Chxta Profile picture
Aug 18, 2020 16 tweets 5 min read Read on X
The thread below is a part of my column in @BusinessDayNg today: bit.ly/317WgDj

If you want to read the full thing, click on the link and just pay them small. It's only like ₦1000 ($2.11) each month.
#Nigeria runs three criminal legal systems, the Criminal Code, the Penal Code and Sharia.

These contradictions are pulling the country in different directions.

The lack of a central identity has served to dampen any attempt to forge nationhood.
#Nigeria's foundation was steeped in violence and the setting up of @HQNigerianArmy was hinged on the need to coerce indigenous people to bend to the will of the colonialists.
But what is even more troubling is the formation of a country that has a largely Muslim conservative north and a somewhat socially liberal Christian South.

With each passing flare up the belief that #Nigeria is united and indivisible is tested and stretched thin.
The recent uproar following the death sentence passed on a singer in Kano for blasphemy is yet another flashpoint.

I expect that 22-year old Yahaya Sharif will appeal and win at the secular courts, but the damage has been done.
The damage was in the deep ethno-religious blowback that followed.

In the North, there was vocal support for the sentence, in the South, the verdict was roundly condemned, showing that mistrust is high.

We may as well be two different countries.
Northern Nigeria has seen some of the worst riots with religious undertones.

In 2002, an attempt to hold the annual @MissWorldLtd event in #Nigeria led to a riot in some northern cities that claimed at least 200 lives between 20–23 November.
The earlier Kaduna riots left many inhabitants had a strong sense of injustice because none of the perpetrators had been prosecuted afterwards.

Moreover, the riots had caused Christians and Muslims to concentrate and isolate themselves in separate districts.
While these are pointers to a deeply divided state yet to attain nationhood, we need to ask ourselves why it is mostly the South who take on liberal causes.

Protests both online and offline about injustice and bad governance have been largely done in the South.
The kidnap of about 200 girls in Chibok, Borno state by #BokoHaram in 2014 led to massive protests that began in Southern cities.

In the case of Sharif, most people leading the outrage on social media against the judgement are Southerners.
There have been some prominent Northern Muslims who have spoken up against the sentencing, and they have been subjected to violent threats as well.

The existence of these moderate Muslim Northerners proves that the North is not a monolithic murderous empire.
Next year, #Nigeria would sit atop lists of the worst place to do business, or the worst place in terms of security, or worst place for human rights and the rule of law, and people will wonder how it happened and claim that the lists are not well researched, or racist.
But consider, if you were a non-Nigerian investor, and you hear that someone is being killed for expressing an opinion, would you want to come and invest in such a country?
When foreigners ask they ask about gangs going to burn down a man's house because of his opinions, bandits operating with impunity, and insurgencies where the government grants amnesty to people who fight the state.

They don't ask localised questions, they ask about #NIGERIA.
These kinds of things raise #Nigeria's security premium, because in simple terms the more risk you factor into a place, the larger the amount you spend on mitigating that risk, which in turn affects the cost of doing business.
At a point, it becomes clear that profits aren't worth the aggravation of these ridiculous costs.

Then throw in that unemployment data shows that #Nigeria's real market isn't more than 50 million, investors begin to move away from Abuja/Lagos to places such as Accra and Nairobi.

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More from @Chxta

Jan 6, 2023
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.
Read 12 tweets
Nov 27, 2022
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
I've discussed that in some form here, and I've done a thread on the effects on the middle class, who are the primary movers of this migration.

I recommend reading @tundeleye's 2017 piece about why people were leaving #Nigeria bit.ly/2WvirUH
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.
Read 16 tweets
Nov 24, 2022
Words matter, especially when they come from someone with influence.

That is the theme of my latest column in @FinancialNG bit.ly/3VhvOAI, the impact of the words of @JoeBiden before he became POTUS.

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. Image
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.
Read 8 tweets
Sep 5, 2022
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.

@Smooth981FM in 15 minutes...
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. Image
Read 9 tweets
Aug 17, 2022
“We have seen your type before, and they all fizzled out. Let’s see how long you will last.”

That's what someone told @DavidHundeyin as recounted in his @BusinessDayNg column today: bit.ly/3JZzB0N

That thing cut my soul because it is true...
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"?
Read 17 tweets
Aug 16, 2022
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.
Read 6 tweets

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