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Benin, Edo State , Nigeria

Saturday, 22 November 2025

Nigeria’s Invisible War: Unmasking the Money Men Behind Terror, Jihad, ‘Fulani Expansionism’ and Mineral Banditry



Who is really paying for Nigeria’s bloodbath?

We talk endlessly about “terrorists”, “Fulani herdsmen”, “bandits”, “unknown gunmen” – as if they are ghosts who appear from thin air, armed to the teeth, fuelled, fed and endlessly resupplied by magic.

They are not ghosts.

They are funded.

And the sponsors are not barefoot militants in the bush – they are people in suits, kaftans and uniforms; sitting in air-conditioned offices in Abuja, Lagos, Kaduna, Dubai and beyond.

This is an attempt to pull back the veil.

1. The Myth of “Faceless Sponsors”

In 2022, the Nigerian government quietly admitted that 96 terrorism financiers had been identified by the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU) as backing Boko Haram and ISWAP.

These were not rumours. They were based on financial intelligence – bank records, transfers, suspicious transaction reports – shared with law-enforcement agencies for prosecution.

Yet till today, Nigerians do not have a public, detailed list of:

Who these 96 people and entities are

What political or business networks they belong to

What has become of the cases

So when government officials and foreign partners repeat the cliché, “We will go after the sponsors,” understand this: they already know many of them. The problem is not lack of intelligence. The problem is lack of political will.

2. Boko Haram, ISWAP and the Business of Holy War

Religious fundamentalism is the branding; money is the engine.

Serious studies of terrorist financing in West Africa show that groups like Boko Haram and ISWAP rely on a cocktail of funding sources:

Kidnapping for ransom (locally and across borders)

“Taxes” and extortion on traders, farmers, transporters and local businesses

Protection rackets in areas they control

Cattle rustling and smuggling

Cross-border cash couriers and informal transfer systems

Occasional donations from sympathisers and extremist networks in the wider Sahel and beyond

A 2025 political-economy study on terrorism financing in Nigeria makes it clear: terror has become a profitable shadow industry, feeding off state weakness, corruption, and collusion between armed actors and elements in business and politics.

So when you hear “Boko Haram sponsors”, don’t picture only bearded ideologues. Picture:

Contractors inflating security and reconstruction contracts in the Northeast

Corrupt officers who divert military funds, sell fuel, food, or even ammunition into black markets

Local powerbrokers who pay terrorists not to attack “their” communities or interests

The line between terror financier, corrupt official and business middleman is often paper-thin.

3. Bandits, Gold and the New War Economy in the North-West

Now to the so-called “bandits” and those securing mineral sites.

Multiple investigations and policy briefs have shown a direct link between illegal gold mining in Zamfara and neighbouring states and the rise of heavily armed bandit groups.

Key facts:

Nigeria loses billions of dollars annually to illegal mining, a significant share coming from gold extracted in the North-West.

Armed groups tax miners, control pits, and exchange raw gold directly for weapons and ammunition through cross-border smuggling networks.

Foreign criminal networks – including buyers linked to gold markets in the UAE and elsewhere – are key players in laundering this blood gold through international supply chains.

In other words, many of the “bandits” terrorising villagers are not just random criminals; they are armed gatekeepers of an illegal resource economy. They secure sites, control routes, and enforce “order” for those making real money behind the scenes.

Who sits behind these networks?

Local political godfathers who benefit from informal mining

Security and regulatory insiders who “look away” for a fee

Foreign buyers and brokers who move the gold out and move the weapons in

If you follow the gold, you begin to see that the AK-47 in the bush is just the last link in a chain that starts in plush offices and foreign trading hubs.

4. Fulani Militias, Farmer–Herder Violence and the Sahel Pipeline

The phrase “Fulani expansionism” is now thrown around freely, often in ways that unfairly demonise an entire ethnic group. We must be careful: most Fulani are not militants, and most are not involved in organised violence.

But there are armed Fulani-identified militias and criminal gangs who have:

Exploited herder–farmer tensions

Used the chaos of the Sahel jihadist wars

Tapped into the same arms-trafficking and smuggling pipelines feeding Boko Haram, ISWAP and other extremist groups.

