My Blog Search

All parcels are

forakin at gmail dot com

Comment notice:

You are free to leave comments on my blogs as long as they are polite, reasoned and within the context of what I have written.

I will NOT entertain insults, abuse or expletives; your strength of emotion should be expressed without resorting to uncouth expression.

Since, it is my blog, I reserve the right to accept, review, edit without losing the context or delete the comment - if it does not meet standards of decent and polite discourse.

Finally, your comments cannot be anonymous, please give a name when leaving a comment.

Thanks for reading my blog and leaving a comment.

My Popular Tags

                                                           

My Mini Search

 

My Moon Days

««Nov 2009»»
SMTWTFS
1
23
4
5
6
7
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930

My Flickr Badge

www.flickr.com
This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from akinnld. Make your own badge here.

Nigeria: Palm, Panic, Pandemonium - Yar'Adua's Lesser Hajj

posted Tuesday, 9 September 2008

From predilection to prejudice

We tend to palm off the essential, have premonitions about the immediate, procrastinate on the important and leave everything else to prayer with clasped palms in the direst situations.

To prepare for eventualities is to prognosticate and usurp the supposed will of God about any situation such that failure then gets passed off as the work of the enemy.

For too long we have allowed our leadership to palm off too much, we got saddled with a very sick president and a vice-president he did not choose so as to assure a kind of continuity and stability that is fast becoming a mirage.

A man unknown or a public president

Now, I have no business and neither am I interested in the health of a Mr. or Mallam Umaru Musa Yar’Adua [1], for all I care, he could have two hearts, four lungs – even though we are forlorn with apprehension and he be as fit as a fiddle – I wish him well.

But when the same man assumes the responsibility of the Presidency of Nigeria, it becomes a completely different matter, something his aides have been trying to palm off without due realisation of the duty to truthfully inform.

Regardless of how this man was chosen, he is now de facto President of Nigeria; one would expect that he holds the reins of power and administration as any executive president would and where he finds that he is indisposed, the necessary steps should be taken to temporarily vest the vice-president with executive responsibility until when the president is better disposed to carry out his duties.

For two weeks we were left in a quandary about who was in control of Nigeria as rumour fed speculation so rife about the well-being of the President who presumably had gone to Saudi Arabia for the lesser hajj having cancelled other pre-arranged foreign trips to other nations.

A Soviet past replayed

By the time we knew what was going on, the man had allegedly had the knife in him to deal with a renal condition that required a new kidney.

Meanwhile, his public relations people palmed all this off as a non-critical medical checkup and asked us to run to our panic stations in prayer for the health of our President.

Since the vice-president had still been left in the dark initially about the condition of the President and had not received due authority to act in the place of a recuperating President who was far away in Saudi Arabia presumably making peace with his God – things that should have been done on Nigerian matters were left on a desk which had an empty chair whilst Nigerians were left somewhere between panic and possible pandemonium.

The secrecy that surrounds the real condition of the President, health-wise rivals the Soviet-era when the likes of Brezhnev [2], Chernenko [3] and Andropov [4] were long dead if not buried before we found out that they had been through a long and possibly incapacitating illness.

Power in the hands of hoodlums

It goes without saying that an incapacitated leader who has not properly handed over his responsibilities in a constitutionally sanctioned process of delegation allows for unelected and unaccountable mandarins in his circle to pull the levels of government in ways they should never have been entitled to do in the name of the President; leaving the nation in danger of reckless malevolence for personal ends.

In that alone, the President does us a great disservice on the verge of being unforgivable, but we would relent on the condition of some disclosure, if not full disclosure. What would not do is this wielding of the axe to give the impression that one is in control - it is closer to pandemonium than patient contemplation.

The need to know

Not knowing whether like John F. Kennedy [5] was addicted to barbiturates and pain-killers, the President lives a drug-fulfilled life to get from day-to-day where such medication may impair judgement is worrisome enough.

It does not help if like Franklin D. Roosevelt [6] was in a wheel chair, the President rides an invisible one that has him wheeled off to Germany in the instant of a relapse from whatever ails him.

Yar’Adua is no Kennedy nor Roosevelt and this is neither the 1940s nor the 1960s, it is however instructive that the Freedom of Information Bill still languishes in the Nigerian Congress in times where transparency should be the underpinning foundation of any democracy that seeks to be respectable.

Facts are needed now

Thankfully, we hear that the President is back in the country, either spiritually refreshed or medically patched up but it is disingenuous for his sycophants and obsequious troop of praise-singers to contend that it has been much ado about nothing and we should have just remained on our knees in sackcloth and ashes praying amiss in ignorance about the facts.

