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.

Putin and Chavez - Great Leader or Dear Leader?

posted Monday, 3 December 2007

Overstaying your incumbency

If democracy is just the ability to walk out and vote and hopefully get your vote counted we had a demonstration of that concept yesterday.

I cannot however say that the use of democratic means to decide a direction of governance ends up in a democratic situation – we saw examples of that in Russia and Venezuela.

The week before, it was the elections in Australia where John Howard who had been in leadership over a decade had failed to realise that he had overstayed his welcome.

He lost the premiership and on confirmation would most likely lose his parliamentary seat. That is a damning indictment of a leader who had brought great progress and prosperity to his nation, but somehow, leaders have a tendency to be absorbed by arrogance and hubris that makes them think no one else could do the job better than they have been doing.

Leaders who have become bosses

This incumbency-complex that gravitates towards a pseudo-dictatorship is dangerous because the leader begins to project his ideas as right and hence the only solution whilst regaling us with the idea that leadership is really tough.

This kind of conviction plagued Tony Blair towards the end of his long premiership which left him almost the most unpopular prime minister for generations at the time of his leaving; it has plagued George W. Bush, but now he is moving into a multilateral phase possibly to secure a legacy for himself in the Israeli-Palestinian issue.

Abusing democratic process

The Russia and Venezuela, Vladimir Putin and Hugo Chavez have been schemed to use the democratic process to entrench their incumbency, Mr. Putin would most likely metamorphose into a Prime Minister with considerably more powers than the incumbent has and would serve under a President that would be made into a ceremonial head of state.

The Russian constitution precludes Mr. Putin from serving another term as President, but being absorbed with the idea that no one else can rule Russia in his stead with authority and purpose, he would assume another national leadership post to keep in control.

The was a time I sympathised with Hugo Chavez and the leader of a developing economy that was ploughing some of the nation’s resources and moneys into improving the plight of the poor who had been left uncatered for by successive governments.

America’s moral laxity

Unfortunately, his mildly socialist rhetoric has gained virulence and notoriety exacerbated by America’s complacency when he was overthrown some 6 years ago.

America always fails to learn and lead in the matters of fairness, justice and balance when the issues of democracy, civil rights and oil collide. It acts like a multi-dimensional chameleon in the pursuit of self-interest instead of upholding the mantle of liberal democracies built on vibrant capitalist economies – thereby, it has little moral authority and the only muscle is seems to be able to wield is the projection of military power anywhere on the globe.

Even bullies eventually have their come-uppance and America is sometimes left with allies who can only lend support in word but hardly in means.

Chavez – all mouth

Having arrogated to himself presidential rule-by-decree, Mr. Chavez was not satisfied with the extent of executive authority as his socialism bandwagon gathered steam towards a 21st Century aberration.

The theory of socialism probably has idealist and Utopian goals, the practice however has yield much less of that ideal – it entrenches a ruling elite that brooks no opposition; it stifles open debate; oppresses the free media; enacts laws for the purpose of exercising omniscience in all areas of the community and society whilst producing too much government that fosters corruption, reduces efficiency, promotes nepotism (See, Time.com - Where everyone important is a Chavez) and sycophancy and eventually destroys the country.

The Time Magazine in Petro Laggard highlights the fact that Venezuela sits on one of the largest reserves of heavy crude which needs large injections of cash to realise and maintain – not much seems to be done to ensure that this “golden goose” of the oil industry remains healthy to satisfy Venezuela’s obligations to the increasing demands for fossil fuels.

Democracy sometimes delivers

However, the referendum that failed yesterday by a margin of just 2% is a welcome development for a motor-mouth that was running out of control.

The question again is why one man thinks out of every good person that can be mentioned in his country, he is the only one who can properly govern his country and bring the goods home.

