Thank you Cornelius for your submission underneath. Sometimes ago, during the discussion over the word 'OUTRIGHTLY', the right honourable professor of Buckingham Palace English confessed that he is heavily remunerated by Daily Trust to write his column in the Nigerian newspaper. Daily Trust is said to be owned by Atiku Abubakar, who became a millionaire as Controller General of Custom in Nigeria before he dabbled into politics to become Vice President to Olusegun Obasanjo between 1999 and 2007. Obasanjo made Atiku Chairman of Petroleum Trust Development Fund (PTDF) but by 2006, relationship between the duos had become sour. Consequently the EFCC descended on Atiku with a report alleging that he had diverted a sum of $125 million approved for the operation of PDTF to the Equatorial Trust Bank, owned by Otunba Mike Adenuga, and Trans International Bank (TIB), which, thereafter, gave N400 million to MOFAS Shipping Company owned by Otunba Oyewole Fasawe. Fasawe had worked in the Nigerian Ports Authority from where he became a trusted friend of Custom Director, Atiku. The EFCC also connected Adenuga's payment of $20 million for his Globacom licence to the PDTF money lodged in his bank. From October 2003, the EFCC revealed, MOFAS paid more than N500 million to Umar Pariya, Personal Assistant to the then Vice President, Atiku, while N61 million was paid directly to Atiku and N60 million directly to Musa Garba, a contractor who worked for Atiku's ABTI American University. Atiku response to the EFCC report implied that he only took the Tiger's share of the PDTF loot while Obasanjo took the Lion share. However, Atiku went to court to get the report of the EFCC quashed. Angry Obasanjo prevented Atiku from contesting as a PDP presidential candidate in 2007 whereby forcing Atiku to move to ACN to pursue his Presidential ambition. When Yar'Adua died, Atiku returned to PDP and contested against Jonathan in the Presidential primary of 2011 and he was defeated. When APC was formed in 2013, he joined it and came third in the presidential primary that threw up Mohammadu Buhari as the Presidential candidate for the March 28, 2015, Presidential election. Hoping that Buhari would not contest in 2019, Atiku has now begun to plan his come back as Presidential candidate by conniving with ex-PDP in APC garments to seize the national assembly and frustrate anti-corruption legislations proposed by Buhari. The well paid columnist in Atiku's owned Daily Trust will never see anything good in Buhari.
With the above narration, I would like to add that there are no poor Nigerians but impoverished ones. The so-called Rich Nigerians do not own factories and do not manufacture anything. Their illegitimate wealth are directly proportional to their nearness to the center of government power and crude oil administration. Thus the idea of converse or reverse Robin Hoodism in Nigeria is a deception invented by self-styled professor of truth and champion of masses' rights who has become a well paid junkyard dog or dunghill mongrel for some of the looters of Nigeria's national patrimony. Buhari's refusal to subsidize petroleum thieves has no adverse effect on impoverished Nigerians but the thieves who are sabotaging the nation's refineries from producing what they are designed for.
S. Kadiri
Skickat: den 3 december 2016 17:31
Till: USA Africa Dialogue Series
Ämne: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Re: Reverse Robin Hoodism as Buhari's Governing Philosophy
Just for fun:
On Wednesday, I read through Simon Armitage's delightful poetry collection "The Dead Sea
Poems" (1995). Maybe, I should stay with poetry?
Hyperbole (even for propaganda effects) belongs to the realms of fantasy, rhetoric and poetry – and
in this case, it's obvious that that's what's being deployed by language buff Professor Farooq
Kperogi. Bearing that in mind, wouldn't it be better if he merely stuck to the region in which he may
claim most expertise, namely the vagaries and vicissitudes, the trials and tribulations of the
sometimes tortuous Nigerian English - tortuous, creative ( like Amos Tutuola) to the ears of the
Royal House of Windsor? That could be better - even for a conscientious and concerned citizen,
than wading and waddling into the deep waters of economic recession, and passing the economic
judgements of one whose feet are down, have drowned but whose knees at least are still above
water?
This is not meant to be a " personal attack" on any too sensitive skin, and I /we know that he can be
explosive ( so can I) but the question remains : Is the article that I'm responding to, calculated to be
provocative, mistaking the Naija jungle for Sherwood Forest and the righteous Brother Buhari as
the good natured outlaw/ criminal/chief thief but in reverse – a corrupt one and by extension, Little
John ( his vice-president) and his cabinet composed of the legendary Merry Men - Friar Tuck etc. )
who steal from the poor to lavish it all on the rich ? Could anything be further from the truth?
