Sunday, May 31, 2020

USA Africa Dialogue Series - AWUJALE OF IJEBU -ODE AT 86-The Guardian

Awujale at 86: A flawed last battle?


Alaiyeluwa, His Imperial Majesty, the Awujale of Ijebuland, Oba Sikiru Kayode Adetona, had two major celebrations within two months – his 60th anniversary on the throne of his ancestors in April and his 86th birthday on 10th May 2020. Both celebrations attracted eulogies for this charming king.

Some of the riveting celebrative write ups include those by Tunde Oladunjoye, a chieftain of the ruling All Progressives Congress in Ogun state, Mr. Dare Babarinsa, a crusading, eminent journalist (as a journalist myself, I reject the tag 'veteran journalist') and Dr. Fassy Yusuf, a former Commissioner of Information in Ogun state and an Ijebu-Ode 'son of the soil'. They all extolled the virtues, the integrity and doggedness of this warrior king. I have not read any tribute from Chief Duro Onabule, the Jagunmolu of Ijebuland and a committed foot soldier in defence of the Awujale in his battle with state power in the attempt to depose him by then Governor of Ogun state, Chief Bisi Onabanjo, also an indigene of Ijebu-Ode. Chief Onabule, another eminent journalist, was in the trenches during that epic battle and got his chieftaincy title, Jagunmolu – the victorious warrior – from that encounter.

As is expected of such celebrative write-ups, they were not critiques and as such, a sticking issue associated with the Awujale, a Bill before the Ogun State House of Assembly on the Installation and Burial of Traditional Rulers, was glossed over by all the writers. The Bill, titled : 'Ogun State Traditional Rulers (Installation and Burial Rites) Bill 2020, sponsored by Mr. Akeem Balogun, representing Ogun Waterside constituency and co-sponsored by Mr. Akeem Amosun, representing Ewekoro constituency had been rushed through for second reading on May 5, 2020 without recourse to public hearing. The Bill seeks to strip traditional religion worshippers of their primary roles in the installation and burial rites of traditional rulers and prescribing that such rulers can choose to be installed and buried according to their religion. Oba Adetona, has been crusading for this reform of the rites of installation and passage of traditional rulers conducted by the traditional worshippers headed by the 'Osugbo' who perform some rites prior to installation of a traditional ruler and also take control of the body of an Oba when he joins his ancestors. There are rumours that parts of the bodies of deceased kings are taken out and preserved for the successor king, on the assumption that the heart of a demised king lives on in the successor. But this has remained a rumour, perhaps a myth, as no one has presented evidence of such act. Even where there is some credence to such act, that aspect can be expunged without stripping the traditional religionists the right to conduct burial of a traditional ruler. With regards to installation rites in Ijebuland, an Oba-elect goes into seclusion for three months during which he is tutored in the history and traditional practices associated with the revered throne he is about to ascend. He is also fortified by powerful traditional medicine men to literally become invincible to any evil machinations; he thus becomes an 'Orisha' a demi-god, by virtue of that fortification. Short circuiting this process is said to explain why some 'Westernised Obas', not authentic traditional rulers, have become cheap preys for kidnappers and been visited by all manner of indignities. It pains that the highly revered Awujale leads this battle that apparently diminishes the traditional institution Obas are expected to defend and project. Perhaps, at age 86, and getting to time up, the refrain, nearer to thee Allah, nearer to thee, has apparently become troubling to Oba S.K. Adetona, hence the urgency of this LAST STAND, prompting a corralling of the force of law to actualize his reform agenda in the Battle of Burial Rites. I take pride in being an Ijebu son and in the sustenance of the dignity of the Awujale throne by Oba Adetona. This respect informed my leading a Voice of Nigeria (VON) team, as Assistant Director of News, to the palace in Ijebu-Ode to interview the Awujale in year 2000 on the occasion of his 40th anniversary on the throne. I also belong to royalty. My great Uncle, Oba Thomas Olaitan Oduntan, Erebineyin Joye 11, the Mogosu of Ibido-Ogbo, near Ijebu-Ode, who crowned the Awujale in 1960, was my grandmother's younger brother and as a child, I followed my grandmother to that coronation. Oba Oduntan reigned for 48 years (1960-2008) I also grew up in the palace of Ilamuren of Okelamuren, also near Ijebu-Ode, Oba Julius Adebambo, and was the Town Crier in my primary school days until I got admission to Ijebu-Ode Grammar School in 1962. I followed the Ilamuren to 'Iledi' and used to carry the royal umbrella of the Ilamuren on his visits to the old Awujale palace during the reign of Oba Daniel Adesanya, Gbelegbuwa 11. Oba Adetona has since turned the old structure to a world class palace that is the pride of Ijebus. Oba Adetona, as a unifying father, achieved the landmark of turning the Ojude Oba festival into an iconic ALL IJEBU affair, irrespective of religious affiliation, even though it has a Muslim origin. The current campaign of religious identification risks diminishing this legacy.

As a royalist, I see this Bill as inimical to the institution of traditional rulership in Ijebuland and by extension, the entire Yoruba land. Governments and politicians in Nigeria are the biggest enemies of the traditional ruler-ship institution, and have tried to reduce traditional rulers to foot-mats to be trampled upon. It is bad enough that a power drunk state governor can engineer the dethronement of an Oba on flimsy charges. The crusade, therefore, should be getting governments and politicians off the back of Obas, and not for an Oba to seek intervention of a state institution, like the House of Assembly, to neutralize a traditional institution like the Osugbo.

Traditional rulers are custodians of traditional culture and religion. A situation, as being proposed in the Bill, where a Christian or Muslim Oba-in-waiting is installed in a church or mosque makes a mockery of the title: Traditional Ruler. A traditional ruler belongs to all religions but with traditional religion his primary constituency once he ascends the traditional throne.

Ultimately, anyone aspiring to the exalted position of a traditional ruler must be ready to abide by traditional norms or decline the position. Period. Some so-called born-again Obas refuse to host traditional festivals or perform certain rights, thereby engendering crisis, with some of them getting chased out of their domains by irate indigenes. Such rulers, averse to observance of tradition, have an option: ABDICATION.

