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Towards Curbing Insecurity In Northern Nigeria.

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Muhammad Ibrahim Milb,

 

Greetings to all Nigerians, irrespective of our tribe, status, language, region,   or religious affiliations. We write this with a disturbed heart, having held our 18th Executive session to brainstorm on the possible ways we can support and complement all efforts geared towards ending insecurity in Northern Nigeria; we resolved to communicate this. While analyzing the continuous threats and incessant loss of lives in the Northern States, we’ve resolved to call on every stakeholder to come together with all our brains and hammers to confront all forms of threats and perils targeting our population.

 

As much as we all remembered that the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (amended) in section 14(2)(b) stated that “the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government”, knowing that the Government alone may never save us from the mess we found ourselves, there is a need for all of us; both the rich and poor, traditional rulers and subjects, Associations and youth leaders, businessmen and academicians, Women groups, tradesmen, Writers, Musicians, Actors, educated and less educated, farmers, herdsmen, Actresses, corporate individuals and every gatekeeper in the society should wake up, let’s start discussing the right methods and modalities to assist all tiers of government in their effort to ending insecurity in Northern Nigeria.

NUJ charge security agencies to stamp out phone Snatching

Let us start thinking about the possible ways to end these problems; because we’re always the receiving end of this menace called ‘Nigerian Insecurity’.

 

Every day, the lives of the  Northern people are in such worrisome condition, especially the states of Zamfara, Katsina, Kaduna, Borno, and part of Niger.

People are forced to survive amidst various acts of terrorism, kidnapping, armed robbery, and massacre that lead to the displacement of persons, economic hardship, and retarded development of the region.

 

We must go beyond social media campaigns and start looking inward for the lasting solutions to these killings, we must start inviting serving and retired security experts, religious clerics, traditional rulers, politicians, business moguls, and youth leaders to give their quota.

 

We shouldn’t just keep watching our helpless brothers and sisters dying every day, we must start asking questions, providing solutions, creating networks, engaging collective efforts, and accept that we can all contribute positively in providing a lasting peace, security, and stability of Arewa and Nigeria.

 

We should be more concerned about the nonstop security challenges in Northern Nigeria, it is the major issue that’s dragging us backward, as it is creating an everlasting negative perception and assumption in the mind of the global community, making the region to continue collapsing and lacking all forms of Foreign investment and the globally standard rate of developments.

 

This is because Multinational companies will continue to believe that the North is the “Most Dangerous region to live in Nigeria”. Therefore, investors will always run away from the region; considering it to be suicidal to come and invest. Another serious threat is about how our brothers and sisters will be facing serious persecution and stereotype from other people; both at home and especially abroad, names related to Arewa are subjected to cumbersome scrutiny at airports assuming everyone from the north to be associated with criminality and terrorism.

 

We must start provoking ourselves to come to the table and proffer solutions to ending Boko-Haram insurgents unleashing terror in the northeast, farmers, and herdsmen conflict ravaging the North-central and armed banditry bedeviling the North-West.

 

We must be the generation that establishes the beginning of ‘collective grassroots discussion’ to end a particular problem that creates a linking bridge between our development and underdevelopment.

 

We must try to keep our ideological, religious, political, and other baseless differences to be able to fight our common enemy called ‘Nigerian insecurity’.

 

Let’s have a sober reflection of our few years amidst insecurity, we’ve lost thousands of lives and infrastructure worth billions of dollars while displacing millions into refugee camps.

 

Our inability to unite ourselves made us not have the sense of quizzing those representing us in government; especially those in our legislative chambers making policies and those executing them. Imagine when the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila says he will not sign the 2021 Appropriation Bill if compensation for victims of police brutality is not captured. How many honorable members, Influential individuals, and Youths activists from the 19 Northern States challenged him about similar efforts on the victims of the decade-old insecurity, what about our millions of orphans and displaced women in IDP camps, slain military and police officers that died at the war front, etc?

 

.We thought Justice of such nature should be served to all Nigerians irrespective of their region or status?.