France is working hard to rescind the 35-hour-week because it offers no particular economic competitive advantage in a global economy and Mr. Chavez proposed to bribe his people with a 36-hour-week, reduced from 44 – no nation of slothful laggards can survive with that slovenly demeanour – projects would take forever and considering the red-tape that socialist ministries can spurn, the country would most definitely grind to a halt.

In the times of almost $100/barrel oil, Mr. Chavez seems to be awash with much cash and little sense of the fact that Venezuela belongs to a global economy, his quest to control the Central Bank of Venezuela is no less the money-grab of a highwayman – it takes more that socialist dogma to run a bank.

Yes, the Venezuelans love their leader but not enough to allow him manipulate the democratic process to deliver a dictatorship thriving on the cult of personality, for that, I am very glad.

Democracy sometimes grates

Mr. Putin has deployed every Soviet tool to grab the election for the United Russia Party that he supports, they have all the means to change the constitution to whatever they might desire, however, I would suppose they would limit their greed to knowing that capability.

All people of a nation should be happy to vote if there was a level playing field in the democratic process – it would appear, hurdles were put in the way of opposition parties who were harassed by thugs and miscreants, they never had equal access to the media, workers were threatened with their livelihoods if they did not toe of the line and monitors did not have untrammelled access to ensure the elections were free and fair.

The party leader announced yesterday that the national leader is Mr. Putin and one can only wonder if this leader would be in the mould of the Dear Leader or the Great Leader none of which augurs well.

On two ends of the world, leaders drunk on the proceeds of oil and intoxicated with power have tried to assume eternal incumbency and omnipotence – one succeeded and the other failed.


tags:                              

links: digg this    del.icio.us    technorati    reddit

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




Tag Related Posts

Ghana: No antibodies for this virus - Obama's speech

Sunday, 12 July 2009
What we should not lose sight of from President Obama's speech to the Ghanaian parliament is that it is the first time a Western leader has been able to speak the truth to African leaders and not have blow-back. Against Obama they have no antibodies.

Nigeria: Ekiti elections, a case of conscience before responsibility

Wednesday, 29 April 2009
The Resident Electoral Commissioner of Ekiti State resigns before she has fully despatched her duties, I think she has failed in her responsibility on the basis of her Christian conscience.

Nigeria: A dereliction dressed as an amnesty

Friday, 3 April 2009
President Yar'Adua of Nigeria offers Niger Delta militants amnesty, I do not think he has that bargaining chip at all.

Nigeria: No new states precursor to abolishing them

Tuesday, 17 March 2009
An ex-vice President suggests that states abolished in Nigera, there is a case for for this in the wider case of federal character and resource allocation.

Nigeria: Electoral reform starts with Iwu pensioned off

Monday, 16 March 2009
The first step to electoral reform in Nigeria is sacking the current chairman of INEC - Professor Maurice Iwu.

Nigeria: Courts give Diaspora the vote

Tuesday, 10 February 2009
The force of Diaspora is getting the vote and the right to participate in the political process from abroad.

In the last 2 weeks Nigerians & South Africans may and the South Koreans assuredly can.

Nigeria: The false debates on same sex marriage

Monday, 26 January 2009
The debate on same sex marriage is really about criminalising defenceless people using false information that does not address the real issues that affect the life expectancy and health of Nigerians. We are being short-changed with hypocrisy.

Nigeria: Women's democratic rights curtailed by Sharia

Wednesday, 21 January 2009
The failure of Islam to address the rights of divorced Muslim women lead to the call for a protest by the women.

Protest has been banned by the Sharia police that feels it is an embarrassment to islam - is Nigeria not a democracy?

Obama Inauguration: The message to Africa

Monday, 19 January 2009
If President Obama's inauguration speech touches on Africa, it should be the opportunity to speak the truth.

Guinea: African leaders are indeed mortal

Tuesday, 23 December 2008
The death of President Lansana Conté of Guinea brings us back to an analysis of the problems of leadership in Africa.

