Tuesday 25 June 2019

Lost to We


                 Ogbonnia Chisom John
                 ogbonniachisom@yahoo.com


Moving World
Beyond any reach
Dare to meet up
Your joy, abridged


Calm Usurped by Fear
Year after year
A quiet ponder
What is in life
Or in the next


Existence in Crisis
Where is my time piece
When does it halt
What do I make of it
What does it make of me
What could it be?


A tide too many
A cross too heavy
Worried in Surplus
Threatened by less
Can I own the world
Or a piece for less


Your message,  my peace
Your voice, my tranquility
Reason for me - You
You alone,  I grasp
My Life, my Gift.

Thursday 11 April 2019

MELODRAMA IN THE MIDDLE EAST: USA FOREIGN POLICY OR DOMINATION POLICY



A few days ago, the United States of America (USA) designated the most elite unit of the Iranian Army, ‘the Iranian Revolutionary Guard’ as a terrorist organization (recall that the USA imposed heavy sanctions on Iran that have devastated the economy of the State). In its report, the USA claims that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard were involved in financing and assisting terrorist organizations across the globe therefore, by implication impeding on the success of anti-terrorism campaigns. In retaliation, the Iranian Government designated the US Army as a terrorist organization. 

According to the media, this is the first time the USA would declare a sovereign nations army as a terrorist organization. I beg to differ. In my opinion, this is the first time two sovereign nations would declare their opposing Armies as “terrorist organizations”. Let us take a microcosmic analysis of the Foreign policy saga of the United States Vs the Islamic Republic of Iran with exacting focus on the USA.
Basically, the United States Government Foreign Policy evolves around their Military might and their claims to foster “democracy”. The United States Army and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard both have troops stationed in Iraq to restore order in the society and provide support to the government of the day. However, due to the faux nature of all United States interventions in sovereign nations till date, the underlying tone, hidden personal beneficial agenda and their inability to work with Iraqis great neighbor ‘Iran’ to bring about a desirable social change to the parties involved, the USA is trying to use its might to bully Iran out of any involvement in Iraq.

In 2001, the USA invaded Afghanistan post 9/11 and till this day, the war in Afghanistan is still on with no end in sight and a total destabilization of the state. The human toll? the financial toll? Unimaginable! 2003, USA and allied forces invaded Iraq under the guise of a Weapon of Mass Destruction (WMD) in the country. Till this day, no WMD has been unearth and no stability restored in the nation either. In 2011 the United States Army had a covert op in Pakistan that lead to the killing of the most wanted man in the world, Osama Bin Laden. As Laudable as that may be, due process was overridden (the Pakistani Government was never consulted and the operation can be deemed as an illicit act and a slap on the territorial integrity of Pakistan) and the spate of terrorism in the world blossomed nonetheless.

During the Arab spring of 2011, the USA invaded Libya and toppled Mummar Al Gaddafi. One of the great visionary African leader (a crusader for a one united Africa with a single currency) of both the 20th and 21st centuries was captured and killed on the streets of Libya in the most inhumane way ever. Today’s Libya are in a shambolic state of perplexing ruins eight years on and the fight in Libya getting bigger by the day. Last week, USA pulled out some of its troops in Tripoli and a few days after, forces loyal to Warlord Khalifa Haftar carried out airstrikes (see Aljazeera for videos of the fighting) at a Libyan airport in Tripoli. Yes, air strikes! Forces loyal to Warlord Khalifa Haftar are fighting a United Nations (UN) backed Libyan interim government and its forces. USA Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo and the UN have called for an end to the fighting. On the 9th of April 2019, Warlord Khalifa Haftar forces targeted another airport in Tripoli with air strikes. Is the USA playing Chess with people’s lives in Libya? Connect the dots. Without a doubt, that the Syrian President Bashir Al Assad is still in power today even after years of civil war in Syria is because of the support of Russia. Remember that a MOAB (Mother Of All Bombs) was dropped in Syria by the USA and just recently, the USA also claims to have completely annihilated ISIL (ISIS) in Syria.

From the foregoing, it can be noted that the intervention of the USA in sovereign nations under the guise of fostering world peace and democracy is Ludicrous to say the least. A big hoax! To paraphrase, power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely and world power corrupts inestimably.