International and regional reports show:

Rising communal militias made up of both herders and farmers, often mobilised along ethnic and religious lines.

A massive proliferation of small arms and light weapons (SALWs) across Nigeria and the Sahel – through porous borders, local gunsmiths, and diversion of state stockpiles.

Who sponsors these armed herder and community militias?

Local elites who arm “their boys” as private security or political thugs

Smugglers and rustling syndicates who use ethnic cover for pure business

Jihadist groups that sometimes piggyback on Fulani–farmer tensions to recruit, train and arm fighters

Here again, the money and weapons often come from far beyond the village – from regional criminal networks, arms traffickers, and corrupt officials.

5. The Real Beneficiaries: A Criminal–Political Cartel

Step back and a clear pattern emerges:

1. Terrorist groups and bandits control territory, intimidate populations, collect “taxes” and guard illegal economies (gold, cattle, levies, smuggling).

2. Local and national elites tap into these arrangements – paying for protection, buying stolen resources, or using violence as a political instrument.

3. Foreign actors – arms dealers, gold traders, shadowy businesses – provide the cross-border infrastructure that turns local blood into global profit.

This is why unmasking sponsors is so difficult:

Do it honestly, and you will not stop at a few bearded preachers in the bush.

You will end up in the homes of politicians, security chiefs, royal palaces, business moguls, bureaux-de-change operators, foreign brokers and even “development partners.”

That is the red line no government has yet had the courage to cross fully.

6. Why the List Stays Hidden

Nigeria has:

An intelligence unit (NFIU) tracking suspicious financial flows

Regional and international support from GIABA, FATF and others on terrorist financing and money laundering

Public admissions that terrorism financiers exist – and have been identified

Yet prosecutions are rare, convictions are fewer, and names almost never see daylight.

Why?

Because a full, honest exposure of sponsors would shake the political and economic establishment to its core.

You cannot wage a real war on terror financiers without:

Exposing people in ruling parties and opposition alike

Indicting some security insiders

Disrupting powerful business interests – from illegal mining to opaque security contracts

Embarrassing foreign “allies” whose markets and lax regulations enable gold-for-arms, cash smuggling and trade-based money laundering

So instead, we get:

Dramatic speeches

Secret “lists”

Occasional token arrests

And a permanent, profitable war that never really ends.

7. What “Unmasking Them” Would Actually Look Like

If we are serious about unmasking the sponsors of terrorism, religious fundamentalism, Fulani militias and mineral bandits, it cannot just be social-media rage.

It would require:

Publishing a verified list of investigated terrorism financiers, with evidence summarised

Sanctioning and freezing assets of individuals and companies – locally and in foreign financial centres

Breaking the gold-for-arms circuit by targeting foreign buyers and hubs that knowingly launder conflict minerals

Independent forensic audits of security and humanitarian spending in conflict zones, as billions of dollars have flowed through the Northeast and North-West with very little transparency

Disarming communal militias on all sides, not selectively, while tracking the origin of their weapons

Until then, “sponsors of terror” will remain a convenient slogan – weaponised when needed, buried when it gets too close to the powerful.

Final Word

Terrorism, religious extremism, Fulani militias and mineral banditry in Nigeria are not random storms. They are systems, built on money, weapons and protection at the highest levels.

The ordinary Fulani herder, the ordinary farmer, the Christian in the village, the Muslim in the market – they are all victims in a bigger game.

If we truly want to end this nightmare, we must stop chasing shadows in the bush and start following the money – ruthlessly, regardless of whose name is on the account.

That is where the real sponsors live.


By Hon Chima Nnadi-Oforgu 

Duruebube Uzii na Abosi

Friday, 21 November 2025

HON. ESOSA IYAWE'S TALE OF CULTURAL REVAMP; WILL HE SUCCEED?

