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Diplomatic Relation: I And Buhari Agreed To Open A New Page -South African President

“We had a wonderful exchange and we both got a sense that we are opening a new page in the relationship between South Africa and Nigeria and this new page gives us opportunity to go beyond where we have been before in a number of areas.”

These were the words of the President of South Africa, Cyril Ramaphosa when he spoke to news men at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, Nigeria, shortly after a closed door meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari.

Ramaphosa said that the two of them agreed that Nigeria and South Africa should pursue what he called ‘Africa focused foreign policy.’

Since I took over office this is the first visit that I am undertaking beyond the borders of Southern African Development Community (SADC) countries in our region, in the southern part of our continent. It is an important visit for us.

He added that in pursuing such African focused foreign policy, they would deepen the relationship between them, “seeing that Nigeria is the most populous country on the whole continent whose economy is the largest on our continent.

“It is important that South Africa and Nigeria should develop and deepen the relationships between them: deepen them at a people to people level and also at an economy level and of course, underpinned by good political relations between the two countries.

“At an economy level, our various companies from South Africa are already business here and in a number of ways are diplomats of our country.

“At the political level, we took time during our discussions to thank the people of Nigeria and the leadership of Nigeria over the many years for the support they gave to our struggle.

“Today, we are a free and independent country and this is largely due to the support that we got from a number of countries around the world but more especially on the African continent.

“Nigeria which is six hours away from South Africa was proudly regarded as a front line state because it was really at the frontline of our titanic struggle against apartheid. Nigeria and indeed Nigerians never flinched for a minute in support of our struggle. In fact Nigerians even took it a little further; President Buhari related that Nigerians through their households contributed money into the Organization of African Union Fund to support the struggle against apartheid.

“So, I took time to thank President Buhari and Nigerians for the support that we received during our struggle.

“We also had time of course to reconfirm that we do want to deepen the relations between the two countries. To this end, we are going to  focus on the Bi-National Commission that was set up between our two countries and make sure that the place where it is elevated to at the president level, is where the action should happen.

“We will expect our officials to do the technical part of a number of things and our ministers to work on the various areas where we need to deepen our cooperation through agreements. And that when President Buhari and I meet, we will then be able to either sign off or to ensure that implementation happens.

“In this regard, we will like to have our next Bi-National Commission in South Africa. I have invited President Buhari to come for a state visit later this year when our Bi-National Commission will then take place.

“We also exchange views on a number of important economic matters, particularly with regards to the oil industry and how South Africa can be part of this whole process. We will also exchange views on how to deepen trade between our two countries and a number of other areas.

“So, all in all we had a wonderful exchange and we both got a sense that we are now opening a new page in the relationship between South Africa and Nigeria and this new page gives us the opportunity to go beyond where we have been before and find a number of areas we can reached agreements and on this regard make sure that the benefits that should accrue to our people is actually bountiful, particularly in the area of opening up of the African continent through the Free Trade Agreement and we will be able to ensure that our economies grow by leaps and bound.

“So, a new page has been opened and we are delighted as presidents, ministers and our officials that we are at the right place at the right time to extend the relationship between nigeria and South Africa to a higher level.” [myad]

APC Vows To Flush Out PDP Elements In Federal Civil Service

Adams Oshiomhole

National Chairman of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Comrade Adams Oshiomhole has vowed that some elements of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) who have constituted themselves as clog in the wheel of development of the country will soon be flushed out.

Oshiomhole, who spoke to news men today, Wednesday at the APC National Secretariat, stressed: “we are aware that even as at today, we still have a lot of PDP people occupying very important positions in federal agencies. We will do everything possible to purge these elements out of the system because we are a party of change.

“When Nigerians complain that they have not seen the change we promised in certain areas, it is because those agencies are still being managed by PDP elements.

“They are the conservative right-wing party. We cannot entrust to conservative forces an agenda for change. Government is not in the Villa. Villa is the head of government. Government is in the agencies – what they do, how they do it, the quality of service delivery and the style of that service delivery.

“That is how the ordinary man interfaces with power and if these agencies are in the hands of those who do not believe in our change agenda, then we cannot expect miracles from them.

“And for those who are aggrieved as to how certain things are done, those who question that they do not seem to see the difference because substantially, PDP is still managing these agencies.

