Saturday 23 June 2012

KANNYWOOD IMMORALITY?


May the soul of our Dear HOD Dr. Haruna Salihi of POL.SCI. DEPT. (BUK) rest in paradise (amin).indeed we all miss him, he is very kind and democrat.



Africans were developed people with their culture, tradition, religious and simple political institutions before the coming of colonial monsters. Our music, dress, food, thought, believes, art and creativity was been infiltrated by colonial mentality and legacy which embedded on almost every sphere of life, movies is not left aside from the so-called globalizations. Aristotle wrote Drama as ‘emulating human attitude’.



Stage drama and performance was among the traditional verbal type of communication, which mostly  use to disseminate a meaningful message on the view to warn against any social vices and forbidden attitude such as robbery, disobedient, fornication, adultery, and so on which at the end of the play, the antagonist with that role will be disown in the society. Lack wise an actor will be cherish and beloved in they society.



Generally Africa is indeed an heterogeneous country with multiple ethnic and tribal groups, hence each tribal groups have some certain message to disseminate in form of a play or stage performance with their own mother tongue, for instance in Nigeria apart from official language (English) with Nollywood, also they three dominant language in Nigeria i.e Hausa, Yoruba and Igbo has their movie industry mainly to disseminate message to people of same language. They started with local crew and covered within their regions, but today they have an advance crew and technologies with millions of audience across the globe.



What is the cultural heritage of a Hausa man? Modesty, Discipline, Kingship, Royalty, Integrity, Love, very conscious of their glorious book (Qur’an) and adherence to teaching of prophet muh’d (swa). What do think their movie would portray? The above mention qualities. The so-called kannywood of today is an irony bedeviled with European and Asian culture, their story is copyright from Indian and English movies, no new initiatives, as you start watching the movie,will assert what would be end of movie and content of they story is all boring love issues.



Kannywood transmitted some negative attitude to our younger once especially their lyric because children that are use of watching they movie memorized the song and sing in school and on road, it effect their sense of thinking and draw them back in academic excellence, usually their actors are models to their fans therefore they emulate their fashion and style of life which are all European in character. There is one actor, he called himself the ‘multiple award wining actor’what he act in hausa movie as forbidding and he act in English movie as passion, such as kiss and flex, been a married muslim man.



It has come to notice that, some of the kannywood stars their life behind camera is very dirty in term of attitude and way of life, what do think of a preacher who commit, what he called a sin? Immorality!


Sunday 17 June 2012

THE RADICAL LEFT IN ELECTORAL COMPETITION IN NIGERIA

WRITTEN  BY PROF. M M YUSIF OF POLITICAL SCIENCE DEPT. (B.U.K). My mentor and a Father,visit his web @ M M YUSIF.
Introduction
What lessons have we documented and subjected to critical analysis about left politics in Nigeria since colonial period? A comprehensive history showing the diverse and sectarian tendencies of the left formations and their politics is yet to be placed for serious discourse by academics on Nigeria's politics, economy and society.
A series of workshops on social movements in Nigeria, by former activists have not generated debates and responses from outside that small circle. Also, the February, 2003 Third All-Nigeria Socialist Conference. Of course, a thorough scrutiny will reveal diverse programmes and strategies, many uncoordinated political activities on the same issues, including in participation in bourgeoisie electoral process.
A very serious limitation which any casual observer of the documents of this history since colonial period will note is that in Nigeria there has not been a lasting unity which keeps these political parties or movements together for long.

This constriction does not mean there had never been broad-based consultative alliances on pressing political problems. But these had never succeeded in solidifying and cementing a tradition of cooperation to achieve a common goal.

On electoral competition the numerous radical groups would not agree to join their agenda against their common enemy. These groups have found their differences from tradition of Marxian thinking on transition to socialism in developing societies. Some, especially the smaller ones insisted that there is no peaceful way against the ruling-class. In consideration of Lenins debate with Kautsky they think that democracy is a class phenomenon so electoral competition is a bourgeoisie democracy, deviced by the bourgeoisie to remain in control (Lenin, 1977: 36). Others might seem working on Marx's declaration at the Hague conference of the First International where he noted that in some countries where there is a strong representative institution, the working-class could achieve their ends by peaceful means (Marx, K. 1976: 293).

The purpose of this paper is to put forward the idea that left formations and or individuals known as part of one of these formations also took the option of promoting working-class politics through electoral competition. This requires asking another question. That is, what does that bring for build up of the working-class politics in Nigeria? Again, if there are limitations what could be done?