In the words of Fela Anikulapo Kuti “hear another animal talk…They call the place United Nations, who and who unite for inside United Nations? One veto vote is equals to 96 or more! Wetin united for inside United Nations?” (from his “beast of no nation” song). Obviously, with the carnage in Syria, Libya, Yemen, Mali, DR Congo, Nigeria, Gaza Strip, Cameroon, India Vs Pakistan, North Korea Vs the rest of the World, North Korea US relations or lack, it is endless. The rhetoric of a United Nations (formally The League of Nations) to foster World Peace post World War II is a mere cosmetic work by Western nations to continually dominate other nations of the World.
Written by: Chisom John O

ogbonniachisom@yahoo.com

Tuesday 19 March 2019

IMAGINE LAGOS

IMAGINE LAGOS
By
Chiso John Ogbonnia
ogbonniachisom@yahoo.com




Imagine
Imagine waking up to utter negligence of a Zombie Apocalypse at your door step. Imagine the peace and quiet in your house, you step outside and it is a whole different level of chaos. Imagine the weather so hot like the sun is on patrol on the streets, the wind? Hidden. Imagine a commercial bus struggling to kick start, imagine the horror of watching same bus get hit by another from the rear and magically, the once ill-fated bus moves with aplomb! Imagine taking a walk to a ‘Bus Stop’, imagine the bus never stops and you jump in while it is in motion. Imagine the sound of footsteps giving hot chase to the bus you are in to issue a paper worth 100 Naira. Imagine looking to the other interchange in a bid to avoid the Driver Vs Tax Collector (Alaye) exchange only to witness Police brutality of citizens in their private vehicle. Imagine being distraught, alight from the commercial bus and board a bike (Okada) nearby. Imagine the look on your face when you expect the journey to your desired destination to kick start then, the bike rider (OkadaMan) beckons on an extra passenger to join you on the bike, disbelief! Imagine being told that driven alone is First Class and attracts ‘First Class Fees’. In your bemusement, imagine being called a brother by a passerby only to be told the most “it never happened” story ever about his dire need for financial assistance to complete the fare for a personal trip from Earth to Mars. Imagine seeing a convoy of Law Enforcers with goods and sellers locked in with the inscription “Environmental Sanitation Corps” on the vehicle. Imagine the joy on the faces of the Sanitation Corps Law Enforcers, not for a job well done but, for their own personal benefits attainable from victims of the law. Imagine a trip to the market and everyone signs up to be Amateur Anthony Joshuas. Imagine another trip to the market and it is ‘Akpororo’ season for traders and buyers. Imagine 20+ million people in the smallest state by size in Nigeria.
Done? Imagine LAGOS!

Monday 11 February 2019

DISENFRANCHISEMENT BY LOCATION: AN ANALYSIS OF INSTITUTIONS AND STRUCTURES

DISENFRANCHISEMENT BY LOCATION: AN ANALYSIS OF INSTITUTIONS AND STRUCTURES
By
Chisom, JOHN O.
ogbonniachisom@yahoo.com

