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More Ways to Curb Domestic Violence

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Domestic violence is another worrisome issue that is on the increase. The scariest and most disturbing aspect of this social offence is the killing and maiming of partners. The worst thing here is that domestic violence does not only happen among married couples. We also see this act amongst people that are still in courtship or even dating. Even teenagers are beginning to kill their partners, who they believe are cheating on them. This then makes one ask what exactly is going on.

Note that domestic violence is not gender-specific. Both male and female genders can be victims and offenders. This heinous act also cuts across different ages and social classes. This is to say, that the problem has nothing to do with age, class, educational attainment, or gender.

The society has received its share of the blame for being the cause of domestic violence. We also blame parental care for it. We apportion blames to drug abuse, and peer and social media influences for the increase in domestic violence. But, we seem to be missing other vital causes of domestic violence – psychological and mental health.

Just this past Sunday, June 21, 2020, we received horrific news about a man that butchered his wife before taking his own life. This sad event happened at Victory Park Estate, Lekki, Lagos State. Story has it that the man is suspicious that his second child isn’t his. However, it is not known whether he went for a DNA test to ascertain the paternity of his child. Unfortunately for the wife, she lost her life because her husband suspected her of infidelity.

The gruesome way this woman was murdered will tell you that this man is a psycho. No human in his right senses will put another person he/she claims to love (or even hate) through such pains as this woman must have passed through before bleeding to death. We can’t even kill animals like that. To crown it all, the man ended his own life painfully by drinking Sniper, an insecticide.

In most churches in Nigeria, before a person gets married, he/she will be asked to carry out certain medical tests (usually HIV and genotype tests) and attend marriage preparatory classes. Some churches, like the Catholic Church, will insist that the pre-marriage classes should be attended by the couple for a minimum of six months. Most of the things taught in the class are matters surrounding challenges couples face in marriage and how they can overcome them. The medical tests couples are subjected to are expected to help in preventing future clashes in their marriages. For instance, couples that both have AS genotype will be discouraged from continuing with their marriage plans. However, I have not seen anyone that wasn’t wedded because of their genotypes.

These tests and classes are good. But to be honest, they will not really stop domestic violence. Most people attending those classes are not really there to learn. They only want to fulfil the requirements for which the church will wed them. As for the tests taken, that is good as well. But then, there is a need for more tests and checks.

Two more Checks that should be done before Marriage is Licensed

 

  • Psychological and Mental Tests

 

Going back to the causes of domestic violence, I made mention of psychological and mental wellbeing. Some people that are not fit to marry and handle challenges that come with marriages are answering somebody’s husband or wife. The only thing that people like this need to snap is a little stress, doubt or suspicion. But if couples planning to marry are sent to be tested on their mental and psychological health, trust me, a lot of bad marriages will be prevented. The couples may not be banned from getting married, anyway, but at least they will know what they are up against. This way, they will always stay at alert in case their partners started behaving abnormally.

Some people may see this as an intrusion of privacy. However, since it involves the lives of two different people, and their children, there is a need to protect the people that might be affected by the person’s mental or psychological state. This condition needs to be considered as soon as possible.

 

  • Background Check

 

In the olden days, people conducted background checks on the prospective spouses of their children. Any unsatisfactory discovery about the spouse or his/her immediate and distant family will lead to automatic discontinuation of the marriage procedures. That was actually possible in those days because people married from villages that were close-by. Today, the case is different. People meet in cities and marry. Hardly do people check on their spouses’ lives in the past to know what they are capable of. Even those that did so believe that mistakes of the youth cannot be revisited in adulthood. This might be true in some cases, but in most cases, it might be deadly.

It may be unlawful to demand that couples carry out background checks on one another and submit their findings; but it will be good if the option is left open. More interest here should be paid to past activities that showed violence or mental disorder. It will also be good to check on the person’s criminal history to be sure he or she isn’t involved in crimes of any sort or involved with associations that encourage violence. These were some of the things our forefathers checked before permitting marriages and it worked for them. Maybe we need to revisit the olden ideologies.

There are still other things that need to be done to discourage the increase in domestic violence. But as we work out ways to make marriages blissful once again, let us first consider these listed options.

Wirecard is Another Challenge for Softbank Vision Fund After Uber and WeWork

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Softbank experiences another bad timing as Germany’s Wirecard crashes. Wireacrd had attracted a $1 billion investment from SoftBank in April 2019 to finance Wirecard’s expansion into Asian markets. Today, Wirecard, after revelation that the  $2.1 billion the company had reported on its balance sheet did not exist, has dropped to less than $2 billion in valuation from the high of $27 billion. This is another poor run for Japan’s Softbank. Maybe it is time for Softbank to try a mega investment in Africa. We could make it whole.

