Monday, March 10, 2014

Young People and the Time of Nigeria

By Tony Usidamen
 
As events to commemorate Nigeria’s centenary (January 1, 1914 – January 1, 2014) continue, and as I reflect on the condition of Nigerian youth today, the perception of the precarious world that has been shaped for us over the last 100 years became stronger than ever.
 
Unarguably, the generations of young people who have come on the scene, one after the other, in recent decades, have found a country whose characteristics and “climate” are changing. Today, the greatest challenge is being young in a nation dominated by fear and uncertainty.
 
Graphic, empirical or quantitative evidence strongly support this assertion: According to the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics (NBS) “2012 Youth Baseline Survey Report”, the population of Nigerians below the age of 35 years comprises 60% of the entire population of the country. Assuming that the 2006 census and the 2012 estimate of 167 million for people resident in Nigeria are correct, then the youth population in Nigeria today may well be over 100 million.
 
Of this number an alarming 54% are unemployed, the NBS report shows (I reckon that the underdevelopment of agriculture through years of neglect and poor policy administration, comatose extractive/mining sector, de-industrialization and the failure of manufacturing over time have contributed in no small way to the poor employment figures).
 
Also, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), in its 2013 Human Development Index (HDI) Report, ranked Nigeria amongst countries with low development index at 153 out of 186 countries that were ranked. Adult illiteracy rate in Nigeria is 61.3%. Life expectancy is placed at 52 years while other health indicators reveal that only 1.9% of the nation’s budget is expended on health. 68.0% of Nigerians are stated to be living below a miserable $1.25 daily.
 
Additional worrisome data are that, while South African and Egyptian universities make the list, no single Nigerian university is ranked among the best 10 in Africa and top 400 in the world, as the “Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2013-2014” show. “T.H.E. Ranking” is the only global university performance table to judge world-class universities across all of their core missions - teaching, research, knowledge transfer and international outlook.
 
Of course, social services today are exceedingly poor and the decay in public infrastructure is glaring for all to see. Or does one need any data to appreciate the challenges that the problem of ethnicity, diminishing national consciousness, religious intolerance and unchecked activities of militias and terrorist organizations pose to security at societal and individual levels in Nigeria today? The gory pictures from the recent massacre of over 30 students in Yobe State by Boko Haram insurgents tell the tale better.
 
As gloomy as they appear all the data given above do not sufficiently portray the ‘real’ drama of today’s youth. The critical issue is something denser; something that goes beyond the unemployment statistics and the tables confirming that the world has changed and that the guarantees of a generation ago are almost impossible in today’s times of ferocious competition and obligatory flexibility.
 
At the heart of the matter is the question of ideology. Today’s youth are immersed in epochal changes. We were not born in historical circumstances in which time-tested, traditional value systems are handed on almost mechanically. We find ourselves before a diversity that forces us to choose.
 
Sadly, the ideology that reads everything in terms of “individual” success; where the value of a person is measured by the possession of material wealth (materialism), is what many young people, in recent decades, have lived by (how much culture, movies, and music bear this terrible news!).
 
Relationships, family, ideals have been pruned, cut away. “Solipsism” - the belief in oneself as the only reality - and, even worse, “Nihilism” (the belief in nothingness), are gradually taking root in our youth. The results?  Various forms of impatience, disappointment and, yes, fear. So much so that many young people today have become violent against themselves, others and the world.
 
While everything in a person tends to search for something that satisfies fully his desire for beauty, truth, and justice, what we meet and what is proposed publicly and privately seems marked by condemnation, precariousness, uncertainty, and doubtfulness.
 
The real drama, therefore, lies in truly finding something that satisfies one’s life. And life as it is, with its limitations and its precipices, not life as a soap opera. This is the story, splendid and terrible, that is on the stage in the Nigerian theater, and pertains to all.
 
