TIGblogs TIG | TIGblogs GROUP TIGBLOGS LOGIN SIGNUP
AYCbethechange's Blog
AYCbethechange's Blog
« previous 5


Haitian Migrants Reach U.S. Shores The Associated...

Haitian Migrants Reach U.S. Shores

The Associated Press reported today that more than 100 Haitian migrants reached South Florida after at least three weeks at sea. According to officials, one man died during the journey.

U.S. Customs reported that atleast 101 migrants were taken into custody including the body of the man who died during the voyage.

The Coast Guard estimated that in 2006, 769 Haitian migrants reached the U.S.

Surprisingly, Cubans are allowed to stay in the U.S. once they reach U.S. soil but Haitians are sent back.

Why are these two groups treated differently? Any ideas?

March 28, 2007 | 6:03 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


"The Next Four Billion"


Report on global purchasing power released by the International Financial Corp. and the World Resources Institute

Four billion low-income people, a majority of the world’s population, constitute the base of the economic pyramid (BOP). The world’s estimated four billion people - those with annual incomes below $3,000 - who live under the poverty line represent an untapped global market worth USD 5 trillion in local purchasing power.

“The Next Four Billion: Market Size and Business Strategy at the Base of the Pyramid” is based on unique access to the household income and consumption surveys of developing and transition countries, offers a new perspective on low-income communities worldwide. This report draws on income data from 110 countries and standardized expenditure data from 36 countries across the globe.

The BOP makes up 72 percent of the 5,575 million people recorded by available national household surveys worldwide and an overwhelming majority of the population in the developing countries of Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, and Latin America and the Caribbean -- home to nearly all the BOP.

This large segment of humanity faces significant unmet needs and lives in relative poverty: in current U.S. dollars their incomes are less than $3.35 a day in Brazil, $2.11 in China, $1.89 in Ghana, and $1.56 in India.

Yet together they have substantial purchasing power: the BOP constitutes a $5 trillion global consumer market.

According to the World Resources Institute, that these substantial markets remain underserved is to the detriment of BOP households. Business is also missing out. But there is now enough information about these markets, and enough experience with viable business strategies, to justify far closer business attention to the opportunities they represent. Market-based approaches also warrant far more attention in the development community, for the potential benefits they offer in bringing more of the BOP into the formal economy and in improving the delivery of essential services to this large population segment.

The logical next move: now that a huge market with purchasing power has been identified, businesses will begin to target these underserved countries with marketing and business strategies which will result in improved services and development.

Time will tell.

Cassandra




Source: The Development Executive

March 22, 2007 | 12:36 PM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


New Blog - AfricaStand!

www.africastand.blogspot.com
"Empowering a new generation to lead the way."

I will post on TIG as often as possible but this is my home.

Blessings,
Cassandra

P.S. If you'd like to post something on AfricaStand!, email me. Spread the word.


Let aggressive peace reign.

March 21, 2007 | 8:49 PM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Posts from The Nigerian Village Square

One of my favorite online news and commentary sites about Nigeria is the Nigerian Village Square. This site proves that there are many brilliant minds with thought-provoking and credible viewpoints to share about the current state and future of Nigeria and Africa as a whole. I hope you enjoy these as much as I did. -Cassandra

Back in Nigeria After 20 Years

by sabidde

Twenty years is a long time not to have visited ones country. It is a long time not to have visited ones place of birth. Twenty years is a long time to have stayed away. My absence wasn’t deliberate. It wasn’t planned. I didn’t set out on a voluntary exile. I had wanted to visit, but somehow, I have not been able to get myself into doing so. Things happen: I had difficulty obtaining an Alien Registration Card (greencard); and without a greencard, attending school became a problem; and without decent education, finding decent jobs became difficult. As you very well know, even after conquering those huddles, you just might lose your job. Once you lose your job, your sanity becomes shaky and in doubt.

Once the aforementioned happen, other unintended consequences are likely to follow: You might lose your home; lose your car, default on credit card and other loans; and then run out of money to tend to immediate family members. Pray you don’t owe child-support payment. Or back taxes. You may even lose your medical insurance. And if you think those are bad, wait until your immediate and extended family members in Nigeria, or elsewhere in Africa, start demanding money for their own upkeep. Mother is ill; dad needs medication, sisters and brothers needs money for tuition and books.

