Thursday 27 September 2012

CULT ASSAILANTS TURN VICTIMS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF JOS



The huge “Say No to Cultism” sign is the first to greet you as you enter the University of Jos through the student hostels access. 9It signal a commitment between the students – represented by their Union Government and the school’s authority, to fight this menace, a show of moral decadence amongst university students who have lost the cause that brought them nigh. Thus, it became alarming when gun-raids said to be by cultists begun rising by the numbers in quarters, occupied by students living off the school’s campus. There were reports, of attacks in the Anguwan Rukuba and Rusuo neighbourhoods amongst others. And if the events of yesterday were to affirm it and put the school’s security system on alert, it was a very dreadful one, which students bravely stood up to stamping a statement of discontent.

When graduating students of Management were joyfully rolling the film, as they celebrated after writing their final exams; Linguistics students were electing new officials, a couple of guys were preparing to wreck havoc to the afternoon air. Donned in red (as all graduating students of management were), they camouflaged themselves to gain entrance in to the library complex at the permanent site (which currently hosts a bulk of academic activities), and reeled in a student of Psychology, who was their supposed target.

Eyewitness accounts say the target was shot at six times, but was not hit by any of the bullets (apparently, he had some voodoo done, to repel bullets). Then when he took off, they began screaming “thief”, to which other students too chase for, caught him and pinned him down for a beating. One of the assailants were said to have approached the mob, and aimed at their victim at point blank range on the head. But they then got alarmed that he was not getting hit, and began to retreat.

Person, reported to be the cultist who was stoned to death yesterday
That was when the wrath of students was borne, and they began going after the assailants. One was caught and stoned to death, while the other got the beating of his life, almost at the point of death with fatal injuries to his head, before men of the Department of State Security came to the scene and whisked him away. In the aftermath, a girl got hit by a stray bullet on the hand, and another got a gash to head from a stone.



No other death or injury was recorded at the scene, and activities got back to normal, apart from the security protocol getting even tighter. Thus, this is to debunk earlier reports by Sahara Reporters, that were had been a gun raid on the University, with about two Students killed, and several others injured.

Wednesday 19 September 2012

KANO IS RUNNING TO THE SANDS


Kano Durbar; an annual Eid festival of pageantry and loyalty
Riding behind a commercial motorcycle in the ancient north-central city of Kano, Nigeria is a two-pronged experience. While it gives you an easy and faster escape from the terrible traffic congestion and its antecedent effects, it also provides the chance to be refreshed with air – freshness determined by what location of the city you are in – which brings reprieve from the scorching heat in a city, fast transiting in to the desert region, in the agro-ecological classification of Nigeria. Kano is a beautiful city, carved out of the clayey material remains of the alluvial plains of central Nigeria, with a very rich history and conservative society, after Islamic norms. And as much as the vegetative metamorphosis is ongoing, the vagaries of globalisation seem to be fast on its heels. 

With the mammoth Kasuwan Kwari – a haven for textile, dates, rubber and plastic merchants to name a few – nestled almost at the centre of the metropolis, little wonder the tag, “centre of commerce” has come to stay, much to the despair of other cities like Onitsha, and Potiskum, barring Lagos, which in its own right, is indeed, the “centre of excellence”.  The city of Kano, written in the annals of time is today an agglomeration of nine local governments of the total forty-four which make up Kano State. Characterised by thick traditional clay defense walls and gates, the original plan of the old city, brings repute to the ancient planners, who had made the city impregnable, a commercial bliss and a tourist’s destination.

Kano boasts of astute business men, ranging from Alhassan Datata who had surpassed Umaru Sharubutu Koki and Maikano Agogo by 1922, to become the city’s richest man. He is the great grandfather to Africa’s richest billionaire today, conglomerate magnate Aliko Dangote, who amongst business interests in flour, sugar, cement, oil and confectioneries, is currently developing a tomato processing plant by the expressway before you enter the city. The Sharada, Challawa and Bwopai Industrial Estates are situated in the city, which has an Export Promotion Zone.
Aliko Dangote - Chairman, Dangote Group

Notorious for its tye and dye, the Maitatsine uprising, the Durbar and the groundnut pyramids, Kano is a ‘wonder’ in Nigerian history and mythology. In January, 2012, it was a scene of deadly bombings carried out by the terrorist group Boko Haram, targeted at government installations in the city. This they claimed was a retribution for the city’s support for the federal government’s effort in ending their activities. Also, in as much as two-hundred years, the traditional Eid Durbar – a festival of class, pageantry, royal show-off and affirmation of loyalty of the polity to the ruler – was called off in August, due to a variation in reasons from security challenges, to the Emir, His Royal Highness, Dr. Ado Bayero – San Kano, taking ill.