“So, we have a duty to convince the federal executive that we have no business, this government has no business with any PDP in sensitive federal agencies and using their old tactics in service delivery. That, I believe is a task that all of us must pursue.

“I believe that we now must work consciously to ensure that in replacing, we replace sinners with believers.

“Believers are those who are card-carrying members of our party and before we go outside the party family, we must convince ourselves that the persons we are taking, we are taking him because we do not have that particular expertise within the family, but even so, he must first take the card and demonstrate loyalty because if you do not believe in a process, you cannot be entrusted with the management of that process.

“It is not because we are hungry to let our people have jobs, but because I have no confidence that PDP appointees can drive the changes that APC promised. APC promises must be kept by APC activists at managerial level, at board level and at political level.

“That, we must all work to achieve but while we are working on that, I will ask you to have patience because some people give up too much early in life. If you work with conviction that you didn’t get exactly what you expected is not a reason to look the other way. I think the most fundamental purpose that brought the APC into being was to save Nigerians from the misrule of the PDP. That has been achieved but the second challenge is now to take advantage of our being in office to work hard to deliver to Nigerians, first, before ourselves.

“We will show mercenaries the exit. We will do everything possible to assuage those who have genuine grievances who simply want fairness and justice.

“I believe on your behalf, I can give them all the assurance that there will be justice, there will be fairness. However, for the mercenaries, who mistakenly joined the party because of what they can gain personally, not for the good of the country, not for the good of the party; they came in purely for greener pastures and they have found that they have had to work hard to plant the grass, to wet it, nourish it for it to become green and they cannot wait, they want to run, not because we have wronged them but because we just cannot satisfy a mercenary, for those ones, we will not only open the door, we are ready to open even the windows.

“But I am ready to go to any length to persuade and appeal to genuine people who are aggrieved, but like I have said, I am not intimidated; I am not frightened, I am not impaired and I want to urge everyone of you individually and collectively that we cannot be intimidated.

“And if any of us had doubts, from what we saw the other day, a collection of old coaches searching frantically for new ideas.

“The more they search, the more they get old players, not even the best of them, but the worst of old players and I do not think Nigerians can be fooled by a coalition of that. If you harness the energy of one million snails and transform it into one snail to run, it cannot catch up with an Antelope.

“So, when we were told 50 political parties had merged to confront us towards 2019, I was excited because first, that is a clear admission that as things stand today, neither the one we defeated before, the PDP, nor the new one that claim they have formed a new party but populated by the same old tired legs, or the mushroom parties that were formed for the purpose of getting handouts from INEC but that they agreed that none of them has what it takes and they are now saying to Nigerians that ‘we want to capture power even though we are different, but for the purpose of capturing power, we will unite’, and I do not think Nigerians need any further explanation that enough of this opportunistic politicking.

“Like any battle, there must be the other side of the battle. If you want to fight corruption, corruption will fight back and because you cannot use corrupt means to fight corruption, those who have assets who are fighting back have huge war-chest to confront a government that does not have the kind of money that they have.

“So, you are the foot soldiers who have the quiet challenging responsibility of having to explain to Nigerians. APC to demonetize politics

“We have a lot of options in our constitution. We have the option of direct primaries. By direct primaries, you remove the power away from delegates to the party members and so if you think that you can compromise the delegates and undermine the wishes of majority of our members, we will call our members to do the voting. So, all those options are open. If we ask you to do consensus, you refuse to do consensus and you want to do a one man show, we know that one man cannot do election, we will neutralize those abuse of privileges by allowing direct membership participation. This leadership cannot be compromised.

“We will not be intimidated and we will not misuse our privileges to deny any one of our members appropriate opportunities to contests and have the opportunity to serve the country”. To win Ekiti, we must be one step ahead of Fayose

“You saw our outing yesterday (Tuesday) in spite of all the crude misuse of limited state power which Governor Fayose chose to do but our superior commitment to progress and to overcome challenges explains the huge crowd that you saw.

“I was happy today that he was talking about crowd that was hired. If we can hire crowd, right, that is nice because he had demobilize the movement facility by paying off all the taxi drivers, bus drivers and Okada riders to make sure that there was no local transportation but like I said, you can demobilize all of those but what you cannot demobilize is the will of the people to do what they believe in.

