Saturday 22 October 2016

HAPPY BIRTHDAY MY BELOVED SON❤❤❤

Your being my son was predestined! Your birth on that Special Saturday of October 22nd at exactly 4.30pm changed everything!  My world also changed and I sang a new song! You had every cause not to live, but because you were my Isaac God honoured His Word concerning you and here you are today!
As you celebrate your birthday today, I can only thank God for the man you have grown into; knowledgeable, intelligent, focused, caring, loving, God fearing and a PERFECT GENTLEMAN full of divine wisdom.
They call you Jachike(Give God the Praise), but I call you Chekwubechukwu(Put Your Trust in God).
Full Gospel Baby you are; Awkunanaw Chapter Enugu has not forgotten the Praise Night where I shared my testimony about you, St. Vincent Primary School, Enugu knew when you were there, Gencos International, Enugu  cannot forget you in a hurry, Command Children's School, Enugu never believed your father was not a Military Officer! What will I say about your short stay at St Augustine's Seminary, Ezzamgbo? God bless Rev. Fr. Ofuluozor and "Master" Victor for all their care!  You made the best result at the 2005/2006 Entrance Examination to the school! At Spring of Life International School, Enugu where you eventually finished your secondary education you are still  seen as a Great Brand and an Ambassador! At Enugu State University of Science and Technology  College of Medicine,  you are a Model, having been a Former "MR FECAMS" in the school.
You  are really a Champion! My ONE and ONLY that can stand an army! You mean the whole to me and I couldn't have asked God for a better SON!
You are Wonderfully and Fearfully Made.
I love ❤❤❤you with all my heart and will forever do.
May God continue to shower His blessings upon you and remain a hedge of protection 👐👐👐around you till the end of time.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY 🎂❤🎁👍🌟

Saturday 10 September 2016

DELE MOMODU JOINS THE LEAGUE OF "WAILLERS" AS HE WRITES "UNVEILING PRESIDENT BUHARI'S MINDSET"


Fellow Nigerians, I doubt if there is anyone who does not see and feel President Muhammadu Buhari is a complex character. As a matter of fact, that is the veritable hallmark of his persona and super brand. Those of us that supported him voluntarily, and almost blindly, last year did so out of our acute frustration with Project Nigeria.

There were those who hated his guts but still went ahead to vote for him because they expected him to wave the fabled magic wand and bring sanity and succour to our insane clime. What no one bargained for was the repercussion, and reverberation, of such venture and adventure. As always, Nigerians felt their situation could never be worse under Buhari than that of the 16-year rule of profligacy of the PDP and the squander-manic regime of President Goodluck Jonathan.

The APC operatives ran a blistering campaign with active collaboration and connivance from some of us. On the matter of the continuation of the Jonathan Presidency, there was no negotiation. Even now as people pummel us over the seeming inertia or retrogression of the Buhari government, I still stand by my decision to support Major General Muhammadu Buhari, warts and all. Walahi, I would have loved any of the combinations of Donald Duke, Nasir El Rufai, Rotimi Amaechi, Aminu Tambuwal, Mobola Johnson, Babatunde Raji Fashola, Nuhu Ribadu, Oby Ezekwesili, Charles Soludo, Akinwunmi Adesina, Pat Utomi, Kayode Fayemi, and some of our other tested and brightest young stars.

They may have their personal foibles like all mortals do but I’m persuaded that Nigeria would have joined the comity of other nations parading some youthful cerebral leaders by now. But the ways of Nigerian politicians are not the ways of mere mortals. We have our unique and peculiar methods of doing things. Our incorrigibility is almost second to none. Everything about us is about self and self alone. Everyone’s permutation is about who is his friend, school mate, church member, Muslim brother, godfather or godson, village folk, and so on. It is not about what you know but more about who you know. Nepotism is the order of the day!

That is why the best of the myriad of Nigerian brains would never be able to win elections at certain levels because of our irredeemable obsession with primordial and parochial sentiments. The import of my preamble is that Buhari was a product of our maddening and inordinate search for a near saint amongst us and he perfectly fitted the bill. Buhari himself must have assumed that the votes given to him were signed off carte-blanche and in blind trust. I’m sure he never expected that the honeymoon would not be an endless romance.

But things and times have changed. It is now sour grapes time. Except for profiteers and/or pretenders who would not tell our President the gospel truth, things are falling apart. The reasons are not because of what Buhari and company are doing wrong but because of what they are not doing right which I hope to enumerate and dissect.

I had chosen to write on this topic before I received the message quoted below from a young, concerned Nigerian reflecting on the “new” rebranding that we have been subjected to. His views mirror the present mood of the nation and the restiveness of our people especially the young ones who fought gallantly for Change and PMB!

“President Buhari, with all due respect to your high office, you are losing me. What’s wrong? What’s wrong with your advisers? Who got you to sign up to the cliché called “Change Begins With Me” and to throw the weight of your office behind it? Did they put together a crack team of psychologists, communicators, sociologists, political scientists, etc? I refuse to believe that this programme, and especially the name, is the product of deep thinking and reflection.

First, the idea that “Change Begins With Me”, renders all our efforts to get you elected in 2015 worthless. Heck, why did we bother? If it’s going to start with us Lilliputs, we might as well have left Goodluck Jonathan in office and allow him and his band of hopeless cohorts to get on with the good job they were doing of raping Nigeria. Don’t you get it? Change began with you! We, the people, already implemented the biggest change possible with turning around this country by electing you on the mantra of change. So why are you now passing the buck? The buck is on your desk. Make the change happen and we will follow from there. It’s over a year and many, sadly, are already suffering buyer’s remorse. Arrest the trend!