 



Culture is as old as man. The Benin culture resonants the very essence of infallibility and fraternality. Its infallible nature stems from incorruptible tradition of monarchical theocracy handed down with distinct norms and values, while its fraternality consumates the abundant wealth - material and immaterial, knowledge, customs, providence and protection of our ancestral heritage and of course hospitality. If a certain honourable member of the House of Representatives called Hon. Engr. Esosa Iyawe, representing the gallant Oredo Federal Constituency thinks he can blow our faces with cultural revamp programmes and partnerships then, he is a true leader. A son of the rooted soil. In such soils, every little seed has an impact; to bring forth and multiply both in dry clouds and rainy heavens.

Have you ever been inspired by your own achievements? It takes more than privilege to join the Governor, H.E Senator Monday Okpebholo, to welcome His Royal Majesty, the Oba of Benin, Omo N’Oba N’Edo, Uku Akpolokpolo, Oba Ewuare II, to the State House on the 7th November, 2025 to celebrate the Benin cultural heritage and shared commitment to progress. According to the honourable "cultural orientation programme for secondary schools in Oredo especially with the theme, 'The Role of Language in Preserving Cultural Heritage,' is as powerful as giving a golden torchlight to a child in a dark room full of treasure." Our identity is our customs and traditions. It is our treasure. It has always guided us in the path of truth, justice and reconciliation. 

Great leaders are thinkers whose bright dreams target future generations. For Iyawe - one of such leaders, continuous collaboration to catapult cultural legacy is a major plus. A South African singer once sang, 'no matter where you go, remember the road that will lead you home.' On October 12, 2024, a dream many refused and rubbished came alive. Same event a year later, November 2, 2025; gathering together secondary schools in Oredo Local Government Area, Hon. Engr. Esosa Iyawe facilitated students' cultural orientation and sensitisation programme making cultural, psychological and economic socialisation possible for the children and tutors. Beyond this event, he continued to champion varying empowerment to seekers, according due respect and privileges to our royal throne. Nationally, the Edo State government, the federal government, the National Institute for Cultural Orientation (NICO), the Oredo people and indeed the diaspora have measured his dream as invaluable. 

In Hon. Engr. Esosa Iyawe's dreams, Edo _Ó'dión_ is not a rhythmic anthem only, it is _"lingua aeterna"_. Many dreams die because the dreamer never wakes up, literally, but with Iyawe, the dream comes alive with him and as a matter of perfection, it will be alive even without him. It is now two lucking in years of doing the same magic again! Such feat is only the for fit. 




Anna Umegboro

Benin City.

8 Nov., 2025.

Motions in Motion; Hon. Esosa Iyawe



The whole of Oredo Local Government Area, Benin City has felt his impact. If you live in this local government area and you have not felt his impact, there can be two reasons for that. First, Oredo has a population of about 600,000 people judging from the 374,671 cited in the 2006 census. That is a 225,329 increase from 19 years. There are approximately (minimum of) 415 people per street. Secondly, Hon. Engr Esosa Iyawe is a first timer that has spent 30 months in office and records available show that he has performed better than any other first-timer. The breakdown of his constituency projects, empowerment programmes and bills will be well deliberated in subsequent write-ups but now, his motions are on focus:


                    *(1)*

Motion on the urgent need to investigate and address deviations from Federal Government approved master plans of Federal Housing Estates for excessive profiteering - plenary proceedings, House of Representatives, December, 3rd, 2024. *Reason:* The motion is driven by concerns that these deviations have led to excessive profiteering at the expense of the public interest.


                    *(2)*

Motion on the alleged non-remittance and under-remittance of tax by MDAs, oil companies, and other organizations. This motion on March 7, 2024, instantly prompted a directive for committees to investigate these allegations. Over the years, these establishments have not remitted billions of naira owed to the federal government and have not paid host communities as mandated by law. Today, the FIRS has gotten approval to recover N5.2 trillion unpaid taxes by MDAs for collective development of the country.


                    *(3)*

Motion urging the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to reveal all interests and principal sums on investments in the Excess Crude Account (ECA), Petroleum Profits (PTT), and Royalty Account to the Auditor-General for the Federation’s Office. In simple terms, there has been 'indiscriminate withdrawals' from very important government owned accounts denoting absence of clear rules for deposits, withdrawals, and investments which has impacted the revenue accruable to the Federation Account. This motion was filed on 23 July, 2023.