“And we saw a stadium that was packed full as if Fayose was not in town. I was excited and I feel proud that our members in Ekiti know that for us to overcome and to win the forthcoming election against a man who has had to rely on instrument of violence not only to win but to retain power that they need to be one inch ahead of him. That point was made yesterday and I am sure it will be proven by the special grace of God on Saturday.”

Source: Vanguard.[myad]

WhatsApp Introduces New Feature To Curb Fake News

WhatsApp has announced the launch of a new feature globally that will highlight when a message has been forwarded and not composed by the sender.

The messaging application made the move public on Tuesday through its official blog following calls from various parts of the world, including India, to tackle the spread of fake news.

In the statement, the platform, owned by Facebook, said, “Starting today, WhatsApp will indicate which messages you receive, have been forwarded to you.

“This extra context will help make one-on-one and group chats easier to follow,” WhatsApp said in a blog.

“It also helps you determine if your friend or relative wrote the message they sent or if it originally came from someone else.

“To see this new forwarded label, you need to have the latest supported version of WhatsApp on your phone,” WhatsApp added.

Recently, while replying a notice by the Indian government to take immediate measures to prevent misuse of its platform, WhatsApp had said that it was testing a new label that highlights when a message has been forwarded.

“This could serve as an important signal for recipients to think twice before forwarding messages.

“Because it lets a user know if content they received was written by the person they know or a potential rumour from someone else,” it had said.

In its blog, the instant messaging application added, “WhatsApp cares deeply about your safety.

“We encourage you to think before sharing messages that were forwarded. As a reminder, you can report spam or block a contact in one tap and can always reach out to WhatsApp directly for help.”

The company had last month also announced “unrestricted monetary awards” for research on spread of misinformation on its platform to address the problem.

Source: NAN.

Wet Season Farming: Sokoto Gov Flags Off Sales Of 15,000 Metric Tons OF Fertiliser

Gov Flags Off Sales Of 15,000 Metric Tons OF Fertiliser | Photo credit: Insidearewa

The sokoto state Governor, Aminu Waziri Tambuwal has flagged off the sales of 15,000 metric tons fertilizer, loaded in 500 trucks, for the 2018 wet season farming. The fertilizer will be sold to farmers at the heavily subsidized rate of 4,000 Naira per bag.

The sales, which began today, Wednesday in Tureta local Government area of the state, attracted hundreds of farmers.

Speaking at the occasion, governor Tambuwal advised the farmers to use the fertilizer judiciously.

He warned against diversion of the product to middle men, even as he reminded the farmers that they were one of the most vital links in the cocktail of measures designed by the state to boost food security.

The governor also advised the farmers to imbibe the culture of using improved seedlings on their farms for improved Agricultural yields.

He then distributed support packages to target beneficiaries of IFAD support programme in the state.

Fertilizers, goats, fishery equipment and improved seeds were among the items given in support of the efforts of farmers in Sokoto State.

Ekiti Poll: Police Announce Withdrawal Of Security Details Of Fayose, Fayemi, Others

IGP, Ibrahim Idris

The Deputy Inspector General of Police, Operations, Habila Joshak, has announced that the security details of Governor Ayodele Fayose, the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr. Kayode Fayemi and other important personalities in Ekiti will be withdrawn during the governorship election in the State on Saturday.

The Police boss who addressed news men today, Wednesday in Ado-Ekiti, capital of the Sate, said that no party will be allowed to hold any political rally that is not approved by the Police until the election is held.

Habila Joshak said that he will work with one Assistant Inspector General of Police, Mr. H.H. Karma and three other Commissioners of Police: Ali Janga, J.B. Kokumo and G.B. Umar, who would man each of the senatorial districts in the state.

He said that they have contacted security details of Governor Fayose and that of the candidate of Dr. Fayemi as well as other top government officials to report at 6am at the Police headquarters in Ado-Ekiti on Saturday.

“We won’t allow anybody to go to the polling booth with armed men, because it will be a breach of the Electoral Act. We have contacted them and they have to be here before election commences. This election must not be compromised.

“They will be documented and whoever defies this will be sanctioned, because they have been contacted.”

