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"ATLAS Cove."
"Now, that gets me angry. I'd ordinarily
expect the Niger Delta militants to show
some consideration for the Federal
Government, after the release of Henry
Okah and Asari Dokubo. But the same day
Henry Okah was released, MEND chose to
attack the Atlas Cove Jetty."
"It was a welcome reception for Henry
Okah. I thought Okah himself said so in
an interview with the BBC. And MEND is
talking about Hurricane Moses. MEND,
while negotiating with the Nigerian
state, wants to visit the country with
one plague after another. The choice of
Lagos is strategic. It is a clear
demonstration of the seriousness of the
crisis. Bringing the Niger Delta
insurgency to Lagos, the country's
commercial nerve centre, exposes the
vulnerability of the Federal Government.
The country is unsafe."
"It took the Atlas Cove incident for
President Yar'Adua to change his
Minister of Defence. He wants to place
emphasis on professionalism."
"So, what if there was no MEND attack.?
Knee-jerk responses can never help us in
this country. I have always said this.
What we need is a rethinking of
attitudes and practices. Specifically,
government must see the Atlas Cove
incident as a signal that it must secure
all its strategic infrastructure in
every part of the country."
"The Navy was caught napping. If Atlas
Cove was so strategic as an off-loading
and distribution point for petroleum
products, why was it left in the care of
four naval ratings, who were probably
not well-equipped? This calls for an
investigation."
"This is Nigeria. NNS Aradu, one of the
country's warships was only a short
distance away from the point of attack.
The Navy could not respond. And the MEND
militants were not in a hurry. They took
their time. They destroyed the facility
and set four naval ratings ablaze"
"Even the fire could not be put out by
the Federal Fire Service. They had to
call on Julius Berger to help."
"In a more serious country, a strategic
facility like Atlas Cove will be
properly secured."
"Nobody was expecting the militants in
Lagos."
"Well, we should wait then until they
attack the Murtala Mohammed Airport, or
they carry out their threat to cause
havoc in Abuja."
"Maybe not. MEND has declared a 60-day
ceasefire."
"A ceasefire can be called off. They are
already threatening to call it off; less
than 72 hours later. They are insisting
that the Federal Government's Joint Task
Force should be withdrawn from the Niger
Delta."
"I think government has granted the
militants who attacked Atlas Cove Jetty
amnesty."
"What I know is that Governor Fashola of
Lagos State has issued a warning that
the attack on Lagos state must never
repeat itself."
"Or else..."
"Well, or else..."
"The Oodua People's Congress for example
has warned MEND not to go anywhere near
the South-West again, or it'd be forced
to retaliate. That is how it starts.
War."
"I don't see the amnesty working. I
think it is about time government gave
the Niger Deltans what they want. It is
time we re-negotiated Nigeria."
"My fear is that when the amnesty period
ends, there could be a serious show-down
in the Niger Delta."
"War?"
"War on criminal elements in the
region."
"I am scared."
"Don't bother yourself. You don't have a
hostage value."
"Who says?'
"Go and sit down. They are not looking
for people like you. In fact, if anybody
kidnaps you, I'd simply advise that they
should keep you."
"I understand members of the House of
Representatives are bent on commencing
impeachment proceedings against the
President for failing to implement
certain aspects of the 2009 budget."
"Are they still on that matter? That is
not what Nigeria needs at the moment.
The lawmakers want constituency
allowances. It is not as if they are
acting in the public interest."
"But if President Yar'Adua signed the
Appropriation Bill, then he should
implement it. He can not subject the
national budget to his own discretion."
"Come to think of it: what part of the
Budget 2009 has been implemented at all?
Can't see any evidence of
implementation. And now by December,
MDAs will be asked to return unspent
part of the budget to the treasury."
"Some money was released recently to pay
the monetization benefits of Federal
civil servants - N40 billion, to get
striking workers back to work."
"Yeah. The entire country is on strike.
Crazy."
"NIPOST is on strike'
"Medical workers are on strike"
"ASUU."
"Even PHCN is on strike"
"PHCN has been on strike for as long as
I can remember. Can't remember when last
we had electricity supply in our
neighbourhood. How about yours?"
"December, last year."
"You see. The Nigerian government itself
is on strike."
"Well, the politicians are busy
preparing for the 2011 elections. I
understand there is now a big fight over
the voters' register."