In a deepening fintech industry scandal, the former Wirecard CEO was arrested Tuesday on charges of inflating the company’s balance sheet, said German prosecutors. The payments firm, which saw boss Markus Braun step down last week, has been unable to locate $2.1 billion in cash that was missing from its balance sheet — which the company said Monday probably doesn’t exist. Wirecard has withdrawn its most recent financial results and is now weighing “a full scale restructuring” to survive, Bloomberg reports.

To show how bad things are in Softbank, the company is cutting “15 per cent of jobs at the investment arm which manages its $100 billion Vision Fund, following a series of misplaced bets which damaged its overall value. The Vision Fund, which is responsible for taking major stakes on behalf of Softbank in tech startups such Wework and Uber, has a global staff of approximately 500 people”. This Vision Fund certainly has bad luck with the Wirecard scandal developing. Yet, it is important to note that the company has some wins; companies like Nvidia and Ping An are good bets.

Softbank investments (source: Yahoo Finance)

Ndubuisi Ekekwe Joins The Board of A UK Company

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I received a Royal Mail from the United Kingdom today. It was sent from the Companies House, the government agency that manages things relating to companies, including Directors. With this inscription on the envelope, “On Her Majesty’s Service”, I knew it was it.

A few months ago, a really wealthy man invited me to join the Board of his company. Then in my village boy mentality, I asked him to also give me shares in the company. Amazingly, he did.

Today, the UK government wrote to me, informing me. I always pray, “Oh Lord, my hands are raised up for your blessing. As the angels go on assignments to bless, make them see my hands”. This season, He did.

Your own will come…keep working hard.

President Buhari’s Bold “Caution” on ECO Currency To UEMOA Zone, ECOWAS

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As far back as 2002, in Diamond Bank’s intranet, a quote welcomed all staff into the system. It was from a speech which Diamond Bank Founder, Pascal Dozie, had delivered on trade, banking and regional integration. He postulated the implication of a single currency and why Diamond Bank must pursue a regional growth in ECOWAS. He used the phrase, “a name, possibly Eco” to describe the potential currency with a supranational bank within the region. Diamond Bank was setting up the Benin Republic branch then.

Single currency has many advantages, on trade, but in heterogeneous markets, there is a huge risk of welfare losses. Typically, when nations lose autonomy to devalue their currencies to adjust equilibrium in international markets, a currency region could be subjected to the vagaries of the most dominant economies in the bloc. 

So, in ECOWAS, if crude oil price drops, Nigeria typically devalues its currency to re-calibrate, but under a single currency, it would lose that ability since the Central Bank of Nigeria would not be controlling the regional currency which would be under the control of a supranational bank. But if the paralysis becomes acute and the regional bank devalues, say Eco, some countries like Gambia and Benin Republic have been impacted instead of just Nigeria.

This explains why President Buhari’s statement to some ECOWAS countries which are trying to play a huge game, flipping CFA Franc as Eco, leaving some countries out, is important. Eco is never new, going back to Mr Dozie’s writing. But when a small bloc, UEMOA, tries to take over it, it makes the whole process harder. You cannot just hijack something everyone has been working for decades and expect others to party.

‘‘We have urged our Ministers towards an expeditious path to success. It, therefore, gives me an uneasy feeling that the UEMOA Zone now wishes to take up the Eco in replacement for its CFA Franc ahead of the rest of the Member States.

‘‘This is in addition to deviating from the Community Act on a consistent attainment of convergence in the three years running up to the introduction of the currency, and our subsequent reinforcing directives.

‘‘I am informed that the French Ministers have approved a bill to reform the CFA Franc and most, if not all of the UEMOA Member States, have already passed legislations in their various Parliaments to that effect.

[…]

‘‘We must proceed with caution and comply with the agreed process of reaching our collective goal while treating each other with utmost respect. Without these, our ambitions for a strategic Monetary Union as an ECOWAS bloc could very well be in serious jeopardy,’’ he said.

As I wrote for the African Heads of State during an African Union Congress, the trajectory must be prior convergence of regional economies before a single African currency. What UEMOA is doing right now will make it challenging in ECOWAS. I hope they play with caution and allow a natural attainment of convergence to happen. 

Share What You Are Learning At Tekedia Mini-MBA

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Yesterday, Lekan Akande Olokunde, FCA shared a page summary for Innovation Lessons (5in5), one of the 3 sub-themes in our Week 1 of Tekedia Institute Mini-MBA. Week 1 is focusing on Innovation & Growth with three faculty handling each of the 3 sub-themes. He has studied the 2.5 hours of video and summarized the message in a page. For our very busy members, this would be helpful.

Also, he also created an amazing calendar for our schedules; that would go to the Board later today. We would be sharing his page summary also.

Please if you do have yours (summary, analysis, etc), share with Admin for the community. Let’s co-learn and co-share. I understand the MVQ has resonated well.

We continue to welcome the World; REGISTER.

https://www.tekedia.com/mini-mba-2/