To be sure, there are minimum requirements when it comes to occupying "higher moral ground"
"Grab them by the pussy"? Bro Buhari would lose the presidency if he expressed himself like that even off camera
On Saturday, 29 April 2017 17:01:36 UTC+2, Cornelius Hamelberg wrote:
> A cursory look at the Press
> Freedom Index confirms that freedom of the press/ free speech is
> relative, ranging from the US where we had some pre-election
> difficulties between Mr. Trump and various female members of the
> journalist and political cadre - at one point we read - and heard
> Trump describing a nauseous scene involving a "her" in
> which he said, "There
> was blood coming out of her... wherever " by which he meant
> that she was passing through her difficult monthly menstrual phase
> (the curse of Eve) - ranging from that and the reports about
> pussy-grabbing and Trump's early press conference in which Trump
> determines who can ask questions and who can not and must shut up
> and sit down - to something like the always decorous even if risible
> - as - from my point of view the innocuous statement by President
> Buhari for which he took so much flak - that more properly speaking
> his wife "belongs"
> in the kitchen. (Thinking just now of Theresa Mayhem)
>
> And now this matter of Punch Reporter Olalekan
> Adetayo now unceremoniously persona non grata to Aso Rock since
> one of the jealous (and zealous) guardians of the president of Aso
> Rock, Bashiru Abubakar
> perhaps believed
> that Adetayo's
> article Fresh
> Anxiety in Aso Rock over Buhari's poor health was
> a mischievous article in fact a violation of journalistic etiquette
> because whatever it's
> intention or
> motivation, in effect
> it has increased
> national anxiety by insinuating
> the existence of a Cabal that is holding Mr. President to ransom -
> and that kind of speculation does not auger well for national
> security or stability.
>
> When President Buhari
> returned from his sick leave in London, he did say that he was going
> to be in the background for an extended while - until - hopefully he
> recovers and is strong enough to execute his duties full time.
> So,
> why now this hue and cry about his " invisibility" ?
> At least it's not as
> bad as that Walcott case:
>
> "Submarine,
>
> the
> seven-foot-high bum boatman
>
> loose, lank and gangling as a frayed
> cheroot,
>
> once asked to see a ship's captain, and refused,
>
> with
> infinite courtesy bending, inquired
>
> " So what the hell is
> your captain?
>
> A fucking microbe? " (Another
> Life )
>
>
>
>
>
>
> The pressure is
> mounting, people want to see their President.
>
> Nobel Laureate
> Soyinka is the latest to add his powerful voice :
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Declare
> your health status, Soyinka tells Buhari …says President is public
> property
>
>
>
>
>
>
> So,
> the President is now "public property". National property.
>
>
> I
> guess that if it was a she president and she was pregnant the nation
> would now be chiming, " We are pregnant"
>
> Next
> question would be, "When is she going to put to bed?"
>
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> On Thursday, 27 April 2017 18:49:46 UTC+2, ayo_ol...@yahoo.com wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone.
>
> From: Margaret Solo-Anaeto <soloanaet...@gmail.com>
> Sent: Thursday, 27 April 2017 08:37
> To: Joel Nwokeoma; Prof Ayo Olukotun
> Subject: PROF OLUKOTUN'S COLUMN
>
>
>
>
>
>
> DEMOCRATIC RECESSION
>
>
>
>
>
> by
>
>
>
>
>
> Ayo Olukotun
>
>
>
>
>
> The
> term democratic recession may be somewhat fuzzy and hard to pin down; but
> thanks to University of Stanford, Professor, Larry Diamond, it has found its
> way into academic and popular discourse on democratic backsliding. It was only
> two years ago that Diamond in an update of an earlier seminal article published
> in the influential Journal of Democracy,
> the piece, Facing up to the Democratic Recession. There is of course debate not just about the
> concept but about the underlying assumption regarding the extent to which
> democracy, globally, has retreated.
>
>
> This is
> not the place to settle these academic controversies, nonetheless, it is
> pertinent to recall in the Nigerian context that one of Diamond's key insights
> concerns what he called, "the subtle and incremental degradations of democratic
> rules and procedures." In other words, the slow almost imperceptible veering
> off, in the end tally into authoritarian regression and the breakdown of
> democracy. Such matters for example as the hounding of journalists and free expression,
> targeting of the opposition and those who fund them, denial of fundamental
> human rights such as the right to bail, may at first blush look like minor
> infractions or negligible errors but over time, they harden and billow into
> democratic rollback. That is why for
> example the recent withdrawal of accreditation to the Punch State House
> correspondent, Olalekan Adetayo by the Chief Security Officer to President
> Muhammadu Buhari, Bashiru Abubakar warrants comment. As some observers have
> commented, that singular and reprehensible action brings up echoes of the
> infamous Decree 4 under which Buhari in his first incarnation as military
> president perpetrated a siege to free expression and detained journalists at
> will.
