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Showing posts from October, 2023

Toxic vibes in schools

 There is a toxicity in Nigeria’s educational ecosystem that indexes a deeper malaise needing to be unraveled and remedied. This toxicity has resulted in avoidable deaths – not just among learners but also teachers. Consider some of the latest cases: Some two weeks ago, a teacher in Delta State was reportedly attacked by a parent, leading to his untimely death. Until the incident, Sunday Ufua was a Physics teacher at Alihame Mixed Secondary School in Agbor, Ika South council area, where the parent allegedly assaulted him for having disciplined his son over reported bad behaviour. Parading the parent, Nnajiofor Nweke, late last week in Asaba, the police in Delta alleged that he flogged Ufua to death in an incident that took place on 18th October. “The suspect went to the school premises aggressively in search of one of the school teachers over punishment meted to his son at the school (and)… on sighting the said teacher, picked a cane in the school and started flogging him during which

Dead heat in Liberian poll

 Presidential elections in contemporary Liberia are like the biblical eye of the needle through which a camel seeks to wriggle through. The polls customarily go into runoffs because contenders can’t make the cut of victory at first shot. Things were no different in the latest election held on 10th October, which threw up incumbent president, George Weah, and opposition candidate, Joseph Boakai, in the tightest tally of that country’s two decades long history of restored democratic rule. Weah secured 43.84 percent of the vote and Boakai, 43.44 percent, with more than 98 percent of the ballots counted by the electoral body as at mid-last week. Although the vote was largely peaceful across the country, the elections commission said hundreds of voters in two polling stations in Liberia’s northeast Nimba County were to re-cast their ballots last Friday after unidentified persons stole ballot boxes.  Although official results may not be called by the National Elections Commission until later

The fire this time

It’s always been a hibernating tinderbox environment waiting for the slightest spark to flare. The latest spark occurred early at dawn on 7th October when Israelis at an overnight party in southern Israel were barnstormed by a horde of fighters from the Palestinian militant group, Hamas, who had breached the heavily fortified border with Gaza Strip to infiltrate the Jewish state. That assault was facilitated by a barrage of rockets fired from Gaza, which blew out homes in Israel. The hailstorm of rockets triggered the Israeli system of siren alarm blaring to alert sleepy citizens, but belatedly so. At the party, the Hamas militants fired indiscriminately at frolickers, leaving no fewer than 260 dead. Militants also fanned out into the communities where they attacked Jewish habitants and abducted about 150, mostly civilian hostages, across the border back into Gaza.  The Israeli government rallied to respond to the ambush attack. Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu went on air to declare

Wrong call, Madame Minister

Women Affairs Minister Uju Kennedy-Ohanenye  has been busy walking back her blunder. She disclosed last week that she was herself a victim of sexual harassment in her university days and would, thus, not abet such abuse against other victims. She spoke against the backdrop of the sexual harassment allegation by students of the University of Calabar (UniCal) Law faculty against suspended professor and former dean of the faculty, Cyril Ndifon. The minister had recently made a curious call amidst ongoing investigation of the allegations against Ndifon by the UniCal management, threatening students who claimed they were sexually harassed with jail time if they testified against the law professor. Addressing university administrators and journalists on sexual harassment in tertiary institutions at a forum in Abuja last Monday, Madame Minister said she had a lecturer on Constitutional Law while in school who nursed an ulterior motive concerning her and failed her several times because she re