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Why is the Nigerian Government not concerned about mass exportation of goods in humans flesh?

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Nuraddin Danjuma

Africa is a land of unlimited resources hence the colonial power leaves no stone unturned in search of those goods to service the modern capitalist states further north of the equator. At the expense of the continent, the European colonialists exploit – cocoa from Ghana, coal from South Africa, diamond from Sierra Leone, coal, cotton, groundnut and hide & skin from Nigeria, iron & steel from Algeria, rubber in Liberia, tea from Kenya, and timber from the rainforest of Zaire (now DRC) and so on. Africans were also traded. That exploitative Europe based colonial policy has instilled in Africa a lasting legacy of inertia as well as laziness of grave consequences. Worst of all, it imprints in African minds the desire to become nomads in search of enhance conditions in any available wage valuing nation within and outside the continent. The process has indeed pushed the continent and her people into dire risk of both self and ecological catastrophe. We have now turned more into human commodities than the postulated scenarios in the late 1980s by late Ali Mazrui.

In this piece, the focus is on a version of commodification of humans (labourers) of the mid 17th century (where Africans were exported to Americas, parts of Europe and West Indies to serve new industries in Europe and USA). The version I termed ‘eternal legacy of colonial exploitation’ has brought in a modern day voluntary migration of professional Africans (in herds) to more advanced modern economies in search of better life at the expense of the continent.

Breaking:Former Bayero University Acting VC Danjuma Maiwada Passes On

Fundamental question here is why isn’t the Government of Nigeria so concerned with the massive export of medical doctors and teachers out of the country (within the last 8 years) despite addressing herself nationalistic?. The assertion that there were hospitals without drugs, nurses without bandage and doctors without hypodermic needles in most African countries in the late 1980s according to late Ali Mazrui best depicts Nigeria Health sector today. More to that, the looming crises of mass migration of doctors and academics which the government seems to encourage. In the last 2 years, no fewer than 9000 medical doctors left Nigeria to UK, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states out of which 100 are consultants according to the Medical and Dental Consultants of Nigeria (MDCAN). Amidst shutting down of all the nation’s institutions of higher learning where medical doctors are trained and courtesy of poor working conditions in all sectors of the economy, 70 percent of the remaining ones are mulling the idea of moving out. As reported, the gap in doctor to patient ratio is widening.

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Accordingly, the ratio as of year 2022 is 1:5000 in sharp contrast to the World Health Organisation’s recommendation of 1:600 and as opposed the India’s ratio of 1:854. Over 5000 Nigerian doctors works in South Africa since 2018 while over 200 million Nigerians are left to access medical care from patent stores. And the President and members of his cabinet spent millions of foreign exchange on medical tourism. Since assuming power in 2015, the President has travelled to UK more than 10 times for one form of condition or the other which is apostolic to the European masters and atrocious to Nigeria and his campaign mantra.

Recently, the Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria and the Minister of Information and Culture decried the dollarization of the medical tourism to the turn of $1.6 billion (664bn in May 2022); a move that only exposes their sheer incompetence and that of their blame game administration. I ask who has the ability to go to even Egypt for any worst case apart from you when the number of poor persons in Nigeria roses yearly?. As of 2022 there are 95.1 million in poverty from 89.0 in 2020 as reported in many newspapers.

According to UNICEF in 2021 the under five mortality rate is 113.8/1000 live births as a result of increase in the proportion of population using unimproved drinking water sources among other factors. Death rate is also high at 11.4/1000 population in 2020 according to the World Bank. So, why is the Nigerian Government not so concerned about mass exodus of good medical doctors?.

The President, the Governors, Senators (here Ekweremadu in my mind), Representatives and all powerful officials should answer this or posterity will judge them. The Minister of Health of Nigeria recently asserted that there are enough doctors in the system because they are producing up to 2000 or 3000 doctors every year in the country and the number leaving is less than 1000. According to him if one doctor resigns today and goes abroad, we will employ one doctor. So the politics goes on.

Our founding fathers (Nyerere here) were right that “while the rest of the advanced world is moving to the moon, we still are trying to access the village”. Indeed the celestial bodies are closer to some while we still navigate between pot holes to doom. Nigeria is in this quagmire and we are not assured if we are inoculated against the consequences of mass migration of professionals to already built modern societies.

May God save my Nigeria

Remember it is not over until it is over.

Nuraddeen Danjuma
Bayero University Kano
06/09/2022

Opinion

BATTLE OF THE TITANS: CAN MUHAMMAD GARBA CONFRONT IBRAHIM WAIYA – “THE RAVE OF THE MOMENT?

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By Shariff Aminu Ahlan

Modern politics is more than a contest for power. It tests strategy, loyalty, competence, and performance.

