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ACJL: What A Mundane Legislation

The new law just passed by the Imo State government that has got people talking is one that has drawn my attention today. Termed the Administration of Criminal Justice Law 2020, that piece of legislation is one awful and needless addendum to our existing body of laws that needed to be vociferously condemned. Ostensibly and for the start, the people ordinarily provoked by such senselessness has given it the needed diatribe. But this condemnation must be taken further beyond the surface layer of criticism to its deeper layer of outburst that sends a clear message that this bill of a law is not just welcomed but smacks of a mundane dereliction to ludicrous childish postulation and so much backward. The so-called law is an element of such puerile senselessness of a huge magnitude that deserves to be roundly and vehemently condemned. The angst that should be shone towards it should speak in such manner as "what do these people take us for?" Indeed, that law is a statement of how t...

Sex Mercantilism in Imo State Varsity

IT IS indeed with a huge sense of dole that I write this piece, which itself is a contribution to the raging issue of sex for grade that had become part of our University system and which recently seemed a magnified concern. The BBC documentary on the issue by Kiki Mordi happened to highlight the concern of sexual harassment on female students happening in some selected varsities in Ghana and Nigeria, but that on its own was just a tip of the debauchery perpetrated by lecturers in every high institution of learning in this country. The incidences of favor for grades has become so prevalent nowadays that continuously they have begun to rob value off our educational system and the certificates it confers. Certificates ordinarily are the culminating reflection of the educational value of a student; they are  the concise description of the academic worth of any student presented in a single material. Certificates are such that they do not define the processes towards the feat their bea...

Impact Living: Chadwick and Chika

 I do not know much about the young Chadwick Boseman, as I'm yet to watch any of his acts. So, I never felt need, never wanted to be drawn to the tributes. But I have begun to reconsider, obviously out of the push from the cacophony of voices that attest to his impacts. If he could have touched such lives as cut across different backgrounds and statuses, he could as well have touched mine! Please permit me to salute such a young man, who within such a short time of living was able to move so much crowd of inspiration. Rest in power, Chadwick! On Captain Ernest Chika Permit to also send my tribute, a hearty one indeed, to the pilot of the helicopter that crashed in the Opebi area of Lagos. Chika Ernest died, thinking of the last impact he would make even as he struggled for life. The young pilot left a great legacy in death. He saved more lives by that heroic act of emptying the aircraft's fuel! And whilst the late Chika thought nobly for the people behind, those behind who in t...

Japan: Shinzo Abe Resigns

Shinzo Abe has stepped down from his official service as the Prime Minister of Japan. Mr Abe, who has been the country's head of government since 2012 premised his resignation on health ground. Abe is concerned that his health is worsening. He's diagnosed of ulcerative colitis since age 15. Just this week, Mr Abe achieved a milestone of being the longest serving PM of Japan and still has one year to go. The nation's parliament is yet to announce the successor of the outgoing Prime Minister.

#IYD2020: Enabling Youth for Global Action

 Interday was August 12, and globally as has become customary, the UN marked it as International Youth Day in celebration of the global young population. As the world and especially the youths relished the day with the topic ''Engaging the youths for global action, I just had to swerve between two emotions, one of great excitement and the other of deep disappointment. #IYD2020: I'm Happy... I am a youth, by international description, and as such I'm happy that today I'm celebrated alongside my peers through the auspices of the International Youth Day as set aside by the United Nations to re-echo the importance attached to the young population in fostering governance and building strong advocacy. #IYD2020: I'm Not Happy... At the same instance, however, I am not just happy that I am a youth in a nation that has no value for its future and its youth, where instead their future has become mortgaged through the incessant and crippling loans, especially from China, r...

Kaduna Killing and Leadership Silence

Each time I feel that the killings in Southern Kaduna have stopped, I become nudged to the reality of its persistence, now and again. The continuous coming to terms of the subsistence of the carnage just does well to reveal how a designed and conscripted silence had pushed it below the radar. The killings have been ongoing, and every day. We might not be fed with them, the mainstream media may not carry them, and the government might denounce or play down the reality. But lives are lost daily, just as people are been butchered daily. By SUSPECTED herdsmen. Life is going on. We have just so many things to practically keep up with. The novel Coronavirus pandemic (or scam pandemic as some may posit), the Big Brother Naija TV reality show, the resumption of the foreign football leagues' season, the politics of Edo and Ondo polls. Differently, we have varying things that have kept us fully engaged in, based on predilection. And indeed, we're fully committed to them, as definitely, l...

IMN: Another of police misstep

I heard with disconcertion the news of the action by the Nigerian police against members of the Islamic Movement if Nigeria, IMN. It was learnt that the movement had embarked on a peaceful protest aimed at commemorating the deaths of their members, who had paid the supreme price especially in the hands of the Nigerian security forces. But in the line of this, the police swooped on them and violently dispersed them. In a statement which seems not to proffer a genuine reason as to why they were stopped from holding their legitimate right of protest/paying respect to their dead loved ones, the Nigerian police concurred that the protest was a peaceful one, but had only the purported proscription of the sect as the reason to have attacked their assembly. It's pathetic how the Nigerian police has refused to face reality in what is their responsibility to protect citizens and fight crimes and has resorted instead to harass and intimidate people who mean no harm. It is indeed condemnable h...