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Written by Ibrahim Egboli
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The late Pan-Africanist scholar Dr. Tajudeen Abdulraheem, Daily Trust African of the Year 2009.
The late Nigerian activist, scholar, newspaper columnist, social campaigner and exemplary Pan Africanist Dr. Tajudeen Abdulraheem was last night named as the Daily Trust African of the Year for 2009.
The choice was announced by the Advisory Board at a special dinner and award ceremony at the Congress Hall of the Transcorp Hilton Hotel, Abuja, which was attended by Mrs Winnie Madhkizela-Mandela and the Ghanaian Member of Parliament Mrs Samia Nkrumah, among other prominent guests.
Taju, as he was popularly known among his very wide circle of pan-Africanist friends and associates, died on May 25, 2009 in a car crash in Nairobi, Kenya, where he was based.
Chairman of the Daily Trust African of the Year International Advisory Board Dr. Salim Ahmed Salim, who announced the selection and read the citation, said the choice was simultaneously humbling and inspiring. He said “even in death, Tajudeen still speaks and is recognised for his tremendous contributions to the development of the continent. We are aware that the next generation will not grow up to see Tajudeen, therefore we must work together to create a better society such that we could say to the next generation, this is the world Tajudeen helped to build.”
Dr. Salim, who was a former prime minister of Tanzania and former Secretary General of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU, now known as African Union), also said the overwhelming responses and tributes which followed the announcement of Taju’s death attest to the impact he made on the lives of all Africans. He also described the African of the Year as a loving husband and father. Taju’s wife Mounira, a Tunisian, and his two children, Aisha and Aida, were present at last night’s award ceremony.
Dr Tajudeen Abdulraheem was born at Funtua, Katsina State, Nigeria on January 6, 1961. The citation said “although he was born in northern Nigeria, his roots were from South West Nigeria. He attended Government Secondary School, Funtua and then went to Bayero University, Kano where he graduated with a First Class degree in Political Science. After youth service, Taju bagged the prestigious Rhodes Fellowship to Oxford University where he graduated with a D.Phil. he was the first Northern Nigerian to win this award.”
Dr. Salim said while Taju could have gone from Oxford to work in any country or company of his choice, he instead returned to Africa to help rebuild it. Among the many inspiring things he did were his appointment in 1992 as General Secretary of the 7th Pan African Congress Secretariat in Kampala, Uganda. He organised a very successful Congress in 1994 with delegates from 47 countries.
The congress was however overshadowed by events in Rwanda, so Taju went with a Pan African Movement delegation to Rwanda for a first hand assessment of the situation. They were ambushed near Kigali and they narrowly escaped unhurt.
After 1994, Taju remained in Kampala as Secretary General of the Global Pan African Movement. Salim said “he inspired an entire generation of Africans and Africanists. Taju was emphatic that the Pan African effort must be coordinated from the African soil.”
Before his premature death last year, Taju was Africa Deputy Director of the United Nations Millennium Campaign (UNMC), from which position he kept a vigil over continent-wide efforts to attain the Millennium Development Goals by 2015.
Salim also said “Taju spoke the truth to those in power. He boldly took to task African leaders who did not have the courage of their convictions, including publicly critiquing Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi for the cumbersome and restrictive visa regime in place at the seat of the African Union.”
The African of the Year award ceremony was supported by United Bank for Africa (UBA), which donated $50,000 as cash prize to the winner. The bank’s Regional Director, Abuja Mr. Dan Okeke said UBA sets aside one percent of its annual profits before tax for a Foundation that is spent in many social projects such as education and health. He said UBA is Africa’s global bank because it already has branches in 17 African countries, the most recent one just opened in Zambia. Many more will soon be opened in other African countries, he said.
Among dignitaries at last night’s event were former Lagos State Deputy Governor Mrs Kofoworola Akerele-Bucknor, Hajia Naja’atu Mohamed, Professor Bolaji Akinyemi, House of Representatives member Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa, Vice Chancellor of Bayero University, Kano Professor Attahiru Jega, Nigeria Labour Congress deputy president Comrade Issa Aremu, the South African High Commissioner and the Chadian Ambassador, wife of the former Kaduna State deputy governor Mrs. Charity Shekari, and the prominent Kebbi politician Alhaji Mai’eka Bello Mohamed.
Also present at last night’s award ceremony and dinner were other members of the Advisory Board, including Professor Tandeka Nkiwane of South Africa, Ms L. Muthoni Wanyeki of Kenya, Professor Kwame Karikari of Ghana, Professor Abdoulaye Bathily of Senegal, Dr. Obadiah Mailafia of Nigeria, as well as Professor Okello Oculli, described as “once a Ugandan, now more a Nigerian.”