From what theoretical perspective

The radical left is seen as a collection of socialist parties or movements, social democratic and populist parties, or of individuals who are patriotic and nationalist popularly identified with the interest of the working-class or nationalist project, generally defined by the common characteristics of nationalism, anti-imperialism and socialism. In view of radical academic contributions on political and economic changes in Nigeria, the orientation and mission of the Radical left is to mobilise resources to defend the interest of the common man, the working-class and petty owners against colonial and neo-colonial domination and ultimately for socialism (Yusuf, B.U.: 1979; Ola O. and Onimode, B.: 1975: Ehiedu E. G. I.: 1996).

With regard to politics of the Radical Left this paper attempts to apply and develop Gramsci's conceptualisation of state and working-class politics. In Marxian tradition modern capitalist state is a class plot. Built on the same principle Gramsci's Praxis shows that the state is a class institution which establishes control and hegemony over the people by political, ideological and other means to get their obedience (Gramsci, A. 1971:258).

There are many views of what Gramsci meant by the state.

1.       State as a class instrument

2.      State as a primary instrument for the expansion of dominant class power.

3.      State is a political machine to keep the subordinate groups weak and disorganised.

4.      State encompasses civil society, each pulling the other to be in control (Gramsci, A. 1971268).

The importance of state for Gramsci is rooted in politics. In this the state is an extension of the hegemonic apparatus of the ruling-class to perpetuate and expand its control of society in the context of class struggle. Hegemony in the more generic sense meant by Gramsci is the way in which a ruling group establishes and maintains its rule (Gramsci, 1971:267). This comes by consent, or by cultural and intellectual as well as political leadership achieved by a particular class, class fraction, stratum or social group as part of a larger project of class rule or domination (Ibid: 268).

Seen this way, hegemony involves attempts of the dominant class to use its moral, social, political and intellectual leadership to establish its view of the whole as all-inclusive and universal (Carnoy, M. 1984:70). This is not by use of only violence or the coercive power of the state apparatus, but in the acceptance by the dominated of a "conception of the world", which belongs to the dominant class (Fiori; 1970: 238).

Thus, working-class politics is naturally counter-hegemonic. How do the changes come? How do the dominated classes overcome the hegemony of the dominant classes? For Marx and Lenin (Lenin, 1976: 242), the state is the coercive arm of the dominant class, from Gramsci the state is also an instrument of the dominant class ideology, of the legitimation of the social need of the ruling-class. Thus, Gramsci would reason that the working-class could use every non-violent resource including the bourgeoisie way in order to counter the hegemony of the state.

Perhaps the "Left" formations are very weak with many sectarian divisions that it cannot control society; not capable of establishing an alternative proletarian hegemony. Hence, the dominant class has to be approached in electoral contest.

It is in accordance with these positions that the argument goes that the "Left" in Nigeria could use electoral competition to defend the course of the working-class. This would probably mean the surrounding of the state apparatus with a counter hegemony by developing working-class institutions and culture, norms and values of the working-class. These, working side by side with dominant class culture confronting the hegemony of the ruling-class. Gramsci called this a "war of position". (Carnoy, Op. cit:72).

The Emergence of Left Parties/Moverments

Between the world wars, communism was virtually unknown in Nigeria, and conditions were not favourable to its growth. Both objective and subjective conditions did not mature. However, by late 1930's, boiling of a general political awakening were observed due to rising climate of war, rise of nationalism and most of all pro-soviet propaganda created an interest in communism in Nigeria (KOP, ND:8).

In 1945 Bankole Timothy, the president of the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria visited the United Kingdom and while there made contacts with British communist party, other socialist groups, and opened channels of communication – exchange of information, books and pamphlets, etc between Nigeria and those groups in Europe. When the T.U.C. affiliated itself to the World Federation of Trade Unions, communist dominated labour organisations in Eastern Europe and ideas on communism became widely spread in Nigeria (Ibid).

This development received internal push by growth of workers and their Labour organisations. The "nationalist press of Dr. Azikiwe and even the University College, Ibadan became centres of propagation of communist ideas in Nigeria (Ibid).

The first and most important movement during this early history of formation of socialist organisations or movements was called the "League". The building and strengthening of the movement had been in the hands of what might be called the field workers, men of very moderate educational attainments. Although, the movement was called the "League", but it was a party and communist in its ideology. In a circular from the office of the Assistant Commissioner of Police Kano, it was called Communist Party of Nigeria (Ibid.).