Before you know it, life begins to snowball; it begins to spiral out of control. Before you know it, it is five years, ten years and then twenty years. You begin to wonder. And in the process, you may lose hope and lose faith and lose handle on your dreams -- assuming there are dreams left to pursue. You lose yourself in this wonderland called the United States of America. America is such a biting and unpredictable place. For most people, if they didn’t achieve their dreams within 7-12 years of getting here, all might be lost. Though they could dream again if they have the energy and the vision and the will to dust themselves up and then climb the mountain, and swim in the ocean of life.

To be sure, their dreams will change; their hopes and expectations and joy tampered with. Such is life in America -- a land where twenty years can pass in a twinkle. Or, in a yawn.

A few months back I met a Nigerian who came to America in 1970. He briefly visited home just before the 1976 military impasse. For him, Nigeria is a very distant past, a land of his ancestors. But in all practicality, Nigeria is no longer his home. He remembers Nigeria only because he was 35 when he arrive the shores of New York. Ironically, he hates it when his children refer to themselves as African-Americans. He tells his children and grandchildren that they are Africans, Nigerians. Nothing more.

That is his fervent wish. He’s told me time and time again: “I am a Nigeria, deep in my heart, I am a Nigerian; but how do I find my way back?” I didn’t know what to say, I didn’t know what to tell him. I don’t know. I really don’t know. I don’t know how to help him retrace his steps. But is retracing his steps necessary?

And then there was the lady I met on my way to Phoenix. She was somebody in Nigeria. She knew everybody -- all the military and civilian hotshots -- but somehow, she fell for the pull of the western world. She left it all and moved; first to London, and then to Los Angeles. Twelve years later she is yet to find her bearing. Fading beauty, gloomy disposition, monotonous life, single-motherhood, neck deep in debt and all the associated negatives of life in Yankee has taken a toll on her. Not yet thirty-nine, but you’d think she is fifty. How to remake her life and retrace her steps is her paramount concern now.

As for me -- after Twenty years of living in the United States of America -- here I am in Nigeria. After three weeks in Lagos I set sail for Ibadan, Jos, and then to Kaduna before flying south to Port Harcourt, and then to my village by road and by canoe. Everywhere I went personal and human security is lacking. And there doesn’t seem to be a method to the general madness.The roads and bridges are bad. The lights are out. It is hot. Mountain of trash everywhere. The open and stagnant gutter. It smells. The air is filled with unknown substance that sometimes makes me delirious.

I couldn’t help but wonder, I couldn’t help but ask: Is this the Lagos of yore? Is this the Garden-city? Is this the Nigeria I knew as a boy and as a teenager? Is this the cradle and the Mecca of the Black race? Is this my homeland? Whatever the answer, whatever the condition, I have come home. I have returned home. I have returned to my people and to my land. I am back to my country, for good or bad.

Time will tell.

Sabidde@yahoo.

-----------------------
Emerging Leaders And Citizens As Catalysts

By Uche Nworah

Abstract

The forthcoming April 2007 general elections will be quite crucial to the future of Nigeria as a fully democratic and progressive country. While Nigerians continue to demand the highest standard of service from those that will be elected at the elections, it is the view of this writer that Nigerian citizens have an active collaborating role to play in the process through full participation in the elections. As a way forward, this author also suggests the introduction of the Nolan Principles of public service into governance in Nigeria as it will complement other ethical codes currently available but which may be grossly unused.

Introduction

Perhaps this year (2007) would be Nigeria’s chance or perhaps not. A humble guess may probably reveal that majority of Nigerians would wish that the outcome of the April 2007 general elections should consolidate Nigeria’s slow but steady match towards national rebirth. If we miss this forthcoming opportunity, we may be leaping backwards into our darkest past, unable to finally take our place amongst the global community of nations as one of the re-emerging economies and stable democracies in the world. The consequences of such a failed opportunity could only be imagined, and may even seem more sinister than the scenarios projected by America’s intelligence agencies concerning Nigeria’s disintegration within the next 15 years.

It is not enough for Nigerians to castigate the Americans for their prognosis; we should rather aim to get our acts together using the forthcoming elections as a litmus test, that way we will not be playing into the hands of the American intelligence agencies by fulfilling their prophecies for them.

Citizen Participation

I will urge the Nigerian people to take the forthcoming elections seriously because it is about time that Nigeria stepped out of the shadows and claimed its rightful place on the world stage. We have to endeavour to capture back our leadership position at least in Africa, a position that South Africa has since snatched from us, and rightly too. Apathy would not help and the days of throwing up our hands in the air and surrendering to the selfish elements in the polity to continue to direct our affairs should also be finally coming to an end. Those who have registered should make their votes count. This is not only the morally correct thing to do, but also the most sensible option; the other option is a retrogressive match to the place we have been before as a nation, an unfortunate harrowing place that we don’t want to be in again.