Secondly, what change can any single individual put into action that will impact the culture and behaviour of 180m people in double quick time? We are in a hurry, Mr. President. So much has been lost. So to rely on Adeola, Abubakar or Opara to start the change and hope that we will be counting gains in months is delusional. You don’t have all the time. We do not have the time. Start the Change!” – Chris Adetayo
Let me reiterate that I have had the privilege of meeting and interacting with some members of the Buhari administration.

I can confirm that I have held discussions and communicated the feelings of both the rich and poor on the streets directly to them. However, I am not sure that they are in tune with the reality of things on this side of the divide. I believe I have sufficient knowledge of the political history of Nigeria. I’m afraid to say, I see the same symptoms of afflictions that ravaged previous governments and rendered them incapacitated. I’m saddened that no lessons seemed to have been learnt from our beleaguered past. Government appears to believe only in its own mind-set and every complaint or suggestion is summed up in some dangerous conclusions: the wailing wailers; corruption is fighting back; the suffering of Nigerians is exaggerated, etc.

Equally worrisome is the apparent paranoia that has crept into our senior government officials. Every commentator or demonstrator is perceived an enemy of government. I was surprised to read how my childhood friend and brother, Femi Adesina, singled me out in his article yesterday and accused me of insinuating that he was too comfortable in Aso Rock. There are so many occupants in Aso Rock and I know the limits of Femi’s influence on the men of power. I can never blame him for what I clearly know is beyond him. He faces the same dilemma of his predecessors who found themselves defending the indefensible in order to exhibit their hard work, competence and loyalty. It is a delicate and thankless job that leads oftentimes to Golgotha. I love Femi so much that I would rather offer him my sincere prayers instead of hanging him.

Let me go to the next case at hand. I could not believe the shabby treatment meted to Mrs Oby Ezekwesili and other members of the Bring Back Our Girls agitators. Their harmless and defenceless group is being harassed for merely exercising their constitutionally guaranteed rights of expression, association and movement. They constitute no danger whatsoever to society. Even if President Buhari won’t receive or entertain them, a senior member of the Federal Government should have been assigned to meet, pacify and reassure them.

Something is terminally wrong with our crisis management capabilities. Our proclivity for mismanaging and escalating troubles is legendary. This particular case is as disgraceful as it is unnecessary. Once upon a time, in the not too distant past, these were the friends of Buhari. They had pinned their hope on the muscular and military abilities of our President to liberate the Chibok girls in a jiffy. If things were proving difficult as it seems, constant dialogue is the only way out of the debacle.

But the handlers of Buhari prefer to fuel the long held belief or myth that Buhari is a mean and ruthless man. This is not good. It also comes at the wrong time. This administration has been accused of several human rights abuses and, according to the Minster of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, the President is heading for the United Nations on Tuesday to make the case that his administration is not guilty of such allegations. Intolerance for the rights of expression, association and movement cannot be a good way of making out such a case.

Anyone who has met President Buhari would readily attest to his simplicity and humility. His witty jokes are remarkable and legendary, just like his hearty smiles and laughter are infectious. He certainly means well for Nigeria and wants to rid our nation of the debilitating cankerworm of corruption and indiscipline. Why, therefore, would anyone want to remind Nigerians that the Buhari in uniform is not different from Buhari, the born again democrat. Why are they compounding Buhari’s image of an irascible dictator? Buhari needs to make a conscious effort to tear the toga of vindictiveness and irritability that appears to surround him. The biggest image deficit he has today is due to the fact that his biggest pet project, the war against corruption, is believed to be largely uncoordinated and too staccato in outlook.

It is difficult to ignore the cries of so many Nigerians who feel let down by a government that promised so much change but seems to have short-changed the people who saw Buhari as a liberator. Even if some of the most vociferous complainants are being cheeky and outright mischievous, many are doing so out of genuine concern. They do not want Buhari to fail. It is someone who loves you unconditionally that can do this. They are worried that the President behaves like a man who feels he has all the time in the world when in reality he has none. Some believe that he started fading and failing when he took his time in selecting his ministers and advisers. The intractable squabbles in his Party has also contributed to the lacklustre nature of his government. APC does not look or act like a Party in power. There seems to be no serious input from the Party to the affairs of government and governance.

The government has been wobbling and fumbling by doing the same things PDP used to do that led to the disintegration of the biggest political party in Africa, according to their self-glorification. The war of attrition in PDP has been passed on to APC. A house divided against itself is inviting extermination. And whenever politicians fight dirty it affects governance adversely.

The economy is in shambles and the commonest justification is that Jonathan’s gang looted the treasury. All that is well and good. But Nigerians knew this and therefore voted for Change! We promised to make things much better. Fighting corruption alone would not save Nigeria. We must fight endemic poverty. If Alhaji Lai Muhammed likes, let him launch a million campaigns and waste more scarce resources on doing a rehash of what past governments did that led nowhere. The Yoruba have a way of describing this kind of unproductive sermonisation: “Eni ebi npa ko gbo iwaasu!” (A hungry man does not listen to sermons in the church).