From the colonial period through the end of the first Republic many worker-oriented and socialist political groups including United Working Proples Party which was the left arm of the Action Group, Socialist Workers and Farmers Party founded by Tunji Otegbeye, Nigerian Labour party set up by Eskor Toyo and Imoudo, etc. had formed.

In the 1970s through the mid-80s Nigeria experienced rapid development with nationalist-oriented economic development. The military regimes of General Olusegun Obasanjo and Muhammadu Buhari Policies on industrialisation and agricultural development were to reduce control by foreign capital. Large-scale farming and industrial projects which produced mass agrarian and industrial workers. Other sectors of the economy experienced similar boom. The universities multiplied many times. (Kirk-Greene A. and Rimmer D. 1981, Tom, F. 1993)

However, the Nigerian economy, then as now, is being controlled by multinational corporate enterprises. The indigenisation policy started under Gowon did not change the balance. The Federal Government of Nigeria depended on revenues from the oil foreign companies who exported Nigeria's petroleum resources. (Ibid.).

The expanding middle class categories were facing the risk of lack of political freedom to push their agenda. Industrial relations shifted from liberal to corporatist system. Whereas, students had become strong political force, the bargaining space .remained tight. The military Governments did not want make compromise.

For these and many other reasons, the answer was underground left formations and or Movements Scattered every where across the country, especially in the University, Urban poor communities, theatre groups in the urban centres, rural co-operative societies, etc. There were so many to be accurately counted. In any way, they have underground names such as "the Iron-grinders"; "the socialist forum"; the parrots; etc.

There were stronger political groups with working class and socialist orientation across the country. They were big political groups because they were political parties and or Movements with widespread network, and their influences reached many states in the federation. Secondly, some of them were afflicted with International Communist Organisations like the "Third International". Thirdly, one of them had a branch in London, with a publication of a magazine which was distributed in Nigeria by a name "Workers Party of Nigeria". These socialist formations although they were operating underground were identified as:

  1. The Socialist Workers Party
  2. The Socialist Workers and Peoples Party
  3. The Labour Militant
  4. The Socialist Congress of Nigeria
  5. The Mass Line

The Left formations remained very active and militant during the early period of transition to the economy of Structural Adjustment Programme. They had directed and or inflenced the three phases – 1986; 1989; 1992; - of anti-SAP riots in Nigeria. Also many other anti-SAP actions by students and workers. The experience of "campaign for Democracy" against military dictatorship had perhaps caused exhaustion and forced them to reconsider their tactics. They continue to exist but they are in disarray (Yusif, M. M. 2010).

Alternative platforms are various types of non-governmental organisations and the existing "Right-wing" Political Parties. Subsequently, may be as a tactical manoeuvre there is no longer acceptance of socialism as an ideology in interpretation of reality. So there is no analysis of social, political and economic phenomena based on class struggle or the class character of the state and the need for socialist order.

Left Parties and Electoral Competition

Between 1960 to date Nigeria experienced eight different General Elections viz. 1964; 1979; 1983; 1993; 1999; 2003; 2007; and 2011. The Nigerian state has been a subject of fierce contestation between different factions of the ruling-class and sometimes other groups with alternative programmes.

The existence of "radical" parties or groups either with social democratic or socialist visions have always been important in the history of elections in Nigeria. But a single most important point is that inspite of the adoption of International Communist Movement strategy of a broad-based popular fronts to bring all supporters of democracy together, by some of these socialist groups as noted above, there has not been a lasting unity which keeps these movements or political parties to achieve and retain a single political programme until it is no longer politically wise to remain together.

However, one cannot approach the history of Left formations in Nigeria without referring to their relationships through consultative meetings and alliances as well as broad-based and popular fronts to achieve a minimum political goal. But these had never succeeded in solidifying a tradition of cooperation to achieve a long-term common objective.

On electoral competition the numerous radical groups would not agree to join their agenda against their common enemy like the "popular front" which turned as "popular unity" in Chile in early 1970s. It is not surprising as these parties and movements have diverse programmes and manifestoes which though have captured the roots of the social, political and economic problems of Nigeria but have different strategies and tactics to tackle these problems.

