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Home Blog Page 6710

Xenophobic Attack Seems Political

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Nigeria and South Africa leaders

I’m thinking out loud here. The recent xenophobic attack in South Africa could be politically inclined.

Why did I say that?

Come to think of it, no reasonable human being would go about hurting people’s lives and businesses without a force behind it. There’s definitely a power backing these people which I suspect is political.

Perhaps, some cabals are against the South African President, Cyril Ramaphosa. This is Africa where the game of politics is dirty. Once a strong group of people do not agree with the ruling power, they find every possible means to frustrate the administration. Which could have been the major reason for the Xenophobic attack.

Perhaps, it’s been calculated like this, if we frustrate the present administration, the people will easily spot their incompetence and voice their dissatisfaction with the administration, making it easier for us to impose our own candidate to counter them. No wonder they say, ”politics is a dirty game.”

Yes, I agree. The players are dirty. The killing of Nigerians wouldn’t just start without any reason. Trust me, no sane person would do what South Africans are doing. Besides, there was no tangible reason for doing it.

I listened to the radio and saw the news on TV. I even read the newspapers online, the reason for the attack was vague. It seems everyone was coming up with something they could lay their hands on just to sell a large volume of printed materials or generate traffic online.

But the big question is, ”why can’t the South African President do something about it?”

Why can’t the police arrest these people causing mayhem in the country and punish them severely?

In Nigeria, those that disrupted the Shoprite business were apprehended and a warning was passed across to anyone who tries to purchase the stolen goods from the mall. This is how a reasonable leader should act. Get to the root of the matter and punish the offenders.

I read that South Africans had resumed this ugly act again. Which makes me draw my conclusion – Xenophobic attack seems political.

Ramaphosa definitely knows this and I think he is treading with caution on this issue. I wouldn’t be surprised if South Africa go down before December. They are digging their own grave with this barbaric act.

No country will want to associate with a country that is full of crime, neither would investors want to put their resources into such a place. This way, it would be difficult to survive the economic hardship that’s about to befall them.

This would be a major step back for them and Africa as a whole. We don’t want division. We want unity.

Africa must unite.

Alibaba’s Double Play Strategy on Offline Retail Digital Transformation

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Chinese ecommerce giant Alibaba has launched an Operating System, a product of a collaborative effort of its key consumer units Ele.me and Koubei, to enable the digital transformation of supermarket chains and brick and mortar stores to make them more efficient.

The platform will onboard leading retail players into the ecosystem giving them the opportunity to leverage its capabilities in ecommerce from Taobao and TMall, Financial Technology services from Ant Financial, Logistics from Fengniao and Digital Marketing from Alimama.

Over 10,000 supermarkets and about 200,000 retail chain outlets spread across 676 cities in China are currently utilizing the operating system.

Supermarket chain Vanguard saw its orders via on demand home delivery platform Ele.me jumped 73 percent each month right from when it was on-boarded while that of Century Mat tripled.

This initiative is part of Alibaba’s A100 Strategic Partnership Programme – an Open Sesame Double Play strategy to help firms rexecute digital transformation. Alibaba has earned its category king status online and wants to offer similar services to offline players as well.

Konga’s redesign which has transformed it beyond offering a single play ecommerce service can learn from Alibaba because Nigeria’s retail industry contributes 33 percent to the total GDP and 45 percent of total employment in Nigeria. Sparkle, a startup, wants to help retailers mitigate the various challenges which they are plagued with. Those challenges dampen their business success. It will do this by delivering customer experience support services ranging from inventory management, invoicing statements, foreign exchange services, and Point Of Sale. Also, it will create a digital framework for them to register their companies, tax and domains, as it wants to connect the dots in business advisory and regulatory services for small and medium retail players.

The current friction which exists between Nigerian offline retailers and consumers can be fixed to make them achieve efficiency through digitization.

Don’t Be A Mario Balotelli

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You may have the right tools in the right environment and still fail. It’s not about having the right tools but knowing how to use it.

Yes, one minute the whole world is hailing and calling you sweet names. Never let it get into your head. The moment you rest on your laurels, you are doomed. Don’t be a Mario Balotelli.

Yes, I mean Mario Balotelli also known as Super Mario. He started his career well. He even won the Golden Boy trophy in 2010 in his early years. But the hype around Mario Balotelli has faded. He’s not even playing for a top team. No one considers him as a top player anymore. The press reporters are not even talking about him.

He currently plies his trade at Brescia, Italy. A team that’s not in the champions league or challenging for titles. Super Mario is not even in the Italian national team. That sums up his career.

Mario Balotelli had the best opportunities in his career. He played for great teams like Inter Milan, Manchester City, A.C Milan, and Liverpool. In the end, he messed up everything. His attitude was his problem. Super Mario was not focused on football, his whole career was full of controversies.

Every manager started ignoring him. His former manager, Jose Mourinho, described him as an unmanageable player.