The BBC Headline - Nigerian Leader Appears in Public [7] - reads like one would expect of Fidel Castro [8] in Cuba or Kim Jong Il [9] in North Korea who many already presume dead, but exists as a double till the power struggle in the cabal of rulers gets resolved.

Unfortunately, we still do not know fact from fiction, truth from conjecture or reality from rumour, all we know is our innocent and concerned inquiries are palmed off into darkness, we are aroused in panic for the call of national prayer and around us pandemonium breaks loose for the lack of leadership in the matters that really do matter about Nigeria – this is not good at all.

Sources

[1] Umaru Yar'Adua - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
[2] The Brezhnev Syndrome - TIME
[3] World Attention Turns To Chernenko's Health - New York Times
[4] Andropov Misses Moscow Parade, Stirring Rumors - New York Times
[5] In J.F.K. File, Hidden Illness, Pain and Pills - New York Times
[6] Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial: Struggle with Disability
[7] BBC NEWS | Africa | Nigerian leader appears in public
[8] BBC NEWS | Americas | Castro seen in rare TV interview
[9] North Korea: Nation To Mark 60th Anniversary Amid Claims Kim Jong Il Dead Since 2003 | World News | Sky News

tags:        

links: digg this    del.icio.us    technorati    reddit

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




Tag Related Posts

A primer on cancer and chemotherapy

Monday, 26 October 2009
A basic primer on cancer and chemotherapy to help understand what it is and how it is treated.

The importance of nurses, bedpans to my career

Saturday, 17 October 2009
Within my professional comfort zone, I viewed bedpans in derogatory language bordering on disgust until I found out through experience in hospital that doing bedpans was essential to my recovery.

The nurses @ OLVG have my deepest gratitude.

In hospital to kill the pain

Wednesday, 23 September 2009
Suddenly, I am admitted for treatment in the hospital.

Nigeria: On transparency about Yar'Adua's health

Saturday, 20 June 2009
A court barred the President from suing for defamation on a report that suggested he was ill.

If the President refuses to be transparent about his health, the rumours would continue and going to court might just expose the truth about his health.

Gabon: Mr. Bongo, your time is up

Monday, 8 June 2009
The prospect of Mr. Bongo demise or impending demise brings into focus the problem with long-serving African leaders who have brought no progress to their countries.

Cover your mouth

Tuesday, 28 April 2009
Covering your mouth when you yawn or cough is just plain good manners, but it even matters more today including a covering when you sneeze.

Nigeria: Surely not a wobbly president

Tuesday, 14 April 2009
Concerns about the president's health create more concerns for the future of Nigeria, economically and politically.

Nigeria: The embarrassment of maternal mortality

Wednesday, 25 February 2009
It is not the fact that a woman gave birth to sextuplets that is of concern but that too many Nigerian women needlessly die at childbirth and Nigeria ranks second on the whole wide world.

Nigeria: Palm, Panic, Pandemonium - Yar'Adua's Lesser Hajj

Tuesday, 9 September 2008
Between a lesser Hajj and a major kidney transplant, the health of the President of Nigeria appears to be a pendulum the swings without the assuredness of the truth.

Nigeria: Yar'Adua interviewed by the FT

Tuesday, 20 May 2008
I review the interview the Financial Times conducted with President Umaru Yar'Adua of Nigeria.

Nigeria: The Senate Health Bill is rejected

Saturday, 10 May 2008
We probably have the most distinguished set of senators ever selected to oversee the issues of health in Nigeria and they failed to present a bill fit for purpose to the Senate.

Nigeria: Yar'Adua healthy from Germany with love

Sunday, 20 April 2008
President Yar'Adua is bundled off to Germany in haste for an allergic reaction - it seems there is no one to treat the President for any simple ailment in Nigeria.

Nigeria: Senator frogjumps her back wall

Friday, 18 April 2008
The more Senator Iyabo Obasanjo-Bello garners newsprint inches the more embarrassing her case becomes, it is an utter disgrace to say the least.

Nigeria: Senate safety from blame not guns

Monday, 14 April 2008
The Senate clears a senator from blame about receiving money for a junket but that did not stop a policemen from blowing his head off where the Senate President was partying for being made the custodian of guns.

Nigeria: The resignation of Adenike Grange

Wednesday, 26 March 2008
I conduct an analysis of the issues surrounding the resignation of Professor Adenike Grange - The Nigerian Minister for Health after allegations of graft

Nigeria: Governor's reputation goes up in hospital flames

Sunday, 17 February 2008
A new hospital in Maiduguri completed in June 2006 had stayed closed because the state governor was waiting to get the President to cut the tape.