Source: Punch

President Buhari Hosts President Ramaphosa Of South Africa

President Muhammadu Buhari in a chat with the President of South Africa, Cyril Ramaphosa when he visited Nigeria’s Aso Rock Presidential Villa today Wednesday, 11 July. Photo by Sunday, Aghaeze. [myad]

South African President Vows To Deal With ‘Criminals’ That Killed Nigerians

New South African President, Cyril Ramaphosa

South African President, Cyril Ramaphosa has vowed that he will bring to justice, some miscreants who have been responsible for the killing of foreigners, including Nigerians in his country.

Answering reporters’ questions today, shortly after a closed door meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, President Ramaphosa emphasized that the frequent attacks and killing of Nigerians living in South Africa, have been “as a result of criminal activity among our own people, which we are focusing on.

“I want to state here and now that South Africans do not have any form of negative disposition or hatred towards Nigerians and in the main, Nigerians in South Africa and a number of places of our country live side by side. They cooperate very well and some of them are in the corporate structures of our various companies and some are traders and some are into a number of things.

“So, I want to dispel this notion that when a Nigerian loses his or her life in South Africa, it is as a result of an intentional action by South Africans against Nigerians. That is simply not true.

“You will know that South Africa has a number of challenges, one of which is criminality and which is all pervasive. We have over a number of years been bringing down a number of crimes in our country and we are working on a concerted basis to ensure that crime does come down. “And the criminality that we have is borne out of a number of factors, one of those is unemployment among people: 27 percent of South Africans are unemployed which amount to about nine million and most of these are young people. Poverty is still all pervasive in South Africa and this emanate front our very sad history of apartheid misrule.

“There is still inequality in South Africa; a few people are extremely rich and majority of our people are very poor and all these factors and other social factors have contributed to the high levels of crime. And criminality is something like I said that we are focusing on, doing everything to bring it down.

“And on top of everything else, people in various parts of the country who get engulfed in acts of criminality, majority of them are South Africans and some of them will be foreign nationals and will either be Nigerians and other people from other countries.

“These are acts of criminality and I want to end by saying that, when we were involved in our struggle, we said that the South Africa that we are fighting for is the South Africa which will regard everyone who lives in South Africa on the basis of equality, respect for human right. And we said that South Africa belongs to all the people who live in it.

“So, the Nigerians who are in South Africa are also part of our community. They can never be targeted on an intentional basis as people who must either be attacked or killed, and when that happens l will like all of us to see that as an act of criminality which in the main, affect many South Africans in the various parts of our country.

“Our government is determined to bring the levels of criminality down and also to go after those who perpetrate these acts of criminality. So that anyone who attacks anyone in South Africa will be pursued with the might of the law to make sure they are brought to justice.”

I Am Very Careful About What I Sign, President Buhari Confesses

Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari

President Muhammadu Buhari has made it clear that he is always very careful about what he appends his signature, including even cheques.

Answering questions from news men shortly after a closed door meeting with South African President, Cyril Ramaphosa at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, Buhari said: “I am very careful about what I sign, whether it is my cheque book or agreements especially when it involves nation states.”

The Nigerian leader was reacting to the signing of the Africa Free Trade Agreement to facilitate growth in the continent in a way that job creation and local industries would be enhanced.

“As your President (Ramaphosa) has said, we are so populated and we have so many young unemployed citizens and our industries are just coming up.

“So in trying to guarantee employment, goods and services to our country we have to be careful with agreements that will compete, maybe successfully, against our own upcoming industries.

“I was presented with the document, I did not read it fast enough before my officials saw that it was not right for signature. I kept it on my table.

“I will soon sign it.”

Gov Fayose’s Commissioner, PDP Senator, Rep member, Others Dump PDP For APC

Ayodele Fayose

The outgoing Ekiti State Governor, Ayodele Fayose’s plan to install his deputy, Professor Kolapo Olusola Eleka as his successor may have been dealt a big blow as several key members of his government and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), dumped the party for the All Progressives Congress (APC).

One of them is the state Commissioner for Justice and attorney-general under Fayose administration, Mr. Owoseni Ajayi even as Senator Fatimat Raji Rasaki, representing Ekiti Central Senatorial District also left to join APC. She is the wife of a former military governor of Lagos.

There was also Olamide Oni, House of Representatives on the PDP ticket, representing Efon/Ijero/Ekiti West Federal Constituency.

Senator Rasaki represents the largest constituency in the state, the same area where Fayemi picked his running mate, an old political war-horse Chief Bisi Egbeyemi.