                    *(4)*

Urgent Need to Address the Outrage Resulting from Unguarded Comments by the Chief Executive of the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Authority towards Dangote Refinery. Plenary session, July 22, 2024. *Background:* the CEO of the NMDPRA, Farouk Ahmed, stated that diesel from the Dangote Refinery had a high sulphur content and was inferior to imported diesel. This damaging claim could promote unpatriotic acts and economic catastrophe. To curtail this, tests were conducted that contradicted Ahmed's claims.In fact, Dangote Refinery diesel had a sulphur content of \(87.6\) ppm, while two imported diesel samples had sulphur levels exceeding \(1,800\) ppm and \(2,000\) ppm. Hon. Engr Esosa Iyawe's motion consolidated this investigation and probes for sabotage of our country's local refinery.


                    *(5)*

Motion on the need to include the revitalization of Gele-Gele Seaport in Edo in the 2024 budget estimates. Date of adoption: July 18, 2023. Ughoton-Gele Gele Sea Port in Edo State has both historical and economic value. According to history, it was from this seaport that the Portuguese first gained entry into the great Benin Empire for trade in items like pepper, salts, etc. Iyawe's motion will bring to fruition this great progress as the House of Representatives urged the Federal Government to include the project in the 2024 budget and mandated the relevant committee to ensure compliance. It was one of the deliberations of the November 5, 2025 sitting where the House of Representatives urged the executive arm to implement all capital projects outlined in the 2024 and 2025 budgets.


                    *(6)*

Motion on the need for valuation of public assets in Nigeria and ensuring accountability in their management. This 20th December, 2023 motion addresses the challenge of how best to ensure that public officials are held accountable for their actions and even inactions. The representatives want all public assets to undergo enumeration and valuation as a means of raising revenues for government.


                    *(7)*

Motion urging the Federal Government to convert forfeited and abandoned properties in Nigeria and abroad for office use to reduce high government expenditure on rents and leases. *Reason:* in a bid to reduce the high expenditure on rent and office buildings, the Federal Government can convert permanently forfeited lands and buildings into offices for federal government agencies operating from rented offices.


                    *(8)*

Motion on the alleged mismanagement of funds and irregularities in the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) operations. Presenting the motion, Iyawe said that despite the huge budgetary allocations for the insurance scheme, records had shown that only 3 percent of persons had access to health insurance in the formal sector, leaving over 170 million Nigerians without health insurance. The scheme has also been mired with corruption, lack of transparency and accountability. Serious investigation is currently ongoing to unravel these irregularities.


                     *(9)*

Motion on the need to compel all uniformed government organizations to patronize the National Union of Textile, Garment, and Tailoring Workers of Nigeria (NUTGTWN). *Background:* In 2017, there was an Executive Order 003 (of 2017) to embark on awareness campaigns to sensitize Nigerians on the benefits of patronising indigenous textile manufacturers. The federal government compelled all Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs) of government to grant preference to local manufacturers and service providers in their procurement of goods and services. They also urged the Nigerian Armed Forces, Nigeria Police Force, the Federal Inland Revenue Service, the National Security and Civil Defence Corps, the Nigeria Immigration Service, the Nigeria Customs Service, the Federal Fire Service, and other uniformed government organisations to patronise the National Union of Textile, Garment, and Tailoring Workers of Nigeria (NUTGTWN) to purchase their fabrics. Consequently, the House further urged the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade, and Investment to revive the textile industry in Nigeria and provide a conducive environment that would attract both indigenous and foreign investments in the sector for sustainable economic development. Unfortunately, this Order had not been implemented and enforced. The House of Representatives, urged the federal government to ensure compliance and Hon. Engr. Esosa Iyawe lend his voice to this cause.


                    *(10)*

Motion on the urgent call to suspend and investigate the proposed increase in subscription prices by Multichoice. On the 4th of March, 2025, Honourable Iyawe lend his voice for Nigerians and filed that Multichoice, the owners of DStv and GOtv suspend its proposed increase in subscription prices pending exhaustive investigation.


