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
8
91011
12
1314
15
16
1718
19
2021
222324
25
26
27
28
2930

My Flickr Badge

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

In Nigeria, can wives make independent choices?

posted Friday, 21 March 2008

PDP, an unruly party

Once again, a rather inauspicious news report catches my eye and exposes an issue of social significance that it elicits commentary.

Nigeria’s ruling party, the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) is an enigma; it has a way of gathering a storm to create a Force-10 gale, the impending hurricane accompanies a tsunami and everything else tumbles to a full magnitude earthquake – all this in a cracked teapot.

Sometimes, I wonder which organ gathers the most news inches; the government of Nigeria which should too busy solving Nigeria’s problems to be distracted by frivolities or the overwhelmingly disconcerting in-fighting that consumes the party that produced the leaders, such that they have no time to do Nigeria’s business.

Split down the dining table

In Enugu State, rival factions have dug-in to face-off each other; one camp being that of the current state governor, Mr. Sullivan Chime and the other being that of the former state governor, Senator Chimaroke Nnamani – I would name each camp for the chief protagonists.

There is nothing unusual about this development, if Nigerian politicians cannot be involved in intra-party conflict, they get bored; they are born to be in difference, in dissent, in disagreement, disruptive, in dissimulation and add to that, be held in disdain and hounded into disgrace.

What makes this worthy of commentary is this intra-party has hit the smallest unit of assumed Nigerian responsibility – a husband and wife have ended up in different camps – The husband is a member of the Enugu State House of Assembly as Hon. Tony Chigbo in the Chime camp and the wife; Mrs. Ngozi Chigbo is listed as the Financial Secretary of the Nnamani camp.

Any vibrant marriage should allow for the traditional marital bliss whilst being able to discuss ideas, especially professional and political ones where the partners might have differences of opinion – that, I would think is a marriage in maturity.

The sway of Unreconstructed Male Chauvinists

However, in what is a throw-back to the patriarchal hegemony that refuses to recognise the possibility of women having differences of opinion from their husbands and even worse, expecting the wife to be devoid of the intellectual capacity to make informed choices that are not dictated and commanded by her husband, the man finds himself fighting for both his honour and his marriage.

There probably is no reason for wives to discuss their political allegiances with their husbands but a mention can maybe avoid embarrassment if they end up on opposite ends.

My wife should be subject

The man declares that he did not know that his wife was associated with the Nnamani camp – below the scrutiny of essential news coverage, the unreconstructed male chauvinists (UMCs) would contend that the man has no control of his house that he does not know what his wife is up to.

He then says he is opposed to his wife’s participation in the Nnamani camp, but the instructive part is that the UMCs are not calling Mrs. Chigbo to persuade her but are putting pressure on the husband to call his wife to order.

Most definitely because, if I were to afford myself the broadest generalisation I could aver, men are schooled and traditionally expected to present their wives as beauty companions but really treat them as pseudo-slaves without rights, independence of thought and sometimes means – they are supposed to be constant supplicants to their husbands who then give them status in society – they must be subject to the broadest purview and authority of the husband.

This is a deep thing, but we have all bought into this concept and women have found themselves subsumed into what is the “norm”

Do wives have rights?

Obviously, societal pressure leads him to say, “I vehemently disapprove of her association with any other political grouping or faction outside the mainstream state PDP led by the State Governor, Mr Sullivan Chime.” Read, I am her husband, she has no right to have an alternative political allegiance.

It would be a while before we find men who would proudly promote their wives to be the best they could ever be without thinking they are in competition – the emancipated man would have said, my wife and I can have disagreements, but that is no one’s business – we have a strong marriage that thrives on mutual respect.

Meanwhile, no one bothers to contact the wife and interview her for her independent opinion, because the society we have does not reckon a married woman should be given that level of courtesy and respect.

That is the way things still are in many places.


tags:              

links: digg this    del.icio.us    technorati    reddit

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




1. omodudu left...
Friday, 21 March 2008 9:04 pm

Read..


2. Chxta left...
Sunday, 23 March 2008 8:50 am

Experiment one: sitting in Nu Metro in Silverbird, one of Naija's 'top' restaurants with the girlfriend. A FEMALE waiter comes and takes our order, serves us and withdraws. Few minutes later we ask for the cheque. Then the girlfriend pays. Guess who the waiter gives the change to?