Political pundits said if the Ekiti central senatorial constituency vote for Fayemi, the election will be lost by the PDP candidate, Olusola Eleka.

The switching of allegiances by the PDP legislators was one of the highlights at the mega rally of the APC governorship candidate in the Saturday, July 14 election, Dr. Kayode Fayemi. The rally was held at the Oluyemi Kayode Stadium in Ado Ekiti.

President Muhammadu Buhari was on hand to receive the defectors, among who was also the chief whip of the state house of assembly, Sunday Akinniyi.

The National Chairman of APC, Adams Oshiomole, was also on hand to receive the defectors. He assured them of equal treatment in the party.

Speaking on behalf of the defectors, Senator Rasaki, said they had to dump the PDP because of the selfishness of Governor Fayose in the state.

According to her, the PDP in the state has been monopolized by a single individual, who would not allow justice and fair play in the day-to day running of the affairs of the party.

Former Minister of State for Works, Prince Dayo Adeyeye was the first to jump out of the Fayose PDP boat, after a controversial primary election, the outcome of which the lawyer-journalist said was predetermined in favour of Kolapo Olusola-Eleka.

The Adebayo Adedeji Example, By Reuben Abati

Professor Adebayo Adedeji

Professor Adebayo Adedeji, the towering intellectual, scholar, pan-Africanist, international civil servant and pioneer Executive Secretary of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) and Under-Secretary General of the United Nations  (1975 -1991) died on April 25, 2018 at the ripe age of 87. He was buried on July 6, in his home-town of Ijebu-Ode in Ogun State. On July 7, the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) organised a symposium in his honour and memory in Lagos, with the theme: “Africa’s Development Agenda: Lessons from the Adebayo Adedeji years and policy options for the 21st Century.”  I was privileged to be one of the participants at this event, which included participants from across Africa – Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, Senegal, Namibia, Liberia, Ethiopia, Cameroon – scholars, administrators, public intellectuals, economists, policy experts, who one after the other paid tributes to Professor Adedeji. There was a serving President in attendance- H. E. Hage Geingob, President of Namibia, and two former Presidents – Dr Yakubu Gowon of Nigeria and Dr. Amos Sawyer of Liberia. Professor Peter Anyang’ Nyong’o, Governor of the County Government of Kisumu, Kenya, a political scientist and scholar, delivered the keynote address. Apart from the tributes, the symposium later focused during three different sessions on three big issues viz: Africa’s economic development, governance and the challenges of economic transformation in Africa and Adebayo Adedeji in the trajectory of public administration and development in Africa.

I want to commend Ms Vera Songwe and her team at the ECA for putting together what turned out to be a befitting tribute and a fruitful symposium. Out of all the events that have been organized in celebration of the passing of Professor Adebayo Adedeji, I find the ECA’s loyalty to him most instructive. On May 14, 2018, the ECA had in fact also held a lecture in honour of Professor Adedeji. Instituted in 2015, the Professor Adebayo Adedeji Lecture Series is a major annual event on the ECA calendar, and that international body has consistently celebrated him during his lifetime and now, after.  There is an important lesson here for institutions and governments in Africa.  We often find it difficult to remember, we forget too easily, and in the hot egoistic environment that Africa is, once a man leaves a position or organization, he is soon forgotten and pushed aside and his achievements are trampled upon by ambitious successors. In its various activities, the Economic Commission for Africa continues to prove that it is an institution that is driven by values, memory and ethics. By remembering and identifying icons and past memory for present constructions, we link the past with the present and erect new paradigms in the corridors of history.

What the Nigerian government has failed to do for Adedeji is what the ECA has done for him, by properly promoting him as an icon, and placing the right emphasis on his significance. In Nigeria, governments detest memory. They prefer to quarrel with the past. It is in part for this reason, I believe, that Nigerian government officials were conspicuously absent at the Adedeji symposium. There is yet another reason. As far as I can remember, the Nigerian government itself has not done anything visibly in honour of Adedeji except the release of a routine obituary statement by President Muhammadu Buhari noting Adedeji’s passing.  A few government officials also showed up at his burial in Ijebu Ode on July 6, wearing resplendent agbada. They probably just knew Adedeji as that old Ijebu intellectual and had no real inkling about his place in history. Nigerian leaders love ceremonies, any ceremony that would give them an opportunity to wear fine clothes and shoes, take photographs, and pretend to be what they are not.  But when it comes to a discussion of ideas, you won’t find them paying attention. The anti-intellectualism of not just Nigerian leaders but African leaders in general, with very few exceptions, is largely responsible for the crisis of mis-governance in the continent.  A leadership elite that enjoys ceremonies and avoids ideas and intellection cannot summon the necessary capacity for the transformation of the continent. The silence, even in the South West, about Professor Adebayo Adedeji is not proportional to his greatness. It is scandalous.