What the people want to see are the following: a drastic reduction in the size and budget of our over-bloated governments; a sustained war against poverty; protection of lives and properties; creating a less rancorous atmosphere for businesses to thrive; special concessions and incentives to employers of labour; a stable currency; upgrading our educational system and making the schools’ curriculum more relevant to our communities and society in general; provision of social infrastructure, particularly power, good roads, hospitals and potable water; and so on.

The mind-set of gloating over the fall of some former members of the privileged class is counter-productive. We must be careful of the image portrayed to foreign investors. Let government concentrate urgently on alleviating the suffering of the people. It is obvious that government may never be able to collect enough money back from the brigands and looters to make appreciable impact on our national treasury. We should stop building our castle in the air and start thinking outside the box.

Wednesday 24 August 2016

MY FATHER 'S MEMORIES! 32 YEARS ALREADY!

Your era ended in the early hours of 24th August 1984 after 57years on earth.  You struggled to live, but your illness was intense and God called you home. You left without a word to our mother on the way forward. As a visionary and focused wife, she took over from where you stopped and never allowed us to suffer or lack anything good.  She completed                                
the house you were building that led to your untimely death, saw us through school and made sure there was food on our table.
Your dream for your "five girls" and two boys which  was access to quality education eventually came true as you now have five very educated women as daughters with your second daughter, Uche, a successful Lawyer that also has her first son and your second grandchild, Ikenna as a Lawyer. It might also interest you to know that you have seventeen grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Is your back not better, Papa? You had little education, having stopped at Standard 3, but you were very exposed and knew the value of quality education. Thank you so much for all that you invested in us. We can never thank you enough. God bless your soul!
How can I talk about my personal relationship with you, my Super Hero father? Where do I even start? I will just start from somewhere because as a great Historian that you were you taught me so much that that time will not permit me to put down here. My childhood story will be incomplete without mentioning of your constantly reminding me of how I kept staying outside the house whenever I was sick which was on a regular basis waiting for you to come back just to carry me into the house and give me my drugs. How can I forget the story of how Ibagwa-Nkwo where we were living at the time fell to the Nigerian side during the Biafran war and you lost everything because I was sick and was taken to the hospital? What about how your brother,  Sir Augustine Mgbemena also of blessed memory drove down to Ibagwa from Ifite-Ukpo where he was the Principal of St Mary's High School to evacuate my sisters to Ifite-Ukpo since I did not have a brother at the time? What about how you changed my name from Nwakaego which was given to me at birth in your absence to Ngozichukwuka because of your unshakable faith in God and what He can do? Wow! I can go on and on without really getting tired of talking about you because you were simply an AMAZING FATHER! I am very proud of YOU, my father like no other!
Did I forget to say that you trusted me to a fault? I am very happy I did not disappoint you, after all!  You never doubted me for one day to the extent that you gave me so much freedom to express myself and explore my world. You allowed me to travel to Port Harcourt to visit my friend without minding that I had not been there before because you knew I was going to come back just the I told you I would come back. What about my choice of studying Mass Communication against all odds? You trusted me enough to allow me take my destiny into my hands and study Mass Communication which very educated relation of yours told you I should not study because "Women Journalists" do not get married. You never believed him,  rather you prayed for me and wished me well. Great of you Dad! Ironically, two years into my study period, your death came like a thunder bolt! You know what? With my feeble hands, I wrote your OBITUARY announcement to show them that I did not waste the money you paid for me as school fees before your death. I am happy to let you know that I now have a Masters Degree in Communication,  now in the last part of my Doctorate Degree programme also in Communication and Professional Diploma in Education. What more can I say to an AMAZING father, caring husband and a generous brother to his siblings? Thank You! Thank You!! And Thank You My Super Hero Father! God bless your soul! Continue to rest in the the bossom of the Lord where you have been these past 32 long years. With much love from your third girl and third child, NGOZICHUKWU❤❤❤❤❤

Sunday 31 July 2016

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT MERGES POLYTECHNICS AND UNIVERSITIES, SCRAPS HND!

THE Federal Executive Council (FEC) yesterday approved a comprehensive reform of Nigeria's tertiary education system, scrapping the award of the Higher National Diploma (HND) by the nation's polytechnics.

In effect, the award of the HND will be limited to only the students currently admitted for the programmes.

Also, all the programmes currently being run by the polytechnics, which are not technology-based, and which are about 70 per cent,

will be scrapped.

Under the new rule, the polytechnics will now become campuses of the proximate universities with the Vice Chancellors of those

universities appointing provosts for the polytechnics, subject to the ratification of the Universities Councils.

The polytechnics will now be limited to award of the National Diploma (ND) while those desirous of further education will be awarded

the Bachelor of Technology (B. Tech) by the proximate university.

To kick-start the new policy, the nation's two most prominent polytechnics - Yaba College of Technology and Kaduna Polytechnic -

will henceforth be known as City University of Technology, Yaba and City University of Technology, Kaduna.

And to give legal teeth to these approvals, the FEC approved the submission of two Executive bills to the National Assembly for enactment into law.

With education being on the concurrent list, the states may wish to consolidate their tertiary institutions. But if they do not wish to follow the federal example, their programmes will continue to be regulated by the relevant agencies of the Federal Ministry of Education.

The first bill will concretise the setting up of the two city universities while the second will approve the preparation and consolidation

of all federal polytechnics and colleges of education as campuses of proximate universities.