Before the bombings, it staked its acclaim during the #OccupyNigeria protests organized by the Save Nigeria group, then seeking the reversal of the Presidency’s decision to remove fuel subsidies, when protesters took to the silver jubilee square, and renamed it “Subsidy Square” though the naming didn’t stand the test of time. A British Broadcasting Service reporter approximated the number of protesters who camped there – a la Egypt’s Tahrir Square during the Arab spring, at two thousands. Protesters followed going-ons across the country, via their mobile phones and transistor radios as they made a name for themselves. The Murtala Mohammed ICT Park, a gigantic structure built by the state government to be the information technology hub, towered behind them. Even a twitter account, @Kano emerged from the event, highlighting the growing influence of information technology in a highly conservative and perceived illiterate society. Albeit, only 35 percent of the population are litereate.

Goron Dutse and Dalla Hills overlook the city, with the Gidan Makama museum housed in a 15th century monument and the Kurmi Market where you can get the best of handcrafts, nestled in the old city. The Aminu Kano International Airport, the country’s largest cargo airport is situated outside the old city, where the first recorded flight to the city landed at the polo field, in 1925. And while the railway system is getting a facelift, a bus or a tricycle ride around, is another experience of its own.

However, a phenomenon scarring the beauty that is Kano is the mass of waste produced which is improperly disposed and managed. This has not only polluted the air and land, but also the ground water system, which traditionally supplies the bulk of residents who are still waiting for government pipes to reach them. Combined with poor housing planning and hygiene, a contamination of the water system would result in a quick fire cholera epidemic. In 2001, well over seven hundred people died and thousands more hospitalised. The World Socialist Web Site reports that up till 2001, the only year in which Kano had not suffered a disease epidemic, was 1997, but the year before, there was a triple epidemic, with almost fifteen thousand people suffering from cerebrospinal meningitis.

Most worrisome, is the flecks of sand that settle between the lips, eyelids and eyebrows, when you ride the motorcycle around Kano. While you might have to wait for the harmattan winds to bring you any evidence of the fast encroaching desert in the middle belt and southern parts of the country; fine loess filter in from the desert daily, as turbulent winds erode the Sahara desert. And with the desert encroaching at an alarming rate of 0.6 kilometres per annum, the efforts of the women employed by the government to sweep the roads of daily stockpile of loess might not be enough; and take frontline local governments in the North-Western and North-Eastern parts of the state are already feeling the impact of the desert. Soon enough, some loess landform might appear in the Kano horizon.

The state government is stepping in, planning to plant one million trees this year, with nurseries already established in Danbatta, Bichi, Gaya, Karaye, Bunkure, Dawakin Kudu and Takai local governments as well as at the monitoring unit in Kano city, according to Alhaji Maitama Danbatta, manager of the project. To confirm the severity of the situation, the federal government is also set to launch the Great Green Wall Sahara Initiative in October, a project which is expected to run across Africa, from Mauritania in the North-West to Djibouti in the North-East, which might just help rehabilitate the existing fifty kilometre shelter belt in the state.

Floods are among disasters that frequent the city of Kano, with yearly records of lives and property lost in the throes. As at Friday, 14 September, 2012 there were calls for volunteers to help evacuate neighbourhoods close to the Warawa Dam. On Sunday, it was reported; eleven thousand, five hundred people were displaced in Kano and Jigawa States. On this occasion, a motorcycle would be handy in saving lives and property.

Word goes around that if you can ride a motorcycle in Kano, then you can anywhere in the country. Enjoying a motorcycle ride around Kano has its downside afterall. Exposure to ghastly mishaps as cyclists meander through traffic is second only to Lagos. You might also be prepared to have your heart in your mouth sometimes, but always have some water in the bathroom for a bath afterwards.

