We were lucky to come across the report of the attacks on Barkin Ladi Local Government Area. The report is circulated on Whatsapp, but in case you didn't get it, you can download it here.
Jul 11, 2018
May 13, 2018
The Economic Enslavement Many Nigerians Don’t See
Substandard electronic imports to Nigeria |
I live in Bukuru town, in Jos-South of Plateau State. Through the centre of Bukuru, a major road passes. It is the Jos-Bukuru Road. This very road is the hub of economic activities in the town. Somewhere along this road, there is the town’s branch of First Bank of Nigeria Plc. It is where I bank. Going to and from the bank each time, I see an eyesore, the inferior imports of, mostly, electronic devices that include computer mice, mobile phone chargers, USB cables, headphones, shortwave radio receivers, torchlights, mp3 players, dry cells, etc.
What makes them an eyesore? It is the fact that they are substandard –you buy today, they fail tomorrow. So, you go again to purchase the same item, ensuring the enslavement continues.
As long as this continues, we will remain a poor nation. It is a strategy that ensures we continue to work for nations from where these imports often come. These nations, mostly in Asia, become the vampires, sucking us slowly and leaving us malnourished. Eventually, they will leave us dead. This is what strikes me, each time I walk along this road.
Many times, I have bought computer mice that I come home to realize aren’t functioning at all. Why would someone want to manufacture and sell an item that isn’t functional? It is, clearly, to suck you and grow fat in the process.
It is not happening only in Jos. It is happening simultaneously in Bauchi, Kano, Lagos, Enugu, Kaduna, and everywhere across the country. This is how one is able to weigh the grave dimension of the problem, i.e when seen at the national scale.
The obvious kink is, no doubt, the unending demand for the dollar that it causes. It leads to the dollar scarcity (when it gets worse) and the subsequent devaluation of the naira, something that is inevitable when the supply of the dollar fail to meet demand.
When the government of President Buhari came, it was confronted with the fall in the prices of oil. As a result, there weren’t enough dollars coming into the country (oil is the major source of foreign currency to the country.) Consequently, the value of the naira crashed, from about N197 to over N400 a dollar. Then, painstakingly, it rose and stabilized at the current rate: N365 to a dollar.
The government had promised, during its political campaign, that it was going to create jobs. One way was to ban the importation of agricultural products that we can produce. In view of this, the government of Buhari banned the importation of rice. It served two purposes: the creation of jobs in the agricultural division, but also helping to reduce the demand for dollars meant for the importation. But obviously, there are “obscure” imports that are badly hurting the economy in severe degrees. They are these inferior electronic devices.
We are told that Nigerian importers are often shown classes of goods, based on their qualities. It is said that they often opt for inferior ones, because Nigerians prefer to buy those ones, in view of their “affordability.”
Sometimes a government needs to compel citizens to do things it is aware will benefit the citizens in the long run, despite how painful it would be to the citizens.
The Standard Organization of Nigeria (SON) is charged with the duty of ensuring such goods don’t come into the country. Clearly now, what this tells us it that SON is not serving the purpose for which it was created. It also means that there wouldn’t have been any difference if SON was non-existent. EFCC must look in their direction.
Mar 18, 2018
PLATEAU STATE ROAD MAP TO PEACE
Plateau State, since 2001, has seen recurrent cases of
violent conflicts. Within this period, over 7000 lives are estimated to have
been lost.
The recurrence of the conflict has, as a result, added
conflict resolution into the list of campaign issues. The current
administration in Plateau State, led by Barr. Simon Bako Lalong, has, in its bid
to ensure an enduring peace, come up with a blueprint to lasting peace. It is
known as the Plateau State Road Map to Peace. It was unveiled by President
Muhammadu Buhari during his visit to Plateau State on March 8th.
Feb 4, 2018
Baba Paul Gindiri, Gofo Gunen (1935-1996)
Paul Gindiri. Source: ECWA Gist Nation Wide |
aching and attacked both Muslims and bad political leaders in Nigeria, a country he saw as a battleground between Christians and Muslims. When a Muslim governor gave Muslims a space in the public motor park along Bauchi Road in Jos, Paul Gindiri demanded that Christians also be given a piece of land in the same area to build a church. The governor gave a comparable piece of land to the Christians who built a church there. Even though no one worships in the building (2004), Paul Gindiri had made his point: what is good for the goose is good for the gander. Continue here
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
A Plateau Author Who Lives in Obscurity
Changchit Wuyep, Plateau Author Changchit Wuyep is an author with three published books to her credit. Her books include Offspring in Peril ...
-
A man with Ngas tribal marks Ngas people are found mainly in the state of Plateau in central Nigeria. Over the years, many have...
-
There is no doubt that progress in technology is helping matters in the area of broadcast equipment, by bringing down the cost of st...
-
The Edifice that Isa El Buba is Building Anybody that has been a movie freak in Jos back in the seventies and eighties will definit...
-
Origin of Tarok As is common with most African cultures, available data on the origin and the history of the people is hinged on oral tradi...
-
The word ‘garri’ has found its way into a few Nigerian proverbs such as:- 1. Throw “sand -sand into one’s garri.” This means to throw sand ...
-
President of Ngwan Ishi Tarok, Rtd. Gen. Joshua Dogonyaro The Tarok people are found in Langtang North and South, Kanam and Wase loca...