1/ So Jack of Twitter, carried his business to Ghana and the Giant of Africa is raking because how dare he leave Nigeria with all its resources; human and otherwise to go and land in Ghana where their jollof is rubbish?
2/ Thing is though, that no matter how many more Twitter users Naija has than Ghana (36 million, almost 4 million more than the entire population of Ghana) an argument I have heard more times than I care to count, Jack owes us nothing.
3/ He is free to set his headquarters wherever he thinks it makes good business or personal sense for him to do so. Maybe he just likes Ghana. Maybe he wants it in a place where he’s not having to invest in security details and power supply
4/ I remember the frustration of trying to work virtually while in Nigeria on a visit a while ago. The constant power outage (several times a day) made it impossible for me to do any sensible work and I had to pack it in.
5/ I once stayed in a hotel that had been running on a gen. for days because of the frequency of outage and because they had some expat guests who needed the assurance of uninterrupted power. Anyway, that’s a topic for another op-ed.
6/ Added to my inability to work on that visit, was the frustration of trying to get from Lagos to Enugu by road because Enugu airport was out of commission.
7/ In discussing the route to take, the driver had to decide which one was less likely to lead us into the arms of kidnappers or herdsmen or armed robbers. In the end, I didn’t do the long road trip but flew into Benin City and drove with a friend and armed security to Enugu.
8/ It is not normal that we have normalised the dismal state of security, that we do not bat an eyelid when armed policemen accompany citizens to wedding parties and hair salons and church services . Again, a topic on its own for another op-ed
9/ What is sad is that if anyone is worried, it is not the ogas at the top. Buhari is in the UK on medical check-up. For sure, he didn’t start the tradition of our leaders travelling abroad for medical care. Yar Adua died abroad, after all.
10/ However, we are in the middle of a global pandemic, Nigerian doctors were on strike and the only thing on our president’s mind apparently, was how soon he could leave for his check up in the UK.
11/ How impatiently he must have waited. We are besieged by a crippling crisis of leadership and we see its manifestations around us. Jack’s choice of Ghana over Nigeria, some have argued, is an indictment of our nation.
12/ Anyway, Twitter posted why they chose Ghana :“As a champion for democracy, Ghana is a supporter of free speech, online freedom, and the Open Internet, of which Twitter is also an advocate.
13/ Furthermore, Ghana’s recent appointment to host The Secretariat of the African Continental Free Trade Area aligns with our overarching goal to establish a presence in the region that will support our efforts to improve and tailor our service across Africa.”
14/ Make of that what you will. Or like my mother always says, use your tongue to count your teeth. In any case, Twitter isn’t the only company on the planet. There are many others that we could try to attract.
15/ And Nigeria is not the only country on the continent. Everything can’t come to us – we got Microsoft Centres in 2019, Google Developer Space in 2020, and we are getting a Facebook Office- so enough already with the entitlement act.
16/ Folks complaining seem to forget that by going to Ghana, Jack also bypassed Rwanda, South Africa, Kenya, Egypt, Morocco, Angola, Namibia and Botswana, all countries that could make good arguments for why he should have come to them instead.
17/ Besides, when he tweeted about Twitter in Ghana, Jack wrote, “Twitter is now present on the continent.” The benefit is not Ghana’s alone, it is Africa’s.
So, calm down and eat some jollof.
Enjoy your weekend!!!!
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‘The African Woman’ (For The ‘Real’ African Man) 1/ Never talk about African women as if they were individuals. Remember: they are a monolithic group. There is the African Woman of which there are two subgroups: the Bad African Woman (BAW) and the Good African Woman (GAW).
2/ Members of each group are easy to spot: The Bad African Woman is a feminist which means that she hates men and spends her days pretending to be happy and her nights crying in loneliness because she has put career before marriage.
3/ Note: it doesn’t matter whether she’s married or not, that’s beside the point. For her, always use adjectives like ‘bitter’, ‘frustrated’, ‘sad’.
1/If you have the heart for it, and you understand Igbo, you can watch/listen to the original interview here. It's heartbreaking : bbc.com/igbo/afirika-5…
2/ How is he justifying domestic violence, sexual assault? In the name of culture? Whose culture? And women should be flattered when they are sexually harassed?
3/ How can he, working in the industry that he does , with smart, intelligent women, acting in movies with such women , even directed by such women come out and say that women have small brains. And imply that they are less intelligent (than men?)
On Sunday, African Giant, Burna Boy won his first Grammy for Best Global Music, and Wizkid’s collaboration with Beyonce (and her nine-year-old daughter) won Best Music Video. Nigerians were ecstatic.
Even Tiwa Savage and the two Kuti brothers, Femi and Made, whose collaboration with Coldplay would have won them certificates (rather than Grammy statuettes) had it won (which it didn’t) were being congratulated on Twitter by Naijans for winning. All win na win abeg.
I am not being facetious. Far from it. It's easy for us, now, to take the fact of Nigerian music going global for granted. H/ever, those of us who were born in the 70’s and came of age in the 90’s know exactly how big a deal it is -
I woke up (earlier this week) to the good news that the 279 girls kidnapped last week from Government Girls Junior Secondary School (GGJSS), Jengebe, Zamfara State, had been released.
I had my piece for this week all ready and had to discard it, but I have never been more grateful for a curve ball being thrown at me. When the news of their abduction broke, parallels were immediately drawn with that of the Chibok girls which happened seven years ago.
Everyone wondered if in 2028, the Zamfara girls would still be in captivity. Of the 276 girls kidnapped by Boko Haram from Government Secondary School Chibok in 2014, 103 were released, 57 fled and four later escaped while 112 are still missing.
So last week I wrote about the disinheritance of daughters in parts of Igbo land & to my disbelief, there were Ndi Igbo claiming that this customary law of inheritance that privileges sons doesn't exist, that I had somehow fabricated this out of thin air dailytrust.com/free-yourselves
(even as I and others on my TL gave concrete, real life examples and some Igbo daughters have successfully brought cases contesting the law before civil court).
One ill-informed young man stated that I had to “malign Igbo culture” so that “white people” would give me money. LOL. I understand that we don’t like to see the worst of ourselves reflected back to us but how do we progress if we refuse to confront it?
from: escr-net.org/caselaw/2018/o…
"Onyibor Anekwe & Anor v. Mrs. Maria Nweke, Supreme Court of Nigeria, SC. 129/2013.
Gender Equality in Inheritance Rights affirmed by Nigerian Supreme Court
This case challenges the customary law of male primogeniture of the Awka people in Nigeria.
The Supreme Court of Nigeria found that any custom that denies women, particularly widows, their inheritance, is repugnant to natural justice, equity and good conscience and is condemned by the Supreme Court.
Following the death of her husband, Mrs. Maria Nweke was asked to vacate her house by her late husband’s father on the ground that she had no male child in the house. erty goes to the deceased’s father and eldest brother.