The Nero of Siam

Monday, 1 December 2008
The events in Siam give great cause for concern not so much for democracy but for the monarchy that migh well begin to make itself irrelevant to its subjects.

Nigeria: Gone is the Jos I knew

Monday, 1 December 2008
My childhood memories of Jos hardly square up with the horrible religious riots that have lead to the death of hundreds.

Our political leaders must have something to pay for these avoidable and unnecessary situations.

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.

Rising from the Ashes of the Bushes

Tuesday, 21 October 2008
If we are to rise from the ashes of the Bushes in terms of the state than America and the world is today, we cannot send the Republican bull to clean up the china closet of chaos they have formented.

Nigeria: Dragging Iwu to the court of the Twelfth of June

Monday, 16 June 2008
When the tenure of Professor Maurice is placed in juxtaposition to that of Professor Humphrey Nwosu, the former is found wanting.

That is the start difference between the National Electoral Commissions of 1993 and 2007.

Nigeria: June the Twelfth

Thursday, 12 June 2008
15 years since the promise of representative democracy was destroyed by the machinations of a malevolent military junta.

We are yet to achieve that standard of democratic resolve which makes this day still so relevant and significant to Nigeria's fu

Cyclone Nargis: The death knell of the military junta

Saturday, 10 May 2008
The attitude of the military junta in Burma to the major disaster caused by cyclone Nargis might well be the death knell of that regime regardless of the referendum on democracy they are holding today.

Spotting the English from afar

Friday, 2 May 2008
What reputations the English have, in public, at dinner and in sport.

Zimbabwe: Mugabe is a coward

Sunday, 13 April 2008
Robert Mugabe is coward, he cannot bear to see he has lost and he cannot accept the fact that he has lost - he is afraid of the truth of democracy in Zimbabwe and he must not be allowed to change the truth.

Zimbabwe: Mugabe's epitaph by a little girl

Wednesday, 2 April 2008
With bated breath and great anticipation we wait for a new dawn in Zimbabwe.

After every vote is counted, the man must know that his time is up and time has now passed him by.

Zimbabwe: Thanks Mugabe, Now Give Way

Saturday, 29 March 2008
Keeping faith with Zimbabwe that today they shall be freed from the clutches of the Grand Despot of Africa.

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.

Nigeria: Abusing the Honours System

Saturday, 16 February 2008
The Speaker of the House who has only been in office for 4 months gets conferred with a national honour and people are complaining that the honour is of too low a class.

I say, he has no track record to be deserving of any honour yet.

Drugs: Chavez is NOT the problem

Monday, 21 January 2008
A US Illicit Drugs control official accuses Hugo Chavez of Venezuela of colluding in allowing drugs to be trafficked through Venezuela to the United States.

I contend that Venezuela has other priorities than trying to solve the US drug problem.

Nigeria: Another two oil cremations

Sunday, 13 January 2008
News of Nigerians caught in the flames of oil burning amongst them hits the wires - two days in a row.

They damned the consequences

Wednesday, 2 January 2008
Murders and vote-rigging by people who damned the consequences of their actions in Pakistan and Kenya. We need to have ways of getting justice for these unjust actions.

Benazir Bhutto, 1953 - 2007

Thursday, 27 December 2007
Benazir Bhutto was assassinated in the garrison city of Rawalpindi today.

Nigeria: 34 burnt to death siphoning oil

Wednesday, 26 December 2007
People get burnt to death siphoning off a breached pipeline in Lagos - again!

Putin and Chavez - Great Leader or Dear Leader?

Monday, 3 December 2007
Elections in oil-rich states belie the use of democratic process to entrench a benign authoritarianism or a virulent socialism.

Musharraf cannot fool us again

Sunday, 4 November 2007
Emergency rule in Pakistan is bad enough but to be lectured by General Musharraf on his failed democratic credentials is an insult we should not take lying low.

