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Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati - Politics - Nairaland

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Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op):
Dapchi 110: The tragedy of a nation, by Reuben Abati 



Dr. Reuben Abati

Karma is a bitch. Poetic justice is a bastard. Both have combined to wrong-foot the incumbent Buhari administration to make it look like a big mistake and an act of misjudgment by the Nigerian electorate.  If Buhari had been disallowed from taking power in 2015, and those who advised President Goodluck Jonathan not to give a damn had their way, and Jonathan had remained in power and all the current problems had surfaced, it would have been said by Nigerians that Goodluck Jonathan truncated Nigeria’s destiny.

In 2015, the refrain, which was reaffirmed recently by those who authored it, was that Nigeria could only move forward with anybody but Jonathan. If Buhari was prevented from taking over power, Nigerians would have been very aggressive towards the Jonathan administration.  It would have been said that the messiah was robbed of victory. It would have been argued that the man who would have saved Nigeria was prevented from doing so. It might have even been argued that under General Buhari, Nigeria could have become the greatest country on the surface of the earth.

Such was the impact of the propaganda. Such was the nature of the politics of the time. The Buharideens would never have allowed a post-2015 Jonathan government to work. Even if it did, the opposition would have imagined a greater possibility. But here we are, three years down the line: the messianic propaganda has failed. Their Saviour is not the Jesus Christ they imagined him to be. The country remains unsaved. Their promise of change has been no more than scaremongering. When the question is asked: are you better today than you were three years ago?, no ordinary Nigerian can answer that question positively: change has brought him or her nothing but agony and anguish.  

Should they offer an answer, it would be a response marked by regret. The biggest tragedy that has occurred therefore is the demystification, the unmasking, the unveiling of a man who was thought to be a god but who has since danced naked and is dancing naked in the market-place. Strikingly, the Emperor is without clothes. Some of the most vociferous critics of old have also been exposed. Nasir el-Rufai deployed all the heights of his intelligence to demonise the Jonathan government on social media. No one else has been able to match the quality of his vitriol. Today, the same Nasir is busy demolishing the houses of anyone who dares to make a negative comment about him, or he takes them to court and threatens them with Armageddon. The same rights that he demanded for the Nigerian people, he now tramples upon.

There was also our beloved kinsman, Alhaji Lai Mohammed. He was the scourge of the Jonathan administration. He could issue five anti-establishment press statements in a day. There has been no one like him in Nigerian history doing the job of opposition spokesman. He was ruthlessly efficient. Nobody in the current opposition parties has demonstrated his capacity as an opposition figure, in part because all the opposition spokesmen have been harassed, blackmailed, dehumanized, and intimidated, but called to do the job, on the other side of the fence as Minister of Information, Alhaji Mohammed remains a study in self-contradiction. His five minutes of fame in the Nigerian political sphere has since ended.

He used to be creative and dynamic, but now faced with the challenges of the real thing, the only thing that comes out of his mouth is the dumb argument that Goodluck Jonathan is the source of all the problems of Nigeria or similar inanities. When the matter is not so phrased, we are told that the Jonathan administration stole the country blind. And yet whereas the government of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) borrowed the sum of N6 trillion over a period of 16 years, the APC government has borrowed more than N11 trillion in 3 years! Is it possible all the oil wells have dried up and Nigeria no longer makes money? What has happened to the country’s revenue stream?  The absurdity of the situation is further explained by the fact that when a gas cylinder malfunctions in the house of an APC member or there is a crisis in their other room, the man that is blamed is Goodluck Jonathan or the previous administration. They defend the impossible and the unintelligible. But that trick is no longer working.  The other tragedy of the Buhari administration is how it has allowed itself to get involved in a Nigerian version of the popular “one-corner-dance”, a downward, self-denigrating choreographic exertion. The result is that right now, people have now moved from the anything but Jonathan corner to the anything but Buhari corner in Nigerian politics. Karma is a bitch. Poetic justice is a bastard.

Nothing illustrates this better than the title of this essay, the entry into which has been deliberately delayed, to prepare a setting and a mood for the crisis that Nigeria faces.  One of the reasons the Nigerian electorate voted out the previous administration was because of its perceived inability to rescue the abducted Chibok girls. There was an international outcry about this. Bring Back the Chibok girls even became the most popular hashtag on international social media, and Jonathan, who had also signed the anti-same-sex bill into law became a villain in the eyes of the international community. The various interested forces, local and global joined hands together to pull down his government.