I'm sad to retort that to characterise the current regime's economic policies as "Reverse Robin
Hoodism" is monumental injustice almost of a malicious order, being perpetrated against my
Brother Muhammadu Buhari ! As if we don't know the sorry state of the nation's current economy –
the precipitous drop from the boom days of Goodluck Jonathan with the price of Nigeria's main
export commodity oil which accounts for more than 75% of government revenue being slashed by
more than 50% worldwide , since Brother Buhari took over the reins of government.
In Sweden where I have lived most of my life (since 1971- since before the days of Gunnar Sträng
and successive Social Democrat minsters of finance – with the exception of Kjell-Olof Feldt )
Robin Hood Taxation has been the essence of the Social Democrat taxation system and even a poor
person like me has always paid at least 30% tax whereas the rich burghers of necessity have and
must afford to pay more. Isn't that also the eternal tug-of-war between the US Democrats (big
government) and the Republicans (the entrepreneurs should pay less tax so that they can afford to
employ more people etc.) ?
Apart from tackling endemic corruption that has been "the system" - unlike digitalised Sweden
which means there is no escape or evasion possible for little or big citizens, in the not so digitalised
Nigerian system, Brother Buhari also has to tackle the massive problem of tax evaders, ranging
from big oil corporations and those who were awarded franchises/ oil wells by their patron, the
goodly Goodluck Jonathan, to some of the new burghers (not to be confused with the buggers) who
– part of endemic corruption – are also wanton tax evaders…
Now, the most recent news coming out of Nigeria is that with a population of 180 million souls,
today only a handful of people pay tax in Nigeria and in the article that I'm responding to, there is
no mention of the poor being taxed. Surely the monies accrued from taxation , on the rich, "bank
charges for every deposit above a certain amount have been introduced", " Those of us who live in
the United States used to pay $15 for 600 minutes of call time to Nigeria. Now we get 150 minutes
for the same amount" and other austerity measures to meet the emergency, including taking away
fuel subsidies etc. go to the national treasury and it's not a matter of " this robbery of the poor to
fund the luxuries of the rich". Along the trajectory of your own chosen Robin Hood -in-reverse
metaphor, you are being - excessively - carried away on the wings of imagination. Given the lack
of evidence, on what basis is such a spurious beingcharge made?
I do not expect a reply to an obviously rhetorical question, and should be surprside to get one.
From China: A Bu Trio : 88 tones of Black and White
On Saturday, 3 December 2016 10:20:47 UTC+1, Farooq A. Kperogi wrote:
My column in today's Daily Trust on Saturday:
By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.
Twitter: @farooqkperogi
To understand "reverse Robin Hoodism," you first have to understand Robin Hoodism. Robin Hoodism is the willfully subversive practice of stealing from the rich to help the poor. It is derived from a daring 12th-century (fictional) English character by the name of Robin Hood who often got into trouble with the law because he always stole from the rich to give to the poor.
When President Muhammadu Buhari was elected president in 2015 in an unexampled electoral upset, people imagined that they had elected Nigeria's lawful Robin Hood who would tax the rich to help the poor, who would save the poor from the torment of the gnawing poverty that was eating away at their souls.
But he has turned out to be a reverse Robin Hood, and his official governance philosophy is now reverse Robin Hoodism, which I once defined as robbing the poor to enrich the rich. Buhari's reverse Robin Hoodism started when he hiked the prices of petroleum products by a steeper margin than any government has done in recent memory, which is the immediate trigger for Nigeria's current recession.
As Minister of information Lai Mohammed said, the fuel price hike was "not really about subsidy removal; it is about the fact that Nigeria is broke. Pure and simple." In other words, as I pointed out in my May 21, 2016 article titled "Unraveling of the Monumental Fraud in Petrol Price Hike," "the increase was just plain old elite robbery of the poor." It was, and still is, unvarnished executive extortion of the masses.
When this robbery of the poor to fund the luxuries of the rich met with no resistance from the poor, the floodgates of reverse Robin Hoodism were officially opened. I don't have to remind Nigerians of all that has happened since then.
Illegal bank charges for every deposit above a certain amount have been introduced, electricity tariffs have gone up, and everything that moves is now being taxed. Federal Inland Revenue Service Chairman Babatunde Fowler even said recently that presentation of tax certificates would soon be a prerequisite for the issuance of passports, which would leave those of us who don't live in Nigeria "stateless." At this rate, the Buhari government will start taxing Nigerians for the air they breathe and for the blood that flows in their veins—until there are no more poor people to oppress because they'd all be dead.
