In 1962, #Nigeria decided to dam the River Niger. The area chosen was the area around the catarats wher Mungo Park died.
After the architects, Balfour Beatty, finished the plans, it became clear that the ancient town of Bussa, the capital of the Bariba people, would be flooded.
Plans were made, and it was decided that the entire town of Bussa would be rebuilt elsewhere before the dam was filled.
Thus, New Bussa came about, and the people of Bussa were relocated before the Kainji Dam became operational in 1968.
But there was a problem...
The construction of the dam destroyed valuable farmland, and New Bussa was not as fertile as Bussa.
The locals thus essentially became peasants. Money that was voted for compensation did not make it to those it was meant for. Essentially, a very #Nigeria story in 1968!
Thus it was that without any irony, the very next year (1969) the government decided to build another dam, about 500km away in Bakolori in what is now Zamfara State.
Resettlement of the natives started in 1973, and construction started in '74. Then problems arose...
The same issues with New Bussa propped up, but the people couldn't really protest as per military government things. But construction, meant to end in 1978, was delayed.
Then government changed in 1979...
So in November 1979, convinced of their democratic rights, the people of Bakolori went to demonstrate at Government House, Sokoto in front of Governor Shehu Kangiwa, who promised to address their grievances promptly.
So they waited, and waited, and waited...
Days turned to weeks, and weeks turned to months, and it became clear that Governor Kangiwa had forgotten about them, so they decided to block the construction site, and all hell broke loose.
A detachment of @PoliceNG moved in and removed the protestors by force. Many died.
The people of Bakolori said that 380 of their people were killed that day, but the government said that, "only 25 were killed."
In his independence day speech, @MBuhari failed to mention anything about the doctors' strike that has paralysed the health sector, kidnappings, which have become a frighteningly regular occurrence in the country, or the unemployment crisis.
These three in many ways have contributed to the "japa wave" that we are currently witnessing, something which he only mentioned in passing to refer to "so-called leaders run abroad to hide".
In all the hullabaloo about the Twitter ban, Pantami, and Biafra boys, an important matter got lost in the noise, and that was a kerfuffle over banks v the telcos, mainly personified by MTN.
Two weeks ago, I talked about it in my BusinessDay column, then forgot about it, so here is the link: businessday.ng/columnist/arti…
Basically, the controversy over the returns on the use of USSD was triggered by MTN reducing the banks' commission from 3.5% to 2.5%, and the banks threw their toys out of the pram and blocked MTN users' ability to recharge their phones via bank channels.
This quick thread is dedicated to @maazi_ogbonnaya who on occasion does good work, but who like any young person, needs the guidance of those who have gone before him.
His heart is in the right place, but your heart being in the right place is often not enough.
A few months ago, I asked about Okonkwo, and unfortunately, most Igbo people think he was a hero.
Newsflash, he was not. Okonkwo was that person who didn't have the ability to think. Even Prof Achebe once said that he'd prefer if we were like Obierika.
I've read a lot of the comments here. Let me give my two kobo, and most of it is reflective…
The reality is that Buhari dares not speak to the South West, the North or the South in the condescending tone he addresses the SE and #Nigeria's youth.
The man shows more deference to even #BokoHaram, bandits and other terrorists than he does to these two demographics.
It shows that the South-East political class have a lot to reflect on.
Why the disrespect from all sides?
The answer is simple: our political class are orphans and people like Buhari know it.
The SE political elite does not have the support of South-Easterners, and why is that?
Over the weekend, Ladipo Market in Lagos caught fire. The majority of the affected people were Igbo.