The Awujale, Oba S.K. Adetona, has been a pride of Ijebuland. This last proxy battle with traditionalists, via state law, is an over kill. It should not be the epitaph to a long, illustrious reign.

Dr. Bisi Olawunmi, a communications, is former Washington correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria.

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USA Africa Dialogue Series - UMAR WARNS BUHARI ON THE CONSEQUENCES OF NEPOTISM-The Guardian

Your nepotism pushing Nigeria to the brink, Umar warns Buhari


Abubakar Dangiwa Umar is not a stranger to stirring up a hornet's nest. He has walked this path for most of his adult life. The cost has been huge. His promising military career was cut short. And he quit as a colonel.

From speaking against the annulment of the June 12, 1993, presidential election to opposing Gen. Sani Abacha's dictatorship and President Olusegun Obasanjo's third term bid, Umar has remained a thorn in the flesh of public perpetrators of inequity and injustice.

Umar yesterday called out President Muhammadu Buhari for dividing the nation along ethnic and religious lines, warning that lopsided appointments in government would spell doom for the country's unity.

In an open letter to President Buhari, Umar said the country was near the precipice as a result of his alleged unpopular policies that have undermined the unity of the country. He warned that unless the Buhari's administration changed its style of governance, Nigeria might further be faced with crisis.

In the letter titled "Mr. President, Please Belong To All Of Us", the former state military administrator said: "At this time and in the light of all that have happened since you took office, any conversation with you Mr. President cannot gloss over the chaos that has overtaken appointments into government offices in your administration.

"All those who wish you and the country well must mince no words in warning you that Nigeria has become dangerously polarized and risks sliding into crisis on account of your administration's lopsided appointments which continues to give undue preference to some sections of the country over others.
"Nowhere is this more glaring than in the leadership cadre of our security services. Mr. President, I regret that there are no kind or gentle words to tell you that your skewed appointments into the offices of the federal government, favouring some and frustrating others, shall bring ruin and destruction to this nation."

Umar quoted Sheikh UsmanDan Fodio as saying that "One of the swiftest ways of destroying a kingdom is to give preference of one particular tribe over another or show favour to one group of people rather than another. And to draw near those who should be kept away and keep away those who should be drawn near".

Umar continues in the letter:" I have been prompted to write you this open letter, Mr. President, by the loud sounds of drums, singing and dancing that erupted within many groups in the last few days on the grounds that you attained the 5th year in office as president of Nigeria. It comes as no surprise that enthusiasm for the celebration is not shared equally by segments of the public. While your admirers and supporters believe you have performed well, many others believe the five years you have been in office as our President has not met the yearnings, expectations and change promised Nigerians.

"Mr. President, you know me well enough and my position on issues to realize that I can be neither a rabid supporter nor a fanatical opponent of yours. I believe being a responsible citizen is enough reason to wish you well and to work for your success. As we have seen all too clearly these past few years, your success is ours as is your failure. We swim or sink with you!

"You might wish to recall that after the results of the 23rd of February 2019 presidential elections were announced, giving you victory, I addressed a press conference during which I urged the runner-up, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), to concede defeat. The reason was clear: tensions were running high and little missteps by the leaders might ignite violence, as often happened after major elections. Some supporters of Abubakar Atiku disagreed with me and told me off. As it happened, Alhaji Atiku went ahead to mount a legal challenge to the outcome of the elections up to the Supreme Court. Mercifully, his actions did not result in outbreak of violence as we feared.

"At the same occasion, I counselled the declared winner, your good self, to use the opportunity of your second term to redeem your pledge of being a leader and president of all Nigerians. On the occasion of the first-year anniversary into your second four-year term, I feel there is an urgent need to revisit this subject matter.

"Mr. President, you have often expressed the hope that history will be kind to you. It is within your competence to write that history. But you have less than three years in which to do it. You may wish to note that any authentic history must be devoid of myth. It will be a true, factual rendition of the record of your performance.

"And truth be told, Mr. President, there are quite a lot of things that speak to your remarkable accomplishments, not least of which is that for the first time in our democratic history, a sitting president was defeated. That feat was achieved by Muhammadu Buhari. The reason was the public belief of you as a man of integrity.

"The corollary to this is that at the expiration of your 8-year tenure in 2023, your achievements will not be measured solely by the physical infrastructure your administration built. An enduring legacy would be based on those intangible things like how much you uplifted the spirit and moral tone of the nation. How well have you secured the nation from ourselves and from external enemies?
"I need not remind you, Mr. President, that our political history is replete with great acts of exemplary leadership which, at critical moments, managed to pull this nation back from the precipice and assured its continued existence."

He mentioned some examples of how the country survived difficult moments in history.

"In February, 1965, the NPC-led Federal Government was faced with a decision to appoint a successor to the outgoing Nigerian Army General Officer Commanding (GOC), General Welby Everard, a Briton. Four most senior officers were nominated; namely, Brigadiers Aguiyi Ironsi, Ogundipe, Ademulegun and Maimalari. The first three were senior to Maimalari but he was deemed to be the most qualified due to his superior commission. He was the first Sandhurst Regular trained officer in the Nigerian Army.

"His being a Muslim northerner like the Minister of Defence, Alhaji Muhammadu Ribadu, and the Prime Minister, Alhaji Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, granted him added advantage by today's standards. But to the surprise of even the Igbo, and opposition from some senior NPC members, Minister Ribadu recommended Ironsi, pointing to his seniority. The prime minister concurred and Aguiyi Ironsi was confirmed as the first indigenous GOC of the Nigerian Army.

"When on 13 February 1976, the Commander-in-Chief, General Murtala Muhammed, was assassinated in a failed coup de tat, General Olusegun Obasanjo, his deputy and the most senior officer at the time, was sworn in as his successor. The Chief of Army Staff, General T.Y Danjuma, a northern Christian, was next in line to succeed Obasanjo as the Chief of Staff, SHQ and Deputy Commander in Chief. General Danjuma, however, waived his right and recommended a much junior officer, Lt. Col. Shehu Musa Yar'Adua, for the post. Shehu was promoted two steps up to the rank of Brigadier and appointed Chief of Staff, SHQ and Deputy Commander-in-Chief. Lt. Col. Muhammadu Buhari was appointed Minister of Petroleum. This was done to placate Muslim North which was deemed to have lost one of its own, Murtala Muhammed.