During the 2015 political campaigns, General Muhammadu Buhari was packaged as a morally upright statesman who would put an end to the impunity of the insurgents and terrorists. Jonathan was considered weak. Buhari was regarded as strong. And so on and so forth- let me just put it like that in order not to be accused of comparison given my own antecedents.  But here is where the rub lies: President Buhari has failed the people in their expectations.  He has frittered away their goodwill.   

He promised Nigerians that Boko Haram will be defeated, and somewhere down the line, we were told the Boko Haram had in fact been “technically defeated.” The President even received a captured flag of the insurgents, together with the personal Quoran of Ibrahim Shekau, the leader of the group. Today, the Boko Haram gang continues to show that they have not been defeated. The Federal Government negotiated with these same insurgents and gave them money to secure the release of over 100 girls, some Boko Haram leaders were released, but the other Monday, Boko Haram abducted over 100 girls in Dapchi in Yobe state. This is sad and tragic. Whatever the government may have gained has been lost. The girls that have been released have been replaced. The fight against Boko Haram is back to square one.

The clay feet of those who thought they knew better than everyone else has thus been exposed. For President Buhari, this must be a personal tragedy. His strongest promoters indeed believed that under his watch, the problem of insecurity will be solved. But under him, more money has been spent on national security, with poor results, and the security situation has only worsened. The previous government had the Boko Haram to deal with, this government has its cup full: the herdsmen-farmers conflict, the low level insurgency in the Niger Delta, the crisis of self-determination in the Eastern region, the nationwide proliferation of small arms and ammunition, the notorious Boko Haram and the angst of a disappointed public. On all fronts, the government is found wanting.

Yes, it has been found wanting and in a suspicious manner too.  It is in fact curious that security forces were withdrawn in volatile areas of Benue state, just a week before the criminal herdsmen struck. Who ordered that withdrawal? The Inspector-General of Police has also reportedly withdrawn the Special Forces sent to secure the same areas. The Benue Governor, Samuel Ortom is so incensed he is now saying he is willing and ready to pay the supreme sacrifice for his people.  In Yobe state, soldiers were also withdrawn from high-risk areas just before the Dapchi 110 were abducted. The military has since defended itself. It has no capacity its spokesman says, to protect all schools in the Northern part of the country. And we can’t blame the military, can we?  It is a sign of the calamity that the country faces that soldiers are the ones now protecting virtually every inch of the Nigerian space, internally and externally. Our soldiers are tired and overstretched, over-used and over-abused. The police are also similarly overwhelmed. It has never been this bad.  Fact: the government of the day has been humbled. I once argued that Nigeria is a very difficult country to govern but when you claim to know it all, you are bound to face the contradictions. Every problem solved generates other problems.

People choose their governments and leaders because they believe they can lead and protect them.  When that trust is betrayed, the legitimacy of the government is in question. In more than 20 states, salaries have not been paid for months.  And it is a stupid point to say that the previous government stole all the money.  How about all the money that has been earned and borrowed since then? Missing? What is responsible really for this drift, this cluelessness, this self-abuse,  from a know-it-all team that took over Nigeria in 2015? My other concern is that beyond all the propaganda and the hypocrisy and blackmail, President Buhari’s team may not really love him at all; they may in fact have truly, set him up for his downfall.  Buhari’s biggest stake is the legacy he leaves behind. The little I see of that legacy is not good at all. I once published a piece in which I alleged that Nigerians had hopped into a one-chance bus; I want to modify that and add that it is actually President Buhari who boarded a one-chance bus, and for that he has my heartfelt sympathy. Whatever bus brought him to power is a one-chance bus.

What has happened so far merely vindicates the Olusegun Obasanjo and Oby Ezekwesili groups. The former is asking for a Third Force, a Coalition of powers and forces. The other is wielding a Red Card. Both are united in this regard: they consider the two political parties that have ruled Nigeria since 1999, useless and ineffectual. They want a new dawn for Nigeria. They want a discontinuity of hypocrisy and opportunism. They acknowledge one significant point: that Nigeria has remained at one spot. Nothing has changed, the change agenda has failed, everything remains the same.  Whether these groups are able to achieve, or motivate the real change the people desire is another matter, but the honesty with which they have reversed themselves is telling, and good for our democracy. You need not raise the point that both Obasanjo and Ezekwesili belong to the same elite that they now repudiate.