And all this while inflation has gone through the roof, while salaries are stagnant for workers who are "lucky" to receive them, while most state workers haven't been paid for more than a year, and while millions of people are losing their jobs.
I just recently learned from the Facebook status update of Denja Yaqub, an NLC official, that "The Federal Government of Nigeria has quietly slashed the salaries of federal civil servants just when everyone is squeezing under the excruciating pangs of high cost of every consumable items and services without any increase in salaries." I hope this isn't true.
The latest targets of Buhari's reverse Robin Hoodism are phone and Internet services, which started in June or thereabouts with Minister of Communication Adebayo Shittu sponsoring a bill in the National Assembly for a 10-percent tax increase on phone calls, text messages, and Internet data plans. Central Bank of Nigeria Governor Godwin Emefiele is also proposing that all phone calls that last longer than 3 minutes be taxed, saying, "government could earn about N100 billion per annum from this alone."
Already, government has imposed a 600 percent tariff increase on all international calls to Nigeria. Those of us who live in the United States used to pay $15 for 600 minutes of call time to Nigeria. Now we get 150 minutes for the same amount.
So while serious countries are democratizing access to ICT by making it dirt cheap or free in order to shrink the world and expand cross-border opportunities for their citizens, Buhari's Nigeria is instigating national insularity and the perpetuation of poverty by discouraging international communication, and even communication itself, through endless, off-the-wall taxes and tariff hikes.
But a government that says it wants to "diversify" the economy by encouraging alternative sources of income for the country is sure as hell killing entrepreneurship, especially internet entrepreneurship. Nigeria's growing IT sector will collapse with government's latest injurious polices on information and communication technology.
Even Nigeria's vibrant blogosphere, which helped bring Buhari to power, will disappear. So will the country's position as Africa's internet hub.
The Nigerian Communication Commission said it has "suspended" its obnoxious and ill-advised data price increase proposal "until the conclusion of study to determine retail prices for broadband and data services in Nigeria," but given this government's compulsive predilection for reverse Robin Hoodism, you can bet that the data price increase will be executed sooner or later.
The Nigerian elite can't help but nickel-and-dime the poor to finance their unsustainably immoderate lifestyles. No Nigerian administration in recent memory can outrival this government's contempt for and insensitivity to the poor.
This is particularly troubling because when Buhari was looking for power, he feigned poverty and asked poor people to donate money to his campaign using the data on their phones. They did. They raised tens, perhaps hundreds, of millions for him. This had never been done in Nigeria's history.
But they didn't stop there: they also used the data on their phones to campaign for him gratis—and to rhetorically pulverize his opponents on social media. Now he is in power and wants to make access to phone data beyond the reach of the poor, the same phone data that enriched his campaign and helped put him in power.
In other words, he used the phone data of everyday Nigerians as a ladder to climb to power. After getting to power, he realizes he no longer needs the ladder, so he is throwing the ladder right back at the people who held it for him to climb to power. He will brutally injure them in the process. Watch out. This is the most conscienceless display of perfidy I've ever seen.
But Buhari is being short-sighted because he will need the ladder he is throwing away when—not if—he is climbing down from the giddy heights of the power he enjoys now. By then it would be gone, and he would crash like Humpty Dumpty!
Related Articles:
Coming Petrol Price Hike and NNPC's Subterfuge
Unraveling of the Monumental Fraud in Petrol Price Hike
Petrol Price Hike: Time to Occupy Nigeria Again
Fuel Price Hike: The Language and Grammatical Illogic of a Regulated Deregulation
Fuel Subsidy Removal: Time to Occupy Nigeria!
Biggest Scandal in Fuel "Subsidy Removal" Fraud
Why Ordinary Americans Are Also Angry with Goodluck Jonathan
Labor's Treachery Against the "Occupy" Nigeria Revolt
The Grammar and Vocabulary of Fuel Subsidy Removal
"Premium Motor Spirit Otherwise Known as Petrol" and Other Petrol-Inspired Grammatical Boo-Boos
Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.Associate ProfessorJournalism & Emerging Media
School of Communication & MediaSocial Science BuildingRoom 5092 MD 2207402 Bartow Avenue
Kennesaw State University
Kennesaw, Georgia, USA 30144
Cell: (+1) 404-573-9697
Personal website: www.farooqkperogi.comTwitter: @farooqkperogAuthor of Glocal English: The Changing Face and Forms of Nigerian English in a Global World
"The nice thing about pessimism is that you are constantly being either proven right or pleasantly surprised." G. F. Will
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