Traitor fathers
But where has the father, in his inexcusable absence, gone? Italian author and playwright, Giovanni Testori, wrote about those “traitor fathers” who had coined a medal with no flip side, “the medal of easiness, that did not envision its flip side: difficulty.” They then passed it on to their children, betraying the very ones they had generated.
 
Indeed, the Nigerian society today is full of such “traitor fathers” who have failed to transmit to the young the values of hard work, dignity in labour, selflessness, social responsibility, accountability, fairness and respect for others, reminding us that fatherhood is not a “natural” given but is cultural and educative.
 
The dearth of “adults” who are a presence bearing a true identity, a positive hope, a constructive certainty or meaning for their lives leaves many young people in an immense solitude, which they fill with the easy and sometimes terrible “games” that are readily available.
 
Thanks to these traitor fathers who have institutionalized corruption in every facet of our public life through years of bad leadership (with a score of 25 out of a possible 100 points, and ranked 144 out of 177 countries measured, Nigeria emerged the 33rd most corrupt country in the world in the Transparency International Corruption Perception Index 2013), our youth have imbibed a lifestyle of greed and a “get-rich-quick-at-all-cost” mentality.
 
But how can the youth see things any different in a society where corruption is the norm and thieving politicians and fraudulent businessmen are celebrated as heroes? Where a poor, hungry man who steals another’s ‘cube of sugar’ is imprisoned while a public official who embezzles ‘billions of dollars’ of our common wealth is allowed to go scot-free, or even granted Presidential pardon?
 
The Need for Re-orientation
At individual and national levels, there is a paramount need for reorientation; a changed set of attitudes and beliefs. There is need for an education (The fundamental idea in the education of the young is that it is through the younger generations that society successively rebuilds itself), and parents and religious leaders have a role to play here, as much as educational institutions do.
 
Let’s be clear: the concept of education I am referring to is not “mere acquisition of academic qualifications” (as, unfortunately, obtains in most institutions of learning today). No! I mean education as Luigi Giussani, Italian educator and founder of International Communion & Liberation Movement, describes it in his book “The Risk of Education” - “an introduction to total reality.”
 
To educate means to introduce a person to reality by clarifying and developing his primary or original view. True education, therefore, has the inestimable value of leading a person to the certainty that things, in fact, do have a meaning, and “tradition” is an important component of the educational process.
 
Unless young people are taught about the past (tradition) from within a life experience that highlights a correspondence with the heart’s deepest needs; in other words, from the context of a life that speaks for itself (a true father figure - who could be a parent, teacher, or any responsible role model), they will grow up either unbalanced or skeptical. If they have nothing to guide them in choosing one theory (a working hypothesis) over another, they will invent skewed ones.
 
The youth must take this past and these reasons, look at them critically, compare them with the fundamental desires of their heart, and say, “this is true”, or “this is not true”. As they grow older, following this educational method, their passion for life acquires an intensity and brilliance that even the educator could not have fathomed, and discloses to them the dignity of their personality and the affinity with the divine that gives it its substance.
 
Of course, this “recollected awareness of the ultimate sense of life’s mysteries” must become a spiritual exercise, an ascetic path, and thus a suitable perspective from which to live out a goal worthy of their lives.”
 
Tony Usidamen, a Communications Expert, writes from Lagos.
Email: tonyusidamen@yahoo.com, Twitter Handle: @tonyusidamen

Monday, February 4, 2013

The Senate Resolutions: Good, Bad and Ugly



By Wale Olu

 The National Assembly recently passed some resolutions with respect to
events in the industry; in unison we can applaud some of them while
the others are either bad or ugly.

The directive to the Central Bank to recover funds given to Air
Nigeria is commendable, with four aircraft parked in the cold in
Hampshire, England awaiting the lessors’ decision and another parked
close to the GAT graveyard without engines. It is clear that Air
Nigeria has turned round the turnaround expert. This is a sad story,
since this airline was flying without an investor or intervention fund
sometime ago in this country and it was managed by a Nigerian.