Tuesday 21 August 2012

SLIDING GURARA

Little wonder, Nigeria's largest state by land mass, Niger is christened, the "Power State". It not only account for around 40% of  total power production output to the national grid, but hosts two past Heads of State - Gen. Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida, and Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar. It is also the birthplace of Nigeria's only indigenous Governor-General, Nnamdi Azikiwe, and secessionist leader, Col. Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu who were both born in the sleepy town of Zungeru.

It is a well drained area, with countless tributaries, emptying in to the Niger river at various points, or first entering the Kaduna river, which is itself, a major tributary of the Niger. Thus, it is hard to say Niger State is not the geotourist's haven. But when the topic of tourism is associated with the state, just the magnificent Zuma rock and the Bida blacksmith district come to mind. However, the discovery of a beau, and the subsequent interest in developing it in to a tourist delight, urged me to pay a recco visit, but not without company.

Thus, in line with taking a tour of Tswata Mukun -  the blacksmith district at Bida, even though we were not allowed to take pictures, I took four Chinese and one Vietnamese tourists to visit the Gurara waterfalls. Characterized by features which still make African rivers unnavigable - rapids, the waterfall is a gigantic stampede of water, slaloming over granitic rocks cut in beautiful formations to form a collection of small falls, and a colossal waterfall which plunges off a cliff, and then proceed through Gurara Local Government to empty in to river Kaduna.

We spent about 45 minutes at the site, taking pictures, and playing at the bank, where I was able to engage with the only local tour guide, who briefed me about the vision of turning the place in to a truly pro-poor tourist destination in Nigeria. While he talked, I kept dreaming, drawing up imaginary structures of how the place could be transformed, but now, I pictured myself as a holder of a 99year BOT tenure.

We got to the site around the time the sun was about to descend beyond the horizon, so, we were able to avoid the heat of the day, but we couldn't help folding up our pants, and feeling the coldness of the water with out feet. The tourists were delighted, and wanted to stay much longer, but we had not bought enough time on the day. We thus, left for the capital, Minna, where I plot my return in grand style, to Gurara Waterfalls.

Wednesday 25 July 2012

MY HEART'S AMBERS

Guise the moon and eclipse my crown,
A thousand thoughts stampede.
Strike with lightening - drought,
Stoke my heart's amber,
Its skin billows foul air.

Grill my demons' fears, those pricks,
They conjure wetness in my pants - 
A rampaging fire from my tap.
Let my heart's amber light the path,
When fairies or djin hunt me the chest

Tuesday 17 July 2012

ROUT

A thousand thoughts stampede my mind

If my pen be slain on this field and my pockets bleed

Will my king be crowned? Or I be eclipsed?

Wednesday 4 July 2012

THE CRY FROM WAR

The wall of a bruises gazelle's Achilles
Rippling echoes, the cry from war
Where Harbinger's god bring to slander
Daisies from wilt's escape
When re-sown goatskin moults
Where emotion's silo roosts
Let Cupid sound the omen
Of lush panorama
The paradise of happily hereafter

Saturday 2 June 2012

NGOZI NWOZOR-AGBO

I got life on campus
Fairytales to my name
The spitting pen of valour
When you commissioned me
For war of flying words

What pact be this?
When life begets death
And vis?
Double for none
Was the creed

The schyte has come upon us
Who shall console a nation?

Monday 21 May 2012

BIAFRA

I ate Biafra, the zealot
fruit, come, to spirits, when
the umunna tarries the half sun

Biafra, a flying hut
neighbours with a parliament
at Uli's marketplace

Friday 11 May 2012

TO BE YOUR LAST FIRST KISS

After bouts of shredding barks
When in sorrow's shackles tears flow
And in darkness' height depression looms
I want to be your last first kiss

When sad tales flourish untold
How they all came and left
Each with a splinter to the shatter
I want to be your last first kiss

In the days of depression
When the next day is a miracle
And strength to live through lacks
I want to be your last first kiss

Though they blow up my chance
And fear of another breakup overthrows
Making persistence hard to believe
I want to be your last first kiss

Though naivety and sobriety be lost
Countless times a chance afresh
Yet a familiar victim of heartbreaks
I want to be your last first kiss

Saturday 28 April 2012

PART 3: TROUBLES NEVER SINGLY COME

Ayuka grew up to be told she had to wear distinct clothes that differentiated her from her brothers. She was a very beautiful girl, and was a toast of the boys in the village. The boys wore shorts and shirts, and good looking khaftani with caps to match.