                    *(11)*

Motion on the need for the utilization of renewable energy in MDAs of the Federal Government. Plenary session December 11, 2024. The truth is, many countries no longer rely on fossil fuels like petrol and gas. Iyawe corroborated the fact that about 60 GW of electrical power obtainable from renewable energy sources would enhance industrialisation within the country to a very large extent.


It is only a true leader who has the people at heart that would file these motions. It is now left for other members of the house to key into this collective project and the executive to accentuate these strides. My former employer used to say, 'the reward for hard work is more work.' Hon. Engr Esosa Iyawe has done well. Those that do well are sent again to accomplish even better. Edo _Ó'dión._



Anna Umegboro - Housed-On-Water Business Hub



15/11/2025

Everyday Satire (1)





Many people do not know that Bianca Ojukwu was among the Nigerian delegates that went to the USA to say that there was no Christian genocide in Nigeria.

Think of it this way; some days ago, I watched one of Sabinus' skits on Facebook. It happened that himself and his wife were strolling happily along a street and all of a sudden, an expensive car pulled over and a rich looking guy stepped out. He approached the lovey-dovey couple but spoke only to the wife inviting her to join him in his car as she looks very radiating. With fury, Oga Sabinus replied first, repudiating him for such disregard of moral values and effrontery. The wife too affirmed the husband's stance, insisting that she loves her husband so much even after 27 years of marriage, frowning at the young man's behaviour all because he is rich. What moral decades in our today's world. The stranger became more insistent. Still ignoring Sabinus, told the woman how beautiful she looked as she will be seriously taken care of with the right _man._ Stressing this, he brought out some shinning cash; 60 dollars, handing it to the woman. He promised to give her more if she follows him. At this point, both Sabinus and his wife paused for a moment. The wife, spoke up in furtherance of her previous stance, insisting that even in lacks, she will not compromise a 27 years old marriage. Sabinus on the other hand, lusting after the cool dough, beckoned on his wife and advised she takes the money from him as such _kind_ gestures will turn their lives around. The wife became infuriated and at the same time disappointed, insisting that regardless of what anyone says she stands by her moral values. At that moment, Sabinus went close to his wife, touched her and immediately (of course through video effects) swapped their clothings. The woman found herself inside his signature blue collard sleeve with tucked in tie and a saggy black trousers. Sabinus camouflaged as a woman, wearing his wife Buba and wrapper with full face makeup and a red glossed lips. He swung his behind and catwalked to the car signalling the stranger that he's ready to be friendly. The stranger was amazed as to how fast things CHANGE. He engaged in a popular but deficient monologue, he said 'this oga you are the real woman, because I was wondering why a Nigerian woman will see money and not follow.' What happened after Sabinus entered the car is a story for another day. I'm sure if he survives that day he'll trek all his life.

Politics is a job devoid of conscience. There are people who you know as integrity filled but politics will change everything. No, it does not changed them, it changed that part of them you did not get to see.




21/11/25

Monday, 26 June 2017

How Africa Can Achieve Sustainable And Affordable Supply Of Energy For All By 2030?



Chekwube .A. Umegboro
Benin City, Edo State,
Nigeria.
4th January, 2016.

TO:
THE UN SECRETARY GENERAL,
BAN KI-MOON,
Geneva, Switzerland.

Dear Sir,
ENERGIZING AFRICA THROUGH ENERGY, BY 2030 IS POSSIBLE
I hope your day goes well. Mine did. I must confess that I am delighted especially on gender mainstreaming issues and its sensitization. And, in talking about energizing Africans through energy supply, which is the epitome of this letter, I intend to use in simple expressions, Sir, culminating problems and arrived solutions to sustainable energy in Africa.
Energy is life. It’s our dependant, without it other life-holds crumble. And yes we are without it. The World Bank has declared 32 of the 48 nations on the continent to be energy crisis. Energy in Africa is a scarcer commodity than in the developed world annual consumption is 518 kwh in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Mr. Ban Ki-moon, lets turn commitments into kilowatt hours for real people! If it is believed that biomass energy, liquefied petroleum gas, biogas digesters and advanced biomass cook stoves are the cheapest options for cooking in sub-Saharan Africa, which I obviously agree with, out of about 1.2billion peoples in Africa, about 620million of these people in Sub-Saharan Africa are without power.
Indeed, the World Bank has pumped in money in revamping energy in Africa in which current projects totals US$3billion but, where is the market? In whose signature where these monies distributed – is it the rural needy or urban rich? Many things also affect the effective distribution of energy which includes ethnicity, political views, religious mediocrity, social status and well, luck. Corruption is of great problem in this fight too. Yes, there are limited water resources but what has happened to those in used.
Furthermore, Africa is yet to tap other energy sources like wind, geothermal, and solar. There is also over usage of the tapped hydro power.
External finance in an ascertain market for the targeted real people, under the leadership of selected graduates, undergraduates, university lecturers, selected engineers will be life changing. Let the UN take care of it in partnership with the country’s government and the above mention individuals in this way, the divergent solutions like tapping other energy sources will be made possible.
Yours faithfully
       Anna
Umegboro .A. Chekwube