We need the active collaboration of Nigerian citizens, parents, young adults, men and women, professionals, market women and men, artisans and students to realise these dreams. Citizen participation is very important in this process, not only as voters but also as watchdogs in our various communities and wards. Technology has now empowered us to write and report whatever is going on in our neck of the woods before and during the elections; we can no longer reserve this watchdog role to the professional journalists, to international election monitors and foreign observers. I will enjoin all Nigerians with access to the internet to become citizen journalists and reporters, you may wish to register a blog and write an online election diary. Several blogging websites such as wordpress.com, blogger.com etc offer such services freely on the internet. You can also network with other like-minded individuals and share information and best practice on the forthcoming elections.

This new freedom of expression which empowers citizens also comes with a responsibility, that of honesty and truth. In assuming this new role of citizen journalists, we should avoid crying wolf and making frivolous allegations of rigging where there is none. If we resort to such cheap tactics to score political points, we would not be any different from the same people we are complaining against. Nigerians could also send in their election news, stories, tit-bits, reports and pictures to websites such as nigeriavillagesquare.com, gamji.com, nanka.org, saharareporters.com, chatafrikarticles.com, nigeriansinamerica.com etc for publication. These websites which complement the efforts of the traditional newspapers and media houses are helping to bridge the information and communication gap between Nigerians in the diaspora and those living in the homeland. Every effort matters because when citizens get involved, those who plan to rig elections may feel anxious not knowing who is watching and monitoring their illegal activities. Perhaps the reason for the near – perfect electoral process which the developed countries have is as a result of the active participation of their citizens who play watchdog roles in their individual capacities. They build networks and freely share information using emerging technologies freely available, perhaps we should borrow a leaf from them.

As we go out to cast our votes, we should vote right and let our conscience guide and lead us to a better path. The days of collecting bags of rice, tins of vegetable oil and snuff money to cast our vote should be over. Selling our vote will amount to mortgaging our future and the future of our children once again. We should vote only for candidates that we think are credible, candidates that have good intentions, men and women of integrity who would work for the people rather than for themselves.

Writing on Democracy and Governance in Nigeria, Dr. Ovo Oghuvbu advices Nigerians to vote “people of conviction who are making themselves available and accountable to us (there are many about the place even if in the ‘wrong’ party). We should be questioning and investigating records and make it clear that we will no longer accept the “short selling” of our dreams and aspirations for a better life.
We should mobilise to unmask the most dangerous cohort of them all – the children of these charlatans (biological or adopted). They are more sophisticated than their “fathers” and their only agenda is to “finish” what their “fathers” couldn’t. Some of them are amongst us in various guises; they have not the interest of our nation at heart”.

Continuing, Dr. Oghuvbu opined that “April 2007 can be a watershed for our nation, the enthronement of a paradigm shift in the evolution of our political and democratic culture. There are saboteurs, ‘chancers’ and agents of calumny who are threatened by this potential. They could become an extinct or neutered breed in our body politic but only if we want them to be. We can either allow them do what they have always done or checkmate and rid our governance space of them”.

He challenged Nigerians to “take action now” by encouraging intelligent voting (the candidates are there he says), and shun primordial voting. “Protect the vote by all means available and be a part of a revolution that the giant may yet arise”, he concludes.

Echoing similar views, Victor Dike, author of Democracy and Political Life in Nigeria also places the onus on the Nigerian people, the citizens and the common man on the street for the impending change in our polity. He wrote that for Nigeria to build a strong foundation for true democracy, “There is need for the society to promote ethical standards in politics, good social and moral values, accountability and transparency in governance”. According to Dike, for this to be possible, “the people should be politically educated and mature. This would enable the people to begin to question the sources of the wealth of the politicians’ who become “very rich” immediately they step into political office”. Dike also quotes Mahatma Gandhi who said that “politics without ethical principles is among the social sins of humankind” to buttress his point.

He however reiterates that “it is not too late for the politicians (and the people) to modify their political behavior and learn to play ethical politics that add values to the system”. He concluded that “If Nigeria wants to transit peacefully from the democracy-experiment to democratic consolidation the politicians (and the people) should adhere strictly to the code of ethics and any person that goes contrary to the rules (operate outside the law) should be punished without fear or favor”.