Inna had told her, custom allowed her to wear trousers made for girls once in a while, but to tie the wrapper around her waist, and wear bespoken blouses. In some occasions, she could wear at will, any of the many long, flowing dresses Inna had made for her.

When they could afford the money, Inna took the bale to the local tailor to sew them. Even though he had an old looking machine, and seemed to have too much work to do, girls and their mothers would still troop to the shop, and demand sometimes in angry tones, why their clothes were not ready, or why some different form, or style was made.

When money was scarce; and father would frown when any of the children approached him for money, Inna would just cut the bale in sizes, and use the needle she had bought in dozens, to stitch them together under the lantern, by the hearth after the food was gulped, and the elves of slumber roamed.

Trust in those occasions, the dresses never looked as beautiful as those that had gone to see the tailor. And the girls, Asabe and Ayuka would frown at the clothes, and would prefer only to wear them at home, to avoid the scorn of other girls, when they went out.

She was a very illustrious woman – mother, who had married father when her puberty had just arrived, and stayed in his house twenty four more moons before father could come home and know her. It was the time, when white skinned people filtered through the hinterland, and built houses in compounds, and pleaded with parents to let their children congregate till noon.

Inna’s Abba had refused his children gather with others to learn to clap and sing and play. He would have none of that. Keep a child all morning just to sing and clap and play? It sounded ironic, while farmlands lay overgrown with weeds. Millet that was needed in bountiful harvest, otherwise grandma would have to buy from the market, when one she had had been made into kunu. And the beans that was used for kwose which sprouted with the latter rains needed tend frequently, to enable them spread limbs and multiply well.
 
He’d rather have his sons in the farm with him, and let his daughters sit at the village square, and sell vegetables and fry kwose. Or go hawking of atta and daddawa for their mother. Inna would fry kwose at the square in the morning, and go selling daddawa till the cock crew before the sun went down, or when the tray went empty. And that was the usual culprit.

That was where she first met father. When she stopped hawking daddawa and fried only kwose, her puberty had not even come. She would sit at the village square, preferring it to the market. Father became a regular customer, and would sit and chat a little longer after gulping his kunu with the kwose. It was common sight to find a girl who fried kwose going off to marry one of her customers who came to gulp his kunu with her kwose.

Ayuka was the second of daughters in a house of eight children. She had two elderly brothers, Buba who was now married and his wife had bore two children already, and sold vegetables at the market. As much as he was a strong farmer, Buba was a hunter who went to the wild, tried never to step the ‘evil’ forest, and return each time with fat bloody meat that taste great after it was, grilled with salt and pepper.
He was the next in line to be dabbed Sarkin Farauta – chief hunter. Father was very proud of his firstborn son. With ya Buba, they never lacked meat in the house. Then there was Mailafiya. His name meant a lot to father and Inna.

Told it was, that as a toddler, he was most visited by bouts of illness, which would make his temperature tumble at night, and soar by day. He’d gnaw at his teeth, and convulse till some milk-white saliva poured down the side of his mouth. The marabou had taken him in his hands, and gone to see the Good Spirit. And never again did he ever had any bout of illness.

After him was Asabe, who was born in the farm. She lived fourty two moons older than Ayuka, and had been married off to a bronze smith who paid her dowry in beautiful bronze castings. Asabe had been so happy on her wedding day, and Inna gave her loads of blessing before she left that day, to live with the man, and to make little beautiful girls for him. The marriage was not blessed it was rumored around, because she had not delivered a son to her man.

Ayuka was the fourth child of the family, and had very long hair, with a dimple that posed her smile in a beautiful cast, and made the boys stare at her, long, long times. She had a lithe slimy frame, and silky long hair that poured down her shoulders, till the scapula was well hidden.

She had four younger brothers who called her ya’Bebi, being that she was the younger of the girls in the house. She loved them more than her elder siblings, but loved even more, Hassan and Hussein, the twin that came forth last from their mother. They had come when no one had expected, considering that Inna was ripe with age.

She had greatly helped Inna in caring for them as infants, and they had a strong clinging towards her, than any other in the house. They were still children, about the age when they could sweep the compound and wash the plates, were they girls. But Ayuka had to do all of the chores, while they played a great deal in the Zaure.

Sometimes, they called their friends and went off to the stream that watered the village, play in it for long and then go off hunting Agama lizards in the surrounding shrubs.