The directive to compel NCAA to ensure all airlines involved in
accidents settle all outstanding insurance obligations and ensure that
all airlines have adequate insurance cover as required by the
regulations is also a good one. They should go further and ensure that
owners or managers of such airlines do not return to the industry in
another name or designation without offsetting their liabilities.

On the MD 83’s they are still flying  without issues round the world,
I stated sometime after the crash that Air Burkina and Air Mali are
using those aircraft to ferry Air France passengers to points beyond
Ouagadougou and Bamako, while our airlines with brand new aircraft
are overlooked for such commercial agreements. The same aircraft has
been picking Nigerian troops from Abuja and other African troops or
officials under the auspices of the United Nations, will the UN use an
unsafe aircraft with its LOGO emblazoned on it?

The directive setting passenger aircraft age limit at 15 years and
cargo at 20 years is not a panacea to air crashes; rather it will
drive some carriers out of the market, increase unemployment and
fares. Is it the airframe or the engine that must have this age limit?
What happens if the airframe is 16 years and the engines are 3years?
Please let us leave the status quo and allow the regulators do their
job, in line with air worthiness directives from reputable
international agencies.

The directive asking the government to revoke the license of DANA
Airlines is a bad one; the airline has just been re-certified by NCAA
and some other airlines are going through that process. If the
Legislature views the certification of DANA despite having an
international AMO as partner is faulty and the NCAA cannot be trusted,
it means all other AOCs issued by the NCAA should be revoked with
immediate effect; anything short of this is RACISM. I just pray their
country of descent will not target Nigerian investors too. The
priority should be payment of compensation to all.

The directive demanding for the removal of the DG and the dismissal of
the Engineer saddled with the inspection of the ill fated DANA
aircraft is distasteful, hasty and ugly. Rather, a speedy
investigation and conclusion of the accident report should be our
priority; at that point there will be no place to hide for every one
anymore.

I do not believe the demand of the Senate is based on tribal
sentiments as espoused in some quarters rather it is based on some
information that look mischievous emanating from the cocktail of
submissions made before, during and after the public hearing. The DG
should not be tagged with incompetence based on his record so far, he
should rather be decorated with national honours for elevating the
regulatory institution rather than being hounded disrespectfully.  Let
the senate hang proven corruption charges and breach of contract on
him, the tide will change ferociously.

ROSAVIATSIA, the Russian equivalent of NCAA was almost pushed last
year by their parliament, the DUMA to revoke the licenses of some
airlines due to air mishaps. The Agency resisted and conducted their
investigations. Red Wings Airline only last week lost its AOC in that
process. The Russian regulator said they are losing the license, not
because of the air crash they had on the 29th of December 2012, but
due to the numerous significant violations found during
re-certification. Also, the airline lacked financial resources to
provide ongoing operations consistent with appropriate level of
safety. This is processes and procedure without interference but
requisite oversight responsibility by all parties.

We are scaring investors. We need to stop the bickering and attract
them by capitalising on our CAT 1 status.

If the National Assembly really has so much time on their hands and consider 
they are not so busy attending to more pressing urgent matters of national 
interest on the deteriorating economy and nation, including the wide gap between
the rich and the poor, let alone all the corruption in the Executive and the Legislature
then they should look at investigating all the fuel companies who supply aviation fuel
as they are the ones responsible for contaminated fuel causing recent air accidents.  

Wole Olu writes from Lagos, Nigeria

Saturday, January 12, 2013

What I've learnt... 1: Musing of a man in position


By George Uriesi

Nigeria is afflicted by a severe lack of patriotism by something like 99.999% of its citizens. But we can talk the talk. Check out all the brouhaha on social media, in newspapers and magazines, etc. All you get is severe criticism of the country, it's government and virtually everything about it. I also confess that I was one of the crowd screaming at the top of my voice on the internet and in newspaper articles about how bad Nigeria is!