 

Who is going to compensate our thousands of business Men and Women that lost their properties worth billions of dollars including hundreds of burnt trucks and buses loaded with goods and even many lost their lives as a result of the same protests?. It is so provoking that even the media could not cover such stories not to talk of the speaker of the House of Representatives or Senate President.

 

This is a call for open discussion to justice and demand for equality and equity where necessary, we must speak for ourselves where no one can speak for us, our people are going through a lot and its high time we all lend a ‘powerfully collective voice’ and a strong helping hands. It is now or never.

Northern Youth asks Buhari to reform SARS

On behalf of our Youthful population, we appeal to all stakeholders to consider this submission. Let’s start some discussions, as the late Inspector-General of Police, Ibrahim Coomassie once said “we must all speak not as members of our individual groups but as members of the Arewa family’’ and “We must salvage the North and by extension the whole nation, our success will usher vista of hope, respect, unity, and cooperation in the North,’’ May we all rise to start talking and acting swiftly to save ourselves and the generality of Nigerians. God bless Arewa and Nigeria. Kindly accept our highest regards. Thank you.

 

Yours Sincerely,

 

Hon. Muhammad Ibrahim Milb,

National Director of Media and Communications.

For:

National President.

News

Muslim-Muslim Ticket: idea fixation pathetic, religion be excluded in politics and governance, says El-Rufai

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The Governor of Kaduna State, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, has described the possibility that the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC, would run a Muslim-Muslim ticket in the 2023 presidential election as mere speculation.

Making a remark on Channels TV’s political show, Politics Today, he said, Nigerians’ obsession with religion – when it comes to voting – rather than competence is sad. “This fixation of Nigerians on religion instead of competence, capacity, and capability is quite sad and pathetic.”

El-Rufai said that anyone asking him questions about the controversial Muslim-Muslim presidential ticket is asking the wrong person, because, in the 2019 general election he settled for a qualified Muslim woman as a running mate and won the election in Kaduna State.

He said, “I don’t look at people from Muslim-Muslim or Christian-Christian angle. Most of my closest friends are Christians. It was Pastor Tunde Bakare, a Pentecostal pastor, that took me to the CPC, not President Buhari. I’m very close to Bakare. I’m very close to many Christians. I don’t think the business of governance has anything to do with religion. I think we should look for the best person for the job. A person that will get the job done and let him do that.”

He advised Nigerian journalists to keep religion out of politics and government. He said, “I don’t think we should be looking at religion. We want to develop this country. When I get into a plane, I don’t ask about the religion of the pilot. When I go to the hospital, I don’t ask for the doctor’s religion of the doctor, I just want to get well. I just want to get to my destination when in an aircraft.

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Nigerian Universities, the interference of Professional bodies, and the time bomb