The Ministry of Justice will do the preparation and submission of the two bills to the National Assembly.

Minister of Education, Mall. Adamu, told journalists after the weekly meeting of the council that under the reform measures, his ministry would, however, continue to licence private polytechnics and colleges of education for the award of qualification at ND and National Certificate in Education (NCE) levels.

She said: "There will be no more award of HND.

After we have exhausted the current students under the programme, there will be no more award of HND. This means that there will be no fresh admission for HND programmes. And in addition, any programme that is not technical will be out of the polytechnics. About 70 per cent of polytechnic graduates are in the non-technical courses. It is going to be a rigorous implementation programme."

A ministerial committee to ensure the smooth implementation of all that is required for the take-off of the reform initiatives is to begin work immediately.

Mall. Adamu said: "The HND certificate will remain a legal tender in Nigeria and holders of such certificate will continue to be recognised as the equivalent of first degree holders without discriminatory remunerations and limit to progression in the work place.

The NCE certificate will be retained as the minimum teaching qualification at the basic level of education. Any higher qualifications by

these private or state-owned polytechnics will be only affiliation with a university. So, HND is no longer in existence, but existing HND will be respected and considered legal tender."

The council also approved the Federal Government's formal take-over of the Waziri Umaru Polytechnic, Birnin Kebbi, which will be the College of Technology campus of the Othman Dan Fodio University, Sokoto, as well as the Hussein Adamu Polytechnic, Kazaure,

Bauchi, which will be a College of Technology of the proximate university in the state.

Also, the Alvan Ikoku College of Education, Owerri, Imo State, has been taken over as a campus of the Federal University of

Technology, Owerri.

A state that had never had any federal institution, like Bayelsa, is to have a College of Technology as a campus of the College of Technology of the University of Port Harcourt.

Sunday 17 July 2016

DR ONYEDIKA MADUEKE'S WEDDING ON 9TH JULY 2016.

Happy Wedlock to my personal Physician, my kid brother, my bestie, a humble and well-trained Doctor of the University of Nigeria, Nuskka, the family's latest couple Dr Onyedika Madueke and his beautiful wife Oluchi. May God bless your marriage with all blessings of a good marriage. My love for you is Endless ❤❤❤. 9th July 2016 will be Evergreen in your hearts.  Congratulations

Sunday 3 July 2016

ONE MONTH IN MIND(MONTH'S MIND)

Today 3rd July 2016 marks one month of our saying goodbye to someone that meant the whole world to us; the Mgbemena family of Ozara-Akukwa Umuchu in Aguata Local Government Area of Anambra State, South East, Nigeria.
It had been a month of sober reflection, a month of stock-taking, a month of total surrender to God's perfect will in our corporate and individual lives.
When the death of quintessential Chuks Peter Mgbemena came like a thunder bolt on 1st April 2016 we never knew we could get over the shock in three months, but here we are today by the special grace of God, the God he so much believed in.
In his memory,  I decided to put down this tribute.
Work! Work!! Work!!! Work!!!!
We all need a break after working very hard.
You worked so hard that your people will live and forgot your own life.
You were there for everybody at all times.
You never knew boundaries.
You sacrificed for everybody because your heart was as tall as your being.
They called you OGBUOTURUGO, but each time I called, I would greet you with the title I personally gave you "OCHILI OZUA" This means taking care of many people at the same time. You were always surrounded by people who wanted you to add value to their lives and you never never ever disappointed them.
Any family event that you did not attend made our house look like others never lived there.
You have just created a vacuum that no one can fill.
Who can take your place?
Who will call me;
Nwanyi Eke?
Nwanyi Enugu?
Nwanyi Wawa?
THERE CAN NEVER BE ANOTHER PETER CHUKS MGBEMENA!
ADIEU OGBUOTURUGO!
ADIEU OCHILI OZUA!
This Month's Mind will not be complete without my special thanks to "my people" and friends Madu Onuorah and Maxim Uzoatu, the men behind the mask for putting up that wonderful  collection of Committee of Friends for OGBUOTURUGO within so short a time. You are simply my personal persons and incredible guys. I love you duo. May you never lack help in your moments of need. To the other members of the committee, I owe you so much and may God forever bless you all for not deserting your friend.
To everyone that identified with us, I say, thank you.
And to the Mgbemena family, I prophesy that God will raise Seven (7) Peter Mgbemenas for us in Jesus name.