Alas, the opportunity came for me to put my money where my mouth is and I took it. And gosh, have I been disappointed by what I've seen. Sooo many so called critics, especially diaspora returnees who found their ways into various influential sectors of government just come in and become worse than those who never left the country! To the vast majority of us Nigerians, our government exists for us to steal from. Forget all the noise people make. I've seen over and over again how the noisemakers come in and before you can say 'hey', join the fray.

The media is the worst culprit. I have never seen a mass media as illiterate, ignorant, unprofessional and hungry as that of Nigeria and I've lived and worked in 3 countries in my adult life. Take it as a fact, virtually everything you read in the Nigerian mass media is paid for, either for self promotion or for "Pull Him/Her Down" purposes. The journalists don't care about destroying anyone's hard earned professional reputation. All they care for is to be paid for what to write. They won't research, they won't cross-check, they won't learn. It's all about money money money!

As a result, you have journalists who have purportedly reported in an area of business for several years and yet remain essentially ignorant about their subject because everything they write is paid for. They won't even read about it to understand it so they can report competently on it. No! What do they care? That's why you have to feel very sorry for the mere handful of real professionals still left in their ranks...

But what is worse? People with whom you have been discussing and dissecting Nigeria all your adult life, who you expect will give you support in doing the right thing and showing a different example when you are in a position of influence, all join in the unholy expectations that people in top government positions are constantly and intensely pressured under. It's always, "ol boy, how far? You wan chop everything alone"? If you dare say "chop what"? They say "abeg coolu. Lef that matter. Forget all those beer parlour and armchair gist, make we yarn better. This job go soon go oh. Make hay while the sun shines" etc etc...

And yet we abuse the president, the Ministers, the Governors et al, despite the immense pressure we place them under to do wrong for our personal benefit. I always wonder how these guys even manage to get through their days in office. And that's why we must give utmost respect to the very few people like Governor Fashola, like Sanusi Lamido Sanusi and a handful of others who try very hard to think and act differently, swimming against a tsunami of wrong and parochial thinking all around them!

Everything seems reduced to a joke. It is all so surreal. The entire society does not want progress. Everybody has an automatic default setting- that you are in your position to 'chop' and you are chopping and therefore owe those around you some of the chop- QED! They make incredible demands of you- friends, family, acquaintances, everyone you come across! They warn you that if you don't 'make hay', you will regret shortly afterward when the job is gone as if you asked them to feed you before the job. (My friends, please forgive me oh, I'm not referring to all of you)!

When you don't meet the society's misplaced expectations, everyone gradually becomes very mean and say the most horrible things about you behind your back. You become a perennial subject of blackmail, slander, subterfuge and backstabbing. To be focused on doing the job for which you have been appointed is anathema! That shouldn't be your concern. Your concern should be how to distribute largesse! If not, then get out of the way! That's the constant, repetitive message...

I've always taken delight in observing everything going on around me dispassionately. My coaching practice will be hugely enriched after this assignment. There really is nothing like viewing the world from an entirely different perspective. Suffice to say though that I have learnt to have scant regard for Nigerian critics of Nigeria. Especially my generation, those of us in our 40s, my few remaining fiercely critical friends in particular!

If now in our 40s, all we do is yak yak yak about Nigeria and keep abusing everyone who leads it, when will we make an attempt to correct it? When we are 70 or 80? We yak yak yak everyday, yet when we have the opportunity to show a different way, we are just the same or even worse than the very people we have been insulting for years!

So the question then is, who will come and right Nigeria for us? Jesus Christ? And talking about Jesus Christ, it is most interesting to watch Nigerians use religion. The society has made religion a 'lightning rod' for all its inadequacies. Before and after every meeting in every office in the country, a Christian and Muslim prayer is said. You should listen to the fervor with which these prayers are said. Quietly witnessing all this, I always wonder how God really feels about us. I have my thoughts on this, but you don't wanna know them...