We can now perhaps suggest that these Left formations are all communist oriented and tend to follow three basic models. One is typified by the iron-grinders in Ilorin, and of course many such smaller movements in some university campuses. It is the model which there is no any suitable tendency to capture their strategy, except simply to characterise them as anarcho-syndicalists. This did not become an independent movement in Nigeria but they could be associated with it by their radical exuberance, by tactical measures of only use of force and violence to attain a goal. In this case there should be no business to do with state and ruling class by electoral competition. Only to destroy them. The second model is exemplified by the Moscow-oriented Socialist Workers Party (also called Socialist Party of Workers, Farmers and Youth) based in Ibadan, with network in Kano, Lagos and many other cities in Nigeria. This party eschewed violence and accepted mobilisation of the Nigerian people to establish Peoples Democratic State under the leadership of the working class. It did not come out openly against front building or for broad-based alliance, but insisted on state power supervised by the people. The party did not seem to oppose electoral competition as its activists stated that "the working people must insist on electing people among themselves to represent them in all organs of state power" (Ola, O. and Bade, O. 1975:227). In the Third model, characterised by an organisational and ideological principles of Marxism-Leninism is found the socialist congress of Nigeria and the Mass Line. According to these Movements, the ultimate goal is to liberate Nigeria from imperialist domination to be followed by socialist revolution and that these could be pursued by every possible means as determined by balance of class forces, including transforming into a socialist party to contest elections.

There were two particularly noteworth tendencies of radical politics which may be separated from the above three models. One of these was the position of Socialist workers and peoples party (S.W.P.P) with Chinese-oriented communism it claimed "an opposition against capitalism and in defence of the interests of the working people". (Fatogun, 1983:71). The S.W.P.P reasoned that differences should not be magnified out of proportion if is to defend the interest of the masses (Ibid: 71). The party urged for defence of the land and the peasantry, of labour against capital and of democracy (Ibid: 71). This could be started by forming a united front of the Left Forces as well as Democratic Forces including mass organisations and even ruling-class political parties that cherish democracy. The party called the United People's Party (UNP) of late Obafemi Awolowo and Peoples' Redemption Party (P.R.P) of late Malam Aminu Kano to join in a front to achieve the said defined objective of the party. Secondly, was the Bala Mohammed Memorial Committee (B.M.M.C). The B.M.M.C was never a political party, but of course a movement, which did not claim socialism, but with a nationalist thinking and programme to change the economy of Nigeria from dependency on multinational corporations and their local lackeys. The B.M.M.C. had no any illusion to bring any change by any means other than by election.

Thus, all the major socialist parties and the B.M.M.C. accepted both in principle and by action either directly or indirectly electoral competition to control state power or cause challenge to the ruling class.

What political influence these parties have had in bourgeoisie electoral contest for power and in defence of workers interest is not clear. Their winning of election in various parliamentary seats contested is not encouraging. The Socialist workers and farmers party for example was contesting every election up to the general election of 1979 but was not able to won any parliamentary seat talkless of threatening the power of the state. In 1964 elections it obtained only 2,206 out of 1,848,270 votes cast in December, 1964 (Cohen, R. 1974: 175). Similarly, the Nigerian Labour Party which fielded Imoudu to contest Lagos North had to boycott distorted results in the 1964 polls (Ibid: 175). What about the Left in the PRP in 1979-1983 party politics? The party had indeed combined the political skills and connections of all forces in Nigeria and strategic manoeuvre of the Left in particular, to had won Governorship seat of Kano and Kaduna States and many seats in both National and some state Assemblies, but petty bourgeoisie squabbles and the threats to marginalise the Left political forces had resulted in factions which killed the capacity of radical groups to pose any serious threat to the power and interest of the ruling-class (Bako, S. 1983). The factionalisation and crisis in the PRP in which one faction had entered into alliance by signing a pact with the dominant political party i.e. National Party of Nigeria (NPN) revealed this fear and the differences in P.R.P.

Inspite of everything all the Left groups in different party formations set aside their differences and struggled against the incursion of neo-liberal economy through SAP. The three major anti-SAP riots united them in planning and mobilisation for action. Moreover, the economic and political aspects of Nigeria took a different form when neo-liberal forces overpowered the radical groups and other nationalist interest, to consolidate Structural Adjustment Programme.

The politics of the groups fizzed out and individuals without any group support turned for electoral contest when democratic opening was won against the military dictatorship. The rules of the competition became difficult without united agenda, so many of them joined forces to form another Nigeria Labour Party and some other smaller political party organisations like Nigeria Liberation Party, Social Democratic Party, etc. There was strong indication of the emergence of counter hegemony when the Federal Government of Nigeria accused all the new parties of "extremism" and dissolved all of them and formed Government Sponsored National Republican Convention and Social Democratic Party. In order to capture and neutralise the ideological fire of both the Rights and the lefts, the federal Government of Nigeria called these parties a "little to the right" and a "little to the left" respectively.