America: Maniac with razor blades

Friday, 26 October 2007
Sanctions complicate issues and makes negotiations very difficult. America's position is now seen as one of a maniac with razor blades threatening a nuclear crisis which parallels the Cuba Nuclear Crisis of the 1960s.

Fair-trade oil quest for Nigeria

Wednesday, 24 October 2007
We look to President Yar'adua to appear to be doing something, but as the oil company deals are coming under review for a better deal, maybe this would be the advent of fair-trade oil and resolution of many Nigerian problems.

Ojo (Maduekwe) has lost his mojo

Tuesday, 9 October 2007
The Nigerian Foreign Minister - Ojo Maduekwe appears on BBC HardTalk without a message from Nigeria.

Viva Sierra-Leone

Monday, 13 August 2007
Sierra-Leone conducts free,fair and credible elections, what has Nigeria now got for excuses?

The seriously unfunny Kiwi parliament

Sunday, 5 August 2007
The New Zealand parliament have banned using footage of parliament for satirical purposes. Me thinks we need a radical lobotomy to force in a humour gene.

This gas flare marks the North Pole

Friday, 3 August 2007
The Russians plant a flag at the bottom of the sea beneath the North Pole and lay claim to the resources therein. I really hope not, this is not the 15th Century.

Reasoning out the girl's kidnap

Friday, 6 July 2007
Some think there is some justifiable reason for kidnapping the 3-year old girl in Port Harcourt - I completely disagree and I cannot be persuaded of why anyone would do such an evil deed.

Child in Niger Delta Kidnapping and Death Threat

Friday, 6 July 2007
The Niger Delta region is really now in lawless flux, a 3-year old girl was captured by criminals and had her life threatened. It is unforgivable, unacceptable and intolerable, the girl must be rescued, what should be done to the men is unprintable.

Presidential prerogative, pride and persuasion

Thursday, 5 July 2007
The executive power of presidents and their humanity expressed by Bush I, Bush II & Putin.

Obasanjo does Pírìgìdì in Christian Theology

Friday, 8 June 2007
The ex-President of Nigeria Olusegun Obasanjo has returned to school for a post graduate diploma in Christian Theology - how contrite.

Democracy Day in the eyes of the fair-minded

Tuesday, 29 May 2007
Democracy Day in Nigeria and the swearing-in of the new President after 8 years of very little achievement for the ordinary Nigerian people.

The Nigerian Proclamation

Tuesday, 29 May 2007
On Nigeria's "Democracy" Day and the handover of reins of government to the President Select, I join other Nigerian bloggers in this proclamation. Slight correction for English rather than American spelling.

Is Goodluck suffering a run of bad luck?

Thursday, 17 May 2007
The vice-president select's property has been attacked twice - does he have enemies?

Nigerian uniqueness or French aberration

Saturday, 5 May 2007
Were there Nigerian observers at the French elections? They would have learnt a lot about how to conduct elections.

Is Nigeria a model for Africa?

Friday, 4 May 2007
A number of articles in the Economist about the Nigerian elections are painting us as a country rapidly losing respect, influence and clout - a model we are not.

Turkey belongs outside Europe for now

Wednesday, 2 May 2007
The current developments in Turkey are ample proof that the country does not belong in Europe if secularism has more weight that the results of democracy.

Rubbish elections or elections rubbish

Thursday, 26 April 2007
Rubbish features in the elections in Nigeria and the United Kingdom, but in what context?

Preparing for a one-party state

Monday, 23 April 2007
The numbers released as results of the elections in Nigeria are the kind of numbers that gave birth to one-party states and ineffectual opposition parties in Africa. I doubt if there would multi-party elections in 2011

Before we lose the Nigerian elections gracefully

Monday, 23 April 2007
The fundamental democratic human rights of Nigerians has been abused and infringed, but until some leader rises up to defend this right the verdict of the election observers would just be a vacuous exercise.