The problem cuts across our society, and the tragedy of it is that females help to propagate it.


Tag Related Posts

Nigeria: When women rage with the pudenda and the paps

Thursday, 30 April 2009
The women are using unusual weapons of warfare to effect political dialogue and change, I think it would be very effective

Thought Picnic: A world without bad religion

Friday, 24 April 2009
My Thought Picnic looks at how the interpretation of religion and religious views takes away from our community of humanity and denigrates womenfolk.

Nigeria: Obasanjo's Hard Talk

Friday, 20 March 2009
The ex-president of Nigeria - Olusegun Obasanjo was on Hard Talk and failed to answer the real questions.

Nigeria: Ribadu and kids get bundled out of NIPSS graduation

Sunday, 23 November 2008
The erstwhile EFCC chairman gets bundled out of the NIPSS graduation cermony after the government fails by all other means to stop his graduation. His wife, 6 children and his guests all get pulled out of the event too.

Adedibu, Half of Ibadanland, the man is no more

Wednesday, 11 June 2008
The strongman of Ibadan, the elder thug that has plagued Oyo State with menace and with impunity - that power broker and peddler of the riotous mob - Alhaji Lamidi Adedibu has died.

Nigeria: Ali denies lobbying for post

Saturday, 17 May 2008
Dr. Ahmadu Ali has denied lobbying for the post of Minister for Health - I also explore the influence of ruling party chairmen on the political process in Nigeria.

Nigeria: Ali Must Go - We deserve a whole lot better

Tuesday, 13 May 2008
It would appear Dr. Ahmadu Ali is trying to inveigle his way into the position of the Minister of Health, the President should and must resist his machinations with the maximum force he can muster.

We, Nigerians, deserve a lot better that that man.

Olympic torch lights up Tibetan cause

Wednesday, 9 April 2008
If anything, the Chinese have been naive to think they could pull off the Olympics without the spotlight being shone on their internal affairs including Tibet.

They should have known someone would take advantage of the Olympic year for this.

Inside China: Hatchlings of Democracy get nasty

Sunday, 23 March 2008
The election for class monitor of 8-year olds in China reveals a lot more about the machinations and manipulation of democracy and the dangers that might be ahead.

In Nigeria, can wives make independent choices?

Friday, 21 March 2008
A news story throws the spotlight on the husband-wife dynamic within a patriarchal hegemony.

Habiba Garba: Religion and violence against women

Monday, 3 March 2008
We have to take a stand against violence towards women and the way religion fails to address issues of humanity for keeping their rotten tenets.

I have a nano-dream

Monday, 21 January 2008
As we commemorate the Martin Luther King Day 2008, I do not think we are any nearer fulfilling the words of that "I have a dream" speech given almost 45 years ago.

We have individuals, fine, but not great numbers of people who have really made it.

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.

The veil amongst Christians

Sunday, 29 October 2006
I remember we had the debate about the veil and the head scarf over 20 years ago, it still dominates some congregations when their should be no such encumbrance in the Church.

The Day of the Toothpicks

Thursday, 7 September 2006
7 inconsequential ministers resign from Mr. Blair's government in order to force his hand to tell us when he is leaving the job of Prime Minister, it is possible they have been put up to it by the Chancellor of the Executor - who knows?

The raid on Peking, London

Saturday, 2 September 2006
The raid on a Chinese restaurant in London shows how this war on terror is impacting seriously on our way of life.

Ahmedinejad-Bush coming to your television

Tuesday, 29 August 2006
The Iranian doctor of engineering invites a one-time failed oil businessman to a debate about world issues. I want a front row seat, who is selling the tickets? bin Laden might also already be dead so what fuels the war on terror?

My contribution to the war on terror - suspicion

Monday, 28 August 2006
This war on terror is turning me into a vulnerable, suspicious, jittery bigot ready to view any seemingly unacceptable observation as anti-social and hence having terrorist tendencies. Are we all getting programmed that way?

Making an ass of a South African policeman

Saturday, 26 August 2006
The minister in charge of safety and security in South Africa suggests that the police should ride donkeys to crime scenes.