"Both the chief of staff, Mr. Sunday Awoniyi, and Dr. Ishaya Audu, the personal physician to the Premier of Northern Nigeria, Alhaji Sir Ahmadu Bello, a direct descendant of Sheikh Usman Dan Fodio, were Christians."

Umar continued: "Barely nine years after the civil war in 1979, the NPN Presidential candidate, Alhaji Shehu Shagari, picked an Igbo, Dr. Alex Ekwueme, as his running mate. They enjoyed a truly brotherly relationship as president and vice president. President Shagari's political advisor, Dr.Chuba Okadigbo, and National Assembly Liaison Assistant, Dr. K.O Mbadiwe, were both Igbo. His economic advisor, Prof. Emmanuel Edozien and his Chief of Personnel Staff Dr. Michael Prest, were of Niger Delta extraction. Remarkably, all his military service chiefs were Christians with the exception of his last Chief Army Staff, General Inuwa Wushishi under whose tenure he was removed in a military coup de tat.

"Mr. President, as a witness and beneficiary, it is our expectation that you would emulate these great acts of statesmanship. Which is why we have continued to engage with you. You may wish to recall that I had cause to appeal to you, to confirm Justice Onnoghen as the substantive Chief Justice of Nigeria a few days before the expiration of his three months tenure of acting appointment to be replaced by a Muslim northerner. We were saved that embarrassment when his nomination was sent to the senate by the then acting President, Prof. Yemi Osibanjo.

"When he was finally confirmed a few days to the end of his tenure, he was removed after a few months and replaced by Justice Muhammed, a Muslim from the north. May I also invite the attention of Mr. President to the pending matter of appointment of a Chief Judge of the Nigerian Court of Appeal which appears to be generating public interest. As it is, the most senior judge, Justice Monica Dongban Mensem, a northern Christian, is serving out her second three-month term as acting Chief Judge without firm prospects that she will be confirmed substantive head. I do not know Justice Mensem but those who do attest to her competence, honesty and humility.

"She appears eminently qualified for appointment as the substantive Chief Judge of the Court of Appeal as she is also said to be highly recommended by the National Judicial Council. If she is not and is bypassed in favour of the next in line who happens to be another northern Muslim, that would be truly odd. In which case, even the largest contingent of PR gurus would struggle to rebut the charges that you, Mr. President, is either unwilling or incapable of acting on your pledge to belong to everyone — and to no one. I hope you would see your way into pausing and reflecting on the very grave consequences of such failure not just to your legacy but to the future of our great country."

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USA Africa Dialogue Series - The New York Times: Demonstrations against police brutality continue across the U.S.


Demonstrations against police brutality continue across the U.S.
Officials in several states reinforced their National Guard presence as anger grew at increasingly aggressive tactics by the police.

Read in The New York Times: https://apple.news/AfLOSt_9pR_OtSr_tRPKBSQ


Shared from Apple News


Sent from my iPhone

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - RE: Okafor: In Memory of George Floyd

You must be an agent provocateur.

Are you not the same person who stereotyped Black People not too long ago?

Sorry I tend to mix up my O's and A's.


GE

> On May 31, 2020, at 7:45 PM, 'O O' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> wrote:
>
> Would a black police officer not do to GF what the white police officer did to GF? And why or why not?
>
>
> Sent from my iPhone
> Work
>> On May 31, 2020, at 3:13 PM, 'Pamela Smith' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> wrote:
>>
>> Thank you for this, Collins.
>> It said it all
>> Endearingly,
>> Endurely.
>>
>> R.I.P.
>> George Floyd
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Toyin Falola
>> Sent: Sunday, May 31, 2020 9:24 AM
>> To: ya <yorubaaffairs@googlegroups.com>; dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>
>> Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Okafor: In Memory of George Floyd
>>
>> In Memory of George Floyd
>>
>> I want to breathe
>> But I cant breathe
>>
>> I could not see his face
>> His knee was on my neck
>> Life was going fast away from my soul
>> I want to breathe
>> But I can't breathe
>>
>> 46yrs ago, I learnt my first word
>> Mama! mama! mama!
>> 25th May 2020,I spoke my last word
>> Mama! mama! mama!
>> And I still pleaded because
>> I want to breathe
>> But I cant breathe
>>
>> My color was black
>> His color was white
>> My crime was black
>> His right was white
>> I still want to breathe
>> But I cant breathe
>>
>> Minneapolis is burning
>> Real Americans are angry
>> The world is shocked in disbelief
>> Because I wanted to breathe
>> But i cant breathe
>> They were four of them
>> Four messengers of death
>>
>> I saw the face of my wife
>> I felt the smiles of my kids
>> I remembered my friends
>> For their sake
>> I just needed to breathe
>> But I cant breathe
>>
>> I asked for water
>> The pain was getting more
>> My neck hurts
>> My stomach hurts
>> My eyes were closed in agony
>> My offence again?
>> My color was black
>> His color was white
>>
>> I have paid the price
>> Price of being black
>> Cry no more Minneapolis
>> I was one of the added numbers
>> My blood on that pavement
>> Will always remember that
>> I wanted to breathe
>> But I had no right to breathe
>>
>> My offence again?
>> My color was black
>> My name George Floyd
>> My crime was black
>> His color was white
>> His name Derek Chauvin
>> His right was white
>> He has the right to breathe
>>
>> I want to breathe
>> I can't breathe!
>> But someday this battle shall
>> Be over.
>> I go in peace but remember
>> 25th May 2020
>> Mama!mama!mama!
>> My last word!
>>
>> -Collins Okafor
>>
>> #ICantBreathe
>>
>>
>> Sent from my iPhone
>>
>> --
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>
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USA Africa Dialogue Series - US: The Nation Reels

https://apple.news/A9c8kA85rRUOaLJNqYZFvSA

 

 

ANALYSIS

America is at a low ebb. Pain and destruction strangle hopes and dreams of people across the country. People are dying — alone from a terrible virus or from a knee on the neck in full public view. Cities burn, destroying businesses and inflaming divisions. Tens of millions are out of work. The president makes it all worse.