That test is playing out in Kano State, as Commissioner for Information and Internal Affairs, Ibrahim Waiya, is now the focus of debate over leadership and results. He is being compared with his predecessor, Muhammad Garba.

In comparison, however, who among them has the vision to take Kano’s communication forward? This is the question that is on the lips of every Kano citizen

For Muhammad Garba, he run the Information Ministry for good eight years, yet a fair comparison with Waiya’s one and a half years would certainly outshine his record. The debate pits him against his predecessor, Muhammad Garba, who ran the ministry for 8 years.

Let’s look at the record, in just over 18 months, Waiya has made the Ministry of Information one of the most vibrant and active in the state, through innovative communication, public engagement, and clear dissemination of government activities.

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But even at that, a push is building intensely, urging the State Governor, Alhaji Abba Kabir Yusuf to replace him. Critics are up at tarnishing his reputation, just for personal gain.

Garba’s supporters cite his experience, unionism, and long tenure, while Waiya’s supporters point to one thing: outstanding performance.
Of course, Waiya may be new in the Communication sector, but leadership is better judged by impact, not years in office. In a short time, Waiya’s work has earned him public attention and the tag “rave of the moment.”

This is why, what is playing out in Kano, is just a contest of “experience vs momentum”. Garba brings 8 years of institutional knowledge, while Waiya brings energy, innovation, and visible results.

The value of this debate isn’t rivalry. It’s policy evaluation. Concerned citizens are of the view that, as a way forward, a public exchange would let both men state their vision, defend their record, and show their plans for the ministry.

Kano people would benefit most. They deserve facts, not sentiment. The public can also judge who has the clearer vision and stronger strategy to help Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf communicate the achievements of his administration and deliver his agenda. The time now, is not for politicking or for the promotion of personal goals, but rather for concrete strategies that will pave the way for Governor Abba’s reelection in 2027.

For Waiya, it’s a chance to prove that leadership is all about vision and results, not just longevity. For Garba, it’s a chance to remind the public of his contributions and explain what he left undone in 8 years.

So the questions are simple: Are both men ready for a battle of ideas? Can Garba’s experience beat Waiya’s momentum? Or will Waiya’s record cement his place as one of this administration’s most effective commissioners?

Now that 2027 is almost around the corner, these questions will certainly shape Kano politics.
The stage is set. The public is watching the unfolding scenario between “acclaimed experience” and momentum. As the State progress, only time will tell.
Let the battle of ideas begin.

Shariff Aminu Ahlan
APC Intellectual Warrior.
Realahlan0101@gmail.com

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Opinion

Let The Records Speak: Comrade Mohammed Garba, Comrade Waiya And The Future of Kano’s Information Ministry

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By Tijjani Sarki
June 21, 2026

Recent calls for the reappointment of Hon. Muhammad Garba as Commissioner for Information and Internal Affairs has sparked debate in Kano State. His supporters point to his eight years of service and describe him as an experienced professional whose return would benefit the government.

While I respect that view, I believe an important question deserves an answer, after serving for eight years in the same office, what exactly remains unfinished that necessitates a return?

This is not an attempt to diminish Hon. Garba’s contributions. Rather, it is a call for an objective assessment of performance. Public office should be judged by results, not sentiment.
Recent public discussions have repeatedly portrayed Hon. Muhammad Garba as a “professional,” as though that designation alone settles the debate. I respectfully disagree. Professionalism is not defined by the length of time spent in office, nor does it automatically flow from occupying a position for many years. It is reflected in innovation, measurable achievements, institutional growth, responsiveness to public concerns, and the capacity to deliver results. If professionalism is truly the benchmark, then the public deserves a fair comparison of records and accomplishments rather than a reliance on reputation or years of service. The debate, therefore, should be anchored on evidence, not labels.

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Instead of focusing on political developments, I suggest that Kano people compare records. Hon. Muhammad Garba had eight years to lead the ministry. Comrade Ibrahim Abdullahi Waiya has had barely one and a half years. Yet within that short period, many observers have noted renewed activity within the ministry, especially in the often-overlooked Internal Affairs Department that was hitherto inactive and relegated to the background thereby rendering it dead by previous administrations until Waiya came in and salvaged the department from strangulation.

I have seen greater public engagement and a more visible ministry under the current leadership. Whether one agrees with every action taken by Waiya or not, the ministry appears more active and connected to the public.

For this reason, I would welcome an open public debate between the two Comrades. Let them present their achievements, challenges, and vision. The Ministry of Information is not only critical and central to governance rather it is at the same time the voice of government and should be led by the person best positioned to serve the public interest with commitment, dignity, competence and capacity.