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Having worked with multidisciplinary teams during my PhD at the Department of Engineering of the University of Leicester and postdoctoral fellowship at the Department of Electric Power Engineering at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), I decided to experiment the acceptability of a multidisciplinary team in Engineering departments in Nigerian universities in 21st century on my return in 2015. Then, I was already due to be a Senior Lecturer in ABU since 2014. So I sent my CV and an application letter for the position of Associate Professor to the VC through the Head of Electrical Engineering Department of one of our public universities in November 2015. And I received the following not very surprising reply.
“Having perused your application documents, I found them interesting and relevant to the need of the department. However, I cannot pass your application for further processing because of the post applied for. For your information, the Council for Regulation of Engineering in Nig. (COREN) has fixed the bar of an Engineering lecturer who is not registered with COREN at Lecturer I regardless of the number of his/her publications.”
The question that came to my mind was that is the regulation of engineering lecturers in universities part of the mandates of COREN? I read the reply again and he was very emphatic on my PhD and postdoctoral research experience and the relevance to his department. I was made to understand that the University has no academic staff in the area of high voltage engineering, but for them to utilize my experience in high voltage engineering, if I was actually ready to move there, I have to accept to be demoted for 4 years because COREN said so. And I can’t grow no matter my research output till I am registered with COREN. Amazing offer! It will take a complete idiot to accept such an offer. That is the reality of the compartmentalization of our university system and the destruction of the Nigerian university system and the structure by supposed professionals.
This was completely different from my experience in my two universities in Europe. Prof. Len Dissado had a first degree in chemistry and a PhD in chemistry but was a Professor of Engineering at Leicester because his research area was in Dielectrics, a topic very relevant to High Voltage Engineering. He was retained as Emeritus when I left in 2012. Dr. Steve S. Dodd had his first degree in Physics and PhD in Physics but was employed as a Senior Lecturer in Engineering (High Voltage Engineering group) because his research area was in Electrical insulation materials. He retired as a Reader in High Voltage Engineering. The HoD of the Electric Power Engineering as at the time I left the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in 2015 had a PhD in Physics and was a Professor of Electric Power Engineering. Universities in the rest of the world are closing gaps, while we are widening the gap. Since I could not close the gap, so we decided to have a High Voltage Laboratory in the Physics department.
In universities, we are academics and research workers. Irrespective of the field, we are employed to teach and do research. The yardstick for evaluating your performance is research output. Engineering graduates in academia are not left out. They are not employed as Engineers. Universities have their Engineers to do the engineering work. As an academic, you can be COREN registered to enable you to practice outside the university but not for the classroom and research labs in the university. I once asked a colleague some years back if as a university worker, he is an Engineer for real or a teacher and he was silent. I asked about the value of COREN registration in his teaching of Engineering courses, research output, and student project supervision and he could not give me a straight answer.
I still find it weird that COREN, a body regulating practicing engineers on the field is now setting standards for promotion in the Engineering departments of Nigerian universities. They will soon be telling Nigerian universities what to teach and what not to teach. The other councils of professionals will soon follow to set what they perceived as standards for the respective faculties or departments.
The interference of the Councils of professionals in the affairs of Nigerian universities has grown beyond setting promotion guidelines. They are now deciding the establishment of faculties and the duplication of academic departments. It does not matter the burden of running such faculties and departments on the universities. I am still wondering how they are able to twist the hands of NUC and the universities’ Senate and Governing Council to achieve all that. Not long ago, the Faculty of medicine in Nigerian public universities were converted to Colleges of Medical Sciences with 4 faculties and several departments, thanks to the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria.
What baffled me was the fact that the Department of Biochemistry, for example, that has taught medical students the biochemistry they know since the inception of the study of medicine in Nigerian universities is suddenly no more qualified to teach medical students because the Lecturers do not have a degree in medicine. Very amazing! We now have duplicated Biochemistry departments across Nigerian universities that they called “Medical Biochemistry” in the college of medicine. The “medical biochemistry” will possibly be taught by the Medical Doctors based on what they learned from the Biochemists in life science while in medical school. Could this be a case of trading quality for ego?
We also, for example, have a medical microbiology department in the college of medicine, a microbiology
department in the faculty of life science, and a vet microbiology department in the faculty of Veterinary medicine.
The microbiologists will be able to explain to us the difference between the different versions of the microbiology.
I was in Norway in 2014 when the Norwegian couple at NTNU shared the Nobel Prize for Medicine with a Professor at the University College London (UCL). I tried to check the structure of these 2 universities. The faculty of medicine at NTNU has no biochemistry department. The Department of Biotechnology and Food Sciences, a replica of the Biochemistry department, is in the faculty of natural science and they provide service to the faculty of Medicine as we had before the coming of the colleges of medicine in Nigerian universities.
How the increased number of departments helping to improve the quality of our academic output is what I can’t figure out. Rather than the duplication of service departments that will only increase the number of academic departments and won’t really add much value to the system but increased running cost, we should have created a college of life sciences and pulled the relevant faculties and departments into it.
Individualistic research is going extinct and most of the novelties of the 21st century are from interdisciplinary researches. One of the winners of the 2014 Nobel prize in medicine John O’Keefe is a neuroscientist in the Faculty of life sciences at the UCL with his degrees in Psychology. But the others, May-Britt Moser and Edvard I. Moser are both neuroscientists from the Faculty of Medicine at NTNU and received their first degree from the Department of Psychology and PhD in neurophysiology at the Faculty of Medicine in Oslo.
There is nothing more fascinating than the fusing of different ideas together to produce a unique product. That is the exploration in the 21st century. The world has left us behind in individualistic ideology and moved into multidisciplinary academics. If we must make progress in our universities, we must break our erected artificial barriers that are keeping us apart. The academics in physical sciences and engineering must come together with possibly a research centre that is into cutting-edge research that will involve research groups from all the relevant departments. Same way to bring life science and medical complex together.
I have seen graduates of mathematics that became Professors of Econometrics in Economics departments in universities in Europe, but not in Nigerian universities. I have seen a graduate of Chemistry that became a Professor of Engineering in Europe, but not in Nigerian universities. I have seen a graduate of Physics that became a Professor of Electric Power Engineering in Europe, but not in Nigerian universities. In Nigeria, I have seen Engr (Prof) XXX boldly written on our doors in the department but not in the universities in Europe. Are we having an identity crisis?
Professional bodies that are supposed to focus on the regulation of Professionals in the field should focus on their mandate and not be given free hands to change University policies as it pleases them. If we don’t end their interference, just like the medical council, COREN could wake up one day to tell our universities that there is a need for colleges of Engineering with departments of mathematics and physics to service the college because those in Mathematics and Physics departments are not qualified to teach engineering students because they don’t have engineering degrees. Vet council, Pharmaceuticals council, builders council, architects council, Quantity surveyors council, etc, may follow. So, how are we going to handle that?
Let’s stick to the founding principles of the university. Universities have world standards. We can stick to our British standard or borrow a leaf from the world’s top universities to improve our system, instead of allowing professional bodies to manipulate us and create barriers within the university system that will further slow down the progress we are to make.
Our universities are not in it’s best form and we have to do what we have to do to improve them. We should be more preoccupied with that. We should be discussing how to reposition Nigerian universities to be able to stand up to our various challenges and not duplicate departments without facilities because some Councils of professionals said so.
Finally, to my colleagues in Electric power engineering or high voltage engineering in Nigerian universities, you are welcome to experience our High Voltage Materials Laboratory in the Department of Physics, Ahmadu Bello University Zaria. We have a 400 kV DC generator and 100 kV AC source with a partial discharge measurement system to serve you. Join us to learn the physics of electric power equipment. We do not have barriers!