This is the state of the union as the nation reels from multiple blows, each one arriving with swift and overwhelming force. Long-standing, untreated inequalities have been exposed anew, and they, in turn, have highlighted the country's real vulnerabilities. What has been just below the surface, known but barely acknowledged and rarely addressed seriously, is now impossible to ignore.

America experienced a wave of burning cities in the aftermath of a racial killing in 1968. America was hit by a pandemic in 1918 that killed even more people than the 103,000 who have died of the novel coronavirus. America was battered by a Great Depression in the 1930s and laid low by a Great Recession just a decade ago. America has never experienced all of this kind of tumult in the same moment. It is more than the system can bear, and people grieve for the country.

The heinous death of George Floyd in the hands of Minneapolis police — one officer, Derek Chauvin, has since been fired and charged — provoked instantaneous outrage that united nearly every racial and ideological group in the country. It was a collective cry of anguish and a demand for change to what has become commonplace, the killing of unarmed black people at the hands of law enforcement.

But today, that unity brought about by Floyd's death is fraying, as what began as peaceful protests over yet another senseless killing of a black person quickly turned to violence and looting, with businesses and police cars in flames. City leaders on the front lines, many of them black Americans, struggle to express their sympathy and solidarity with the underlying conditions that provoked the demonstrations while trying to quell those protests so they can save their communities from further damage and division.

Through all this, President Trump has spewed division with ill-chosen tweets about looting and "shooting" or "vicious dogs" and overpowering weapons. He has attacked Democratic leaders as their communities burn. He flails rather than leads, his instincts all wrong for what confronts the country.

At a time when presidential leadership is most called for, at a time when Americans look to a president for words to unify and heal, many hope this president will resist that call — an extraordinary condemnation of the way Trump leads in crisis.

"He should just stop talking," Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms (D) said on CNN's "State of the Union." "This is like Charlottesville all over again. He speaks, and he makes it worse. There are times when you should just be quiet, and I wish that he would just be quiet."

On the same program, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan (R) lamented what Trump has done in the face of the protests. "It's not lowering the temperature. It's sort of continuing to escalate the rhetoric," Hogan said. "And I think it's just the opposite of the message that should have been coming out of the White House."

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America's enemies revel in the chaos of this triple blow or seek to stir more disruption and division as they exploit the chaos. America's allies see a president further withdrawing U.S. leadership at a time when the world seeks to unite against the common enemy of the coronavirus. The American carnage that Trump promised in his inaugural address to end is literally and figuratively on the doorstep of the White House, for all the world to see.

The coronavirus is not under control, and fears of a second wave persist. As the spread slows in some areas hit hardest early on, it grows in other places. The lifting of restrictions on businesses and other activity has in some places brought out crowds of people indifferent to calls for social distancing and the wearing of masks. The massive protests in cities also risk accelerating the spread of the virus.

Trump once, twice, many times, dismissed the dangers. Now the pandemic has killed nearly twice as many people as were killed in the Vietnam War, and the death toll continues to rise.

Black people have borne the brunt of the pandemic, dying at rates far in excess of their share of the population. Hispanics, too, have been hit disproportionately.

Economic pain abounds. The number of people filing for unemployment, though it has slowed in the past two weeks, has reached an astounding number, with roughly 40 million Americans out of work — the worst joblessness since the Depression. Many, if not the majority, of those are people who can least afford it: low-wage workers already struggling to pay their bills.

Police turn more aggressive against protesters and bystanders, alike, adding to violence and chaos

Many small-business owners, the backbone of the economy, are barely holding on. Some have been forced to close their operations, and more could follow. Now, in some neighborhoods in big and medium-size cities, they are experiencing another threat from the flames that engulfed their livelihoods.

Congress and the White House stand seemingly frozen in the face of this economic catastrophe. Having moved swiftly earlier to supply aid, lawmakers remain at ideological loggerheads over what to do next, trapped in the past as if this were something ordinary and recognizable.

States and cities that have cried out for assistance now have another problem to deal with: The destruction of businesses and neighborhoods from days of violence amid the protests. It can take years for riot corridors to rebound.

"The original sin of this country still stains our nation today," former vice president Joe Biden said Friday. "And sometimes we manage to overlook it. We just push forward with a thousand other tasks in our daily life. But it's always there. And weeks like this, we see it plainly that we're a country with an open wound. And none of us can turn away. None of us can be silent."

The entire nation is bending under the weight of the pandemic, economic reversals and tumult in the aftermath of Floyd's death and how it is tearing apart cities. But that weight is felt more acutely in certain communities, among African Americans especially, and turning away no longer seems legitimate.

It is in the American spirit to proclaim that better days lie ahead, that this country has faced and overcome every challenge, external or internal. That is useful to remember. But it is also important to recognize the troubled and weakened state of the country today and all the things that have contributed to it, and the enormity of finding the will and the leadership that will be needed in the coming days.

Dan Balz is chief correspondent at The Washington Post. He has served as the paper's deputy national editor, political editor, White House correspondent and Southwest correspondent.

 

USA Africa Dialogue Series - The Washington Post: Protests over death of George Floyd, police killings spread to London, Berlin, Toronto


Protests over death of George Floyd, police killings spread to London, Berlin, Toronto
Demonstrators defied coronavirus restrictions to wave "I can't breathe" signs and chant "No justice, no peace" outside U.S. embassies.

Read in The Washington Post: https://apple.news/AcnsA49NeS6mKFZTTxattxQ


Shared from Apple News


Sent from my iPhone

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - BANNED MUSIC, No. 25: Stevie Wonder, “It’s Wrong (Apartheid)”

Sir Julius,

Christianity says that salvation is exclusively through Jesus (Acts 4:10 – 12)

Islam says that the only religion acceptable to God is Islam

These two religions will never agree, or see eye to eye unless, according to Islamic eschatology, Jesus returns as a Muslim and leads the zuhr Salat at the Mosque in Damascus. Etc.