Sunday 26 June 2016

EKE STANDS STILL FOR FOR DR ONYEAMA AND MR OKECHUKWU

It is no longer news that Eke, the home town of Chief Onyeama, Okwuluoha of Aghaje was the very first place Christianity and Education came before spreading to other parts of Agbaje and their neighbours including Enugu the state capital. Chief Onyeama was not education, but knew when he saw a good one and that was why he rejected  the Church Missionary Society(CMS) and their education and accepted the Catholic Church in 1910. This accounted for the  Centenary celebration of the Catholic Diocese of Enugu in 2010. The benefits of this valued education are enjoyed by Eke Community in Udi Local Government of Nigeria till date.
June 24th & 25th 2016 will remain indelible in the heart of every Eke indegene; man, woman, children and youth as the day they stood to count their blessings. An emerging group known as "Eke Progressive Forum"(EPF) a collection of elites and business giants both at home and diaspora  took the community by storm and organized an extra-ordinary dinner and public reception for two of their own Dr Jideofor Geoffrey Onyeama(accomplished International Lawyer) and Mr Osita Augustine Okechukwu(accomplished Politician) in thanksgiving to God on their elevation as Minister of Foreign Affairs and Director General Voice of Nigeria respectively. Dr Onyeama,  son of World Court Judge Dadi Onyeama was actually born with silver spoon, but not disconnected to the community even after spending more than forty years of his life outside the shores of the country. I call him "a home boy." Mr Okechukwu was not born with silver spoon, but walked his way to the top through hardwork and perseverance. He had lived here in Nigeria all through his life and had seen it rough and tough without disconnecting to his people. He had been in Nigeria's political landscape since he left the university decades ago and I choose to call him "a grassroot man." He is very popular among his people.
Gracing the two days event without sending representatives is something I record for them as great virtue of humility and having regard for their "envy of all"community, Eke. That the events were well attended is an understatement, having pulled the the state Governor Rt. Hon. Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi, former Vice President of Nigeria Dr Alex Ekwueme and his wife, former Senate President Dr Ken Nnamani, Prof. Osita Ogbu of University of Nigeria who delivered the keynote address among others.
The Chairman of the Forum, Prof. Bartho Okolo described the group as a non-political, non-partisan association of genuine Eke men and women who have come together for the advancement of socio-economic, educational development and empowerment in line with the founding fathers of the community.

Sunday 12 June 2016

AS DELE MOMODU CRIES "BEFORE THEY MISLEAD PRESIDENT BUHARI, MY QUESTION IS "WHO IS MISLEADING PRESIDENT BUHARI?

Fellow Nigerians, let me say categorically and emphatically that our dear beloved country is dangerously haemorrhaging again and this perfidious drift must be halted urgently before we all end up in perdition. Anyone telling President Muhammadu Buhari that all is well or that his government is moving in the right direction is either lying or pretending like a rattlesnake. And there are many scorpions around ready to mislead every government and move on effortlessly when things fall apart. For sure President Buhari possesses the ability to move this country in the right direction and lead us to where we want to be but right now it is not happening and the soul of the people palpitates! I’ve been on several television and radio interviews in the past one week and the commonest question is on the performance of our President. The general perception is that the change mantra seems not to be working and the world is worried because of the importance of Nigeria in the comity of nations.

I hope our President will get to see this piece, read it and ruminate on the points I will raise. The Buhari government has lost a substantial equity in just one year as I will try to explain in the next few paragraphs. It must be noted that Nigerians were happy with the election that ushered in President Buhari. Even those who did not vote for him accepted him with unusual equanimity. Those we expected to fight and throw tantrums simply vamoosed into their bunkers. The expectations were high then but I doubt if enough effort was put into seizing the momentum and translating it into a mass movement that would have stood the test of time. It is not too late to reclaim the moment.

The faith Nigerians had in the abilities and incorruptibility of Buhari is mighty enough to move mountains. But unfortunately, I think the government took many things for granted once it took over the reins of power. The government mistakenly believed that the support of the people was like several blank cheques which it could cash at any point in time. The general impatience of Nigerians and their desire for progressive action were never put into consideration. I remember writing two memos to our President in quick successions, when I realised that Nigerians were getting restless and restive, one of which was the desperate memo that earned me an invitation to the Presidential Villa for which I am so honoured and proud.

Still the government did not respond appropriately to the yearnings of the populace. The major problem is that the priorities of Buhari were never palpable to the general public as everything seemed to operate in utmost secrecy. This is probably a relic of the military days when surprise and spontaneity achieved more.  However, democracy is an open book and it has become even more so since the internet turned the world into a global information minefield. I’m sure it was assumed that the people would never doubt or query the sincerity of a messiah. So there was no need to provide any real information about the activities of government. That was the first fallacy.

The second fallacy is that people would give the President plenty of time to unfold his change agenda. One year on, it is obvious that this has not been the case. President Buhari should have moved faster once the people started grumbling about the apparent sluggishness of his administration. The selection of his cabinet was annoyingly slow and by the time it eventually came it had evaporated into a deja vu. There was no element of surprise to elicit major excitement. In fact, most people wondered why it took so long to assemble his present team most of whom he could have picked in two weeks or even before he was sworn in. The demystification of Buhari became manifest from that moment not because the team he picked is not worthy or creditable but because the interminable delay in making the choices cost the nation dearly.

The next problem was that the President should have moved to unite and unify the country immediately. It was clear that the previous administrations had riven great division into the Nigerian polity. A new beginning seeking to heal the ulcerous, cancerous wounds of religious and ethnic disunity and disaffection was required. However, starting with a war of attrition, it was obvious our President would soon have his hands full. Not that some of the wars were unnecessary but the timing and methodology should have been meticulously weighed and analysed before launching into the requisite offensive. There was a lot to learn from our nascent democracy. It would have been easier to embark on some of these wars as a military ruler that the President formerly was but not as a civilian leader which the President now is. That realisation appears to have been missed by some of our President Buhari’s advisers.

