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I want everyone to #Believe. It is a new dawn for transportation in Nigeria.

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Tomorrow, Aug 27, Vetifly will run its debut flight. I had hoped I would be in person to fly with you, but with the international airports closed, that would not happen. From our Board of Directors, we wish everyone flying with Vetifly to fly into GREATER promise and abundance. We come with a great vision and will serve our nation and continent in great ways. Thank you all for the amazing support we have received.

The fascinating young lady going out to do the amazing tomorrow, thank you. Let me hold that one until after tomorrow. We are truly thrilled. Thank you Nigerians. Thank you GOOD People – you are the best.

As Vetifly helicopters leave the solid  bounds of the land to reach skywards, I want everyone to #Believe. It is a new dawn for transportation in Nigeria. Download our app and book your flight.

Download Vetifly App and Book Your Helicopter Ride – Operations Commence Aug 27

Nigeria’s Supreme Court Upholds The Rights of Igbo Female Children to Fathers’ Inheritance

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Igbo traditional marriage

In a landmark ruling, the Supreme Court of Nigeria has upheld the judgment of the Appeal Court respecting the right of a female child to her father’s inheritance. The Apex Court judgment has however, disrupted a long-held tradition of the Igbos that prohibits female children from inheriting their father’s properties.

The Supreme Court ruled that the tradition contradicts Nigeria’s constitution and it is discriminatory. It said the practice is a clear violation of section 42(1)(a) and (2) of the 1999 Constitution.

Gladys Ada Ukeje, the daughter of late Lazarus Ogbonna Ukeje had filed a suit challenging her family’s decision to disinherit her from her father’s estate based on the Igbos’ native law. The trial court had ruled in her favor, but the widow of late Mr. Ukeje, Mrs. Lois Ukeje, and her son; Enyinnaya Ukeje appealed the ruling of the trial court.

Consequently, the Appeal Court upheld the judgment of the trial court, prompting the duo to appeal to the Supreme Court. The long legal battle that started in 2004 with the file number SC 224/2004 ended in a historic verdict which does not give only Gladys a right to her father’s inheritance, but every other female child of Igbo race.

In its ruling, the Apex Court held that the Appeal Court has been right in its judgment that nullified the Igbo tradition that prohibits females from inheritance.

The panel made up of Justices Samuel Walter Nkanu Onnoghen, Clara Bata Ogunbiyi, Kumai Bayang Aka’ahs and John Inyang Okoro and others, agreed with the lead decision.

Justice Bode Rhodes-Vivour, reading the verdict said: “No matter the circumstances of the birth of a female child, such a child is entitled to an inheritance from her late father’s estate.”

Rhodes-Vivour added: “Consequently, the Igbo customary law, which disentitles a female child from partaking in the sharing of her deceased father’s estate is breach of Section 42(1) and (2) of the Constitution, a fundamental rights provision guaranteed to every Nigerian.

“The said discriminatory customary law is void as it conflicts with Section 42(1) and (2 of the Constitution. In the light of all that I have been saying, the appeal is dismissed. In the spirit of reconciliation, parties are to bear their own costs.”

While the ruling has voided the practice of disentitlement of a female child in Southeast Nigeria, it has also created a new conflict. The tradition has been upheld for ages, and consequently many have found the Supreme Court’s judgment unacceptable.

Igwe Simeon Osisi Itodo, the traditional ruler of Aji autonomous community in Igbo-Eze North Local Government Area of Enugu State, told Vanguard that the Supreme Court ruling will not change the custom of Ndigbo, and any effort to enforce it will bring chaos.

“There are traditions which had existed before the law. Before the emergence of law courts, Igbos have their tradition and custom which cannot be wiped out because of Supreme Court ruling.

“We are not against that ruling but we would not abolish our customs and traditions which all of us met. You can imagine a married woman coming back to her father to share his property with the sons.

“We would not allow it because it would breed chaos and troubles in our communities. If there are customs that allow such inheritance, let the people continue the practice but it won’t work in Igboland. In India, women pay the dowry but the reverse is the case here. We would not abolish our unique customs because of court ruling,” he said.

While there are many voices in support of the court’s judgment, many have acknowledged the difficulty in its implementation.

Another Monarch, Igwe Christopher Nnamani of Likke Iheaka, in Igbo-Eze South Local Government Area of Enugu State, who added his voice to the development said the Igbo custom that denies females’ right to their fathers’ property has been unfair, and needs to be changed. But he acknowledged that it would be difficult to introduce something new in place of the old custom.

“This unfair treatment of female children does not happen in Northern or Western parts of Nigeria. This explains why females with affluence lord it over their male counterparts in Igboland when they remember the injustice they have suffered in the past.

“If a male becomes the eldest man in his community, he would be entitled to some privileges, which may come in form of royalties but the reverse is the case for the women in Igboland. The challenge is how to implement it now because it now because it is an old tradition in Southeast Nigeria,” he said.

The tradition has been based on the fact that a girl-child will be married off, maybe far away from home where she cannot play the custodian of the inheritance. Moreover, for Ndigbo, a female child’s inheritance lies with her husband who is believed to have inherited his father’s property.

However, a twist in the custom that birthed the judgment is the urban setting, where Igbo fathers own properties far away from home, where inheritance is not governed by native laws and practices.

Additionally, the 21st century ushered in a new era of thinking and a brigade of rights activists ready to fight till the last drop of blood to kill the old norms that have subjugated women.