I sympathise with the parents of the Dapchi 110.  It is sad that their only hope is in God, and the possibility of a miracle.  Students get killed in the United States, due to gun possession issues in a psychotic society, but to send a child to school and have him or her abducted by terrorists is the grievous pain ever possible in Nigeria. What is clear is that the Nigerian leadership elite has failed the people. This is not a political party matter; it is about capacity, political will, leadership and commitment.  This is probably why a body of opinion has developed to the effect that the two major political parties in the country – the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) have both failed the country. But can extant or any political parties, in their present shape, save Nigeria? I doubt, and that is my thoroughly non-partisan opinion.

The political party system in Nigeria has to be rebuilt, reformed and reconstructed.  Beyond that, we need a new crop of leaders. The solution may not lie with Obasanjo or Ezekwesili or the Nigeria Intervention Movement but they have thrown up ideas about the national dilemma that cannot be ignored.  Such ideas cannot be ignored because the biggest victims are not the ten per-centers or the men and women in high places who succeed not through talent or excellence, but mere opportunistic “faith”; the victims are young Nigerians, the same people we call the leaders of tomorrow – that tomorrow is already postponed, because that generation of the future is led by analogue leaders whose glory is trapped in the past.  Nigeria needs to rescue tomorrow from the past and the present. Nigeria needs fresh energy, new ideas and a leadership revolution.  Wherever they may be, may God protect the Dapchi 110, who have been failed by the Nigerian state. If Buhari rescues them, he may well succeed in rescuing his government a little from the devastating and ruthless onslaught of poetic justice.
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Dericinh: 4:40pm On Feb 28, 2018
Omooba77:
Dapchi 110: The tragedy of a nation, by Reuben Abati 



Dr. Reuben Abati

Karma is a bitch. Poetic justice is a bastard. Both have combined to wrong-foot the incumbent Buhari administration to make it look like a big mistake and an act of misjudgment by the Nigerian electorate.  If Buhari had been disallowed from taking power in 2015, and those who advised President Goodluck Jonathan not to give a damn had their way, and Jonathan had remained in power and all the current problems had surfaced, it would have been said by Nigerians that Goodluck Jonathan truncated Nigeria’s destiny.

In 2015, the refrain, which was reaffirmed recently by those who authored it, was that Nigeria could only move forward with anybody but Jonathan. If Buhari was prevented from taking over power, Nigerians would have been very aggressive towards the Jonathan administration.  It would have been said that the messiah was robbed of victory. It would have been argued that the man who would have saved Nigeria was prevented from doing so. It might have even been argued that under General Buhari, Nigeria could have become the greatest country on the surface of the earth.

Such was the impact of the propaganda. Such was the nature of the politics of the time. The Buharideens would never have allowed a post-2015 Jonathan government to work. Even if it did, the opposition would have imagined a greater possibility. But here we are, three years down the line: the messianic propaganda has failed. Their Saviour is not the Jesus Christ they imagined him to be. The country remains unsaved. Their promise of change has been no more than scaremongering. When the question is asked: are you better today than you were three years ago?, no ordinary Nigerian can answer that question positively: change has brought him or her nothing but agony and anguish.  

Should they offer an answer, it would be a response marked by regret. The biggest tragedy that has occurred therefore is the demystification, the unmasking, the unveiling of a man who was thought to be a god but who has since danced naked and is dancing naked in the market-place. Strikingly, the Emperor is without clothes. Some of the most vociferous critics of old have also been exposed. Nasir el-Rufai deployed all the heights of his intelligence to demonise the Jonathan government on social media. No one else has been able to match the quality of his vitriol. Today, the same Nasir is busy demolishing the houses of anyone who dares to make a negative comment about him, or he takes them to court and threatens them with Armageddon. The same rights that he demanded for the Nigerian people, he now tramples upon.

There was also our beloved kinsman, Alhaji Lai Mohammed. He was the scourge of the Jonathan administration. He could issue five anti-establishment press statements in a day. There has been no one like him in Nigerian history doing the job of opposition spokesman. He was ruthlessly efficient. Nobody in the current opposition parties has demonstrated his capacity as an opposition figure, in part because all the opposition spokesmen have been harassed, blackmailed, dehumanized, and intimidated, but called to do the job, on the other side of the fence as Minister of Information, Alhaji Mohammed remains a study in self-contradiction. His five minutes of fame in the Nigerian political sphere has since ended.