Made in America - just in your backyard

Friday, 25 August 2006
Unexploded cluster bombs supplied by the US to Israel are found in Lebanon - Let us see how Condi Rice tackles America's image from all perspectives.

Much terror out of a mobile phone and a plastic bag

Friday, 25 August 2006
A plane returns to Schiphol under escort because a few mobile phones and plastic bags give the appearance of an impending terrorist attack. Methinks we are getting better at terrifying ourselves than the real terrorists are.

Back to James Blake and Rosa Parks - 1955 to 2006

Friday, 25 August 2006
Black students are asked to give up their seats for white students 51 years after Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat. America, we've got a serious problem.

London police in an institutionally culpable homicide

Thursday, 24 August 2006
A 22-year old father gets shot by the 14-year old for standing up to their anti-social behaviour in a crime that could have been avoided had the police investigated and prosecuted the stabbing of the same father 7 months before.

The end to presidential voyeurism

Friday, 18 August 2006
A judge has declared the unwarranted surveillance of American citizens illegal. That is one big win for civil liberties all around the world, in my view.

Aspirant elimination depicts murderous democracy

Tuesday, 15 August 2006
Another ruling party aspirant killing and a riot to clean things up as we prepare for the 2007 Elections in Nigeria. What gives?

The American-Israeli tinderbox that Hezbollah lit up

Tuesday, 15 August 2006
If America was already privy to Israeli plans to attack Lebanon long before the kidnap of the 2 soldiers in Israel on July the 12th, the whole truth of this matter does not augur well for the new world order at all.

A large body count with no ease as war ceases

Monday, 14 August 2006
The people who lost the most from the Israeli-Lebanon conflict are those who were sacrificed in the proxy war between American and Iran, neither Israel nor Lebanon have gained anything - rather they would have to talk to each other.

Not leaving on a jet plane soon

Sunday, 13 August 2006
The number of planned terror attacks have been foiled, we are told, with that comes greater paranoia from the United States than the terrorists themselves could have intended. It you as much as have any liq

A dead man dishonoured

Sunday, 13 August 2006
The burial of Funsho Williams was not without event from the sermons given to the way his supporters allowed their egos to get in the way of letting their leader lie in state.

Sweet dreams are made of these

Wednesday, 9 August 2006
How I learnt that I could control my dreams and what I have learnt from doing so.

Daytime television a cure for current news

Tuesday, 8 August 2006
Well, I have gone off the news, my remote control deliberately misses every news channel as daytime television seems a welcome relief.

The doctor says good riddance

Thursday, 3 August 2006
I think it was clear that losing the leadership of the Economic Management Team was also going to lose us a Foreign Minister. She was no doubt humiliated by the manner of her removal - This minister is above the fray with her dignity intact.

Mind that language

Thursday, 3 August 2006
A study shows that the Dutch are not as proficient in other languages as we all assume them to be. In fact, other Europeans who speak other languages have a better grasp of the languages they speak than the Dutch. Could that be true?

A doctor without a patient

Wednesday, 2 August 2006
After the reshuffle of six weeks ago which moved the technocrat finance minister to the foreign affairs minister, she now loses the leadership of the Economic Management Team whilst negotiating in that position in London.

Scotland Yard in Nigerian murder backyard

Tuesday, 1 August 2006
The Scotland Yard has been invited to help the Nigerian Police in investigating and resolving the latest political murder - we do hope they get all the cooperation they require and something lasting comes of it.

Somehow, Israel can do no wrong

Monday, 31 July 2006
The angel of death arrives in Qana, Lebanon a second time, on the wings of American supplied bombs, autographed by religious Jews and chaperoned by Israeli aircraft. This is utter madness.

Condi is not welcome in Lebanon

Sunday, 30 July 2006
Sometimes you just have to speak up and stop being run around by seemingly benevolent but insincere friends. Lebanon has reached that stage with America by saying the Secretary of State is not welcome. A snub as good as you can get.

A poker hand of unintended consequences

Sunday, 30 July 2006
The gamble US, Britain and Israel have taken in the Lebanon issue can see a better resolution than new occupations. Israel should relinquish occupied territories of Shebaa Farms and Golan Heights. That is the really hard but courageous decision.