INEC frustrates Nigerians with incompetence

Sunday, 15 April 2007
INEC's preparedness comes apart when the reality of voting dawns. Some polling stations opened very late and others not at all. Irregularities abound and what else?

e-Petition pillow fights at 10 Downing St

Friday, 13 April 2007
Petitions to 10 Downing Street are making things happen even though indirectly.

Selling their discretion, dignity and honour

Sunday, 8 April 2007
Now the naval personnel have been given permission to sell their stories to newspapers. I despair.

Nigeria: They were burnt like tinder to cinder

Wednesday, 28 March 2007
Another petroleum death which happened on Monday and got reported on Wednesday - a lament of many wrongs in Nigeria.

Four years of shock and awe

Tuesday, 20 March 2007
The story of Iraq tells itself without the need for analysis or excessive commentary.

The Yar'Adua website - not impressed

Tuesday, 20 March 2007
A visit to the Yar'Adua website leaves me seriously unimpressed.

CNN Exclusive: The creaks (sic) of Niger Delta

Sunday, 11 February 2007
A CNN Exclusive files last week appears to be a directorial debut of the correspondent rather than facts as they really are, this does a disservice to the people affected in the Niger Delta and it is a shame.

The hope in Hillary

Saturday, 20 January 2007
Hillary Rodham Clinton is in the race for presidency, there is great hope for America after this prodigal son of politics is done with.

The Ideological Contagion of dummy capitalism

Tuesday, 9 January 2007
Russia, Belarus, Thailand and Venezuela might well be the school of hard-knocks about the truth of how capitalism works and why many countries have no inkling as to how the markets in a globalised setting cannot be tinkered with.

The Iraqi Travesty - Saddam escapes justice

Monday, 8 January 2007
All charges against Saddam Hussein have now been dropped and rightly so. However, I do remember that we were assured that all the charges would be tried even if he was killed, smart people knew the rush to kill him was behind that false promise.

Spare and pardon the Saddam video guard

Thursday, 4 January 2007
As the net closes in on the person who recorded the execution of Saddam, the fact of the matter is that the government lied to us when something different was happening. They should face up to their mistakes and learn to speak the truth.

Mene, mene, tekel, upharsin - Rumsfeld gone!

Wednesday, 8 November 2006
Found wanting and forced to change. Rumsfeld is out.

Saddam's death - No open and shut case

Sunday, 5 November 2006
The execution of Saddam Hussein would do nothing to change Iraqi for the better, we can expect worse before things begin to change after the US November elections.

No voting advice for our Dear Dutch Leader

Sunday, 29 October 2006
StemWijzer is a voters' advisory, the Dutch Prime Minister answered 30 questions and StemWijzer could offer him no advice. That is seriously worrisome.

Many U-turns required

Saturday, 21 October 2006
On Iraq, on Iran, on North Korea, on Syria, on Hezbollah, on Hamas and on many other issues, the Bush administration is in need a radical rethink if not a complete overhaul of his team which should include Rumsfeld, Rice and Gonzales.

Democracy - Counting the votes or Counting on judges?

Thursday, 21 September 2006
After the military coup in Thailand, one wonders about America's commitment to and support of democracies around the world.

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 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.

Keeping moral convictions out of the US Constitution

Wednesday, 19 July 2006
Yesterday, the Senate voted to allow stem cell research with human embryos and the House voted to reject a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage. Karl Rove must be in overdrive on how to rescue this situation for the November 2006 Election.

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.

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.

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.

Unnamed, unknown, unsung and undone in Nigeria

Sunday, 14 May 2006
The disastrous pipeline explosion in Lagos on Friday leaves us with the same questions and the wrong answers. Another probe should address the real issues - desperate poverty, mass illiteracy, poor health-care, corruption and the lack of opportunity.

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.

Abort this preschool finger-painting politics immediately

Wednesday, 19 April 2006
Having heard the party political broadcasts of both the Labour and Conservative parties in the UK, we cannot seriously be hoping that the message is anything but condescending. My third installment on democracy.

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