 In the meantime, both religions preach love of fellow human beings, humility, kindness, compassion, heaven…

My proposal that you all unite, unify, bite the bullet and embrace Islam was only a logical proposition but altogether "robotic" - as Lord Agbetuyi has already said. At the very least, all the African colours, ethnicities, tribes would then be united under one religion and you (Julius) would be feeling a little closer to the believers in Sokoto, Ramallah and Cairo. The oath of allegiance could then be about "one Nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all." Africa might then even have one currency…

Those of you who would be most resistant to the idea of conversion to Islam i.e. the Jews, the Christians, the idolaters, and the polytheists would have to act uniformly as Zombies.  It wouldn't matter at all to the atheists to declare the Shahada with their tongues and at best only pay lip service to the deity; they might even willingly pay zakat and give in sadaqah  - if these were state laws, but I suppose they would have a problem with praying five times a day. Fasting during the month of Ramadan, rejecting palm wine and all alcohol, especially when thirsty could also be easily done, for health reasons. If for example it was announced from the White House, that the only cure for the coronavirus is conversion to Islam, you never know who among those who want to go to Heaven would not be amongst the infected ones, who would be the first to convert. Let's say that about 2%  refuse to convert even on pain of going to the fire, these would become the dhimmi

 Re – your question: "…despite being largely Islamic/Muslims, why have Arabs not actualized the final goal of Pan-Arabism, that is, the unification of the Arab world?"

You know the story: the Arabs revolted against the big boss man Turks the and that brought the Ottoman Empire to an end   - displaced by the creation of many mini Arab States. To a great extent, the Arabs are more united through language, culture, and religion, and despite the sectarian Sunni-Shia divide - the rest of the in-fighting, civil wars, etc are due to outside interference implementing their very effective divide and rule strategies.

The Pan-Arab  dream, Arab Nationalism is being effectively channelled  through a very powerful organ known as the Arab League through which cooperation and strong partnerships unite the Arab World

At some levels, the rest of the Muslim world - are brought together through the OIC  of which twenty- seven African nations are already members…

You talk about "Arabs' ambivalence and racism towards Africa"

Arabs' ambivalence and racism towards Africa? That's a gross exaggeration and over-generalisation. I am not aware of anything like that. Read this and reconsider. The Arabs are among the most generous people in this world. I think that Africa and Africans have a much bigger problem with eth tribalism that bedevils many aspects of life in Africa, from politics to justice, equity in governance. So, what about putting your own house in order?

You are unhappy about what you refer to as "the equally odious anti-African racism in Israel, USA, Europe, Asia or SAmerica to make the point that I am not targeting only Arabs as the culprits."

When it comes to the immigration problems being experienced in  today's Israel which including the so called Palestinian territories in only twice the size of  Africa's little Gambia, you must agree that considering the myriad problems that Israel has with the Palestinians, terrorism etc, - SECURITY problems,  the suspicion with which the Israeli authorities are prone to regard  non-Jewish refugees as potential "infiltrators"  it should not be as easy or as convenient for Israel to accommodate great influxes of refugees from the Sudan or Muslims and Christians running away from Boko Haram, when they could and maybe should seek accommodation elsewhere, nearby,  in e.g. Saudi Arabia, Italy, Cameroon, Abia State, Edo State, Lagos…

 Olu Dara: Rain Shower ( My friend Kwatie on guitar there) 


On Sun, 31 May 2020 at 22:41, 'Julius Eto' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> wrote:
Sir Cornelius,

Thanks for your submissions. Although you said, "Julius Eto, hold your fire I understand that from your point of view, it is an outrageous question," I am still tempted to say something on your poser: "Wouldn't it be nice and easy if instead of the unending "divide and rule" the whole continent of Africa was to bite the bullet, to unite and to convert to Islam?"

I will embrace any viable suggestion to help Africa's unification, such as adopting any of the foreign religions. But this alone is not enough or even necessary. This is because, for example, despite being largely Islamic/Muslims, why have Arabs not actualized the final goal of Pan-Arabism, that is, the unification of the Arab world?

It's the same faulty argument from Marxists who say communism is the answer to all of society's woes. My reply to them is that even if all the African nations become communist but are still divided, they will remain weak, underdeveloped and susceptible to manipulation in their present small sizes by global imperialist powers such as Russia, China, and even the West. 

My position also applies to a situation where all the African countries adopt Christianity.










 On Friday, May 29, 2020, 09:20:49 PM GMT+1, Cornelius Hamelberg <hamelbergcornelius4@gmail.com> wrote:











Correction: should read "where Spanish is a very strong
second contender…



Something to chew on the 27
African States that are currently members of the Organisation of Islamic
Cooperation ( OIC)



About your namesake Mwalimu
Julius Nyerere, taking into consideration the
status of Islam in Tanzania, that Dar
es Salaam was the capital of Tanzania, that Swahili
is the main language spoken in Tanzania it's difficult to understand the
Mwalimu's attitude here: Mwalimu
Julius Nyerere and Islam



 In Nigeria, neither
Gowon, nor Obasanjo nor Goodluck Jonathan ever expressed any such reservations,
so, Tanzania under Mwalimu Nyerere cannot be the litmus test



 By the way during the
Nyerere years which mostly coincided with the Swedish Social Democrats in
power, Tanzania was Sweden's favourite country in Africa. ( Traditionally Ethiopia
was Sweden's favourite country in Africa, going back to the days when the
Emperor of Ethiopia and the King of Sweden were very good friends  - I also have a few Swedish friends who were actually
born in Ethiopia, ( mostly the children of missionaries)  - but of course, during the Apartheid years,
the fight against Apartheid  in South
Africa was always at the forefront of  Swedish
Foreign Policy in Africa



Food for thought: International relations: A United Africa and
the world….
On Fri, 29 May 2020 at 19:55, Cornelius Hamelberg <hamelbergcornelius4@gmail.com> wrote:


Brother Julius Eto,



Let's travel from your very latest to your earliest in this
thread.