Condi knows nothing about birth pangs

Saturday, 29 July 2006
Bombs and hostilities continue as birth pangs of a new Middle-East as the midwife returns to the woman in travail and extended labour to probably deliver the baby still-born. No new Middle-East can emerge with this belligerence.

Precision-guided resolutions that miss the target

Thursday, 27 July 2006
The question is how precision-guided weapons can accidentally hit a prominent target. Then I examine the UN SC Resolution 1559 and find that we might not have heard the whole truth of that matter of Israeli withdrawal. Syria it appears did more.

The Red Cross marks the missile target - Updated

Wednesday, 26 July 2006
Two ambulances get blown up with the missiles coming through the centre of the Red Cross on the roof and a clearly marked UN observers post is obliterated with surgical precision. This wild and reckless party is getting atrocious by the day.

Pay up or get bombed up

Tuesday, 25 July 2006
In a suit filed in the US, it has come to light that one of the reasons there might still be Americans left to be evacuated from Lebanon is they were at one time required to agree to pay the costs of their evacuation. Get we get any lower?

Condolezza condoles with aid

Tuesday, 25 July 2006
Dr Rice's unannounced visit to Lebanon finished every semblance of genuine friendship between the Lebanese and America as they are being sacrificed on the altar of some new Middle-East order. Know your friends.

Verdonk back with new controversy

Monday, 24 July 2006
She made the last government fall, kept out of the public eye for a few weeks - she is now back to make it difficult for once illegal and consequently legal immigrants to gain re-entry to the Netherlands.

Condolezza brings condolences - maybe more

Sunday, 23 July 2006
Until America demands a cessation of violence by every forceful means possible, this Middle-East conflict would only continue. To now learn that Israel is asking for an arms order to be speeded up from the US, leaves much to be desired of the US.

The land of the matter - The Middle-East Cauldron

Saturday, 22 July 2006
I provide a framework of how the Balfour Declaration of 1917 promised one thing and offered another leading to the many conflicts that have plagued Israel throughout the last century till today.

Attaching the burden of history to the Middle-East

Friday, 21 July 2006
Having received a few comments on my views of the current conflicts in the Middle-East, I am concerned that a larger historical perspective is being lost in reviewing the prevailing events. There can be no resolution without that context.

Peace eludes our time with appeasement

Monday, 17 July 2006
Evacuating foreign citizens of influential countries from Lebanon is the best tacit appeasement that would help the troubles escalate beyond manageable proportions. I fear for when those Israeli rockets land inadvertently in Iran and Syria.

A crusading psychopath is in a war near you

Sunday, 16 July 2006
The shortage of army manpower in America lead to relaxing the rules of recruitment, Steven Green benefited and now has a rap sheet of rape and murder committed in Iraq. They created a monster of a pussy-cat criminal and dumped back in society.

Forked-tongues fuelling the Middle-Eastern fires

Saturday, 15 July 2006
Where would we find a seriously honest broker to look at the facts of the Middle-East Conflict and get the protagonists to face their responsibilities to global peace squarely and act accordingly? America is not in the frame for honest brokerage.

Spooky Brother Act as Spook goes to Court

Friday, 14 July 2006
Polish twin brothers as heads of government depending on who you are looking at and the spy throws a pie in the face of the White House - when you uncover a spy - well ...

Dummies guide to removing thorns

Friday, 14 July 2006
The way Israel is going about removing the Palestinian thorn in their sides would hurt Israel more than it would hurt Palestine eventually. This belligerence is patently not the solution to the Middle East Conflict.

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.

Scalding snouts out of the Nigeria Civil Service trough

Monday, 10 July 2006
The new deal to sack 20% of the Nigerian Civil service with a generous severance pay and a consequent increase in civil service salaries is inflationary at best - worse could happen.

Marie Fatayi-Williams - A mother for peace

Friday, 7 July 2006
One solemn voice that encompasses the emotion and magnitude of the day - a mother indeed.

Clambering from the ruins of World Cup 2006

Thursday, 6 July 2006
The seedings are awry, the referees are the news and then we have one more controversial referee for the final - FIFA is doing so much to make us hate the beautiful game.