In Nigeria, history is no longer a compulsory part of the curriculum, memory is short and emotions are more important than good reason, still, it is disturbing for an Adebayo Adedeji, dying at 87, to be unsung.  And yet, he was in his life-time, one of Nigeria’s most prominent policy makers and ambassador on the international stage. Nigeria has been blessed with a number of international civil servants to whom present and future generations owe a debt of respect and gratitude. They include Simeon Adebo, Nigeria’s first Permanent Representative to the United Nations, his protégé, Professor Adebayo Adedeji, pioneer Executive Secretary of the ECA, Professor Ibrahim Gambari, also Nigeria’s Permanent Representative to the UN,  who was also one of the speakers at the Adedeji memorial symposium, Alhaji Uthman Yola, UN Under-Secretary General, and Chief Emeka Anyaoku who made his mark at the Commonwealth Secretariat in London as an official, and later as Secretary-General.  There are others, many of whom also attended the Adedeji symposium, and who after retiring from service have been largely abandoned by Nigeria, whereas these are persons who should be properly de-briefed and given fresh opportunities in the governance and leadership process, considering their cosmopolitan experience and professional exposure and contacts. Adedeji suffered a similar fate, even if President Olusegun Obasanjo called him to service again in 2000 to help re-design the Nigerian civil service. He was for the most part, “a prophet without honour in his own home”; his ambition to become Nigeria’s President never got off the drawing table, but the international community embraced him and continued to make use of his talents and influence till he chose on his own to retire from active public service in 2010, when he turned 80.

For all his international accomplishments however, Nigeria, a country that no longer knows how to manage and appreciate its talents, made Adedeji in his early years. He became a Professor at the age of 36 at the then University of Ife, and was one of the leading lights of the then famous Ife school in economics, social sciences and public administration.  At the age of 40, General Yakubu Gowon, shortly after the civil war, appointed him Nigeria’s Minister for Economic Development and Reconstruction. Adedeji was not only instrumental to the planning, design and implementation of the Third National Development Plan, he was at the forefront of the rebuilding, rehabilitation and the reconstruction of Nigeria after the war.  Instructively, he was the first Director-General and Chairman of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) scheme – one of the post-civil war national unity projects introduced by the Gowon administration. It was indeed not surprising that General Gowon, Adedeji’s boss, attended his funeral in Ijebu-Ode, and was also at the ECA symposium where he gave a good account of himself as an intellectual in his own right:  he not only responded to barbs thrown in his direction by irreverent intellectuals, he painstakingly explained the policies of the Gowon years.

In 1975, Professor Adedeji was appointed the pioneer Executive Secretary and UN Under-Secretary-General in charge of the ECA based in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. In this capacity Adedeji came of age – not necessarily as the longest serving ECA Executive Secretary, but as a man of formidable impact, intellect and resourcefulness. He transitioned from being a distinguished national servant to a distinguished international civil servant.  He built the ECA into an effective machinery for promoting the good interest and development of Africa and as a leading policy and research institution.  Those who worked with him or came under his influence, attested at the Lagos Symposium, to his creativity, originality, pan-Africanism, abiding commitment to the future transformation of Africa, confidence, forceful personality and limitless capacity for hardwork. It was not all praises though. I got the impression that Adedeji was regarded behind his back, as an intellectual autocrat, who did not know how to accommodate crass incompetence or intellectual inadequacy.