He used to be creative and dynamic, but now faced with the challenges of the real thing, the only thing that comes out of his mouth is the dumb argument that Goodluck Jonathan is the source of all the problems of Nigeria or similar inanities. When the matter is not so phrased, we are told that the Jonathan administration stole the country blind. And yet whereas the government of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) borrowed the sum of N6 trillion over a period of 16 years, the APC government has borrowed more than N11 trillion in 3 years! Is it possible all the oil wells have dried up and Nigeria no longer makes money? What has happened to the country’s revenue stream?  The absurdity of the situation is further explained by the fact that when a gas cylinder malfunctions in the house of an APC member or there is a crisis in their other room, the man that is blamed is Goodluck Jonathan or the previous administration. They defend the impossible and the unintelligible. But that trick is no longer working.  The other tragedy of the Buhari administration is how it has allowed itself to get involved in a Nigerian version of the popular “one-corner-dance”, a downward, self-denigrating choreographic exertion. The result is that right now, people have now moved from the anything but Jonathan corner to the anything but Buhari corner in Nigerian politics. Karma is a bitch. Poetic justice is a bastard.

Nothing illustrates this better than the title of this essay, the entry into which has been deliberately delayed, to prepare a setting and a mood for the crisis that Nigeria faces.  One of the reasons the Nigerian electorate voted out the previous administration was because of its perceived inability to rescue the abducted Chibok girls. There was an international outcry about this. Bring Back the Chibok girls even became the most popular hashtag on international social media, and Jonathan, who had also signed the anti-same-sex bill into law became a villain in the eyes of the international community. The various interested forces, local and global joined hands together to pull down his government.

During the 2015 political campaigns, General Muhammadu Buhari was packaged as a morally upright statesman who would put an end to the impunity of the insurgents and terrorists. Jonathan was considered weak. Buhari was regarded as strong. And so on and so forth- let me just put it like that in order not to be accused of comparison given my own antecedents.  But here is where the rub lies: President Buhari has failed the people in their expectations.  He has frittered away their goodwill.   

He promised Nigerians that Boko Haram will be defeated, and somewhere down the line, we were told the Boko Haram had in fact been “technically defeated.” The President even received a captured flag of the insurgents, together with the personal Quoran of Ibrahim Shekau, the leader of the group. Today, the Boko Haram gang continues to show that they have not been defeated. The Federal Government negotiated with these same insurgents and gave them money to secure the release of over 100 girls, some Boko Haram leaders were released, but the other Monday, Boko Haram abducted over 100 girls in Dapchi in Yobe state. This is sad and tragic. Whatever the government may have gained has been lost. The girls that have been released have been replaced. The fight against Boko Haram is back to square one.

The clay feet of those who thought they knew better than everyone else has thus been exposed. For President Buhari, this must be a personal tragedy. His strongest promoters indeed believed that under his watch, the problem of insecurity will be solved. But under him, more money has been spent on national security, with poor results, and the security situation has only worsened. The previous government had the Boko Haram to deal with, this government has its cup full: the herdsmen-farmers conflict, the low level insurgency in the Niger Delta, the crisis of self-determination in the Eastern region, the nationwide proliferation of small arms and ammunition, the notorious Boko Haram and the angst of a disappointed public. On all fronts, the government is found wanting.

Yes, it has been found wanting and in a suspicious manner too.  It is in fact curious that security forces were withdrawn in volatile areas of Benue state, just a week before the criminal herdsmen struck. Who ordered that withdrawal? The Inspector-General of Police has also reportedly withdrawn the Special Forces sent to secure the same areas. The Benue Governor, Samuel Ortom is so incensed he is now saying he is willing and ready to pay the supreme sacrifice for his people.  In Yobe state, soldiers were also withdrawn from high-risk areas just before the Dapchi 110 were abducted. The military has since defended itself. It has no capacity its spokesman says, to protect all schools in the Northern part of the country. And we can’t blame the military, can we?  It is a sign of the calamity that the country faces that soldiers are the ones now protecting virtually every inch of the Nigerian space, internally and externally. Our soldiers are tired and overstretched, over-used and over-abused. The police are also similarly overwhelmed. It has never been this bad.  Fact: the government of the day has been humbled. I once argued that Nigeria is a very difficult country to govern but when you claim to know it all, you are bound to face the contradictions. Every problem solved generates other problems.