It is very important that Nigerians de-focus on the federal government a little in the coming dispensation, they should re-direct their attention to the states and most importantly the local governments whose governors and chairmen have struggled in the past to justify their monthly allocations from the centre, which usually run into millions and billions of Naira. Part of the thinking in the creation of a local government system of government in Nigeria and the continuous carving out of new local government authorities from existing ones is to bring government closer to the people. This objective has remained unfulfilled, it is therefore very important that people being voted into these positions pass certain standards and tests set by the people. Truly, development could also occur bottom-up as is the case in the United Kingdom where the boroughs have responsibilities for basic services such as roads, housing, education, health, welfare and so on. This frees up the central government’s time which could then be devoted to more strategic issues and projects.

Nigerians should demand a service charter from the next local government chairpersons; these chairpersons should also on their own create one not only as a token but as a symbol of their commitment to improving the lives of the people living within their jurisdiction. State governors should do the same; they should even go a step further by emulating the examples set by the likes of Governor Donald Duke of Cross River state who has put his state on the world tourism map with the Tinapa project as well as other developmental initiatives. The new set of governors should work hard to clean up the image of the state governor as a criminal and treasury looter epitomized by the likes of former governor of Bayelsa state J.S.P Alamiesegha, Rivers state governor Dr Peter Odili amongst many others. Some of these governors have been indicted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commision (EFCC) for corrupt practices.

Service delivery should be made more efficient at the state and local government levels, borrowing from the activities of SERVICOM at the federal level, the incoming government should promote accountability, service, honesty and integrity at all times. This is the only way the confidence and trust of the citizens can be won back, and the only way they can receive the support and cooperation from the citizens which they desperately need in order to function.

The Obasanjo government may have laid the foundation for a new Nigeria, rescuing it from the claws of military oligarchs in 1999, but now is the time to move on. We have to build on the institutions and good intentioned reforms of the last 8 years. The race is not yet over and has just begun. The incoming leaders should consolidate on the debt relief as well as debt repayment efforts of the outgoing government. They should also build on the achievements recorded in both the financial, education and other sectors. They should not drag Nigeria back into the Paris and London clubs through frivolous borrowings. Enough of playing politics and Russian roulette with our collective future.

Perhaps this may be the best time to incorporate the Nolan Principles into governance in addition to other codes that may already exist. The Nolan Principles of public life which originated in the United Kingdom is preferred because of its simplicity and because it covers the key areas that have remained the bane of successive governments in Nigeria. The principles which are reproduced here could be hung in offices as reminders of the people’s expectations. Abbreviated pocket-sized versions could also be produced and given to civil servants who sometimes function as clogs in the wheels of progress and development.

The Nolan Principles of Public Service

Selflessness: Holders of public office should take decisions solely in terms of the public interest. They should not do so in order to gain financial or other material benefits for themselves, their family, or their friends.

Integrity: Holders of public office should not place themselves under any financial or other obligation to outside individuals or organisations that might influence them in the performance of their official duties.

Objectivity: In carrying out public business, including making public appointments, awarding contracts, or recommending individuals for rewards and benefits, holders of public office should make choices on merit.

Accountability: Holders of public office are accountable for their decisions and actions to the public and must submit themselves to whatever scrutiny is appropriate to their office.

Openness: Holders of public office should be as open as possible about all the decisions and actions that they take. They should give reasons for their decisions and restrict information only when the wider public interest clearly demands.

Honesty: Holders of public office have a duty to declare any private interests relating to their public duties and to take steps to resolve any conflicts arising in a way that protects the public interest.

Leadership: Holders of public office should promote and support these principles by leadership and example.

Perhaps the time has come for Nigerians to shun the ‘Nigerian factor’ psyche and expression. This expression seems to have provided a ready excuse for us in the past to justify our misdeeds and poor judgements. There should be nothing ‘Nigerian’ about selflessness, integrity, objectivity, accountability, openness, honesty and leadership. These are all universal principles and virtues without any black or white flavourings and colourings. If we indeed want to come out of our socio-economic doldrums, then we should all rise to the challenge knowing that there is no compromise to these principles.

Conclusion

Finally, we need the vigilance of all collaborating agencies and institutions for this process to work, if indeed this will be our chance, the Independent Electoral Commission (INEC) must play an impartial role and ensure that elections are free and fair. The onus is on them to conduct an election that will rekindle the trust of Nigerians in government agencies. The emerging leaders post- April 2007 and the entire citizens of Nigeria should not let this opportunity pass us by. This may indeed be our last chance.