The strategy for power struggle involved different positions. The more revolutionary radical groups regarded the SDP as a bourgeoisie reformist calculation. Others formed popular Democratic Alliances and joined the SDP in blocs. Despite working in the SDP it was not clear neither any record is kept as to what revolutionary dynamic was intended to produce and or reproduced. The only thing we could see was that when the June 12, 1993 election was annulled as the SDP presidential candidate was winning the election, these groups in the SDP and others who did not join the SDP ignored their differences and campaigned tirelessly against the annulment.

As events unfolded after annulment of June 12 elections, inspite of the divisions and contradictions within the Nigerian ruling classes, the state played off and disorganised the radical groups, such that by the time the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), All-Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) and the rest of them were formed, the Left had not collectively joined or formed any party to contest elections. Except those who joined them on individual capacity.

From "practical politics" point of view, then, it looks that there is one problem of the Left in the politics of Nigeria today. That is that neo-liberalism has produced democracy with empowerment of the civil society, seized by the left to play their politics there, and so the neo-liberal order must not be opposed from outside neo-liberal conception of the development of human society.

The Crisis of Left Electoral Politics

The roots of the Left in electoral contest with ruling-class political parties go back to colonial period when in 1948 Imoudu, Coker and other radicals in the Nigeria Trade Union Movement decided to set up Labour party to win electoral support (Cohen, R. 1975:174). From then, both electoral mobilisation and successes of the left politics continues to grow at decreasing rate.

In general, what one may observe today is a total decline of the Radical left below what it were before. It is unable to profit from the new political space by capitalising on anti-neoliberalism, even if is within the framework of neo-liberal agenda. From theoretical angle and the available diverse practices of Asian and Latin American countries, neo-liberal globalisation has two faces – one built on free market fundamentalism and the other on managed free market system (Stiglitz 2006:3). A Left project and political responses pushing for social market system may continue to mobilise the people, and reproduce the left and new dimensions, orientation, agenda, and organisation of left politics.

Therefore, a fundamental question to raise is whether the "Left" participation in bourgeoisie electoral machinery promotes working class agenda. The fact is that the history of Nigeria's Trade Union Movement had shown the influences of Left organisation in working class actions. But what is really happening today? Is it to say, from theoretical perspective that the politics of workers have come to an end as is now the claim among pro-globalist theories? (Bruce, E. K. 2004). It seems that in Nigeria that working-class politics has not disappeared. A new politics of industrial relations is evolved by the Nigeria Labour Congress through alliance of labour and civil society organisations. However, for a long-term and maximum benefits of the workers, the strategy of alliance politics in Nigeria must be critically re-examined.

Accepting the importance of electoral process as part of the strategy of creating condition of counter hegemony means that the Left if at all it is to remain alive must organisationally regain more support and even notoriety to contest for power with other electoral forces.

Furthermore, if the Left would have to remain in existence as an organised political force, it is imperative to review their ideological and political position, in view of very powerful coalition of neo-liberal forces, so that they can clearly redefine what is to be achieved, the limits and the choices, instead of individuals sticking to ideology of communism and or getting into parliaments and become more important than the party or the movement, or even more important than the workers and the people.

It needs pointing out again that in a country of violent ethnic sentiment in political relationships, what would "The Left" do? First, whatever would be the case, "The Left" must build opposite strategy, not the usual saying and practice of lets do what they are doing better in order to defeat them. Secondly, in Nigeria of the fourth republic, political parties are like cartels. What kind of party organisation are the left going to run? The same kind of businessmen/politicians type of political parties? As a reminder, Gramsci once noted that "there are periods of history in which social classes become detached from their political parties; the class no longer recognises the men who lead the parties as its expression" (Gramsci, A. 1971:211). From the time of National Republican Convention (NRC) and Social Democratic Party (SDP) to present set of political parties i.e. PDP, ANPP and others the observation made by Gramsci seems to characterise political parties in Nigeria. A big challenge against politics of the ruling-class is to form "New Political Parties to contest against the parties of the ruling-classes. Or would the left parties be frightened by rules, regulations and conditions of registration of political parties? This would not have mattered so much as building counter-hegemony is a process of series of counter tactics against state power to weaken its capacity to govern.

Conclusion

There are endless necessary conditions to bring out and structure the "left" into electoral politics, but it will be difficult to draw definitive conclusions about when the overall impact of the electoral game will show positive. It may take long-time. It may be temporary as seen by the failure of the experiment of Chile in 1973.