6th of July - 1942, 1946 & 2006

Thursday, 6 July 2006
On this day, Anne Frank's family sought refuge from the Nazi's in the Secret Annex and 4 years later this day George W. Bush arrived in the first tranche of baby-boomers - Does history have much to teach us?

Justice! Delayed, denied and deceased

Wednesday, 5 July 2006
Kenneth Lay is dead and the Enron case is unfinished - where is the justice in unfinished matters like this?

30 years after the Raid on Entebbe

Wednesday, 5 July 2006
I am beginning to wonder if Israel has not already discounted the hostage corporal as dead and are just waiting for that opportunity to unleash unspeakable and unrelenting terror on the occupied Palestinians.

No to Balkenende III

Tuesday, 4 July 2006
There is no reason to allow a second reincarnation of the lack-lustre Dutch government. Their inability to accept responsibility and consequence shows they are both unfit for government or electoral success.

Hocus Pocus Zim Bab We Arghhh!

Monday, 3 July 2006
Zimbabwe legalises witchcraft in the light of the president not being able to muster Christian support. The only hope of the people from the crises that has befallen them is the mortality of Mr Mugabe. Could the witches have some good spells?

Blasting the hostage out of Gaza

Friday, 30 June 2006
I am not sure that the destruction of Palestinian infrastructure in Gaza would lead to the kind of resolution we all desire, the release of the young soldier-conscript. Does Israel have any tool beyond might in this conflict?

The Dutch government collapses around Mrs Verdonk

Thursday, 29 June 2006
Just as any inevitable situation, Mrs Verdonk also known as Lady Oddjob on this blog and the Minister of Integration and Immigration has brought down the government over an immigration affair centred around her selfish actions. Resignation tomorrow!

Recording the bad history of football - II

Thursday, 29 June 2006
In part two of what I never intended to be a series, I highlight one aspect of racism on football - monkey chants from fans and coach with despicable views - Don't weep for Spain.

They hate our freedoms

Saturday, 24 June 2006
Now we hear that the US Government is livid about the revelation that they have been trawling through international banking transactions since 2001 - looks like this government hates our freedom to know what they have been up to.

The new ball order - Football meritocracy

Friday, 23 June 2006
The World Cup levels the playing field of political powers and undue influence - little countries make minced meat of behemoths and if you cannot play you get beaten and go home. The Olympics has nothing on the World Cup.

A Shuffle unworthy of a black jack table

Thursday, 22 June 2006
The recent cabinet reshuffle in Nigeria leaves one wonder about its significance for the elections in 2007.

Arise! Sir easy

Saturday, 17 June 2006
The Chairman of easyGroup of companies is knighted in the Queen's birthday honours list- I suppose a new business can come out of this accolade - easyHonours?

Pray for Mrs Verdonk

Friday, 16 June 2006
The Ivory Coast plays the Netherlands today and Mrs Verdonk might just feel the wrath of the Dutch if they lose.

Insemination Tax Credit

Tuesday, 6 June 2006
If the President of the United States is really serious about strong marriages, he should stop going after gay marriage and rather strengthen marriage through Insemination Tax Credits.

Morphing into Texan Bambi

Friday, 2 June 2006
After the contriteness of Mr Bush last week, the changes that fits into the whole scheme of things could be the birth of a more humane presidency, not a lame duck valedictory.

No nice words for Mrs Verdonk

Wednesday, 17 May 2006
Mrs Verdonk has seriously miscalculated the consequences of her decision to revoke Ayaan Hirsi Ali's Dutch citizenship. She has been called to other and her support have dived in the quest for party leadership. That is the hole that dug for herself.

Lady Oddjob draws ire and fire

Tuesday, 16 May 2006
The recriminations have started, amd Mrs verdonk should be in a less comfortable position than she was on Friday.

Lady Oddjob decapitates Poster Child

Tuesday, 16 May 2006
Yesterday evening Mrs Verdonk called Ayaan Hirsi Ali and told her, her Dutch citizenship was suspect if not invalid. Basically, she cannot be a Member of Parliament. Opportunism has trumped perspective - what chance other immigrants?

Lady Oddjob does about face on Poster Child

Monday, 15 May 2006
Between Friday and today, Ayaan Hirsi Ali has gone from not having anything to worry about to an inquiry opened by the minister of two opinions. Meanwhile, a job beckons for her in the US, an opportunity to say "Good Riddance" to Dutch ambiguity.