Finally, I know a lot of people will be shocked and even offended by all of this and frankly, that's their problem. I'm reflecting. And my summary take is that we are a bunch of not serious people. Not the government. THE PEOPLE!!! You really need to think deep to appreciate this statement...

The beautiful ones are not yet born oh... Or at least, only a handful of them are! We need more urgently... So help us God!

George Uriesi is the managing director of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria

Friday, January 11, 2013

How close are our local government chairmen?



Edo State Governor, Adams Oshiomhole                                                                                                                                      By Monday Obaze
They swore to be our servant, placing their right hand on the Bible or Koran;  they  lift their voice to the heavens  proclaiming all sorts of loyal ties to the people, little  did we know that their action was an irony, a ruse, because in reality we are their servant and they our lord and master.    
 The local government reform carried out by the military in 1976 was done with the view of taking government closer to the people and embodied in various parts of the reform is the baseline that the local government is there to serve the local people, to carry out those vital functions that are necessary for grassroots development. It is written in the guideline for local government reform that local government is government at local level exercised through representative councils established by law to exercise specific powers within defined areas.
These powers should give the council substantial control over local affairs as well as the staff and institution, and financial powers to initiate and direct the provision of service and to determine activities of the state and federal government in their areas; and to ensure through devolution of functions to the council and through active participation of the people and traditional institution that local initiative and response to local needs and condition are maximized.
 The local government was created for the people but now the reverse is the case, the local government headed by a chairman and other council has now grown so big to the extent that the need of the people has now become insignificant. The local people can’t have access to their local government because the personnel in charge are either not around to listen to their complaints or simply do not care.
On several occasion I tried to contact two local government chairmen in Edo State but failed. One was consistently not in office while the other couldn’t grant me an audience because to him what I have to say was not important probably because I was not in a three piece suit and was not recommended by a high ranking political officer.
Every time I go to these offices, I was tossed around like a round leather ball in a Barcelona game, a scenario that will not occur if I was the son of a very important person in the state. The local government is no longer for the local people, and for the common man seeing the local government chairman is like a camel passing through the eye of a needle. It is time to get local government leaders who will actually be servants of the people as it should be.  
                                                                                                                                     


Monday Obaze is a political scientist based in Benin City, Edo State

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Tragic-comedy of House Committee on Aviation/Dana Air Crash saga

By Group Captain[rtd] John Obakpolor

I have waited this long before lending my voice to the issue above. In all my years in aviation industry both here and abroad, I have never come across a situation as this: where a group of people constitute themselves as judge and jury to pronounce judgment in a case which they are not professionally competent. It was a travesty  of justice.
I am pleased at the amount of resentment poured out by the Nigerian professionals who felt insulted by these masquerades and impostors parading themselves as the watch dogs of the industry.
How could they violate the sanctity of the 'Hallowed' chamber to perpetuate this heinous crime of character assassination in the name of oversight duty they knew nothing about? I thank God that Nigerians are not as ignorant as they thought.
The history of Aviation industry accidents/incidents is as old as the industry itself. When they happen, it takes time and patient to unravel and the causes found are used to proffer solution for future occurrence of such accident/incident.
The results are never punitive in nature, else the spate of accident/incident would be exacerbated. If we have to apply the Hope Uzodinma approach, there would be no Aviation industry in the next one year. I am happy that we operate a system of checks  and balances. 

ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION.
In an accident investigation, you must have an open mind to allow free flow of information. You do not draw conclusion until the evidence before you point you toward that direction. You do not work from answer to question but allow the answer to evolve itself.
That was Senator Hope Uzodinma's style. At its inauguration, his committee directed that the D.G, NCAA stepped aside to allow for unhindered investigation.
This is not a financial misappropriation matter. That was where he goofed. He was playing out  somebody’s script who have zero tolerance for healthy competition in the industry.
This idea was brought to me when I headed the administrative panel on the same DANA crash investigation. I thought it was a joke but I now know better.
How else can one explain why a committee of a legislative arm of government now wish to assume the role of NCAA in the issuance of Aircraft Operator’s Certificate (AOC) and its revocation.
The two chambers joint committee members must be guided  in the way they trod 'carelessly' in Aviation terrain. Free flow of information is the bedrock of safety consolidation Aviation. 
We preach  REPORTING in CONFIDENCE with CONFIDENCE (RCC).
If this is achieved in the industry, confidence would have been restored to  the industry. Safety Management System  (SMS) must be fully entrenched and enforced on the operating airlines in the country. 

