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Sunday, November 10, 2013

Femi Fani-Kayode: The curse of power

This is a grim and depressing essay and the subject matter is painful to digest. I take no pleasure in writing it and I would suggest that those that are easily hurt, over-sensitive and unduly emotional should stop here and go no further because this is not the stuff for weak stomachs or gentle souls. Yet those that choose to go on and read it to the end can be rest assured of one thing- that there is a purpose for this interesting contribution and there is a morale to the tale. Now sit back, relax, fasten your seatbelts, prepare for take-off and come fly with me. Here it goes. When one studies the history of our country critically and takes the time to do the appropiate research one thing becomes very clear- that, in Nigeria, politics and the power game is a dangerous calling and terrible business which, more often than not, comes with a heavy price tag.
That price tag includes pain, anguish, betrayal, humiliation, persecution, misfortune, hardship, loss, death, strange ailments and tragedy for those who reach the top and their loved ones. It is rather like playing Russian roulette- there is one live bullet in the six empty chambers of the pistol and one doesn’t quite know when that bullet will go off when the trigger is pulled. The gamble and risks taken are not only compulsive but they are also addictive and at the same time utterly deadly. Sadly the result is as follows- virtually every single one of our national leaders and those that have ever ruled this country has suffered immeasurably at some point or the other in their lives, whether it be before, during or after they came to power. They too have shed tears in the loneliness of their closets and have eaten portions of what the bible describes as the ”bread of sorrows”. Yes, even the rich and powerful cry and even they suffer loss and tragedy. This is the case for leaders all over the world but in Nigeria it is far more pronounced and common than anywhere else. Here the angel of death, misfortune and sorrow seem to stalk those that find power and, like an ugly old crow plucks out the pink feathers and precious eyes of a beautiful flamingo, she cuts short and plucks away their lives or the lives of their loved ones. Like a light bulb attracts a moth and leads it to a sudden end, so power attracts those who seek it with equally tragic consequences. As painful as it is, let us look at the facts.

Human rights commission lied against me — Chime’s wife



Wife of the Enugu State Governor, Clara Chime
Wife of the Enugu State Governor, Sullivan Chime, Clara, has faulted the report of the National Human Rights Commission on her incarceration by her husband. She said the report was set to damage her reputation.
This was contained in a letter of complaint she wrote to her lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana, SAN, which was made available to SUNDAY PUNCH on Saturday.
The NHRC had on Friday released a preliminary report on its investigations into Clara’s complaints of rights abuse.

Cristiano Ronaldo

Real Madrid: Cristiano Ronaldo is incredible - Ancelotti

Real Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti labelled Cristiano Ronaldo "out of this world" after the Portuguese forward scored his 23rd hat-trick for the club.
Ronaldo, 28, scored in the 12th, 26th and 76th minutes as Madrid beat Real Sociedad 5-1 and moved within three points of La Liga leaders Barcelona.
Ancelotti said: "He scores so regularly and with such incredible ease. It's hard to find new words to describe him.
"Cristiano's talent puts him in a different category altogether."

God took Abacha, Abiola away to save Nigeria — Gowon


Former Head of State, Gen. Yakubu Gowon
A former Head of State, Gen. Yakubu Gowon (retd) in this interview with SUCCESS NWOGU says if those that took over from his government had continued with his programme, Nigeria would have been more developed than China, among other issues
Is national conference/dialogue desirable now?

Bus sex: Night travel’s fringe benefit



Luxury Bus sex
Night travel may be fraught with a lot of dangers in Nigeria where highways are not in the best condition and robbers use the state of the roads as an opportunity to ambush interstate commercial vehicles.
But in spite of these inherent dangers, there seems to be no reduction in the number of people who choose to go on journeys in the night.
Investigation by Saturday PUNCH showed that the attraction of some of the passengers to the night travel was more bizarre as much as it was almost unbelievable.
When Saturday PUNCH visited some parks to investigate, it found out passengers preferred night travels for different reasons.


Jose Mourinho: Chelsea's penalty against West Brom clear

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho insisted the controversial late spot-kick from which Eden Hazard earned a 2-2 draw with West Brom was a "clear penalty".
Baggies boss Steve Clarke was outraged by Andre Marriner's decision to penalise Steven Reid for a collision with Blues midfielder Ramires.
But Mourinho told BBC Sport: "I have watched it two or three times and it was a clear penalty.
"The referee made many mistakes during the game but that was not a mistake."


Theo Walcott (left), Aaron Ramsey (centre) and Jack Wilshere

Arsene Wenger: Arsenal can match Man Utd's 1992 youngsters

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger believes his side's core of young players can prove as successful as Manchester United's famous 'Class of 1992'.
The Gunners head to Old Trafford on Sunday top of the Premier league.
"United had an exceptional group together - the two Neville brothers, David Beckham, Ryan Giggs, Paul Scholes, Nicky Butt," Wenger said.
"I would say this group is as successful as Manchester United's group of players were."
Left to right: Nicky Butt, Ryan Giggs, David Beckham Phil Neville, Gary Neville, Paul Scholes
Manchester United's 'Class of 1992' won five Premier League titles