It may be possible to achieve something significant if properly thought out and managed within the organisational thinking of the parties, or the groups directly or indirectly contesting elections.

Thursday 14 June 2012

CORRUPTION:WHO IS WHO




Upon B.U.K registration online stress, that denies my database user account even due, am not the only affected students and I heard from BUK MIS that very soon the portal would access all student database. I managed to write this piece with the hope that it will make sense.



Corruption is not a new phenomenon in Nigerian contest, it was asserted that corruption is even worse than prostitution because it impact penetrate in the whole nation but the former it is only on individual basis. Corruption is almost every were in Nigeria right from presidential villa to local government council are not free from it because thousands of cases in economic emblazonments and public looting is on the desk of EFCC. After the sage of fuel subsidy removal protest in January, 2012. Which paved way for National House of Assemble under the leadership of Hon.Aminu Waziri Tanbuwal speaker house of reps, set up an ad-hoc committee on fuel subsidy scam headed by Farouq Lawan, a member representing shanono/bagwai federal constituency in kano state.Mallam farouq and his team members, probe the issue with public hearing and came out with some recommendations in their report on fuel subsidy scam. On the recommendations some top government officials and some top business mongols are among. A round of appolouse from a well meaningfull Nigerians for the job well done to Farouq Lawan and his committee members by  taking the bull by the horn,on the other some of the cabals disowned their effort that, the report should be trash into dust bin.



Mr president and other resposible bodies remain adermat in implementing the subsidy report scam,allagation was made by Mr.Femi Otedola of Zenon Petroleum and Gas Limited,that mal.farouq recieved 600,000 dollars bribe with the submission of video and audio coverage of their discussion to the state security service system(sss) to proof his allagation,meanwhile blackmail could be use by members of the subsidy scam to suppress the exposure and avoid prosecution as Nigerians are in an enthusian of the thought that the probe of 1.6 trillion subsidy frauds would be the bigining of the end of inpunity in Nigeria. Although farouk lawan himself did not help the matters either by his equivocation on the issue when the scadal became public knowleage. His discrepancies and inconsistancies lay him bare to the allagations and suspicious of insicerity.,subsequencly he finally acknowladged receiving the dirty dollars from Otedole but insisted that, he collected the money in order to use it as exhibit against the oil mogul for bribing the committee to doctor the report to exonerate his company.



Who is who on this scadals,having knowing that farouq lawan is very brilliant and active in house of assemble upon the video evidence submitted by mr otedole,one can not justify the issue because at first instances even the judiciary are not ready to prosecutes the cabals as recommended in subsidy probe report, as I learn it is only EFCC that are making a moves to free the nation from corruption. There is a bit turmoil in the house of assemble as some members are calling for the disowning forouq lawan as a member of house representative, meanwhile the house would have an emergacy session about the issue.urge the members not to make a haste decision by sacking farouq lawan,at least let them set a committee to found out between otedola and faroug who is the cabal as the state security have started doing.

Monday 11 June 2012

HEARTLESS LAMIDO SUNUSI


Is yet another mile stone, really thank God for the merciful trip from j-town to kano. Also welcome all BUKITES to a new academic session (2012/2013). This piece was written by Yinka Odumaki, even due am a great fan of Mal. Sunusi Lamido sunusi but Yinka wrote a constructive criticism of Mallam Lamido and here by stand by it, urge you be patient and read the opinion of Yinka.  

I was one of those who opposed the appointment of Sanusi Lamiido Sanusi as the Central Bank Governor when the late Umaru Ya'aradua nominated him for the exalted office in 2009.

My reason for considering him unfit for the office was not because he lacked the knowledge and intellect for the office but rather because I found him impetuous and his thoughts on national issues showed a narrow man whose lenses do not see beyond the prism of his own agenda.His thoughts on other nationalities in Nigeria were either rude,condescending and when at his best patronising.

Anyone who doubts the above should read most of his sabre-rattling views and commentaries before he became the CBN Governor.The Number 1 banker for the country should not be a man with such strong political views which negate the liberal mindset that is required to handle the apex bank.He eventually assumed the office of the CBN Governor and has since carried himself about with all the swagger of an aristocrat and in the process did a lot of incalculable damage to the economy through his whimsical actions whose results are already staring us in the face.