ACHIEVE GENDER EQUALITY AND EMPOWER ALL WOMEN AND GIRLS IN THE NEXT 15 YEARS



“When the news of (the birth of) a female (baby) is brought to any of them, his face becomes dark, and he is filled with inward grief! He hides himself from the people because of the evil of that whereof he has been informed. Shall he keep her with dishonour or bury her in the earth? Certainly, evil is their decision.”1 This is how the Islamic Holy Book describes Arabs before the coming of Islam there. Of a truth, women were nothing but a space taker - even up till now especially in developing countries. Christian priests saw women as the cause of ‘original sin’, the source of all catastrophes happening in the world. They are enemies of successful men, the main cause of hatred among men.
And Yahweh told Jeremiah that if He would not listen to any body, yet will He listen to the supplication of the wailing women who are interceding for their generation.
Society for a long time has assigned certain roles to women which were merely domestic and these include ‘being sex objects, giving birth to children, nursing the children, cleaning the house and cooking. This from the view point of the sociological social stratification, conveniently satisfies the focus of the gender debates, to use contemporary terminology, the ideal woman has become the grass root woman, who should be content being a house wife, a petty trader, and if necessary, an assistant to the husband in the farm! These roles (deem natural) make here completely subordinate to man, it is therefore not surprising that such a woman does not aspire to high professional jobs. She could not because she had been conditioned and condemned to servitude by a society that is committed and dedicated to making here a chattel.
Society has soon realized that there is that vacuum needed to be filled by women - sensibility, intelligence, affection, consistency and care. Women have become the last resort in financial breakthrough and family collapse. Whence those who debate against feminism and gender equality on the grounds that the girl child solely depend on her male superiors whether husband or man friend making her weak, a slot and categorizing her a filthy are the real blockage hindering young women from broadening their horizon. So, the problem is not only culture or religion neither is it culminating factors of societal travails – it is greatly the women themselves culminating the attitudes of anti-feminist stands.  Madam C.J Walker the first made American millionaire was a black woman. Folorunsho Alakija, Linda Ikeji, Ngozi Okonlo-Iweala, Chimamanda Adichie, Stella Okoli, Bukola Elemide, etc have all distinguished themselves in their various fields.
African women have been hindered by many things but no need crying over spilled milk, let us talk about how to achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls by 2030.
(i)               Fighting feminine fear: there is that internal fear in a woman especially at the onset of her carrier about certain decisions to make in order not to flop and bring here entire womanhood to further criticism. That fear of being in the steering in the highway attracting degrading insults about how sluggish she drives. The fear of professional failures, quick emotional breakdown, bodily features and structures et al. The fear becomes a fight, an internal fight only the female can overcome. Some women fear that employers will view them as vulnerable… if they decide to start a family.”2 Some women still believe that men are stronger leaders,  have better ideas and are more equipped to achieve success.3
(ii)            International bodies’ legislation: these bodies should have a distinct department that looks into gender equality form there the sensitization can get to those in the grassroots. They can instill more resolutions to what Nigeria should achieve in the total development of the girl child for a year.
(iii)          Government participation: it is the decree from international legislation that will guide the country’s government in measures through which women are to be treated. Especially a country’s law that harbours domestic violence, child marriage, gender segregation, etc.
(iv)          Compulsory education for the girl child: but this is hindered especially for those in the Northern part of Nigeria. The girl child is not allowed education especially because she is seen as too fragile to be away from the care of her parent, and also that education might amount to nothing since she will be married away and all her seemingly future conjoined with that of her husband. If every girl – not minding her limits whether physical or mental is given education, then the society is bound for material and financial prospects hence female appreciation.
(v)             Revival programs: we can set up clubs in secondary and tertiary institutions in Nigeria. The students through the coordination of the Ministries of women affairs should guide these clubs and bring these young students together so as to enlighten them.
(vi)          Women empowerment: ECOWAS ECOWGEN is a good example as it is impacting on the lives of rural women in uplifting their sense of acceptance through empowering them in agriculture, healthcare, education and other training.
To empower will not only mean authoritative bequeathing to a woman so as allowing her access to certain rights, here, empower instills and revamp the already instilled confidence and focus in achieving the inner sketches to fulfillment. So how can Nigerian women and girls be empowered?
(i)               Female self-strength: this lies inward in the woman. Every woman has the ability to make one another successful. It takes support encouragement and non-grievances attitudes towards a fellow woman.
(ii)            Allow her financial freedom: to achieve sustainable development in mind and society, we must give the woman a chance to be financially accountable she must take the steering in issues bordering her, her family and her nation.
(iii)          Total encouragement: the woman must be encouraged to achieve beyond being a helpmate. My mother, a trained nurse impacted on the society so much that even while gone it seem she is still alive. She managed a clinic, making positive impacts in people’s health, reducing maternal mortality, giving prompt and friendly healthcare thereby putting smiles in the faces of thousands of people. She, empowered by herself strength, encouraged by her family, trusted by the society impacted on the people.
(iv)          Formal education: educated women/women that know the value of education produce healthier, decent and brighter children who in turn educate the society.

