018, resulted significant damage to the helicopter; there was however, no loss of lives as a result of the incident,” Olatokunbo Adesanya, NAF’s Public Relations and Information, had said in a statement .

“The Chief of Air staff, Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar has immediately directed the constitution of a board of inquiry to determine the exact cause of the incident in line with global best practices.”

That same Monday, Sani Usman, Director of Army Information, issued a statement claiming that “Boko Haram terrorist group factional leader, Abubakar Shekau, is in a terrible state of health and not much a threat as he is now a spent horse, waiting for his Waterloo”.

Usman also said that “Abu Mus’ab Albarnawiy, (another factional Boko Haram Leader) who has been busy deceiving and recruiting gullible persons, especially misguided youths into his fold, will soon be captured”.

Days earlier, on January 4 precisely, the Army had said troops of Operation Lafiya Dole carried out a successful offensive on the insurgents, killing many of them and rescuing dozens of captives, among whom is Salomi Pagu, one of the kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls.

The Army has a history of releasing statements that have been contradicted by the protagonists of the incidents, the most recent being its disputed claims on the casualty tolls of a Boko Haram attack on a World Food Prograame (WFP) convoy and another on UNIMAID lecturers and NNPC staff prospecting for oil in Borno State.

‘Are we a shithole country?’ — Botswana queries US ambassador over Trump’s ‘irresponsible’ comment

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The Government of Botswana has queried the Ambassador of United States of America to the country over comments attributed to Donald Trump, which described African countries as “shithole countries”.

According to a statement by Botswana’s Ministry of International Affairs and Cooperation, the US Ambassador was asked to “clarify if Botsana is regarded as a ‘shithole’ country, given that there are Botswana nationals residing in the US. and that some… may wish to visit the US”.

“The Government of Botswana is wondering why President Trump must use this descriptor and derogatory word when talking about countries with whom the US has had cordial and mutually beneficial bilateral relations for so many years,” the statement read in part.

The current US Ambassador to Botswana is Earl R. Miller, according to the website of the US Embassy in Gaborone, the capital of Botswana.

“Botswana has accepted US citizens within her borders for so many years, and continues to host US guests and senior government officials, including a congressional delegation that will come to Botswana by the end of this month; that is why we view the utterances of the current American President as highly irresponsible, reprehensible and racist.

“Botswana calls of SADC (Southern African Development Community), the African Union and all other progressive nations across the world to strongly condemn the comments made by President Trump.”

Trump allegedly made the remarks in the White House when some members of the US Senate came to brief him on a newly-drafted immigration bill being considered by a bipartisan group of senators.

“Why do we want all these people from Africa here? They’re shithole countries … We should have more people from Norway,” Trump was quoted as saying.

The White House did not deny Trump’s comments but explained that the President supports immigration policies that welcome “those who can contribute to our society”.

The United Nations condemned the comments attributed to Trump, with Rupert Colville, UN human rights spokesman, saying: “There is no other word one can use (to describe the comments) but racist.”

“You cannot dismiss entire countries and continents as ‘shitholes’, whose entire populations, who are not white, are therefore not welcome.”