Dele Sobowale in his piece titled "Another Banking Crisis Coming Up" in VANGUARD of May7,2012 rightly opined that If anyone had asked Sanusi Lamido Sanusi three years ago his choice between becoming the Emir of Kano and the Governor of Central Bank; he would have chosen the former." But like Prince Charles of Britain, whose mother, Queen Elizabeth II, has reigned since 1952, and is still going strong, Lamido too must wait indefinitely to pursue his ultimate ambition – which does not include being remembered as a great banker. Banking was just something to do while waiting.

That was why, unlike his predecessor, he did not lobby much for the job; instead the job came looking for him. That might have explained his distractions and his aloofness bordering on arrogance."

In what appears a glimpse into Sanusi's mishandling of the banking sector I quote Mr Sobowale copiously:

"When Sanusi took over,he proceeded to dismantle the Soludo legacy. And although, there is no indication he intends to erect a monument, he will all the same. The crisis might occur before he goes to Kano for the coronation. It is brewing with a fury known only to beer Brewmasters.

Most banking crises start from one incident, a breach of the rules and regulations, in one bank which benefits a few people; gets copied by other banks or is repeated by the same bank until it becomes routine. The current case involving the former Managing Director of the defunct Intercontinental Bank, Plc and the former governor of Kwara State is one of the two examples which will be examined today to round up this warning.As stated last week, if the allegations are proved beyond reasonable doubt, the the Governor of the Central Bank must bear a significant portion of the blame for appointing someone whose track record had been revealed as questionable in the past.

At the moment the focus is on one allegation pertaining to granting waivers to Senator Saraki’s firms under questionable circumstances and releasing the securities for the loan prematurely; thereby leaving the bank holding to thin air for its exposure – N9 to 11 billion worth of it. One can only pray it is not true; for the sake of Mr Alabi; more for the sake of Senator Saraki and for the sake of the Nigerian banking sector.That incident raises several questions to which this writer already has some answers. The first is, was that the only loan handled in this manner? If not, how many more loans are involved? For those who might not grasp the implications of those questions, let me quickly explain

The next question is for the Central Bank to answer. Are there no guidelines which must be followed before a bank can grant this magnitude of a waiver? If, yes, were they followed and did CBN examiners to the bank check these? If not, how could the examiners have missed this huge write off?

The more you look, the more it can be seen that the CBN was somehow derelict in its duties and its responsibilities to the shareholders of the bank who had no say in the appointment of the Managing Directors. And, if it was careless in one case how can the stakeholders in the banking sector have confidence that this is an isolated case. Information reaching me suggests it is not.When we turn to the pension scandal, one is appalled and the heart melts. Here the rules and regulations guiding deposits by individuals, as well as opening of accounts are so clear that no banker can claim ignorance of them. There is the “Know Your Customer” principle and the mandatory requirement to report deposits of one million or more into an individual account.Yet virtually all the banks conspired with old and new customers to launder stolen pension funds belonging to millions of individuals. Even with the rather lenient penalties attached to these offences, the banks face billions of naira in penalties directly; and billions more in claims from affected groups indirectly.

In these cases we are not talking about a few individuals but a systemic and pervasive violation of the laws. The bankers who have appeared at public hearings have sounded like people interested in passing the buck and running for the border than people certain of their innocence. Heads, again will roll."

Sanusi, this time, should not be allowed to single-handedly appoint new Chief Executive Officers to replace those who might be implicated.The obvious question; to which there is also an obvious answer is: why did so many bankers risk their careers and the fortunes of their banks by engaging in widespread money laundering? The answer is “they were desperate”. Both individually and as banks people had become desperate.

Retrenchment occurs every day sending hundreds of bankers into the job market and an uncertain future. Most, on account of loans taken, would depart with very little. Under the circumstances, it was easy to bend the rules, collaborate with pension fund thieves and hope to put away something for the future.Diminished job security is one reason for the collective violation of banking rules and regulations. The negative variances between projected revenue and profits also act as catalysts to law breaking. When deposit targets are not being met, bank managers become vulnerable to dubious deals.Most succumb hoping that the violations can be concealed through a combination of other deals with CBN staff, creative accounting and complaisant auditors. Some of the tell-tale signs are there when depositors spend long hours at branches trying to withdraw money.

Also, when your bank “fails” to clear local cheques deposited within three working days, or out of state cheques for almost a week, into your account – especially on week-ends — you should suspect deliberate delay by the bank. Or when salaries paid into your account “have not been processed”. Invariably, it is not just a few customers; it is every customer who is subjected to “go slow” treatment.