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Written by Administrator
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Uneasy cam is returning to jos after a three day violent ethnic conflict which began on sunday. The immediate cause of the conflict are yet to be ascertained even though tension and suspicion between the the various communities had remained.
The federal and State governments have been at each others throat, with Christians accussing the federal Government of siding the Muslims and Muslims accusing the State Government of siding Muslims.
 Last year some persons beaaring arms and wearing army uniforms were apprehendd by the Police. The whereabouts of the persons are not known. The State government accused the federal government of shielding the perpatrators of the riots
The Police Commissioner in Plateau State announced on Monday that five persons wearing army uniform were among the over 100 persond apprehended over the crisis. The state governor has imposed a 24 hour curfew to contain the rioting which has spread to several other parts of the metropolis. At the Plateau State Specialist Hospital, before the curfew was declared, hospital officials told The Guardian Newspaper that 20 bodies had been brought to the facility.
At the Jos University Teaching Hospital, it was learnt that 80 bodies were in the morgue while several people were receiving treatment from matchet and cutlass wounds.
In a broadcast yesterday, the Commissioner for Information and Communications, Mr. Gregory Yenlong, said that a 24-hour curfew had been imposed on Jos/Bukuru metropolis.
He said: "The state government, in consultation with the state security council after reviewing the prevailing situation in Jos metropolis has directed the immediate imposition of a 24-hour curfew in Jos and Bukuru.
Meanwhile, the police have arrested 100 miscreants in connection with the crisis.
Those arrested are from Dutse Uku, Congo Russia and Angwam Nshanu. They were found with dangerous weapons including Ak-47, locally made pistols, daggers, axes, cutlasses, among others.
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Written by RANA BAYAOK
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The National Union of Textile Garment and Tailoring Workers of Nigeria (NUTGTWN ) yesterday declared that Nigeria would fare better if President Yar’Adua formally relinquished power to Vice President Goodluck Jonathan while he attended to his health abroad.
The union also described the President’s comments on the state of his health in an interview he granted on Monday to the Hausa Service of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) “an assault on the national sensibility” of Nigerians.
General Secretary of NUTGTWN, Mr. Issa Aremu who spoke yesterday at a news conference in Kaduna maintained that Yar’Adua by his preference to speak to Nigerians for the first time in 50 days after he left the country for medical treatment in Saudi Arabia through a foreign radio station, had further legitimized Nigeria’s slide into dependency after about five decades of independence from her British colonial masters.
He said it was hearten warming and reassuring to hear the president’s voice on the BBC, noting however that the terse statement he made raised more questions than needed urgent answers for the crisis of governance his long absence from the country had continued to generate.
Aremu lashed at the decision of the president’s aides to organize his short broadcast through only the BBC on such a matter of national importance, instead of giving priority to the Nigerian print and electronic media, stressing that the action of the president’s aides had put a question mark on their competence and patriotism.
“For one, the president’s voice was heard so late, so little. However, better late than never. But we have a problem with the medium used by the president to address anxious Nigerians, namely BBC. Addressing Nigerians through foreign media on the eve of a mass protest calls to question the competence and much more the patriotism of the president’s handlers. Millions of ordinary Nigerians have been praying feverishly for the president in mosques, churches, and workplaces, state government houses throughout the country here in Nigeria.
“But if the president must seek help abroad as he is already hospitalized in Saudi Arabia for more than 50 days, it is quite uncharitable for the president’s men to make him casually address us through telephone broadcast through BBC not NTA, FRCN and scores of local Nigerian electronic and print media.. The promise of independence is that our president 50 years after will not talk to us through London.
“This is one incompetence and unpatriotic act carried too far. Wives of high profile leaders now shamelessly deliver babies abroad. High profile leaders send their children abroad for studies which sometimes result in disaster and terror as in the case of Farouk Mutallab that in turn puts 150million persons in a mess. For Mr. President to further legitimize this slide towards dependency by talking to us from his sick bed from a foreign country through a foreign media is an assault on the national sensibility of those of us who had been feverishly praying for him here in Nigeria. One good turn definitely deserves another.
“The president’s handlers must help him through frank talk and good advice in a way that all the good jobs he had done within these few years would not be jeopardized and wasted,” Aremu said.
The union further noted that although Yar’Adua’s casual address on the BBC was aimed at convincing Nigerians that he was still alive, the ailing leader failed to betray the slightest concern about any of the pressing outstanding national issues during the BBC broadcast.
He urged him to hand over power to Vice President Goodluck Jonathan, arguing that if he did that the country would fare better.
Aremu added that it had become imperative that the Nigerian nation moved on while President Yar’Adua attended to his health abroad.
“It is clear (and the BBC correspondent confirmed it) that the president was legitimately sympathetically battling with his personal health. That is why the president must look at the bigger issues. While attending to his personal health, he must remember he has done so much as president during the past few years and for which he must sustain.
