Chxta Profile picture
11 May, 11 tweets, 3 min read
In Western countries, there is a lot of talk about de-escalation of force, risk analysis and appropriate use of force. Many governments, even in some authoritarian countries like #China, see de-escalation of force as "less is more".

Let me tell a short story...
Back in 1989 when #China burst into the pro-democracy riots that culminated in the Tiananmen Square massacre, the protests were spread around the country.
Most people outside China don't know this.
In Beijing, Deng Xiaoping sent in the tanks to crush the protests, and of course no one challenged him. However, again unknown to many, in China most of the local prefectures have a significant amount of autonomy.
A man called Jiang Zemin was in charge of Shanghai, and he ended the protests there very quietly and without bloodshed.

Deng was impressed, and Jiang was called to Beijing and anointed to succeed Deng. The rest, as they say, is history...

Why do I tell this story?
The go-to tool of the Nigerian government, especially the Buhari government in dealing with Nigeria's myriad problems has been force - bit.ly/3vZojBG.

It still is force.
The loss of legitimacy, the increased willingness to challenge the state, are just a preview of the results. I'm not even going to talk of the perception of one-sidedness given that Buhari only pleads with "bandits" in the North - bit.ly/3tBz5ML
Here is the problem - #Nigeria's security architecture has had a bad rap in the SE for years.
It's gotten worse recently, and while I won't go as far as saying that people support the whole UGM nonsense (I know too many who are alarmed at it), I'd say without fear of contradiction that the population isn't sympathetic to the security services.

And who can blame them?
Back to how I started this thread, and people who are wise know that force should be an absolute last resort, not the first, and certainly not the one that you should double down on even when it's clear that it has failed.
Clear communication and a listening ear are the main things to bring to the party.

You'd be surprised at how much can be achieved with just the pretext of a listening ear.
Just pause briefly and imagine if, upon assumption of office, rather than divide the country into 97% and 5%, Buhari had visited the SE/SS, called a town hall, and acted as a father.

What would #Nigeria be like by now if he had done that?

But then again, the man is not wise.

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More from @Chxta

21 Apr
Upon gaining power in 1979, Margaret Thatcher made the defeat of inflation in the UK its number one priority.

The 1970s were a difficult time for #Britain inflation-wise, and Meg Thatcher was willing to do anything to stop it.
In my latest piece in @BusinessDayNg, I disagree with my editor.

He thinks we are headed towards stagflation, I'm certain we're already there.

The full text is here, bit.ly/3duFRz3, what follows is a summary.
With #Nigeria's food inflation at 23% and headline inflation at 18%, @cenbank doesn't appear to be giving rising consumer prices the attention it deserves.

Rising prices are compounded by low-output growth and high unemployment, the textbook definition of stagflation.
Read 9 tweets
12 Apr
I had a meeting this morning with a big boy to talk about a job.

During the meeting, an antique car passed by the bistro and we talked briefly about antique vehicles. He told me a rather interesting story...
He worked in Abuja for a decade, and when he moved back to Lagos at the end of 2019, he felt he needed a driver, so he hired one.

Now, Oga has an antique 1968 Mercedes Benz W115 convertible, Wilma, which he drives once in a while when the weather (and traffic) permit.
A few months ago, his new driver, let's call him Bob, took Wilma for a spin and bashed her.

Even worse, Bob didn't tell Oga the fate that had befallen his beloved Wilma.

He simply put her back under the tarpaulin and said nothing.
Read 11 tweets
5 Mar
"Moving on" is no longer an option in #Nigeria. Everything must be interrogated.

As an example, an excuse that was given by those who attempted to do a food blockade against their "fellow Nigerians" was because of the violence meted out against Northerners in Oyo.
To my mind, that excuse fails the smell test.

Food was also blocked from going to Ikpoba Hill in Benin, and Onitsha Main Market, two big markets from which distribution happens to other places in their respective regions.

Are Benin and Onitsha on the way to Oyo?
Why punish Benin and Onitsha for the sins of Oyo if this was not an attempt to show who had power, an attempt that failed miserably.

The truth is that the economics of the attempted blockade simply did not add up, and this should be a lesson for all involved.
Read 20 tweets
4 Mar
Today's lesson is about @GazetteNGR and the attacks that happened on their website a few weeks ago, and yesterday.

Both attacks were the classic denial of service attacks aimed at getting the site offline.
A distributed denial of service (DDOS) is an attack done by multiple computers flooding the server that the attacker wants to get offline with false traffic requests, thus overwhelming it and putting it offline.

Anyone can fall victim to DDOS.
Now here is the thing: a DDOS can be bought.

Most of the people who sell DDOS attacks as a service are based in #Russia or #Ukraine.
Read 7 tweets
22 Feb
The lead story in today's @BusinessDayNg is an absolute must-read for everyone who may be interested in #Nigeria bit.ly/3kaRAEy

We're six years into the Buhari second-coming, and the results are in. Buhari is the worst thing to have happened to this country.
Why is he the worst thing?

It is very simple. Under his watch, our economy has developed a chronic case of stunted growth. And @BusinessDayNg has all the meat. Let me quote a few excerpts from the article...
"With data from @nigerianstat showing a 1.9% contraction
in 2020, it means #Africa’s largest economy has now failed to match its average population growth rate of 2.6% for 6
years."

This means that we've effectively been decelerating for the last six years.

There's more...
Read 8 tweets
19 Feb
Let me build upon this in the light of the murder of six Fulani kids in Oba: bit.ly/3bjFxkp

Each time a new militia comes up, people tend to support them because they think that what the militia are doing aligns with what they agree with.
A very recent example is when #BokoHaram started. A lot of Northerners tacitly supported them because the group's teachings aligned with the Wahhabi Islam that is prevalent in Northern #Nigeria, and so they felt that Boko Haram was something for them.
Of course, #BokoHaram didn't start by killing Muslims, and many Northerners saw the initial victims as "the enemy".

When "the enemy" is being killed by the militia that is "on your side", you either give overt support, or you become complicit by not saying anything.
Read 11 tweets

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