Some Nigerians have been arrested in the US for fraud, and have been promptly thrown under the bus by a Nigerian government representative. Is that right? bit.ly/2Nsurze
Back in the days when Roman legions marched across the earth and imposed the will of the Emperor on one and all, a concept emerged, first mooted by the prolific consul, Cicero. The concept was simple, “Civis Romanus sum.”
I am a Roman citizen.
It was that idea that was used by apostle Paul a century. He was arrested in Jerusalem for preaching heresy (yes, Christianity was once a heresy).
Paul spoke to the commander of the garrison, introduced himself as a Jew born in Tarsus and crucially said, “Civis Romanus sum.”
Paul, was a birthright citizen of Rome, and as a result, if that crowd had killed him, the Roman garrison in Jerusalem would have been obliged to kill a few of them in return.
Paul had a right to get his case heard by the Emperor. He would eventually stand trial before Nero.
A few millennia later, Rome was no longer in charge of the earth, it was an island, Great Britain, that now ruled the waves.
In 1847, a Jewish man, David Pacifico, was attacked by an anti-Semitic mob in Athens, Greece.
The police did nothing and instead arrested the victim.
But Pacifico had an ace in the hole. He wrote to the Foreign Office as a British citizen. That fact, swung the British into action, and it no longer mattered that Pacifico had offended local Greek customs leading to the attack, what mattered was that he was British.
Lord Palmerston, the British Foreign Secretary sent a demand to the Greeks asking compensation for Pacifico. The sum demanded was more than the value of the Greek Royal Palace, and the Greeks replied that this was a judicial affair, and that there was a separation of powers.
2 years later, still no compensation for Pacifico, so Palmerston ordered the Royal Navy to blockade the port of Athens (ever heard of gunboat diplomacy?).
The blockade lasted 2 months, and a humiliated Greece compensated Pacifico with £500, a prince’s ransom in those days.
In sending the Royal Navy to punish the Greeks, Palmerston quoted Cicero’s “Civis Romanus sum”, and paraphrased it with “An injury to one is an injury to all,” setting the tone for the passport system in use in international relations till this day.
When a British (or insert serious country here) passport holder is detained in another country, it matters what not he has done, the diplomats of his home country are duty-bound to defend his interests.
If he is convicted and sent to prison, a diplomatic official is sure to take on the role of visiting him in prison, on a regular basis, until he is set free.
About this letter, I think it is ill-timed. Individual Nigerians have every right to wring their hands about how those people have brought shame on us, BUT, the Nigerian state has an obligation, to provide services for all Nigerian passport holders, even those accused of murder.
Last I checked, #Nigeria has three diplomatic missions in the US, Washington, Atlanta and New York.
Has anyone of them made any effort to reach out to these people?
A nation ought to be way beyond claiming the glory of its citizens and descendants when they shine. A nation as a sovereign has a duty to shield its citizens even when they are wrong.
Such as how Britain reacted when some British girls were accused of drug trafficking in Peru.
Sometimes, you may find that one person among the arrested, that is actually innocent. By throwing the accused under the bus so quickly and so publicly, the Nigerian state has told every one of us that it will not be there when we need it.
So that you guys will understand that innocent people may be caught up in this.
But as an irresponsible country, we will not provide them consular services, instead our officials will be asking them to "go and clear themselves."
This life na turn by turn sha...
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There has been a lot of recrimination due to the musician, Brymo's misguided tweets. I won't join issues with him except to mention that as a Tinubu supporter, he is simply doing what I have said, so many times, would be done by Tinubu supporters, ethnicise the elections.
What I want to talk about, very briefly, before returning to @EdPaiceARI's excellent book is the tendency for Nigerians, in general, to keep behaving like our country's civil war did not end 52 years ago.
Igbo people in #Nigeria are generally treated like we are all fifth columnists who secretly support Biafra.
This ahistorical view completely ignores that even during the war, there were Igbo people, Ukpabi Asika and Ike Nwachukwu as examples, that fought for Nigeria.
I had a discussion with someone yesterday that brings to my mind the nature, to some extent, of the damage that the current Japa wave is doing. This time, not to the body-corporate #Nigeria
The #LekkiMassacre of two years ago merely accelerated what was already a trend.
But not much is being said about the effect of this trend on the lower classes, the people who used to be house helps, nannies, stewards, drivers, cooks and maiguards.
Bear in mind, this was written before #America's mid-terms...
Faced with the implications of his words during his presidential campaign, the Biden administration rediscovered the concept of realpolitik and tried to make good with the Saudis by visiting #SaudiArabia in July and ending up with that infamous fist bump.
In November 2019, Joe Biden fingered MBS in the killing of @washingtonpost contributor Jamal Khashoggi and committed to making the Saudis pay.
He followed up upon assuming office by rejecting contact with MBS and stopping US assistance to Saudi efforts in its war in #Yemen.
On #FreshlyPressed981 with @SopeMartins and @monsieurceee this morning, we'll be asking how the NNPC came to the conclusion that petrol will sell for ₦462/litre without the subsidy.
The NNPC is just involved in unnecessary fear-mongering.
Our neighbours, who are poorer, pay a lot more than we do for petrol. What I see in all this is people committed to maintaining their cushy subsidy scam going on.
Consider the attached chart, published in February.
As of February, based on the exchange rate, we were paying 40 cents per litre of petrol. In #Benin it was 95 cents, in #Niger it was 97 cents, in #Chad it was 89 cents, and in #Cameroun, it was $1.09.
For all the flak that the Nigerian media gets, people tend to forget one crucial fact: they are products of their environment, working within that same environment.
Only a very few people in this life have the fortitude of Job.
The overwhelming majority of humanity, including me these days, would make the required compromise to just keep things moving.
One problem we have in #Nigeria is that we never interrogate these things. We must ask, "why"?
In the 1963 movie, Cleopatra, there was an interesting dialogue between Mark Anthony and Octavian, the man who would later become Augustus Caesar, the first emperor of Rome about the birth of Julius Caesar's son, Caesarion:
Mark Antony: "You were so shut at the mouth just now one would think your words were are precious to you as your gold."
Octavian: "Like my gold, I use them where they are worth most."
This is instructive...
Also instructive is that during his 19 years as chairman of the US Federal Reserve, Alan Greenspan did not give any interviews. Having taken over from the inflation-busting Paul Volcker, Greenspan knew that words from his position carried weight and so had to be used sparingly.