Wednesday, June 3, 2020

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Re: Is Something Wrong With Me?

 
Southern Nigerian Black Leaders Lives Matter Also

Mr Moderator Sir,

I totally support  Professor Moses Ochonu's take on intersectionality and intersectional analysis on this thread.

We, Nigerian diasporans risk being seen as hippocrates when we join Black Americans mouth platitudes on Black Lives Matter when we cannot demonstrate the same enthusiasm towards southern Nigerian leaders when they were assassinated in cold blood by agents of the Northern Oligarchy and they strut about and are even rewarded after having confessed  to the murder. This has kept me  awake at 3am every night  for the past twenty years

To date five Nigerian leaders have been assassinated: Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa (who topped the list of politicians  and military officers murdered in January 1966 ),  General JTU Aguiyi Ironsi, General Murtala Mohammed, General Sanni Abacha and President Moshood Abiola.  The first two and the last two were involved in revenge killings.


Whenever northern Nigerian leaders were assassinated agents of northern power brokers made sure culprits were brought to summary justice and culprits did not go scot free.  It was the inability to secure summary justice in the case of Sir Abubakar that snowballed into the assassination of Ironsi whose perpetrators were then rewarded with rapid promotions instead of being court martialled and made to face military justice by firing squad as it happened when General Murtala  Muhammed was assassinated, all of which led to a catastrophic civil war.


This situation was repeated when General Sanni Abacha was assassinated by members of his inner clique because he had grown totally uncontrollable by the clique that put him in office to prevent the elected President from taking office.  The elected President Moshood Abiola was then assassinated still to prevent him from taking office and the man who organised his beatings to death was allowed to walk free after his confession when he should have been court martialled and be made to face Military Law since he committed the crime in uniform.  I am referring Major (rtd) Al Mustapha.

Members of this forum should in a similar vein to what they are doing to honour American Blacks, be clamouring for General (rtd) Theophilus Danjuma and Al Mustapha to be court martialled by  a military tribunal set up by President Buhari who incidentally was a military officer before becoming President and who cannot pretend not to know the workings of Military Law when it comes to assassination of a country's leaders. President Buhari should demonstrate a new beginning in the administration of justice as prescribed for true Muslims in the just concluded holy month of Ramadan. He should remember that when he was toppled from power as he toppled Shagari from power both would not have lived to tell the tale of their toppling if they were southern Nigerian leaders.  Southern Nigerian  Leaders Lives Matter and they should not be dispensable to share spoils of political wars.

It is true that Mr President holds the ace of commutal of sentences after  justice is seen to have been done but the least the President ought to do as commander in chief of the armed forces to cleanse the armed forces and lay the ghosts of these crimes to rest is to strip them of their ranks and dismiss them from the armed forces for the heinous crimes committed while in uniform  to which their confession is in the public domain.  Anything short of this means it is one law for northern assassins of southern Nigerian leaders and another for assassins of northern Nigerian leaders.


OAA

Sent from Samsung tablet.


-------- Original message --------
From: Moses Ebe Ochonu <meochonu@gmail.com>
Date: 02/06/2020 23:59 (GMT+00:00)
To: USAAfricaDialogue <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Re: Is Something Wrong With Me?

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Oga Falola,

I second Okey Ukaga's point that so-called small questions and so-called big ones are interrelated, connected both causally and symbiotically. I use "so-called" because one man's big existential issue is another's small, inconsequential matter, and vice versa.

To elaborate on the point about the interconnections between what might seem like more urgent existential and substantive issues and issues that might seem less tangible, more abstract, and thus less inconsequential, the perfect analogy is the growing popularity of intersectionality and intersectional analysis in the humanities and humanistic social sciences. In essence intersectionality is the recognition that social phenomena and social constructs that may seem separate and unrelated, such as race, creed, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and culture, are coextensive with one another and inform one another. Such is the connection that you have to recognize all of these phenomena as aspects of the same problem and you do violence analytically to one side if you focus only on the other. This the whole point of intersectionality is that you cannot fully analyze or understand one without simultaneously looking at the other.

In the same way, and in addition to the robust explanation given by Udogu, I would say that the issue of representation in national appointments is not only central to nation-building and national cohesion, but it is ultimately related to the issue of whether the nation survives or atrophies. If people do not feel that they belong to the national project, why should they contribute to it and if they don't contribute then how can the nation endure and how can you blame them for wanting out? If representation is trashed and the nation is polarized, how can economic and tangible projects be successfully pursued? How can the nation prosper and if it does how can citizens benefit from that prosperity?

Philosopher Axel Honneth captures the interrelatedness of the tangible and intangible, the concrete/economic and the abstract/representational when he argued that all human struggles are defined by two overarching imperatives: redistribution and recognition. In other words, people desire as much recognition (representation, belonging, dignity, respect) as they do redistribution (socioeconomic goods and opportunity).

On Tue, Jun 2, 2020 at 5:04 PM Uyilawa Usuanlele <biguyi@hotmail.com> wrote:
Oga Prof.,
                  I second Biko's prescription. Thank you.
Uyi


From: 'Biko Agozino' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, June 2, 2020 4:42 PM
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Re: Is Something Wrong With Me?
 
Kpele o

Something is definitely wrong with you!

Why are you lifting a cup of coffee to your 'sleep' at 3AM?

I join others in reminding you that you need your rest for we need you.

Instead of coffee, drink water from 6PM and go to bed latest by 10:30PM

Take a deep breath and count yourself to sleep with a focus on you breathing.

Africa will still be there for the superman to save the next day, fi i le.

Get you 8 hours of sleep every night, old man, and that is a prescription.

Biko

On Tuesday, 2 June 2020, 14:58:26 GMT-4, Harrow, Kenneth <harrow@msu.edu> wrote:


dear all
please join me in applauding our renowned, respected moderator. his work on behalf of ALL of US, in postings about everything to do with africa, from politics, to religion, to current events, to covid... all this indeed is demanding, stressful, and difficult for him, but informative, healing, community building for us. what do the people do about all those nurses and doctors and grocery store clerks, who are out there risking their lives so that we might be able to live and go on with our lives? they take out a few minutes, maybe thursday at noon, go to their windows, balconies, and applaud. why? not just to show appreciation, but really to say, we are all one.
toyin falola, you are never alone. we all appreciate you much more than you will ever know.
👍❤️🙌😁
ken

kenneth harrow

professor emeritus

dept of english

michigan state university

517 803-8839

harrow@msu.edu


From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Toyin Falola <toyinfalola@austin.utexas.edu>
Sent: Tuesday, June 2, 2020 8:04 AM
To: dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Is Something Wrong With Me?
 

Reading some items on this site as well as others, as in the case of appointments in Nigeria, I have come to the conclusion that something is wrong with me as a person and with my emotion. When there are bigger issues, as in the ongoing protests, the devastations by COVID-19, the behavior of President Trump, declining economies in Africa, I become obsessed with those issues. I forfeit sleep and food. I will hold a cup of coffee and won't be able to raise it to my sleep. I feel betrayed.

 

I wonder how some of you are able to leave the bigger issues and focus on the smaller ones, sometimes totally irrelevant to the concerns of our civilization and collective humanity. How are you able to disconnect and live your normal life?

 

At 3AM this morning, I came to the conclusion that you are the ones who are doing the right thing and that something must be wrong with me.

Moderator

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