 From Sunday onwards I'll
be taking a serious look at all your other submissions in this thread , but
right now it's  still Shavout
in heart and mind



 (There's the Quranic paradigm
in which the Angel Gabriel communicates via the Prophet of Islam, salallahu alaihi
wa salaam, the objections that the kuffar, the sceptics, and the other interlocutors
made from time to time, so  that throughout
the Quran we have this ongoing dialogue, punctuated and interspersed with "Qul"
– say - answer them with the following…)



Now we are reduced to a similar dialogue in this thread,
except that I am not directly in communication with  Allah Subhan wa ta 'ala's emissary, the Angel Gabriel
, but the kinds of questions you ask about the current or future role of Islam
in the United States of Africa that you envision, have already been presupposed
and answered in the Holy Quran  - but I'll
refrain from quoting directly from it, for the moment, since you are not a
Muslim and therefore the Quran is not any Divine Authority for you.



 You say, "we do not
want to emphasize Christianity, Islam or any other religion in Pan-Africanism
to avoid further division/fissions."



That's a non-starter because among the over
3,000 different ethnicities
of Africa,  and as many languages, Christianity,
Islam and other religions/ways of life are  at the core identities of the people living in
the content of Africa. So religion,  the
ideals of Islam and Christianity and other religions, cultures, ways of life
are very important unifying factors that cannot be ignored or overlooked when drawing
up any grand schemes of continental African unity, whether political, social or
economic  - Nigeria is a microcosm of the
complexity that the planners and visionaries face. ( Interestingly enough, a
few decades ago, Wole Soyinka said that he would nominate Swahili as the
continent's language, if Africa were to have a ( one continental language – he may
have changed his mind since he made that suggestion since there's the sobering
reality of the United States where Spanish is
a very second contender not only in California  and maybe in Florida and Texas  too,  Texas
after all, used to belong to Mexico, remember ?)



 So, let us agree that
when it comes to language and religion, North Africa is more formidably united
than your Africa South of the Sahara. I should also like to point out that Berbers
come in many different colours, from white to blue-black  - and that many centuries ago, many Berbers
converted to Judaism, just as ages ago – well, we still have the legends about the
Khazars, as famously highlighted in Arthur Koestler's  "The
Thirteenth Tribe" – that the King of Khazars converted to Judaism  together with all the subjects in his kingdom
, so that  the reading of Yehuda
Halevi 's Kuzari  is recommended reading
for some potential converts to Judaism. I only mention this because in the
spiritual and ideological fight that's going on between Christian missionary
zeal and Islam for the souls of Africans, there's no telling what the near future
might bring.



 It's all about Survival




"How good and how pleasant it would
be before God and man,



To see the
unification of all Africans " ( Bob Marley: Africa
Unite



 Now, Sir Julius, think,




"How good and how pleasant it would be before God and man,



To see the unification of all Africans"



Wouldn't it be nice and easy if instead of the unending "divide
and rule" the whole continent of Africa was to bite the bullet, to unite and to
convert to Islam?



I wonder how Mwalimu Julius Nyerere would have answered that
question.



Julius Eto, hold your fire I understand that from your point
of view, it is an outrageous question.
On Thu, 28 May 2020 at 17:24, 'Julius Eto' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> wrote:
Dear Cornelius,



Thank you sir for your response(s) and clarifications. However, please take note that we do not want to emphasize Christianity, Islam or any other religion in Pan-Africanism to avoid further division/fissions.



Still on Beijing, please read a piece entitled, "The Chinese are here," by "Abdurafiu" in The Guardian newspaper (Lagos, Nigeria) today where he wrote: "Yes, we want the Chinese, but not as our masters or landlords.We must therefore be on our guard. There must be a firm lease agreement when land is given to foreigners renewable every 10 or 15 years as the case may be depending on the use to which the land is to be put."

















 On Thursday, May 28, 2020, 01:31:18 AM GMT+1, Cornelius Hamelberg <hamelbergcornelius4@gmail.com> wrote:















Brother Julius Eto,







The way things are in the United States today, we cannot say

of Trump, what was said at the funeral oration of General Washington, "A

citizen, first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his

countrymen"







Since Black People in America are catching hell and being

decimated  on a daily basis by  "Racist

Terror"  with the latest documented

evidence of savage racist police brutality - the cold-blooded murder of Brother

George Floyd without even a squeak from Trump, not even the bogus house

negroes will pray  for their forgiveness because,

I'm sure that this is the

kind of mood that all of us are in. Right now.







Merely labelling ARICOM "imperialist"  and your prophecy that "under a united African

military command" the aforementioned " imperialist AFRICOM will die naturally" is

only day-dreaming, even if what you assume is that "The imperialist AFRICOM"

will soon submit to your "united African military command", sort of "naturally".







When you eventually address the presence of China in Africa  - and the Caribbean ( Jamaica has been taken

over completely) you should reconsider/ examine/ re-examine  Mao's most famous idea about what he called

the "Paper

Tiger".  And so, we see the US under

Trump in complete disarray, Trump already brought to his knees, his touted economic

gains in ruins, unemployment on the astronomical rise, his popularity down the

drain, his chances of re-election annihilated by what he refers to as "the invisible

enemy"







 Your rejection of all

of North Africa, and the grounds of your rejection is unacceptable and is

incompatible with the truth because Islam

in Africa – as both religion and ideology is indeed a unifying factor and there

is strong support for this thesis from Edward Wilmot Blyden through El-hajj

Malik el-Shabazz to the latest African Union Summits. We cannot afford to

neglect or underestimate the influence of Islam

as a factor in Pan-Africanism, African unity,  Islam and Islamic identities as an important factor

in international relations, the financial well-being of the continent, you can't

even afford to leave out the contributions of the Arab Development Bank in any

kind of calculation you want to make about the present and the future.