For example, while the war against corruption was desperately urgent, it ought to have been known that it was intricately and delicately tied to the economy. The need to recover the looted funds as quickly as possible and use them to reinvigorate the economy needed to be balanced by the need to do so expeditiously and tactfully so that the main objective would be fulfilled. My humble opinion and advice would have been to use the carrot and stick method rather than the kill and go style that has now exposed our economy to grave danger and imminent collapse. The angry mob of Nigerians goading on our President has blatantly refused to assimilate the magnitude of the resultant repercussions. But it should be noted that those who feel frustrated about a rotten system can never be bothered if the entire structure collapses. It is such acute disillusionment that gave rise to the ascendancy of a Donald Trump in America. It is the duty and responsibility of leadership to wear its thinking cap well and rise above the giddiness of the baying crowd who have nothing to lose and only wish to see the spectacle of blood flowing without any degree of humanity or compassion for the impoverished masses that they claim to represent. The same people who hailed Buhari yesterday are the ones denigrating him today.

Once it was impossible to generalise the war against corruption to engulf all politicians tainted with corruption no matter their affiliation the government should have requested for a blanket return of government booty via negotiation with all public office holders. Those who failed to take up this generous offer of recovery could then be visited with the might and power of retributive justice. An example of when this great opportunity was missed was when government unreasonably told Nigerians they could no longer pay foreign currencies in cash into their accounts. Perhaps government in its naivety did not remember that politicians had prosecuted the last election through the almighty dollar because it reduced the bulkiness of gratifications. Government should have patiently waited for the dollars to come in, whether in cash or not, before pouncing on the owners. Once that opportunity was missed, the next was to discreetly stretch its tentacles across the world in search of thieves and money launderers. Assets at home and abroad should have been quietly traced for possible confiscation. This could have been done without all the present grandstanding and hullabaloo. When you hear the elephant stomping the ground behind you in a one directional manner, you know it is time to run and hide. In this period when we are celebrating the life and times of Mohammed Ali perhaps it is poignant to say that you do not telegraph your punches rather you “rope a dope”!

Also, the moment our President chose a military style of operation he should have known that corruption would fight back with ferocity and velocity. For example, once it seemed the former President, Dr Goodluck Jonathan had been marked for humiliation even demolition, I knew our President was playing with the tiger’s tail and I sounded my note of warning. Before we could say Jack Robinson, the Niger Delta avengers returned with a vengeance and brought us back to our knees. Today our oil production has plunged to an all-time low even when we had been grappling with the nightmare of low crude oil prices. The Niger Delta Avengers army seems ready to make Boko Haram look like child’s play as they strangulate the economy, degrade the environment and decimate the local population that they claim to be fighting for. Is this what we need to add to our plethora of problems at this time? The answer is a big NO.

The militarisation of Nigeria has become very suffocating. Shiites are being killed in droves in the North West. Mass graves have been identified and uncovered. The Biafra agitators are being massacred in broad-day light and its leaders detained indefinitely. Boko Haram remains a monumental menace to society despite the extra-ordinary efforts of our military and Intelligence agencies. The Fulani and or Libyan herdsmen have added to the conundrum out of the blues. Different militant groups are now armed to the teeth. Trust me these guys don’t look like they are joking.  Nobody fights on as many fronts as this government now seems to be fighting without risking it all.

Many have argued that Nigeria should be restructured. It is believed that its present configuration is too artificial. Most of the States are no longer viable while some fringe or full-blown eccentrics are asking for more. It is interesting that in the build up to independence our leaders from the North, Southwest and East were saying the same thing in different words.  Nigeria is peopled by diverse nationalities and any nation must recognise this diversity and give it voice and room to flourish.  A continuous denial of this fact can only lead to self-destruction. One of our erstwhile leaders in his wisdom foisted unitary system on us when we had successfully thrived under true federalism. That was a mark of courage notwithstanding that it was a totally flawed decision. Our President must find a similar kind of courage to find and examine all the previous recommendations made during different and various constitutional conferences and implement the universal clamour for true federalism. There is nothing new under the sun, as they say, our President already has a rich reservoir of knowledge deposited in some government archives to reach the best decision and modality that will achieve this end.  My simple solution, Nigeria must return to and embrace and practise true Federalism. Not doing so is like pushing our luck too far and postponing doomsday.

What is of utmost importance in calling for a political configuration that will meet the yearnings of our people is the state of the economy. My submission is that the economy will never recover in an atmosphere of tension, uncertainty and panic. The Federal Government needs to tone down the negative rhetoric about our country. That unfortunate moniker of a corrupt nation that has been hung round our necks is dragging us down and denying Nigeria the investment in its future that it requires. Our President must make it clear that he is not the only saint in Nigeria but that the majority of Nigerians are saints and he is the leader who epitomises that. This is why he was chosen by the majority of good and well-meaning Nigerians who want someone that would demonstrate to the world that the generality of Nigerians are decent, hardworking and honest and that it is a small minority of Nigerians that are crooks. We must begin to walk away from our ugly past and work assiduously for a beautiful future.

Every nation has lived through its terrible moments but none ever cuddled the past forever as we now seem to be doing. Nigeria is richly blessed with human and natural resources. There is always a new dawn tomorrow and we must get ready for it, embrace it and by so doing seize the initiative. There would always be criminals in every society but we must never allow them to steal our future or still dominate our narrative when we have so many great men and women we can be proud of. Fortunately, we have a President that stands head and shoulders above all else and he clearly leads the way.  He must now show it by moving at the fast pace that his country desires, nay demands!