He was respected and celebrated nonetheless for his distinction as a man of ideas, and for his commitment to African development and African issues.  He was critical of the Western model of development and used the ECA as a platform for bringing an African perspective to bear on Western social science, and for seeking an alternative framework for African development and transformation. He led the search for Africa’s alternative framework for Structural Adjustment in the 80s. He also argued in various writings that Africa needed to be self-reliant and self-sufficient and for Africans to seek African solutions to African problems. He was also a renowned visionary and architect of regional integration and co-operation in the African continent, believing that the whole is stronger than its integral parts and that an integrated Africa would play a stronger role in the global space. His efforts led to the emergence of regional communities such as COMESA, and ECOWAS, and he is today, generally regarded as “the father of ECOWAS”, and the thinker and main mind behind the Lagos Plan of Action (1980), the Final Act of Lagos (1980) and the Abuja Treaty (1991). He was also the main architect of the Africa Peer Review Mechanism designed to promote the objectives of good governance and responsive leadership in African states.  Adedeji was outstanding in generating knowledge, providing leadership for the younger generation, designing and defining imperatives for the future with the force of his intellect, personality, example and capacity to manage processes and achieve results.

This was the man who was buried in Ijebu Ode on July 6 and who was celebrated by the institution he helped to build on July 7 in Lagos. His legacy is unblemished because ideas do not die. It is regrettable however, that his vision of African integration is still a work in progress and a scandal, that his own country, Nigeria has so far refused to sign or endorse the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AFCTA) which he helped to conceptualize in the 80s. It may be right to argue that endorsement or mere signature does not guarantee expected outcomes, but perhaps principles matter. It is also disturbing that the African Peer Review Mechanism no longer complies with the original objectives. It has been reduced at best to a talk shop, and a pitiable praise-singing forum for negligent African leaders.  The transformation of Africa remains a major task. Intra-African trade is a miserable 15%, foreign companies and portfolio investors largely dominate the economic space, the market is at loggerheads with governmental policies, poverty and inequality continue to thrive, and on top of it all, the continent suffers from a leadership crisis as sit-tight leaders change the Constitution and violate term limits.

The key take-away is that there is still a lot of work to be done to transform Africa, for the people’s good.  S. K. Asante has described Adedeji as “an African Cassandra” and may be he is right. After his retirement in 1991, Adedeji established in his home town, an African Centre for Development and Strategic Studies (ACDESS) which soon became a watering hole for intellectuals and policy experts. With his retirement from active service at the age of 80, the Centre went into limbo. His children – 11 of them, the man was prolific in every department – should consider the possibility of handing over ACDESS and its resources including the proposed permanent site, to the Economic Commission for Africa, which definitely has the means to turn the centre into one of its major units across Africa, and thereby sustain the Adebayo Adedeji legacy.

II: Macron’s visit to Lagos

One of the major highlights in Lagos recently was the event of the Lagos State Governor, playing host to two Presidents – President Emmanuel Macron of France and President Hage Geingob of Namibia. Lagos is no longer just the economic hub of Nigeria; it is gradually becoming a major centre for international diplomacy. President Macron’s visit in particular had all the markings of soft power diplomacy, cultural diplomacy, citizen diplomacy and economic diplomacy.  Lagosians are yet to recover from the excitement that was generated by that visit and Macron’s humility and humanity as well. President Macron’s visit has done more for Nigerian-France relations than any other initiative since a cat and mouse relationship was established between both countries in the 60s. Nigeria has always been resentful of France’s leaning towards its Francophone former colonies, and its support for Biafra during the civil war.

A 2018 visit by France’s youthful President has endeared France to many Nigerians. The Lagos state government not only rolled out the carpet, Governor Akinwunmi Ambode played the role of a perfect host. For President Macron, the visit was a kind of homecoming, and a journey of remembrance, having lived and worked at the French Embassy in Lagos 25 years ago.  He visited the New Afrika Shrine, where he danced, pumped hands, took selfies, paid homage to Fela and Afro-beat and spoke the language of the streets: “What happens at the shrine stays at the shrine”, he said.  He also granted an interview to the BBC where he spoke pidgin English. The following day, President Macron commissioned the Alliance Francaise building in Lagos, named Mike Adenuga Centre, and conferred on Otunba Mike Adenuga, one of France’s highest honours. Not done, President Macron was a guest of the Tony Elumelu Foundation where he addressed over 2, 000 African entrepreneurs and interacted with young business leaders. Congratulations to the Lagos State Government, Otunba Mike Adenuga and the Tony Elumelu Foundation and to President Macron: that was really good and profound.

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