People choose their governments and leaders because they believe they can lead and protect them.  When that trust is betrayed, the legitimacy of the government is in question. In more than 20 states, salaries have not been paid for months.  And it is a stupid point to say that the previous government stole all the money.  How about all the money that has been earned and borrowed since then? Missing? What is responsible really for this drift, this cluelessness, this self-abuse,  from a know-it-all team that took over Nigeria in 2015? My other concern is that beyond all the propaganda and the hypocrisy and blackmail, President Buhari’s team may not really love him at all; they may in fact have truly, set him up for his downfall.  Buhari’s biggest stake is the legacy he leaves behind. The little I see of that legacy is not good at all. I once published a piece in which I alleged that Nigerians had hopped into a one-chance bus; I want to modify that and add that it is actually President Buhari who boarded a one-chance bus, and for that he has my heartfelt sympathy. Whatever bus brought him to power is a one-chance bus.

What has happened so far merely vindicates the Olusegun Obasanjo and Oby Ezekwesili groups. The former is asking for a Third Force, a Coalition of powers and forces. The other is wielding a Red Card. Both are united in this regard: they consider the two political parties that have ruled Nigeria since 1999, useless and ineffectual. They want a new dawn for Nigeria. They want a discontinuity of hypocrisy and opportunism. They acknowledge one significant point: that Nigeria has remained at one spot. Nothing has changed, the change agenda has failed, everything remains the same.  Whether these groups are able to achieve, or motivate the real change the people desire is another matter, but the honesty with which they have reversed themselves is telling, and good for our democracy. You need not raise the point that both Obasanjo and Ezekwesili belong to the same elite that they now repudiate.

I sympathise with the parents of the Dapchi 110.  It is sad that their only hope is in God, and the possibility of a miracle.  Students get killed in the United States, due to gun possession issues in a psychotic society, but to send a child to school and have him or her abducted by terrorists is the grievous pain ever possible in Nigeria. What is clear is that the Nigerian leadership elite has failed the people. This is not a political party matter; it is about capacity, political will, leadership and commitment.  This is probably why a body of opinion has developed to the effect that the two major political parties in the country – the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) have both failed the country. But can extant or any political parties, in their present shape, save Nigeria? I doubt, and that is my thoroughly non-partisan opinion.

The political party system in Nigeria has to be rebuilt, reformed and reconstructed.  Beyond that, we need a new crop of leaders. The solution may not lie with Obasanjo or Ezekwesili or the Nigeria Intervention Movement but they have thrown up ideas about the national dilemma that cannot be ignored.  Such ideas cannot be ignored because the biggest victims are not the ten per-centers or the men and women in high places who succeed not through talent or excellence, but mere opportunistic “faith”; the victims are young Nigerians, the same people we call the leaders of tomorrow – that tomorrow is already postponed, because that generation of the future is led by analogue leaders whose glory is trapped in the past.  Nigeria needs to rescue tomorrow from the past and the present. Nigeria needs fresh energy, new ideas and a leadership revolution.  Wherever they may be, may God protect the Dapchi 110, who have been failed by the Nigerian state. If Buhari rescues them, he may well succeed in rescuing his government a little from the devastating and ruthless onslaught of poetic justice.
true talk brov.
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op):
Dericinh:
true talk brov.
What a man sows he reaps...Life is all about what you put
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by chuksjuve(m): 5:44pm On Feb 28, 2018
Man had found his voice ..

Aso Rock demons have finally let loose of him ..

He's come back to his brilliant best..

Meanwhile
What goes around comes around ...


Check my profile.
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op): 5:54pm On Feb 28, 2018
chuksjuve:
Man had found his voice ..
Aso Rock demons have finally let loose of him ..
He's come back to his brilliant best..
Meanwhile What goes around comes around ...

Check my profile.
The Truth is that power blinds people from seeing things the way they are. I hope everyone will read through and not just make unnecessary comments
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by chuksjuve(m): 6:00pm On Feb 28, 2018
Omooba77:
The Truth is that power blinds people from seeing things the way they are.
I hope everyone will read through and not just make unnecessary comments
You are right , but you can't stop people from accessing the person before his message ..


Power truly is intoxicating..

What you make use of it is what defines you ..

A great master piece he wrote up there !!!

Kudus
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op): 6:30pm On Feb 28, 2018
chuksjuve:
You are right , but you can't stop people from accessing the person before his message ..


Power truly is intoxicating..

What you make use of it is what defines you ..