SIN AND FORGIVENESS

For forgiveness to take place::: First acknowledge your sin. It's after acknowledgement of your sin that you  will be forgiven. A man in the family can be a great sinner while a woman in the family can also be a great sinner. The good news is that God forgives everyone no matter the load of sin that he or she carries.
Closing up or covering our sins is a major problem in our lives.
The sin of weakness can eventually turn into a sin of wickedness.
Reputation is very important, but we have to be careful that in our bid to keep our reputation we get into more trouble. Don't be too hard on yourself that you end up making life difficult for yourself and miserable for people around you.
Don't give people the opportunity to destroy your name by the way you conduct yourself and your activities.
Don't think that you are a strong or hard man because every man gets weak at one time or the other.
The power of the Sacrament of Penance or Reconciliation cannot be replaced by other powers. You therefore need to confess your sins regularly.
We cannot avoid sin on our own. We cannot achieve holiness on our own. It is only the mercy and grace of God that can see us through and make good christians. Above all, learn to forgive yourself so that you can find a place in your heart to forgive others. HAPPY FORGIVENESS SUNDAY! ❤❤❤

Friday 3 June 2016

THE OTHER SIDES OF OGBUOTURUGO

THE ENTERTAINER! THE BIG BROTHER!! THE TRUE FRIEND!!! YOUR EXTRA ORDINARY HEIGHT WAS AN ASSET YOU. THOSE DAYS AT 11 OREMIJI STREET IKEJA, THAT YOU USED YOUR  LEG TO PUT ON THE TURN-TABLE TO ENJOY UR MUSIC WHILE READING AND AUNTIE AZUKA WILL JOKINGLY SAY "NGOZI, NEENU IHE OGOLOGO BEE UNU NA EME" AND WE WOULD ALL LAUGH OVER IT WAS QUITE FUN,  ENTERTAINING AND
AMAZING.😎😃
TAKING ME TO YOUR CENTRAL BANK OFFICE THEN IN LAGOS AGAINST ALL ODDS JUST TO SHOW ME WHAT YOUR OFFICE LOOKED LIKE, WAS TO SAY THE LEAST GOING OUT OF THE ORDINARY TO SHOW HOW MANLY AND PROTECTIVE YOU COULD BE AS A BIG BROTHER 👫👫. I CAN'T FORGET HOW YOU HELD MY HAND THAT DAY LIKE THAT OF A LITTLE BABY.
YOUR FRIENDLY DISPOSITION,  TRUST AND CONFIDENCE IN PEOPLE MADE IT POSSIBLE FOR YOU TO TAKE ME TO YOUR WIFE'S SCHOOL,  COLLEGE OF EDUCATION, IJANIKI, LAGOS STATE JUST TO GET MY APPROVAL OF THE GIRL YOU WANTED TO MARRY WITHOUT MINDING MY AGE AND SIZE❤💛

Monday 11 April 2016

MY OCHENDO ON MOTHERS'S DAY

My mother is Catherine Lebechi Mgbemena born Diana Lebechi Iloka by Jonathan and Jemima Iloka of Umuezenwegbu, Umueleke Village, Achina, Aguata Local Government Area of Anambra State. She got married to my father at the age of 13(don't get it twisted please). She was taken to the house of her married Uncle Mr Daniel Iloka who lived in Jos to be be trained by his wife to wait for her maturity period. She came out four years later and was wedded by my handsome Dad, Vin Obi Mgbemena of blessed memory. Madam Cardinal or Ochendo Nwanyi as she is popularly known is blessed with Seven Children, 5girls and 2boys who are celebrating her in this year's Mothers's Day. We love u Mama Ifeanyi! Mama Basil! Mama Tobias! Happy Mothers's Day! 💋❤💙💚💛💜👍👍👍