AIRCRAFT AGE IS NOT AN ISSUE
Much has been said about the age of  an aircraft as a cause of  frequent aircraft accident in Nigeria, but this is not correct.
The age of an aircraft has no adverse effect on its operational performance if the schedule maintenance is strictly adhered to. This  is what NCAA has been doing to make sure that airlines do not default in their maintenance schedule.
The  committee recommended  a 15years bar for any aircraft operating in Nigeria. This will not only make it impossible for airlines to re-fleet but also make it impossible for them to sustain themselves in business.
A well maintained old aircraft is better than a poorly maintained new aircraft. A Kenyan 737-800 that was three month old when it crashed in Cameroon as a result of wind shear; that is  weather related cause.
Bad weather does not discriminate between old or new aircraft and in this case.  What matters, is perfect air-man ship and discipline. An old aircraft could be retrofitted  and become new.
An aircraft has two major components; Air frame and Engine and they both have different life span. The engines are change from time to time as at when due but an Airframe, when it reached the designed age limit are taken out of service.

MD 83
Contrary to the committee findings MD 83 aircraft is very much in operation all over the world including countries in Africa. How far can emotion lead us when taking decision that will affect our economic structure.
During the era of Nigeria Airways which lost one of its aircraft in a crash, elicited a lot  of emotional out cry  and with a government fiat, the airline was made to dispose of its fleet six (6) F28 brand new Aircraft type without any technical reasons
When will this hasty and unsubstantiated decision making attitude stop? Enough is enough. Seek for professional advice before taking such far reaching decisions. 

MILITARY HELICOPTER CRASH
A lot has been said about this crash. High profile emergency meeting held and communique was issued at the end; all pointing towards suspicion. It is unfortunate that we have gotten to this stage in our Aviation industry.
The military is a place where such thought should not be entertained because it is apolitical and non partisan in nature.
Why would any one doubt the outcome of a military investigation to suggest the inclusion of an independent observer in the name of “consultant”. If  the situation has gotten to this stage in our society, then God help us.
Let me at this juncture express my heart felt condolence to Mr. President , the family of those who lost their dear ones in that horrible accident; I joined the teeming Nigerians to pray for the repose of the souls of the  departed.
Military crashes happen every now and then. They happen that we might learn from the result of the investigation. There has been suggestion that the military operation be put under the Ministry of Aviation. That should be the last thing to be considered.
I attended a workshop in the UK last October to review the performance of MILITARY AVIATION AUTHORITY (MAA) in UK. This body came to being as an after might of the crash of a reconnaissance aircraft (Nimrod) in Afghanistan. The fallout from that report gave birth to MAA.
It was found out that there was no unified regulatory authority for the military. Every arm of the  service was operating on its own. There was no interference from the CAA.
With the MAA the services are brought under one command and made the relationship with the CAA seamless.
The volume of our operations may not be in the magnitude of the UK, it would be appropriate if we started thinking along that line.

CONCLUSION
It is high time we started doing things the right way. There is no room for ignorance , hypocrisy, cheap popularity and hatchet man job in Aviation industry.
Bogus consultants whose knowledge is centered around vendetta and destruction of the few proven hands in the industry should be exposed and stopped. It is time to sheath the sword and do some constructive work to the good of the nation. 

I wish you all COMPLEMENT of the season. 

Group Captain John Obakpolor (rtd.) was former Chairman National Society of Engineers (Aviation)