A great master piece he wrote up there !!!

Kudus
95% of us dont read; but just make comments without reading
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by chuksjuve(m): 6:33pm On Feb 28, 2018
Omooba77:
95% of us dont read; but just make comments without reading
I can't argue less.. grin
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by seunmsg(m): 7:03pm On Feb 28, 2018
The headline is seriously misleading. Abati merely ranted all through the piece without saying any meaningful thing about the abducted Dapchi girls or their predicament.

The same way morons like him politicised Chibok kidnapping and called it a scam perpetuated by the then opposition is still the same way he's trying to score a political point with the current kidnap. Abati is a loser without any iota of dignity. He should be ashamed of himself.
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op): 7:19pm On Feb 28, 2018
seunmsg:
The headline is seriously misleading. Abati merely ranted all through the piece without saying any meaningful thing about the abducted Dapchi girls or their predicament.

The same way morons like him politicised Chibok kidnapping and called it a scam perpetuated by the then opposition is still the same way he's trying to score a political point with the current kidnap. Abati is a loser without any iota of dignity. He should be ashamed of himself.
Your own summation; ohun ta ba se sile loni oro itan ni bo do la.
Law of harvest is real my brother. Always think of your actions today because of tomorrow.
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op): 8:23pm On Feb 28, 2018
Dont destroy others because you want to live
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op): 10:03pm On Feb 28, 2018
God is not mocked.... Lala lailia
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op): 6:26am On Mar 01, 2018
Dapchi is another sorrow to parents;may God comfort them all this new month and bring back our girls....Why only girls?
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Histrings08(m): 6:45am On Mar 01, 2018
Front page straight... Lemme book space first nd then go nd Read
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by boluwatife66(m): 7:34am On Mar 01, 2018
Omooba77:
Your own summation; ohun ta ba se sile loni oro itan ni bo do la.
Law of harvest is real my brother. Always think of your actions today because of tomorrow.
Je komo.. i cant believe he called this piece a rant. well, awon lo ni enu won
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by CROWNWEALTH019(m): 7:46am On Mar 01, 2018
seunmsg:
The headline is seriously misleading. Abati merely ranted all through the piece without saying any meaningful thing about the abducted Dapchi girls or their predicament.

The same way morons like him politicised Chibok kidnapping and called it a scam perpetuated by the then opposition is still the same way he's trying to score a political point with the current kidnap. Abati is a loser without any iota of dignity. He should be ashamed of himself.
I was expecting this rubbish from you

Adeke
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op): 8:46am On Mar 01, 2018
boluwatife66:
Je komo.. i cant believe he called this piece a rant. well, awon lo ni enu won
We are funny and too sentimental; even the blind can see this Truth; but many cant come out to be counted among the right
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op):
Histrings08:
Front page straight... Lemme book space first nd then go nd Read
Lalasticlala still eating yesterday snake from Akure-Ado road
Na so my brother
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omeokachie: 9:44am On Mar 01, 2018
"But here we are, three years down the line: the messianic propaganda has failed."


"When the question is asked: are you better today than you were three years ago?, no ordinary Nigerian can answer that question positively: change has brought him or her nothing but agony and anguish."


"The Federal Government negotiated with these same insurgents and gave them money to secure the release of over 100 girls, some Boko Haram leaders were released, but the other Monday, Boko Haram abducted over 100 girls in Dapchi in Yobe state. This is sad and tragic. Whatever the government may have gained has been lost. The girls that have been released have been replaced. The fight against Boko Haram is back to square one."
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op): 9:59am On Mar 01, 2018
Omeokachie:
"But here we are, three years down the line: the messianic propaganda has failed."


"When the question is asked: are you better today than you were three years ago?, no ordinary Nigerian can answer that question positively: change has brought him or her nothing but agony and anguish."