Sunday 24 January 2016

SEE WHY OKOJIE SAYS THAT APC'S CHANGE IS CAUSING MISERY


The Archbishop Emeritus of the Catholic
Archdiocese of Lagos, Cardinal Anthony Olubunmi
Okogies, has asked President Muhammadu Buhari
to urgently retool, refocus and aggressively lead
by example on all fronts or risk plunging Nigeria
into a state of despondency.
In a statement released by the Director of Social
Communications of the Diocese, Monsignor Gabriel
Osu, Okogie accused the president of waging a
shoddy corruption war and acting disdainfully
towards the judicial authorities while millions of
Nigerians were left to face unimaginable social
problems.
“He must retool, refocus and aggressively face the
social, economic (fiscal and monetary) problems
we have head on, without letting the anti
corruption drive look like a political distraction,”
the cardinal noted. Expressing disenchantment
with the president’s style, Okogie said: “A snail
paced and disordered methodology in governance,
his apparent disdain for judicial authority and
decisions, a lost today found tomorrow 2016
budget debacle, and a rather rudderless and
confused Central Bank with an unclear monetary
policy strategy (inevitably increasing the economic
uncertainties being faced by Nigerians), have set
alarm bells ringing in my mind and in the minds
of many discerning Nigerians.
“Indeed, his perceived discordant relationship
with the leadership of the Legislature has many
naysayers chuckling and remarking that President
Buhari’s government is heading rather naturally,
into his comfort zone – a one man show.”
Okogie also noted that a lot of Nigerians are
beginning to feel that Buhari is fast transforming
this nation into a police state where Mr.
President, the EFCC and DSS rule the day.
His words: “What they say is given lurid
headlines in the media, and it seems to all that
some of the defendants/accused persons are being
tried in the press with information conveniently
slipping into the hands of the press, presumably
from the security agencies, even before such
people have been charged to court.” He also
frowned on the President’s refusal to heed court
pronouncements regarding the bail granted to the
Director of Radio Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu and former
National Security Adviser, Col. Sambo Dasuki.
He said: “The Pro-Biafran activist, Nnmadi Kanu
and the erstwhile NSA Sambo Dasuki were
granted bail by the courts but such bails were
disregarded by the security agents under Buhari’s
watch. Unfortunately, democracy is difficult and
this government must realise that democracy
pervasively coloured with impunity, arbitrariness
and high handedness, cannot be used to fight and
correct the financial impunity and reckless
abandon of the previous administration, even if it
is more difficult to do so, the rule of law must be
obeyed and be the order of the day.
“If Buhari wants to leave a creditable legacy come
2019 he should retool the bureaucracy. For
instance, the roof of the Central Bank is leaking
water.
Governors, who arm-twisted Okonjo Iweala into
signing out our reserves held by Central Bank, are
today ministers in the APC government. We are
still talking about change and corruption when old
things refuse to pass away! These political
gimmicks can only carry away gullible or naive
Nigerians. President Buhari should beam his flash
light on policies and programmes that will lift up
the Masses. “Existing industries are almost dead
and call for urgent revitalization.
The budget ought to aid solutions to the mass
unemployment, Rural-Urban migration,
skewedness in the distribution of income, abject
rural poverty and industrialization of rural
economy.
The 774 local government capitals should be
linked to their state capitals. Even the mind
boggling infrastructure deficits can take the
entire tenure to address.
The weakness in the bureaucracy has not been
addressed. Consequently, the problem the APC
government is trying to solve is bound to re-occur
because it is treatment of effect rather than the
cause. Causative factors are being totally ignored
or glossedover. Institutional weakness pervades
the MDAs, offices of the Accountant General,
Auditor General and the Central Bank itself.” He
observed that leakages in the economy had
remained unnoticed and unplugged over the last
16 years of uninterrupted democracy.
“Our Change must change something. How could
we continue to talk of change in a static system?
How could we be talking of change when the
same crew are governors, ministers, senators, and
members of the House of Representatives?
This is a cyclical devolution of power to the same
people who are never out of power! “What sort of
change is the President talking about? When will
the youth take over when even a governor does
not take a bow and go? When shall we plan for
the replacement of delinquent leadership? This is
what constitutes change.
Change is not changing from Jonathan to Buhari,
Okoie asked. According to the Cardinal, “Change
is behavioural and pervades all levels of society
including the family, the church, the mosque,
schools, market women and business men. “When
we talk of change, we talk of positive-salutary,
healthy growth and development oriented change
that cuts across the entire gamut of the society.
What sort of change is this that ignores the
glaring un-equal distribution of national income?
It is absurd that the same government that is
unable to pay N18, 000 per month to the lowest
grade of labour can afford to pay N1.8 Million per
month to anyone in the economy. Why must tax
payers’ money be used to feed Mr. President and
his family? “Why must the tax payers’ money be
used to buy brand new exotic vehicles for the
legislatures, judges, ministers and governors when
they are heavily paid?
Why don’t they use loan finance and mortgage
finance to buy their cars and houses? This is also
a form of looting and it is the cause of grounding
the economy and calling in IMF spin-doctor all the
time. Precisely two years ago this same President
Buhari rejected off hand this use of spindoctor to
heal the ailing economy.
He preferred the use of counter trade and inward
looking policies like cutting down cost and
flamboyant exotic life styles. “Today I am not so
sure we have the same Buhari. I do hope he has
not changed all the colours of the rainbow. The
ruling elites are living a luxurious life while the
masses are in abject poverty and yet we are all
Nigerians. Enough of this change-conundrum,”
the Cardinal warned.
-The Telegraph

Saturday 9 January 2016

SENATOR JIM NWOBODO AND HIS SEASON OF SURPRISES!

2016 has been a year of surprises for the former Governor of old Anambra State Senator Jim Ifeanyichukwu NWOBODO. First, he on Friday 8th Jan dumped his party PDP and joined the ruling APC in Enugu and toady again he wedded his wife Patricia in the Catholic Church in Enugu for the second time having wedded her in the Anglican Church in the 90s. Some are really luckier than others I must say! Congratulations latest couple in town!

Monday 4 January 2016

RETIREMENT THANKSGIVING OF MR PETER CHUKS MGBEMENA(OGBUOTURUGO 1 OF UMUCHU)

Mr Peter Chuks Mgbemena(Ogbuoturugo 1 of Umuchu) is a great son of Ubaonu Mgbemena of Ozara-Akukwa Village, Umuchu in Aguata Local Government Area of Anambra State. Chuks as he is popularly known worked at the Central Bank of Nigeria Lagos shortly after a B. Sc in Economics and MBA in Personnel Management from the University of Lagos.                                                         He later joined the Nigerian Maritime Authority now NIMASA where he rose to the Director of Personnel Management before his retirement in 2015.                                                        Mr Mgbemena held a Thanksgiving Mass at St. Clement Catholic Parish, Ozara-Akukwa, Umuchu on 1st January 2016 to thank God for His mercy all through his service years. The Mass which was attended by family and friends attracted people from all parts of Nigeria and beyond. Congratulations Ogbuoturugo!