"You mean, the rigging has started?
Always with the voters' register. You'd
recall that in the 2007 election in Osun
state, names like Bill Clinton, Michael
Jackson, and Osama were on the Voters'
register."
"Osama Bin Laden. Where is that fellow,
these days?"
"In your village...The Americans will
soon come there to smoke him out. But I
have one piece of good news for you,
though"
"Oh ho."
"I saw a photograph of the INEC
Chairman, having a handshake with the
Pope. Front page of Daily Champion"
"Iwu and the Pope? Come on, that is not
possible. Are you sure the photo is
genuine, because these days in the
Nigerian press, you never know"
"Yes. Nigeria's Maurice Iwu and the Pope
in front of St. Peter's Basilica in
Rome. The Pope was meeting with select
world leaders."
"I'd have loved to know what the Pope
said to Professor Iwu."
"Must have been something like Maurice;
your sins are forgiven by our Father who
art in Heaven. Go and sin no more!"
"Is the Professor a Christian?"
"I should think so."
"So, when are you going back to the
campus? Looks like all of you who left
the university system should begin to go
back. Now, you can retire at 70, a
Professor's take-home pay is now N5.4
million per annum, about 40 per cent
increase."
"ASUU does not want it"
"They want more?"
"Why not?"
"By the way, they say you people are the
brains behind Nigeria's problems".
"They?"
"Well, the Speaker of the Lagos State
House of Assembly, Adeyemi Ikuforiji
says media practitioners in Nigeria are
the brain behind Nigeria's problems."
"Lord Lugard as far back as 1913
referred to the Lagos press as
scurrilous. Spiro Agnew talked about
journalists being "nattering nabobs of
negativism". Former President Obasanjo
abused journalists. Abacha also did. So
did Buhari and Idiagbon. Speaker
Ikuforiji is in good company."
"Are you saying you did not read what he
actually said about Nigerian
journalists? It is worse than you
imagine, and I see the media is not
speaking up in its own defence."
"No?"
"The Daily Independent published the
story. Other newspapers ignored it. The
media is not even willing to report its
own story."
"I am usually careful about stories that
are reported by only one source."
"This one is straightforward. It carries
a by-line and since the story appeared
in the Daily Independent on Tuesday,
nobody has denied it."
"So, what exactly did the man say?"
"I think it is better you read the story
yourself. It is like this. Members of
the Lagos State House of Assembly were
discussing President Obama's speech in
Ghana, when the Speaker suddenly got
angry and said he observed that
President Obama did not mention the
Nigerian media "as one of the models" in
the African continent."
"Meaning what?"
"The Speaker then turned on the
reporters who were in the House of
Assembly. Listen. He said: "The Nigerian
media is not always doing the right
thing; they write what they want to
write. They choose to spare the
executive arm and concentrate on
legislature. They are not doing their
job the way it ought to be done. Their
own corruption is worse than any other
person."
"Really? Did any newspaper publish the
Speaker's photograph, showing him taking
an oath or something, naked?"
"Wait now... Read this part of the
report: He told the young reporters -
"And it is not the fault of you that are
young in the profession but your bosses
that are in the office. Your own
Ghana-must-go is the worst; you and your
bosses in the office must change for
good."
"Has the Speaker started drinking? Was
this at a beer parlour, after several
bowls of isi-ewu, or on the floor of the
House."
"The House. And of course, the Speaker
enjoys parliamentary privilege. And you
wait for this, the journalists that were
present "simply burst into laughter and
this made the Speaker angrier."
"The journalists laughed? They didn't
stage a walk-out? No, let me get
something straight. Were those reporters
part of a rehearsal for a toothpaste
advert and they needed to show their
teeth?"
"You always like to trivialize things."
"I am trying to understand the story".
"What are you trying to understand? The
Speaker of the Lagos State House of
Assembly says journalists are thieves,
bribe-takers, worse than armed robbers
and he hopes that by the time you people
finish destroying this country, you'd
all relocate to Ghana!"
"Tactless, if you ask me. Did the
Speaker also say that journalists joined
MEND to attack the Atlas Cove Jetty, or
that journalists are the ones trying to
impeach the President, or that
journalists also took money from the
banks and refused to pay back?
"Candidly, I don't know".
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