However, it is not the first time the Supreme Court is ruling in favor of Igbo women in this matter. There has been such a judgment in the past, but it has failed to change the custom particularly in the Southeast. And based on the views of the custodians of Igbo customs, the recent Apex court ruling may have little effect on the tradition.

The Adenuga Unstructured – A New Book Coming from Ndubuisi Ekekwe

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He is an unstructured builder. A man whose playbooks differ from anything you might have learnt in any management school. But he has great results, expanding an empire and winning markets and territories. He is also an innovator, liberating his nation and fellow citizens from the bounds of per-minute billing when he pioneered per-second billing, via Glo. Yes, his model is uncommon, for the size of his business, across many dimensions and not many can make sense of it. Simply,  Mr. Mike Adenuga is Unstructured in his ways of building a conglomerate. 

In a new book – The Adenuga Unstructured: New Models for Building Conglomerates – I am working on, we will be examining how he has used that model to build one of the largest conglomerates in West Africa. As always, our books are exclusive for Tekedia Mini-MBA members.

 

 

“The Dangote System” – A New Book from Ndubuisi Ekekwe

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From the critics:

“This book is a very amazing piece. It presents concise, well thought-out and very clear insights on how to build companies with focus on solving problems not many people can solve and consequently, have government’s attention and support. Thank so much for this Prof.”

“This book is a worthy read to all aspiring, low-fly and high-flying entrepreneurs, including those envious of the privileges that Dangote Empire has enjoyed. Noteworthy to say, I doubt Mr Aliko Dangote himself understands these privileges as a Conglomerate Tax (reward for helping Government out on high-pains by moving upstream) and not benefits of tribalism, feudalism, and/or Northern Nigeria cabalism”.

Have you read “The Dangote System” by Ndubuisi Ekekwe? Begin here

Comment on LinkedIn Feed

Ndubuisi Ekekwe sir, it would have been lovely to have the man dangote do the forward for the book. It will make perfect “brain”

That would be very bad. That is not how professors work. If I do that, I am no more reporting facts, from my angle. It means, I am singing praise since there is no way he would not influence the contents. We do not need to coordinate with any human. Dangote may not even like the book. But provided it is fact-based and relied on public data, I am fine. This book is not really about Dangote, it is simply a case study for our members to understand how to build companies. I do not need any Foreword from any human to explain that.

NDLEA About To Make Drug Testing A Prerequisite for Marriages in Nigeria

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The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) is about to make a move that will ensure that Nigerian homes are safe again. The Chairman of the agency, Mohammed Mustapha Abdalla, revealed this on Friday 21st August, 2020, during the destruction of seized illicit drugs and substances in Maiduguri. According to him, drug testing will soon be made a compulsory prerequisite for the institutionalisation of marriages. He said that the major reason for putting up this requirement is to curb the use of drugs and other harmful substances among young ladies.

According to the NDLEA chairman, the number of young girls and married women that traffic and abuse drugs are on the increase. He said that this social ill was initially common among young men, but unfortunately, women are taking over the “business” from men. To discourage the further growth of this impending disaster, NDLEA chairman said, “As an extension of the proposed Drug Integrity Test Policy for the public servants, the agency is considering partnering with religious leaders to make testing a prerequisite for marriages in churches and mosques just as the case of HIV/AIDS and genotype tests.”

The good tidings this development will bring may not really be the total eradication of or a drastic reduction in substance trafficking and abuse. Why I said this is because most people don’t marry in churches and mosques. Besides, it is not compulsory that everyone should get married. So it is possible that a greater percentage of these abusers and traffickers may not be reached and discouraged if it becomes a marriage prerequisite. But I know we stand to gain a lot of benefits from it.

The good news I am seeing from this deliberation of NDLEA is that if it is brought into effect, our marriages will be safe again. With this policy in place, domestic violence and murder of spouses and children will reduce drastically. In fact, marriages will be left for the saner people alone.

But like I mentioned earlier, it is possible that people will still bypass this law even when they are getting married. A good instance is in the case of the double wedding system that exists in Nigeria, where you have to do the traditional marriage before going for the church wedding. A lot of couples usually stop at one level of the wedding, especially the traditional ones. Some do traditional weddings and then head to the court for the next one. How then does NDLEA plan to capture instances like this considering that there is no organisation that presides over traditional weddings?

Another problem here is that there is this possibility that people will start abusing substances after they get married. As the NDLEA chairman stated, drug testing will be given the same priority as HIV/AIDS screening before marriage is conducted. If I remember truly, marriage has not been able to stop the spread of HIV/AIDS. I have read stories of and met people, whose spouses were infected with HIV when they were married. So, if people can contract HIV after getting married, it is possible that those that did not abuse substances before getting married can do so after their weddings.

As I stated earlier, it is not everybody that gets married. Since it’s only the people getting married that will be compelled to run drug tests, what about those that are unmarried? How will they be captured by this policy? What about the people that married before the policy was enforced? What plan does NDLEA have for them? Another thing is that the agency did not say anything about those going for court weddings. Or does it mean that they are exempted?

Of course, it might be impossible to stop drug and substance abuse and trafficking, but efforts should be made to discourage and bring them down. As a result, NDLEA should consider including more avenues for compulsory drug testing. But making it a compulsory prerequisite for marriages is a welcomed idea.

But then, NDLEA needs to come clear on certain aspects of the policy before enforcing it. For instance, if a person tests positive to the drug screening, what will be his fate?