Like all the previous bank crisis, this too started slowly, by a few bank managers in a few branches and regional offices. Suddenly, the exception became routine once again in Nigerian banks. But, as appetite grew with eating, it became an all-comers affair. Now virtually all the banks were consumed by it.The CBN had been issuing threats to deal with all the banks involved. That is akin to wanting to close the gate after the cows have fled. To start with the bankers opening dubious accounts did it deliberately and were paid for their “services”.

Furthermore, a lot of the funds deposited and which, if reported as required by law, would have been recovered intact have been spent. A great deal of the stolen funds and the bribes to the bankers have vanished; but the banks are liable.Once again, the question is: where were CBN bank examiners while all these were going on? Increasingly, what these cases reveal is a governor and group of Executive Directors who have been derelict in their duties; who have not been supervising the banks and who have allowed another crisis to develop so soon after the last one. Like drunken sailors on shore leave our bankers have stumbled from one crisis to another – thanks to poor supervision this time."

Our dear aristocrat has in words and actions confirmed the position of the columnist that he is just marking time at the CBN while waiting for the current Emir of Kano to transit so he can fulfil his long held ambition of becoming the next emir of Kano.

At the peak of the fuel subsidy crisis early this year ,another columnist, Tunde Fagbenle ; in an exchange with Sanusi Lamido Sanusi had nicely cautioned him against his undisguised ambition of getting turbaned as Emir while there is a reigning one.The following exchange took place between Fagbenle and SLS as published in Fagbenle's column of SUNDAY PUNCH of March 25,2012:

“I know you’ve set yourself the ‘supreme ambition’ of becoming the Emir of Kano (the stool of your grandfather), though I think it is impolitic to have declared such ambition so soon while the incumbent is still alive (well, by my Yoruba custom, that is!); but I would want to see a movement that can help in bringing someone like you, Oshiomhole, Fashola, and, even, Okonjo-Iweala to run Nigeria. What a great country that would be!”
Regards,
TF
From SLS

Thank you very much, Tunde.

“Starting from the lighter note, it was not so much a declaration of ambition. In our own part of the world, the emir takes it for granted that every prince wants to be an emir and in fact, it would be a sad day if a prince, when asked his ambition in life, ranked another office higher than the throne of his ancestors."
It was in showing that his ambition of becoming an emir ranks higher than being CBN governor that he dipped his hands into CBN purse to donate N100m to the victims of Boko Haram in Kano when the apex bank had not made any such donation to the many victims of terror strikes by Kano.

It is from the same mindset that a CBN governor who ordinarily should not be heard except on monetary issues granted an interview where he said that the reason why Boko Haram is on rampage is the skewed "derivation" formula in the country!

The final moment for the total unravelling of SLS came with his arrogant display of insensitivity and soullessness by going ahead with his being turbaned as Dan-Majen Kano at a period the burnt bones of 160 Nigerians who perished in the Dana crash are still being sorted in Lagos mortuary.Given the mood of the nation a man who understands the responsibility of his office would have lost nothing by postponing the event for at least two weeks.

Aside from the general grief the nation is enmeshed in, 9 people who worked under SLS at the CBN were among the 153 passengers who died in the ghastly crash.The deceased persons are Amiaka Rapheal and Antonia Attu, both Senior Managers; Bamaiyi Adamu, a Senior Supervisor and Talmata Muhammed, an Assistant Director.

Others are Ibrahim Yusuf, Principal Manager; Kim Norris, Special Adviser to the CBN Governor on Banking Supervision; Mutihir. I., Deputy Manager and Samuel Mbong.

Sanusi was not reported to have visited the crash scene where eight of his staff lost their lives.All that mattered to him was the chieftaincy he was about to take.I argued with a friend who was invited to Kano but made up his mind not to go given the tragedy that occurred,on Thursday night that the SLS I have studied would still go ahead with the ceremony.My friend was still optimistic that a last minute cancellation would take place.Sadly I was proved right.

Shame on heartless Sanusi and his soulless guests who have shown us that tragedy means nothing to them.Does the blue blood in SLS's veins so royal it cannot be touched by the sorrows of others?could that tragedy not have happened to any of us? Would the emir change his mind altogether if he had asked for a shift of date?How cold would these fellows be if they had to take actions that involve the lives of people behind closed doors if they can merry while the nation mourns?

To SLS I commend the words of John Webster, The Duchess of Malfi:

"Ambition, madam, is a great man's madness"
May the souls of the CBN8 (who most likely would have been in Kano to celebrate their 'Oga' had they not perished) forgive SLS for this display of utter insensitivity