The author's book - The Long harmattan Season is available from amazon.com and other bookshops. info@uchenworah.comThis e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it . http://thelongharmattanseason.blogspot.com/

References

1. Dike, Victor. Need for Ethical Politics and Values.

http://www.nigeriavillagesquare.com/articles/victor-dike/need-for-ethical-politics-and-values.html

2. Oghuvbu, Ovo (Dr.). The Mirror Sign - Nigeria & Democratic Governance.

http://www.nigeriavillagesquare.com/articles/guest-articles/the-mirror-sign-nigerians-democratic-gover.html

3. Ologbondiyan, Kola. US Intelligence: Nigeria 'll Fail in 15 Years

http://www.thisdayonline.com/nview.php?id=18299

4. Summary of the Nolan Committee's First Report on Standards in Public Life.

http://www.archive.officialdocuments.co.uk/document/parlment/nolan/nolan.htm

For more excellent commentary along these lines, visit http://www.nigeriavillagesquare.com

March 21, 2007 | 9:03 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Africa – Where the Next US Oil Wars Will Be

by Mr. Bey, Director/UFJ

On Feb. 7, George Bush announced the formation of AFRICOM, a new Pentagon command to plan and execute its oil and resource wars on the African continent. What does this mean to African Americans? And to Africans? And Where?

Nigeria. A member of OPEC, Nigeria is the largest oil producer in Africa and the eleventh-largest producer in the world. The country is a major oil supplier to both Western Europe and the United States. The country produces roughly 2.5 million barrels per day. Nigeria's proven oil reserves are some 35.2 billion barrels, with plans by the Nigerian government to expand to 40 billion barrels by 2010. Nigeria's economy is heavily dependent on oil revenues, which account for nearly 80 percent of government revenues. Despite its resource wealth, more than 70 percent of the population lives in poverty.

Angola. Angola is the second-largest oil producer in sub-Saharan Africa after Nigeria, with oil production expected to reach 2 million barrels per day by 2008. Angola also has major offshore sources of gas. The oil and gas industries, both considered highly promising, have attracted over $20 billion in foreign direct investment since 2003. The Angolan economy is highly dependent on its oil sector, which accounts for over 40 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) and almost 90 percent of the government's revenues. Angola accounted for half of China’s oil imports from Africa in 2005, according to the World Bank.

Sudan. Sudanese production and export of light, sweet crude—the most easily refined, and therefore most desirable, oil—have risen rapidly in the last few years, with Sudan's Energy Ministry reporting production of some 500,000 barrels per day in 2005 despite internal upheaval, including the unrest in the northern region of Darfur. Sudan has proven reserves of some 563 million barrels of oil, with the potential for far more in regions of the country made inaccessible by conflict. Sudan is one of the world's poorest countries.

Equatorial Guinea. This tiny West African country's total proven oil reserves are estimated at 1.28 billion barrels. Oil production averaged 371,700 barrels per day in 2004, with oil accounting for nearly 90 percent of the country's total exports in 2003. In October 2004, Equatorial Guinea told oil companies operating in the country to cap production at 350,000 barrels per day, for fear that ever-increasing oil revenues could destabilize the economy.

Gabon. Gabon has proven oil reserves of roughly 2.5 billion barrels and produces about 230,000 barrels per day. This represents a decline of 37 percent since its peak production levels in 1997. Exports of crude oil account for approximately 60 percent of the government's budget and more than 40 percent of GDP.

Republic of Congo. As Sub-Saharan Africa’s fifth largest oil producer, the Republic of Congo has 1.5 billion barrels in proven reserves and averaged 235,000 barrels of crude oil production per day in 2004. In 2005, the oil industry accounted for about 80 percent of the country’s revenues, and nearly 90 percent of its total export earnings.


Check out Mr. Bey's blog on Taking It Global www.takingitglobal.org.
(This article was posted on AfricaStand! with his permission.)

March 21, 2007 | 8:03 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


« previous 5


Cassandra's Profile

Cassandra's Friends


Latest Posts
The Good, the Bad, and...
Historic Prayer...
Africa sees 6%...
Keep them in your...
Kisumu Ex-Street...

Monthly Archive
March 2007
April 2007
May 2007

Change Language


Tags Archive
abstractexpressionism nigeria paints pieces willemdekooning

Filter By Type
News
Travel
Topics

Friends
Ebonie C. Fifita
Emeka
iwegbu patrick
Kate Jongbloed
mohamed elkashash
Quirz
R Kahendi
snyamhuno
UFJ


8126 views
Important Disclaimer