In a few days, the most populous black Country in the world would head to the polls to decide the path of their future for the next four years and beyond.
Nigeria and Nigerians rewrote the history books during the 2015 general elections as a sitting President was ousted from Office for the first time in the history of the country’s fragile democracy. With a much more fragile democracy and weakened democratic institutions post 2015, the 2019 elections cannot be any more pertinent.
The most controversial decision of the 2015 general election was the Six weeks’ postponement of the General Elections by INEC (Independent National Electoral Commission) under the guise of ‘security reasons’. This decision flared up the polity and was considered by the then opposition party the APC (All Progressives Congress) to be a last ditch attempt by the Goodluck Jonathan Administration to manipulate the election, stretch the campaign finances of their party (APC) and submerge the will of the Nigerian people. As ‘politically motivated’ and controversial the decision of INEC may be at that time, painfully so, it was a step in the right direction as the issue of ‘disenfranchisement’ due to security challenges is a threat to a free, fair and credible election in itself and as such, should not be overlooked except of course one is disinterested in credible polls.  A lot of observers at that time were chasing shadows to the utter neglect of substance as regards the decision by INEC to postpone the Election. Many questions were raised and a lot answered by that sole decision: Was insecurity rife in the North East as at 2015? Yes; Would that insecurity mean that by implication voters would be disenfranchised in the said region? Yes; Were there genuine efforts by security agencies to tackle the situation? Yes; Did the security agencies gain positive grounds against insurgents in the specified weeks? Yes, former President HE Goodluck Ebele Jonathan visited a once regarded stronghold of the insurgents Bama himself; Did this Lead to voter confidence and increased participation in the North East? Absolutely YES.
Elections are key in any democratic setting and the ability for citizens to exercise their franchise unconstrained, a prerequisite for any election to be considered free, fair and credible. This work looks at how the actions and inactions of the security agencies in the State and INEC would inadvertently lead to disenfranchisement as a result of the location of electorates in the 2019 general election.
The security situation of the country is worrisome and cataclysmic to say the least. According to Amnesty International Report 2017/18: the state of the world’s human right “there remained at least 1.7 million Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in the North Eastern States of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa; 39% lived in camps or similar settings and 61% in host communities”. Also in an Amnesty International Nigeria Publication titled ‘Harvest of Death: Three years of Bloody clashes between farmers and Herders in Nigeria’, the total number of people killed from January 2016- October 2018 in the select States (22 States, FCT inclusive) affected by the Farmers Vs Herders Clashes alone was three thousand six hundred and fourty one (3641) persons “Benue 726 deaths, Adamawa 540, Plateau 492, Zamfara 489, Taraba 453, Kaduna 414, Nasarawa 196, Enugu 46…” among others.  The Boko Haram menace has intensified over the past year and a new deadlier faction ISWAP (Islamic State West Africa Province) has emerged in the decade long battle. In an article titled ‘Islamic State seeking next chapter, makes inroads into West Africa’ by Joe Parkinson and Drew Hinshaw published on the 3rd of February 2019 on Wall Street Journal it estimated that ISWAP has the Strength of About five thousand (5000) men and “seasoned fighters from Libya and the Middle East have returned to augment ISWAP ranks”.
From the foregoing, it can be noted that the security situation is bleak, the military is overstretched by the increasing guerrilla warfare across states in the North and with the recent reports of people fleeing the menace of armed bandits in Zamfara State to Katsina and to border countries (Chad and Niger) any talk of positives from the current situation have been dealt a heavy blow. Due to the debacle, disenfranchisement of citizens in the affected states would be rife as the fear for lives and properties would overwhelm the zeal to exercise ones’ franchise and therefore lead to political apathy on the one hand and the massive movement of people due to violence or the fear of it (typically plaguing Nigeria elections) on the other hand would contribute to a situation whereby eligible voters are unable to express themselves in the polls.
INEC (Independent National Electoral Commission) for all its ‘Laudable’ effort in some states have been unable to satisfactorily distribute PVCs (Permanent Voters Card) in others. This particular problem has continued to plague elections and become a reoccurring experience for electorates who admittedly would find it easier “crossing the Mediterranean Sea to Europe than getting their PVC”. The deplorable experience of some voters begs the questions: What Lessons did INEC learn from the 2015 exercise? What strategic plan was put in place to ameliorate the PVC distribution problems? How and at what level is the implementation of the said plan? A society that fails to plan lacks vision and mission (a chart Nigeria should rank top worldwide). While those questions are yet unanswered, the continuous postponement of the deadline day for PVC collection is an indicator of what line the answers would tilt towards regarding the questions. Geroge Edem described his attempts to collect his PVC in Lagos state as futile and frustrating. In his words “INEC do not have a permanent location just mere transit camps as they stay at private and public school premises and my PVC transfer request till this day has not be met.  My right to vote has been trampled on”. In another interview, Utazi John also expressed his displeasure with INEC, “I registered for PVC in June 2017 at Nsukka LGA of Enugu State. The day I went for collection of PVC I was given a contact to call. I called and the man directed that I submit my TVC for easy location of my PVC. Till this day I have not been able to get my PVC and TVC. I have been disenfranchised and my fundamental rights denied. No thanks to INEC”. On a more positive outlook, Mr Abubakar stated unequivocally that he did not face any challenges in the collection of his PVC he said “I registered at Tunga Maje, Abuja in 2011 and I did transfer of PVC to Bwari area of Abuja as at October 2018 and was able to successfully collect my PVC by January 2019”. It would be a big plus if INEC could adopt the processes for PVC collection that worked seamlessly in some states to others or adjust the PVC collection procedure to suit the circumstances of different states as they arise.
On the issue of PVC transfer, the publicity of the process is below par. Already existing voters can only cast their votes in their wards of registration and any desire to cast a vote elsewhere can only be possible after a PVC transfer is done. In the words of Albert Einstein “A clever person solves a problem, a wise person avoids it”. The issue of PVC transfer in particular is needless and should have been avoided in the first instance with a PVC that is not location bound thereby making it useable wherever one may find oneself.
No country in the world can boast of a 100% foolproof electoral process not even the United States of America (with recent accusations of Russia meddling in their election) therefore it would be unfair to demand a 100% foolproof electoral process from INEC and even worse, not to demand for the basics of freedom and ease to exercise ones’ right to vote.