>
>
> True, Buhari has not on the whole in the period
> since 2015 been hostile to free expression but it needs to be clarified whether
> the recent clampdown constitutes a one off or signals a new direction. It should be mentioned that Adetayo's alleged
> offence was no more than an article he did in Sunday Punch on April 23, 2017 entitled, "Fresh Anxiety in Aso Rock
> over Buhari's poor health." As Adetayo narrated his ordeal, the CSO who
> summoned him "was visibly angry about the story…which was about how the
> president had not been seen in public in the last two weeks except when he made
> brief appearances at the mosque inside the presidential villa for Jumaat
> services." To demonstrate his fidelity to journalistic ethics, Adetayo had
> included in the story, the reaction of Special Adviser to the President on Media
> and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, who indirectly confirmed Adetayo's perspective
> by saying that the president was recuperating and that many were praying for
> him to fully recover.
>
>
> Fast forward to a few days later and
> observe that Buhari was pointedly absent at the scheduled weekly meeting of the
> Federal Executive Council, pleading that he needed to rest. This points up the
> fact that the Sunday Punch story is
> far from being a fictionalised account or the output of the hyperactive
> imagination of a journalist. The underlying
> truthfulness of the report did not prevent Adetayo from receiving a lecture by
> Abubakar and to endure the humiliation of having his accreditation tag seized as
> well as being escorted by a DSS official to fetch his personal effect from the
> press gallery and barred henceforth from the villa. Predictably, Abubakar's
> harsh reaction has elicited condemnations from a wide spectrum of civil society
> activists and some state officials including Adesina who claimed ignorance of
> the putdown and dissociated himself from it.
> It is interesting to put on record however that at the point this
> article was being finalised no apology had been tendered and Adetayo remains
> barred from the Villa.
>
>
> Authoritarian
> and jackboot instincts run deep in our polity and primordial culture. But having
> operated a democracy for 19 unbroken years our leaders ought to have lived down
> the slippery and high handed ways that have led us to the current downturn. If it needs to be restated, the media
> implement remote sensing and surveillance functions on behalf of society, to
> the extent that they can warn both leaders and citizens of clear, present and imminent
> dangers. The story about Buhari's
> possible deteriorating health and the attempt to cover it up constituted not an
> act of rebellion but of patriotism carrying an alert that should prompt all concerned
> to wise steps. It is a pity and deeply unfortunate
> that it was not seen in this light and has therefore elicited the contemptuous and
> demeaning reaction from a state official. To reverse and heal up the wound
> which this incident has inflicted on the national psyche, Buhari should
> reinstate the persecuted reporter and put his aides on notice that he will not
> tolerate or be silent about blatant violations of the citizens' right to free
> expression.
>
>
> In a related connection, this columnist
> laments that shortly after the Emir of Kano, Mohammadu Lamido Sanusi, raised critical queries about public policy hints
> were dropped in the public space that the finances of the Emirate would become
> a subject of inquiry and that like his grandfather he might soon be deposed. Indeed,
> the governor of Zamfara state, Abdulaziz Yari who was berated by Sanusi for
> saying that the outbreak of meningitis is traceable to the sins of the people, is
> reportedly leading a caucus to press for Sanusi's ousting.
>
>
> The health of a democracy is often measured
> by its tolerance of opposition and opposition views. It is precisely this
> factor that distinguishes a democracy which privileges robust debates from non-democratic
> and tyrannical forms of government in which the leader is always right. If we
> go down memory lane we will realise that constructive critics even in their
> most lacerating, tend to see more than the rest of society. To bring this
> truism home, Sanusi was excoriated by some when he blew the whistle about the
> monumental sleaze and corruption in the president Goodluck Jonathan administration.
> How right later events proved him to be! The point therefore is that the
> hounding of public intellectuals who speak truth to power stifles societal and
> political development and reinforces a culture of mediocrity in which those at
> the top cannot be disproved or be wrong.
> This is not to say that if Sanusi is found to have mismanaged his turf
> the matter should not be investigated, but we should stop giving the impression
> that as soon as someone disagrees with established positions, state agencies
> and power mongers should begin to put the spotlight on him for the purpose of silencing
> him.
>
>
> It is a symptom of democratic recession that
> this administration is becoming more intolerant of critical opinions and views
> that depart from the mainstream. It is also ironical because the administration
> is made up of star opposition figures who advanced the democratic imperative by
> rigorously interrogating official shibboleths and cant. I do not buy the argument
> that Sanusi's outspokenness lowers the bar with respect to his revered traditional
> office. I think that the nation is lucky to have someone like him who departs
> from the telling silences and business as usual positions that have put us all
> in trouble.
>
>
> The country is groping for redirection and
> the administration should stop giving the impression that it resents criticisms
> of any sort.
>
>
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> Olukotun is the Oba (Dr.) Adetona Professorial
> Chair of Governance at Department of Political Science, Olabisi Onabanjo
> University, Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State.
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