 A conscious person does

not turn a blind eye to where we are now because of ancient slavery, the more

recent history of slavery – The

Jesus of Lubeck, the Middle Passage, Professor

Tony Martin on slavery, racism,  post-colonialism,  Louis

Farrakhan,  islamophobia, the reality

of Israel and the Arabs which you can see immediately in these

maps, the land, and religion issue of  Israel

and the Palestinians, and so on and so forth.







 About you or anyone

else "being groomed for the job", I didn't mean to insult you – I know and have

known honourable people who have been "groomed for the job", some as professors,

others as journalists, opinion-makers, some as sitting presidents...







 Is this meant to be a

funny question, "Please who are the "We" in your assertion,

"We despise the anti-Arab racism and xenophobia that's implicit in what

you say here"?







Please, who do you think we are?







 Dear Julius, please permit

me to stop here for now with the promise that I'll get back to you to tell you

who "we" are and to address all the matters that you have raised in this your

post.







 Sincerely,







 Cornelius









On Wed, 27 May 2020 at 21:49, 'Julius Eto' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> wrote:

 Dear Cornelius,



I will address the China question shortly.



The imperialist AFRICOM will die naturally under a united African military command.



On your question, "Don't you want to include North Africa as part of your 'United People'?," my answer is NO because they are anti-black racists and their loyalty is to the Arab world, not Africa.



You insult (libel?) me when you claim/allege: "I can see that you are being groomed for the job, for the time being as a little agent for the views that you are presently expressing, and who knows, in time to come, maybe, as the First President of Africa South of the Sahara?" My adherence to Pan-Africanism is not aimed at becoming "the First President of Africa South of the Sahara."



And may I ask: Are you an Arab agent just because you espouse their worldview? You seem not bothered about the Arab-inspired Trans-Saharan slave trade, the secret black slave trade/trafficking markets in NAfrica (Libya, Mauritania etc), widespread anti-African racism in Arab countries etc.



I do not doubt "that Egypt was and is still part of the African Continent, as are the other Counties of North Africa," but who and where were/are the original inhabitants/owners of these areas/lands (Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Sudan etc)? Exterminated and the rest enslaved?



Please who are the "We" in your assertion, "We despise the anti-Arab racism and xenophobia that's implicit in what you say here"?



There is no "anti-Arab racism and xenophobia," in what I have written. Provide counter-facts to impeach the facticity of my submissions. Even the Arabs (and you too) know that they do not regard black Africans as their human equals.



Another insult: "you should do your best to avoid playing into the enemy's hands by inadvertently or as you seems to be doing, by deliberately promoting their 'divide and rule' policies." There is nothing to divide since the minority Arabs (and their Berber, Bedouin cousins) who rule NAfrica with an iron hand have already divided Africa with their racist policies in their countries against blacks such as is glaring in Sudan where the terrorist Janjaweed, backed by the Khartoum authorities, plunders, rapes and commits genocide against our people. This was why South Sudan wanted out and became independent, from Arab neocolonialism and enslavement.



I agree with you that "better integration of the North-South partnerships should be most welcome, for the prosperity of the continent – the whole continent," only if your Arab/NAfrican friends genuinely believe in it and eschew racism, a form of tribalism (assabiya) which the Koran and our revolutionary Holy Prophet of Allah frown at. Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) recognised the then cronic (incurable?) Arab tribalism as dividing the Ummah. And you Cornelius know this. In the present case, you are like a black person denying that there is Caucasian racism.



And what do I "have to say" about Algeria for example? A bad example. For example, as i have noted elsewhere, despite all that he did (risks and sacrifices) for the Algerian revolution/independence as its foremost anti-colonial spokesman/diplomat or ambassador, the new nation's racist so-called socialist pan-Arab leaders refused to honour radical black activist intellectual Frantz Fanon. No monument, not in the hall of fame! Little or small wonder that your friends told you "that during the Liberation struggle the Algerian Jews opted to become French citizens instead of Algerians."



Advising me further, you wrote: "If anything, you should be promoting mutual understanding between all people, and not only in Nigeria but also in the rest of Africa where of course, North Africa is predominantly Muslim, just as Northern Nigeria is predominantly Muslim!"



My brother, as a traditional Nkrumahist, i am not espousing Christian Pan-Africanism because there is nothing like that. Pan-Africanism is for all black people---Muslims, Christians, traditionalists, atheists, free thinkers, naturalists etc----although it is strictly not a religious ideology or movement. It's your racist Arab friends and Caucasian supremacists that are trying to divide blacks along ethno-religious lines, not Pan-Africanists who are striving to unite our people on the continent and in the diaspora.



Pan-Africanists have always extended a hand of genuine friendship to Arabs and their cousins in Africa who, like other imperialists like the West, Russia, China, India etc are only eyeing the continent's land and resources. Our High Priest (Dr. Kwame Nkrumah) married an Arab (Egyptian). We have stood by you at the UN, Palestine etc. So we do not hate Arabs, but we detest their racism, opportunism and sponsorship/support, whether alleged or real, of turmoil and terrorism in Africa.



Chinese and Arabs are gradually taking over Africa. The communists (overpopulated Chinese) are buying millions of hectares of land in communities all over Africa as if they have a future project to resettle some of their people on our continent which they have practically enslaved with loans mortgaged with airports, railways, oil and other facilities.

Private sector chiefs, politicians, intellectuals, journalists etc should help check terrorism and neocolonialism/imperialism (expansionism) in Africa.





     On Wednesday, May 27, 2020, 01:07:45 AM GMT+1, Cornelius Hamelberg <hamelbergcornelius4@gmail.com> wrote:







Julius Eto,



There you go again.



Thus far, not a word from you about China or some of the multinationals that own the mines and more or less everything else, the economies of whole nations including puppet governments



When you begin with," Pan-Africanism is more about our collective military security as a united people…" I can see where you're coming from.  Therefore AFRICOM ?



Think a little further into the future. Don't you want to include North Africa as part of your "United People"?



 Check this out:  The Military strength of African countries



I can see that you are being groomed for the job, for the time being as a little agent for the views that you are presently expressing, and who knows, in time to come, maybe, as the First President of Africa South of the Sahara?