It has now been razed and the governor laments the loss of his reputation, he has more to lose.

Nigeria takes Big Tobacco to court about kids

Wednesday, 7 November 2007
Nigeria is suing international cigarette companies on their complicity in allowing their cigarettes to fall into the hands of children. They do have a cause, but maybe not a case.

That Thabo Mbeki Collective

Thursday, 16 August 2007
The sacking of the South African Deputy Minister of Health points to a deeper symptom of celebrating African incompetence championed by African leaders.

Clothes line or clothes nurse

Tuesday, 12 June 2007
Clothes to keep tabs on your health, nice idea - where next?

The Pfizer Drug Trial

Wednesday, 23 May 2007
Another set of comments and clarifications on my first blog on Humanitarian Pfizer.

Humantarian Pfizer fed Nigerian kids poison drug - allegedly

Monday, 21 May 2007
Kano State sues Pfizer for administering unapproved drugs under the guise of humanitarian aid. What prize would they pay for this rotten exercise.

Mind-bending yesterday, mind-mending tomorrow

Friday, 16 March 2007
How drugs have changed as we find new uses for things our parents would not touch.

Healing on a jet plane

Tuesday, 13 March 2007
Another presidentail candidate jets off to Europe for treatment - Why can they not get treatment in Nigeria?

Yar'Adua crests the stairway to heaven

Wednesday, 7 March 2007
If indeed Yar'Adua has passed on, we have happened upon rather inconvenient times.

Yar'Adua - Catching his breath in Germany

Wednesday, 7 March 2007
Yar'Adua has spoken to the BBC, he was breathless, he dis not collapse and he is in Germany for a check-up - he would run in the elections in April.

Obama vs. Stupid is as stupid does

Tuesday, 13 February 2007
The name Obama has been juxtaposed with Osama sadly, however, when people then base their views on that unfortunate juxtaposition, well, they have got it coming, with no mercy. I just would not condone it.

AIDS cure or homosexual lure in Iran

Tuesday, 6 February 2007
Iranian scientists have claimed to develop a complimentary treatment for HIV/AIDS. I am concerned that those who would appear from treatment might get more than they bargained for, if homosexual.

A turkey flight between England and Nigeria

Monday, 5 February 2007
3 Avian flu deaths and nothing like panic or nothing happening at all in Nigeria, one does hope somehow there is more good fortune on our side.

A Gambian Cure for AIDS or An Epidemic of Stupidity

Friday, 2 February 2007
The President of Gambia declared before foreign diplomats that he could cure AIDS in 3 days - somehow we still have mad people in African presidential palaces or I am just being too cynical.

Finest quality Ecstasy from the Police

Tuesday, 17 October 2006
Immigration, asylum seekers and law enforcement - just some of the political tools to hammer the electorate before the November elections and it is not looking good at all.

Needing aid for those in charge against AIDS

Thursday, 13 July 2006
It appears the man in charge of the fight against HIV/AIDS in Nigeria does not understand his demographic or the context of homosexuality and has garbled a useful message on issues that would kill the message of safer sex.

Unhealthy directors of Nigerian Health

Saturday, 10 June 2006
Having just watched Bad Medicine on BBC World about couterfeit drugs trade in Nigeria and I have come away thinking the men in charge should be charged with culpability. Dr Dora Akinyuli is definitely on the ball sorting this mess out.

Too many aspirants dying to rule in Nigeria

Thursday, 18 May 2006
If the measure of anyone's patriotism is the willingness to die for your country, how many people would we have left? When presidential aspirants use that rhetoric, be weary of what they really are up - it cannot be honest.

DeepThroat II exposed too early

Thursday, 27 April 2006
A CIA employee was sacked six days before retirement for unauthorised access to the press for exposing some activities in the secret services and possibly the Presidency which are almost certainly illegal. Whistle-blowers - an endangered species.

What exactly is wrong with me?

Wednesday, 26 April 2006
In medical clinics in Africa, this is a question one hears ever so often. Poor diagnosis leading to wrong treatments sometimes lets malaria wreak more deathly havoc than it should. In Africa, we have a medical emergency.

The beauty of the dead cow

Wednesday, 22 February 2006
We tamper with food to our peril as scares and aesthetics take food from natural to chemically enhanced. Now, meat is keeps its red colouring by being treated with carbon monoxide. Harmless, they say, harmless, indeed.