“It is sad that the Nigerian state has been without a president these past 50 days. The president’s predecessor, Obasanjo was well and healthy but we lost a decade under him in terms of power failure, factory closures, job losses. If a healthy president worked so poorly, the one sick abroad can hardly be helpful. President Yar’Adua’s achievements from the rule of law, civility in governance, Niger Delta etc were recorded when he was on duty.
“The president should not give room to mischief makers and political opportunists who want to rubbish all the good jobs he has done for this country on account of his alleged disregard for due process. The president has actually ‘resigned’ to attend to his health and the country goes on rather badly. The country can do better if he formally mandates the VP to continue from where he stopped. Nigerians need somebody to talk to on minimum wage, factory closures, energy crisis and other critical issues of governance. The best way for the president to consolidate is to attend to his health and make sure the health of the country does not suffer.
“We urge President Yar’Adua to discard self-serving politicians around him by handing over to the vice president and put Nigeria on a sound pedestal for the challenges of governance in 2010. Once he recovers he can resume his good work” Aremu said.
ENDS
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News Headlines
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Written by RANA BAYAOK
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For the first time since he left the country to attend to his health in Saudi Arabia for over 50 days ago, President Umaru Musa Yar’adua finally spoke saying that he doesn’t know when he will return to Nigeria .
The president in an interview with the Hausa Service of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) on Monday in the evening said his condition is improving, adding however that he is not in a position to know when he will return to home to his duty post.
The rumour mill had been awash with all forms of speculations about the true state of the president following the inability of those in authority to brief Nigerians about Yar’adua’s condition.
There were wild speculations on Monday by some people that the president was dead. Some were also speculations that the president was in a coma. A newspaper had also claimed that the president’s brain has been damage and cannot speak or recognize anything.
President Yar’adua, in the BBC interview monitored in Kaduna said he was responding to treatment and thank Nigerians for praying for him and for the nation.
Said the president: “My brothers in Nigeria , I want to inform you that I am getting better insha-Allahu. By the grace of God, any time my doctors discharge me, I will come back home to Nigeria to continue my work. I want to also thank all Nigerians for their prayers for me and for the nation
"I want to wish our team, the Super Eagles victory in the African Cup of Nation that is going on in Angola . Thank you”.
The president who was interviewed on phone was apparently speaking with great efforts and pain. In the interview which lasted for about 86 seconds, Yar’Adua disclosed that he has been in touch with his Vice, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan and that everything regarding the governance of the country is going on well as expected.
He however could not say when he will return to Nigeria , saying that anytime he recovers fully and is strong, he will come home back.
The brief interview run thus-- BBC: Your Excellency do you know when you will go back home, because Nigerians are worried about your condition. Do you know how long it will take you to go back home to continue with your work?
Yar’Adua: Insha-Allahu I am getting better. Anytime God heals me and I am strong, that is the time, insha-Allahu, I will come back to Nigeria , anytime the doctors discharged me.
BBC: There are a lot of issues (in Nigeria ), have you spoken with the Vice president and is everything going on well as you expect?
Yar’Adua: I spoke with him; I have been speaking with him. Everything is going on well in accordance with the constitution of the country.
ENDS
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News Headlines
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Written by ISHOLA MICHAEL
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The Bauchi state police command has release 10 of the disciples of the late leader of the Islamic sect, Kala-Kato who were suspected to have taken part in the religious crisis that erupted in Buachi recently. All the 10 0f the were said to be minors, where arrested at the resident of the leader of the Islamic sect during the mayhem.
It was gathered that the children were released to the Bauchi state Office of the Red Cross which in turn took them to a suburb of Bauchi after accommodating them in the camp for some days. Their Teacher and leader of the Islamic sect was killed during the crisis It was further learnt that the most of the disciples came from Niger Republic while others came from other parts of the country including the Federal Capital in search of Islamic religious knowledge.
The children who were said to be ignorant about the events that led to the violence were said to have been forced forced out of their abodes when the police raided the resident of their leader. Some of them were said to have died during the incident
Meanwhile the Chief Imam of Bauchi Central Mosque, Bala Ahmed Baba Inna has condemned the persistent religious clashes in Bauchi state saying that all those causing crises sect members fighting for ideology and positions within their sects.
Speaking in an interview with newsmen at the Palace of the Emir of Bauchi the Chief Imam further stressed that the Boko Haramu sects’ members were fighting security agents not civilians.
He advised parents and guardians to be vigilant on their children and wards as well as try to educate them so that they will not be available for use by mischief makers to cause confusion.
“We are not supporting them or their acts, their approach is wrong, influx of people from neighboring states is also contributing to the problem” he said.
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