REFERENCES
1.      QURAN 16:58-59
2.      ZEYNEP ILGAZ www.forbes.com
3.      Ibid

Carnege Council Essay Contest (submitted 05/01/2016)

Sunday, 25 June 2017

#Standtall: Gender Mishap – Derivative Paroxysm in the Energy Sector in West Africa.



               I had gone to my secondary school few days back to collect my S.S.C.E certificate urgently needed to complete my university’s final clearance. I waited for about an hour before the principal arrived. Immediately she walked in she shouted “up NEPA” to my dismay. This slang is the greatest hymn title for the average Nigerian. I could see the joy, relief in her eyes as well as the eyes of other school heads there. The thing is, “up NEPA” signifies the triumphant entry of power into the home of an ordinary Nigerian, held back by instances of sustainable power supply. We can now charge our phones, watch our favourite television program and allow our hearts leap for joy for no ‘just’ cause. The Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) is responsible for Nigeria’s energy supply. It is aired that Nigeria is capable of generating around 3’500MW of electricity which is below the country’s needs despite government investment of around $1 billion annually. Other West African countries are not left out as the high rate of poverty is majorly caused by the low energy supply.
            Who are women? Being a woman goes beyond having hefty bosoms and nurturing skills. What if, just what if the woman is given the opportunity to corroborate the light that the world needs? A woman that can find her way through dark patches in the room where there is “down NEPA” to get that match-stick, light up the room for the safety of her kids; she can, as she had, for centuries be the best in the class and the energy to other women. Until Africa and indeed West Africa accept the fact that women’s role as background syndicate is a defect to everyone’s development, energy access can never be hundred percent. It starts from the home, the first social contact of the girl child. Why would she not be allowed formal education? Even when allowed, why is it cut short? It gets worse when you visibly encounter compromised situation in education. Why will the young bubbling girl be ‘thrown’ in ARTS and Social Studies against her will while her male counterpart is kingly in the Sciences?
            I would bet my last dough on the fact that there is shortage of women in ministries and agencies that formulate technical and engineering dictums in universities. So why won’t there be discrepancies in the rules that govern the ways and manner subjects are to be taught to favour both genders. Indeed, chances have been compromised. The roles of women and the master-plan they choose to inculcate have been bedeviled by unwholesome instances of ill-content. The average Nigerian is awed, puzzled, rebuffed, when he hears a woman say ‘I studied petroleum engineering’, or ‘I intend to work as an electrical officer in charge of maintenance in the energy sector of the country’. The saddest is seeing a woman on a ladder, effecting repairs to a loose wire on the high pole. She becomes a laughing stock as well as the reigning celebrity.
The causes of gender inequality in the energy sector in West Africa are not farfetched. We are lukewarm to change. I would not want to be a psychologist here. If we trust women with our food, water, clothes and all, why can’t we with our energy supply. What would want to kill that dream of a woman who wants to effect transformation to the energy efficiency of her country? Lack of education will, compromised learning choices, lack of encouragement through communal psychological torture, ministerial failures and governmental unfairness, unsolicited exclusion from technical and decision-making programs, and corruption in the administrative policies in energy will. I have never seen governmental committees on power, task force on energy rejuvenation, power distribution companies, headed by a woman talk more of a female deployed technician deserving a standing ovation.