If not, then please, kindly take note that there is no room for tribalism and racism in the Africa that optimists envision. Remember (to keep it in your mind and don't forget) that the Prophet Moses was born and bred in Egypt and that Egypt was and is still part of the African Continent, as are the other Counties of North Africa.



We despise the anti-Arab racism and xenophobia that's implicit in what you say here:



"North Africa (probably except Gamal Abdel-Nasser's Egypt) was unremarkable. NAfrica was seized from the original black owners who were largely exterminated and the rest enslaved by invaders and slave traders from the Arabian peninsula. So, it's not a surprise that the Arab racists who see themselves as whites only paid lip-service to the anti-apartheid struggle. How did the Afrikaner-run apartheid enclave get oil supplies? There were (and, it's believed, still are) secret black slave/trafficking markets in NAfrica (Mauritania, Libya etc)… Nasser, the high priest of Pan-Arabism, helped the anti-apartheid struggle to undermine the then Israeli-SAfrican romance and get the black continent's political support on the global stage for his Mideast (especially Palestinian) and world politics. Gaddafi, also a pan-Arabist, was an expansionist who eyed the continent for Arab domination, hoodwinking its leaders to believe that he was one of them. Like Nasser, he saw himself as the authentic leader/voice of the Arab world, leading the charge against Israel over Palestine and, of course, SAfrica over the apartheid regime's closeness to the Jewish state…However, Gaddafi supported the murderous Arab minority Khartoum authorities in their plunder, rape and genocide against the majority black Sudanese population."



 Just as you advocate improving  South Africa – West Africa business relations, so too better integration of the North-South partnerships should be most welcome, for the prosperity of the continent – the whole continent  – and you should do your best to avoid playing into the enemy's hands by inadvertently or  as you seems to be doing,  by deliberately promoting their " divide and rule " policies as if you don't know any better, possibly thinking that there's nothing to learn from history. If anything, you should be promoting mutual understanding between all people, and not only in Nigeria but also in the rest of Africa where of course, North Africa is predominantly Muslim, just as Northern Nigeria is predominantly Muslim!



 We can discuss South Africa as much as you want – but seriously. And what do you have to say about Alegria for example.  My friends tell me that during the Liberation struggle the Algerian Jews opted to become French citizens instead of Algerians.

  Virus-free. www.avast.com



On Tue, 26 May 2020 at 20:45, 'Julius Eto' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> wrote:

Dear OAA,



 I agree with some of your submissions but reject your assertion that "South Africans need to be employed in equal rates in Ibadan, Oturkpo, Ife, Kano, Enugu, Abakaliki, and Onisha for the policy to be successful. Otherwise crying foul against South Africans is hypocritical."

 First, most SAfricans do not leave their country to other parts of the continent to seek employment except those taken there by their companies like Multichoice. Many other Africans (Ghanaians, Togolese, Chadians, Liberians, Cameroonians, Nigeriens, Malians, Mauritanians etc) are employed in Nigeria, some even holding political and elective offices.

 Second, a unified Africa will be a federation or confederation with autonomous entities but with a common currency, defence, foreign policy. Like in every true federation, you cannot violate the internal laws of a constituent entity if you aren't from there. Can a New Yorker flagrantly violate Californian laws just because he is an American?

 My brother, Pan-Africanism is more about our collective military security as a united people and continental economic integration for rapid development from pooled resources.



















  On Monday, May 25, 2020, 10:59:39 PM GMT+1, OLAYINKA AGBETUYI <yagbetuyi@hotmail.com> wrote:























 I have given my own initial  reaction to post Apartheid realities in South Africa:







 Pan- Africanism needs to run both ways:   South Africans need to be employed in equal rates in Ibadan, Oturkpo, Ife, Kano, Enugu, Abakaliki, and Onisha for the policy to be successful Otherwise crying foul against South Africans is hypocritical.







 'Help me liberate my country' is different from "help me liberate 'our' country".  Yes, pan- Africanism is a political liberationist tool; yes it is just that-political.  We have cited the case of Nigerien Almajerai in Osogbo to buttress our case.  That

  comparison still stands.  Osogbo is not their original abode and if the case is allowed indefinitely control of Osogbo economy will flounder.  There is a limit to what is allowable under ECOWAS protocol and pan- Africanism







 We have seen how fellow Nigerians ( Fulani herdsmen) are being turned away from southwestern and southeastern cities on the basis of cultural differentiation.







  Criticism of South Africans is tantamount to what Yoruba calls ' şore fúni ka lóşo tii' ( exacting perennially profits from a supposedly selfless good turn)







 Let us be real.







 OAA





















 Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.















 -------- Original message --------

 From: Gloria Emeagwali <gloria.emeagwali@gmail.com>

 Date: 25/05/2020 13:45 (GMT+00:00)

 To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com

 Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - BANNED MUSIC, No. 25: Stevie Wonder,  "It's Wrong (Apartheid)"















  This message is eligible for Automatic Cleanup! (gloria.emeagwali@gmail.com)



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 One of the useful organizational and inspirational tools  in the battle against apartheid was pan-Africanism. I suggest that the editors of the planned text "Xenophobia, Nativism ....."  should solicit a chapter on Pan-Africanism and the struggle against

 apartheid. That chapter may focus on the southern African frontline states and their sacrifices, and  their contributions in military and other means. West and Northern African roles in the  pan- Africanist endeavor should also be reflected on.









 Sent from my iPhone





 On May 24, 2020, at 6:37 PM, 'O O' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> wrote:















 My most hated word in Afrikaans. Indeed, an original "sin" against an original continent.







 Sent from my iPhone





 On May 24, 2020, at 12:58 PM, Toyin Falola <toyinfalola@austin.utexas.edu> wrote:

























 In 1985, the South African government banned Stevie Wonder's song "It's Wrong (Apartheid)" because it explicitly condemned the

  government: "the wretchedness of Satan's wrath / will come to seize you at last / because even he frowns upon the deeds you are doing / and you know deep in your heart / you've no covenant with God / because he would never countenance people abusing."













 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wbG3zIs4Q4E















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