"The Federal Government negotiated with these same insurgents and gave them money to secure the release of over 100 girls, some Boko Haram leaders were released, but the other Monday, Boko Haram abducted over 100 girls in Dapchi in Yobe state. This is sad and tragic. Whatever the government may have gained has been lost. The girls that have been released have been replaced. The fight against Boko Haram is back to square one."
seunmsg said it was ordinary ranting, but dodged the question, my #200k then cant buy me more than 45% of purchasing power now.
Insecurity has heightened; I fear Ilorin-Ogbomoso-Oyo- Ibadan road pass anything now because of menace of herdsmen
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by twentyk(m): 10:11am On Mar 01, 2018
I have simply lost all faith in the administration of president mohammad buhari....before he became president,i was a big supporter because i was dissollusioned with the administration of goodluck jonathan.....
A considerable lot of people have lost faith in not only the politicians,political parties etc but a lot of my friend have deducted that nigeria no longer has anything positive to offer them....
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omeokachie: 10:17am On Mar 01, 2018
Omooba77:
seunmsg said it was ordinary ranting, but dodged the question, my #200k then cant buy me more than 45% of purchasing power now.
Insecurity has heightened; I fear Ilorin-Ogbomoso-Oyo- Ibadan road pass anything now because of menace of herdsmen
Anybody that really and truly means well for Nigeria should join hands in rescuing this country from the cabal that has taken Buhari captive. Buhari is not in charge. He should be let go to save this country.
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by TheFreeOne: 10:27am On Mar 01, 2018
Karma is a bitch. Poetic justice is a bastard. Both have combined to wrong-foot the incumbent Buhari administration to make it look like a big mistake and an act of misjudgment by the Nigerian electorate.
The Law of reciprocal actions.

For an opposition who exploited abduction of chibok girls to its limits and rode to power on same with lies, propaganda to get served same cold dish confirmed Natural laws never fails. What you sowed is what you'll reap.

And the circle continues...abduction then ransom, more abductions then ransom again whilst the helpless abductees bear the brunt / suffering and boko haram with those benefitting from this terror war continues to feed fat whilst APC, Buhari and the military chiefs keeps lying about the true state of insurgency in the north east to mask their failures and incompetence.
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op): 11:22am On Mar 01, 2018
Omeokachie:
Anybody that really and truly means well for Nigeria should join hands in rescuing this country from the cabal that has taken Buhari captive. Buhari is not in charge. He should be let go to save this country.
Only few realised this though!
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op): 1:35pm On Mar 01, 2018
twentyk:
I have simply lost all faith in the administration of president mohammad buhari....before he became president,i was a big supporter because i was dissollusioned with the administration of goodluck jonathan.....
A considerable lot of people have lost faith in not only the politicians,political parties etc but a lot of my friend have deducted that nigeria no longer has anything positive to offer them....
My brother never loose hope; somehow hope will arise from somewhere; how, when and by who, I dont know.
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op): 6:05pm On Mar 01, 2018
TheFreeOne:
The Law of reciprocal actions.

For an opposition who exploited abduction of chibok girls to its limits and rode to power on same with lies, propaganda to get served same cold dish confirmed Natural laws never fails. What you sowed is what you'll reap.

And the circle continues...abduction then ransom, more abductions then ransom again whilst the helpless abductees bear the brunt / suffering and boko haram with those benefitting from this terror war continues to feed fat whilst APC, Buhari and the military chiefs keeps lying about the true state of insurgency in the north east to mask their failures and incompetence.
One commander just got kliled by boko haram in Sambisa
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op): 7:07pm On Mar 01, 2018
The demons don leave Reuben Abati alone
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Ofunaofu:
What goes around comes around.

But the truth is it has never been these bad,
Whatever that was bad during the Jonathan administration is worse now
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op): 8:21pm On Mar 01, 2018
Ofunaofu:
What goes around comes around.
But the truth is it has never been these bad Whatever that was bad during the Jonathan administration is worse now
Ahaaa...Things are very ok abi no be sooooo. Nigeria a very hypocritical nation.
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Ofunaofu: 8:48pm On Mar 01, 2018
TheFreeOne:
The Law of reciprocal actions.

For an opposition who exploited abduction of chibok girls to its limits and rode to power on same with lies, propaganda to get served same cold dish confirmed Natural laws never fails. What you sowed is what you'll reap.

And the circle continues...abduction then ransom, more abductions then ransom again whilst the helpless abductees bear the brunt / suffering and boko haram with those benefitting from this terror war continues to feed fat whilst APC, Buhari and the military chiefs keeps lying about the true state of insurgency in the north east to mask their failures and incompetence.
Hmmmmm
And the circle continues

We are stocked
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op): 9:47pm On Mar 01, 2018
Ofunaofu:
Hmmmmm And the circle continues
We are stocked
We can pray and watch as time erode their strength......
Re: Dapchi 110: The Tragedy Of A Nation, By Reuben Abati by Omooba77(op): 10:36am On Mar 03, 2018
NGO Staff killed again...God have mercy
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