Poster child hung in a frame of lies

Saturday, 13 May 2006
Ayaan Hirsi-Ali is probably the most integrated immigrant of African origin in the Netherlands. Apparently, she was both economical and creative with the truth when she applied for asylum in 1992. Would they protect or castigate the poster child?

Are you Belgian-Suspect?

Friday, 12 May 2006
The murders in Antwerp illustrate how coming from a family of extreme right-wing proponents and having a privileged education offers no escape from committing violence commensurate to extreme right rhetoric. If you are Belgian-suspect - beware!

Desiring a Palestinian Passover

Thursday, 11 May 2006
The Israelis celebrate in the peace of their borders and the desperation just beyond their walls as Passover arrives with the angel of death hovering over Palestine - all because the West is being unduly sanctimonious about Hamas.

Old-age Rum's field day

Friday, 5 May 2006
A hapless septuagenarian was heckled during an important speech to his supporters, then accused of lying. How rotten! This is in empathetic concern and commiseration. Why badger a poor old man?

Death eludes the State

Wednesday, 3 May 2006
The jury decision to give Moussaoui a sentence of life imprisonment without parole might just end the obsession with the death penalty in America. Is the President and the Governors listening?

M'aider! M'aider! Mayday! Regime Change coming to you!

Monday, 1 May 2006
It appears US plans are well advanced to attack and disarm Iran at the least, beyond that, create the kind of popular unrest to unseat the Mullahs. Methinks, the US is on another miscalculation strategy - the lessons of Iraq having been forgotten

Queen's day - For pomp and bric-a-brac

Saturday, 29 April 2006
We celebrate the Queen's day in the Netherlands a day early along with some Dutch peculiarities.

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.

Why Brussels doesn't work

Sunday, 23 April 2006
Europe and Brussels are synonymous, Brussels is a microcosm of Europe. What works works and what doesn't grates. We, the people of Europe have to protest vehemently to be heard but no guarantee of good results. This is Europe through storage lockers.

God Save the Queen - Long live the Queen

Thursday, 20 April 2006
Elizabeth II turns 80 today, I speak up for the monarchy, not so forcefully but sentimentally as it is our anchor to history, heritage, culture and belonging. I rejoice with our Queen at 80.

The Barbarian Ruling Class

Friday, 14 April 2006
Politicians and leaders in the military seem to be missing an essential component in their education; an appreciation of history, culture, heritage and values. Babylon is plundered and the Colonel in charge fails to grasp the error.

Lady Oddjob - From Irrevelance to Assimilation

Thursday, 13 April 2006
An Amsterdam Alderman has suggested the Ministry of Integration and Immigration be assimilated by other ministry that might really address those issues. Come think of it, I agree!

Eureka! is Farsi for Enrichment

Wednesday, 12 April 2006
Iran is enriched with the ability to enrich uranium, have we forgotten they just tested a supercavitation missile last week? Oil, gold, war, markets - what else is being knocked out of stability?

Not in my local shop

Thursday, 30 March 2006
A visit to the African goods shop bring idle banter, hilarity and the serious case of disguises aided with hair extensions and skin-lightening cream.

Awake! Oh frail man! Your people have called

Tuesday, 28 March 2006
The Kadima Party takes the election spoils in Israel as its leader lays in coma commanding more influence than those who opposed him as an able-bodied man. Those who have written Ariel Sharon's obituary should tear up their copy and wish him well.

The people are high on opium - V

Friday, 24 February 2006
I am saddened to see that the Mohammed cartoon saga is still costing lives around the world. We now need to examine the conseqences of exercising the freedom of expression. It is time also for Morgenavisen Jyllands-Posten to take some responsibility.

No harsh tongue for Mrs Verdonk

Monday, 23 January 2006
The Dutch have come up with a very innovative public places ban; whist we are still trying to stomach the smoking ban in some public places, we now have the prospect of banning other languages but Dutch in public places.

Setting democracy ablaze with gas

Tuesday, 3 January 2006
This little Ukraine problem of gas supplies has more far-reaching consequences that could affect the whole basis of our democracy