Let the records speak. Let the people judge.

Tijjani Sarki writes from Kano and can be reached via responsivecitizensinitiative@gmail.com.

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Opinion

The Unsung Guardians of Nigeria’s Prosperity-Edekhe Glorious Maria

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By Edekhe Glorious Maria

In the grand narrative of Nigeria’s quest for economic self-reliance and sustainable development, popular discourse frequently centers on fiscal policies, central banking reforms, and foreign direct investments. Yet, the finest policy frameworks remain mere ink on paper without a robust mechanism to police the entryways of commerce. Standing resolutely at this critical intersection of trade, finance, and defense is the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS). Far from being a mere tax collection agency, the modern NCS functions as the quintessential bulwark of our economic sovereignty and a premier shield guarding national security.
To fully appreciate Nigeria’s survival and resilience within a highly volatile global market, one must look closely at the unsung guardians keeping watch over our borders, seaports, and airports.
The Economic Bedrock: Fueling the Machinery of State
In an era where volatile oil revenues demand aggressive fiscal diversification, the financial contributions of the Nigeria Customs Service have transformed from a supportive budget buffer into an absolute lifeline for the federation.
Under the reform-minded leadership of Comptroller-General Bashir Adewale Adeniyi, the Service has consistently shattered its own revenue records. In recent fiscal cycles, the NCS smashed historic expectations by generating unprecedented trillions of naira in revenue comfortably surpassing its initial treasury projections. This momentum has carried fiercely into recent quarters, with non-oil export processing volumes revealing massive year-on-year surges in value. These trillions of naira flow directly into the Federation Account, funding critical public infrastructure, healthcare, education, and public sector operations nationwide.
Beyond raw revenue generation, the NCS acts as the ultimate protector of local industries. Without the tactical enforcement of import prohibitions and anti-dumping regulations by customs officers, Nigeria’s fragile agricultural and manufacturing sectors would be utterly overwhelmed by cheap, subsidized foreign goods.
When customs officers intercept shipments of smuggled rice, expired pharmaceuticals, or contraband textiles, they are not merely enforcing paperwork. They are actively saving Nigerian jobs, keeping local factories open, and preserving the structural integrity of the Naira.
The Border Shield: Where Trade Meets National Security
In the contemporary global landscape, the threats to a nation’s survival are asymmetric, fluid, and deeply intertwined with international trade routes. Herein lies the dual nature of the modern customs officer: a facilitator of trade by day, and a frontline defense asset by night.
The proliferation of small arms, light weapons, and illicit narcotics across West Africa represents a clear and present danger to Nigeria’s internal stability. The NCS stands as the first ,and often most effective,line of defense against these lethal inflows.
Multi-billion naira intercepts at strategic flashpoints across Lagos, Port Harcourt, and land borders have successfully kept military-grade rifles, pistols, and live ammunition out of the hands of bandits and insurgent networks. Simultaneously, large-scale seizures of tramadol, codeine, and illegal synthetic substances actively dismantle the financing chains of criminal syndicates while protecting Nigerian youth from the scourge of drug abuse.
Furthermore, customs operations directly suppress resource economic sabotage. The rapid interception and enforcement around smuggled petroleum products (PMS) block economic saboteurs from starving local communities of critical fuel supplies and bleeding the national economy dry.
Modernization and the Future of Border Management
The victories of the NCS are not accidental. They are the direct result of a deliberate, ongoing transformation toward digital trade facilitation anchored by the comprehensive Nigeria Customs Service Act.
Through the implementation of advanced technology, such as automated risk-assessment systems, the expansion of the Authorized Economic Operator (AEO) scheme, and advanced Time Release Study (TRS) diagnostic tools, the Service is rapidly reducing human interface, cutting down cargo clearing times, and plugging revenue leakages. This structural evolution ensures that the dual mandate of the Service remains perfectly balanced: legitimate trade is accelerated to boost economic growth, while illicit trade is ruthlessly intercepted.
Conclusively recognizing the Sentinels at the gate; The sovereignty of a nation is defined by its ability to control its borders and dictate its economic destiny. For Nigeria, that awesome responsibility rests heavily on the shoulders of the officers and men of the Nigeria Customs Service. They operate in high-risk environments, facing down heavily armed smuggling cartels and navigating complex maritime and land entryways, often without the public adulation reserved for other security arms.

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As Nigeria marches toward a more prosperous future under the banners of industrialization and regional integration via the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), the NCS will remain our most vital institutional shield.

It is time to rewrite the public narrative. The Nigeria Customs Service must be recognized for what it truly is: a patriotic, highly strategic, and indispensable cornerstone of Nigeria’s prosperity, national security, and enduring sovereignty.

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