Ayuka’s other siblings, Abba, because he was named after father, and dan’Fari who was very fair in complexion, were of age to mingle with the youth of the village, and thus went to the farm with father. They also went to learn to sing and clap and play with other children in the district, who assemble at the compound every five days, in Alkaleri.

But they went for four days. On Friday, they didn’t go to the place, a mile and half from Bwompe, when they went to the farm with father very early in the morning. Ayuka never went with the boys. It was never heard, of a girl who went in the midst of the boys.

Bwompe sat close on a pass. The towering hills kept it away from Fulani and Anaguta invaders centuries past, and now, the taller hills formed its watch tower, and refuge. A very remote village, not all Lorries could maneuver the steep road that led to it. Thus only the giant lorry in the fleet that ply the long route between seven villages come only once in four days.

It carried all the commodities Bwompe needed, and the district nurse that came once every week, to administer the medicine that cured diseases. Even though people still beckoned the marabou, they still tried the concoctions of the nurse who came in crystal clear dress with a headgear to match.

But a few motorcycles plied the trail often. The district officer’s bike was most distinctive of all. The D.O. as he was called was a white skinned man, who wore something over his eyes. The messenger who worked in his house, a young man from Bwompe here, said it helped him see his way better, and to read well. Said of it, that it helped to see djins at night, when they prowled, and cast spells on children exposed, when the turare was not lit by parents. The man was learning the local dialect already, and could say some words well. His house was said to have plenty rooms in it, and a nice lane of blossoming flowers.

Children would abandon their play, and wave as he rode bye to the village head’s house. It was a giant Honda CG-250, and its roar was distinct from the others. This announced its arrival each time. Because the village head’s compound hedged not too far from the square, the D.O. would park his bike at the square, and walk to see the village head.

Ayuka went to the village square like her mother did, to fry kwose in the mornings. Men bound for the farm, would sit with kunu and kwose and fill their bellies before they left for their farms. And then Ayuka would retire home to wash plates, and sweep the compound, and cook while the twins played in the Zaure.


A few times, when the D.O. came, children who trail the bike would buy off the remaining kwose that left unsold all morning. But most times, the few that left were usually being taken home to the twins and their friends, who devoured with much gusto.

And there was this young man, just initiated into manhood, who came to sit, and gulp before heading for the farm. Their house was in the other side of the village, and he was named Babangida. He had a nice physique, and his biceps gleamed in the morning sun. His hands were firm, and strong.

He had the humor that chuckled your sides, every time he was around. His father had sent him to the place where children gathered to learn to play and to sing and to clap. It was said, that they taught to count and to write and to read too. The piece of wood at the entrance of the compound read, “Rop District Elementary School”.

Ayuka liked him a lot. His company every morning seems to make the time travel fast. He would share some of the stories they were told by the white people who taught at the school. Sometimes, he would urge her to count after him. He no longer went to the school. He had finished learning from there, and was encouraged to proceed to the city to finish his learning.

He had been going there since he was the age of Hassan and Hussein. He had elder brothers who helped his father in the farm, and who were not privileged to attend the school. Those days, there were usually great lorries coming from the city, full of people and bands who rolled out across the district, visiting village and gathering people to the squares. Accompanying the D.O., they often came to encourage fathers to send their children to the school. “All the male children, and the girls too, if you can” the man who compered would say after the D.O. had given his speech.

After the second time they came, and had a boy from the village climb the wooden platform to count to ten, fathers began to send their wards to school. That was when Babangida had gotten the chance to attend. And his father had managed to pay his fees of fifty naira for each class, till he graduated. But his father had declined, rather choosing to have him around helping in the farm.

But he had enough learning already that helped him count his father’s goats. He was the shepherd who took them out to eat in the morning before they left for the farm, and returned them to the manger at dusk. And by the time he was done taking the goats out, his father and brothers were usually gone for the farm already. So, he had time to drink his kunu and kwose at the square, before joining them. and he would turn up at Ayuka’s hearth, to take kwose. He preferred her kwose to others, because hers tasted better in his mouth, and because she liked to laugh to his jokes.

And he liked the way her smile radiated. He always looked, unending. She would look at his eyes, and find something that she never sees in her father’s eyes, or Inna’s or her brothers’. It radiated warmth, and caught her off her feet each time. Every time, she asked herself what it was, that drew him closer to her heart.