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Sports

Galadima Knocks Nigeria Sports Handlers Over Laziness in Talent Development,

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By Abdulgafar Oladimeji.

Former chairman, Nigeria Football Association , NFA Ibrahim Galadima(MFR) has faulted the administration, promotion and development of sports in Nigeria, noting that  the continuous  degenerating  global  status of Nigeria on the  sporting  arena could be attributed to laziness.

The outspoken sports administrator   stated that the absence of  clear  cut policies  on how  sports should be driven in Nigeria  constitutes parts of the factors that  has enrolled Nigeria on the path of total  failure.

Galadima in his remarks  on ( Thursday)at a one day workshop organized by Sports Writers Association of Nigeria, SWAN  Kano state chapter held at the conference hall of the Kano state Sports Commission with the theme “Early Warnings and Security Vigilance At Sports Events, he said “we re yet to clearly structure and drive the message clearly to say whether we   are in sports for business or  for leisure purposes.”

“our sports is going through difficult times, certainly, the Kenyans have  a clear concentration, they  have  shown clearly where they belong by dominating marathon races, recently they came to Kaduna and stamped their dominance.

“The abundant talent in Nigeria remained untapped, no age group graduation, even if you are in Chad, you are considered as a foreign based athlete, we are now so lazy in identifying talents.” Galadima lamented.

He alleged that lack of trust and confidence has  sent sponsors out of the industry, adding that potential brand sponsors are shying away from injecting their monies into  the industry for the fear of unaccountability.

 

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