       As a continent, as a community, we can never stand tall. Poverty rate is glaring, hardship, unemployment, financial constrains, and under-development. What is more? So much money is wasted on a single cause gone wrong. There is not a single economic pursuit that does not directly and indirectly rely on electricity, yet no meaningful profit, why would there not be hatred, clashes, seeking of greener pastures and leaving our lands bare. The gods have indeed want to punish us by first making us mad – for we cannot grasp impartial and genuine intellectual accordance to the female gender. Vital sectors of the economy are also affected as there is no broadband forum united in women empowerment so as to foster sharing of ideas and reduce intellectual monopoly. It has affected our perception of the woman, as imperfect and unfit. Alas, the discretion and continued psychological decay on gender issues.
How can all these be addressed? Ecowas Network on Gender Mainstreaming in Energy Access has dubbed its 2015 essay competition for young Africans ‘#Standtall’. What decorum! I am being brainwashed for good. Thousands of West Africans will hear me and millions will hear ECOWAS. Government plans must also align, high schools and colleges must be educated on gender issues. Ghana, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, and Equatorial Guinea is prompting the establishment of a regional gas companies in dealing with issues of supply of natural gas and re-gasification units in sub-regions. I just hope women are given chances to head administrative positions. Education of the girl child should not even be an issue of discussion; every child should be allowed his/her intended field
         The hard stance of OPEC not to curb crude oil output in the face of plummeting prices comes off as a grand experiment and a workable policy following scandals and illegality rocking petroleum sectors especially in Nigeria. Diezani Alison-Madueke deserves mention here, as her being president of OPEC has encouraged women not to limit their roles in foundational issues on energy. That openness of the people and encouragement from within will salvage the loss of human resources. Government should promulgate laws that will foster this equality so as to heighten exposure and limit incompetent gestures. I have read textbooks that authoritatively spelt out the unemployable stance of women in science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields, that their agility will deny the sector needed output. Am clueless here, aren’t both sexes supposed to complement each other? Continuity in female participation must be maintained!
The outcome of all these will be huge: employment, poverty eradication, women empowerment, even development. All these are true taste of an African testimony. What is more? Respect and love between both sexes as a result of financial breakthrough, booming economic market, sustained developmental projects, refurbished energy alliance with other developed countries because of their perceived maturity in us (West Africans), reduction in manipulation and corrupt tendencies , and so on.
          To conclude, I place my hand on my chest and justify the above spelt out solutions: that #Standtall initiative should be mimicked by other organizations because it will emancipate women through educated minds; that government plans can foster gender equality in the energy sector through decorating women as partakers in the administrative affairs as it is done in other advanced countries; markets will be open, survival of the fitness will be crushed; education will be respected and of effect; diverse knowledge will be put into use for good; family and continental empowerment which is the overall justification will be attained.

For ECOWAS ECOWGEN #Standtall Essay competition (submitted 06/04/2016)
http://ecowgen.ecreee.org/index.php/standtall-gender-mishap-derivative-paroxysm-in-the-energy-sector-in-west-africa/