Mario is a good striker, no doubt, but no manager is ready to work with his immature and unprofessional acts. No manager wants to be sitting in front of the press, defending an adult that’s expected to behave like a professional.

Mario Balotelli faded away. The big star he promised his fans to be never worked out. He had numerous opportunities to develop his wonderful talent and become a star.

Considering his career, he’s a bad example for any upcoming professional. No one is indispensable. Don’t just live in the moment, use it to create a legacy. The legacy will carry you forever.

Don’t be a Mario Balotelli!!!

All Service Providers In Africa Should Be Giving Unlimited Data Plans

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MTN and Airtel data plans are the last thing I would ever subscribe to.

Here’s my reason before you crucify me – it barely last three days. You can imagine, buying a data bundle worth 2000 naira and you can’t even use it for a week.

It makes me wonder – what exactly is the cost of data per kilobytes?

Being a writer, I leave my Internet connection on all day. Sometimes, I don’t even stay online browsing. Yet, I tend to pay more. I use Glo to browse at the moment and I can say, it’s a bit fair.

Airtel is worse than MTN. I bought a data bundle worth 2000 naira and it got exhausted in two days. Like seriously, I was in disbelief when I got a notification that my data had expired.

What exactly are we benefiting from these service providers?

I have a suggestion that could definitely work out. And that is – our service providers (MTN, 9Mobile, Glo and Airtel) should find a means to subsidize data plan.

Perhaps, give us unlimited data plan with a fee attached to it every month. This simply means – each network provider can charge, let’s say 5000 naira per month for unlimited access to the Internet.

Better still, they can offer two packages – one for mobile browsing and the other for those that use the computer to surf the net. Meaning if I want to browse on my system, I will subscribe for the system bundle and vice versa. Instead of offering a certain amount of money for different data bundle.

This idea is similar to DSTV monthly charges or BlackBerry subscription data plan. One of the reasons I miss BlackBerry. I’m very sure people do miss BlackBerry too.

If the network providers truly care about connecting people and not just about the profit, they should give their subscribers unlimited data bundle with a certain fee attached to it.

Nigerian government can also help by providing a wifi connection. Just like the PHCN monthly bills, we all can be paying that. And whosoever doesn’t pay, will be disconnected. It’s very simple.

The future of work environment is digital and it has started. However, the only barrier we Africans have to explore the digital space is the cost of the data plan.

Are our service providers ready to do this for us?

I don’t know but I am very confident that this idea is a win-win for both parties (service providers and users). Let’s hope that this article will reach all the decision-makers in these companies.

The Nigerian Independence Came Too Early

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 “ The common man prays, ‘I want a cookie right now!’ And God responds, ‘If you’d listen to what I say, tomorrow it will bring you 100 cookies.”

– Criss Jami

The cloud is forming for the 59th Nigerian independence celebration. But it looks like the country is not free from both internal and external forces.

To write on this national issue posed to be an enormous task and risk for me. Indeed, I was not close to being a Nigerian by the time the sung heroes and unsung heroes of this Nation fought for our independence. Many would consider me unqualified to put into ink such an article as this; I considered it too. But I followed my heart rather than my momentary emotions. As from the time I was born, I’ve never witnessed a period where Nigerians weren’t complaining. We may want to give in, tagging it a “Nigerian syndrome” with complaints and impatience as its components.

This article is not to condescend the efforts of our National heroes – both the sung and unsung. I am just writing from my heart and to encourage everyone reading this to think through before taking crucial decisions. I know many articles will be written about this issue for eons. This article is not a fight for superiority. My views aren’t superior or inferior to anyone’s opinions. Yet, I’m inclined to my own opinions.

” In our common desire to win Independence, many VITAL problems were left unsolved. One of these outstanding problems was the creation of more states which would have provided a more lasting foundation for stability of the Federation of Nigeria… On reflection, Nigerian leaders have admitted that the British were right and they were wrong on this VITAL issue in hurrying to Independence without solving the problem of stability of the Federation. “

Adapted from The Struggle for One Nigeria ( Federal Ministry of Information, Lagos, 1967) page 3 in the book MY COMMAND By Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo

Seven years after independence, an article was released by the Ministry of Information and that is an excerpt from it. The Nigerian leaders conceded if we had waited for better, things would have been different 7 years after. They were only saying 7 years after then, but even now things would have been better after 59 years.

If the article released stated that the problems left unsolved were “just” problems, I think the room would have been guaranteed that sometimes we don’t see all the room until we move. But it stated that the problems left unsolved were “vital” problems. So the Nigerian car wasn’t in a good state before we gained our independence. A “regional” Nigeria was pushed for independence by the regional leaders who had self ambitions even though it was crystal clear the country was not in a stable state when Independence came. Let’s take a look at the state of the country before Independence.

Until 1990, the now Nigeria existed as a number of independent national states with different linguistic and cultural differences.

“Nigeria is a collection of independent native States, separated from one another… By great distances, by differences… And by ethnological, racial, tribal, political, social and religious barriers”

Sir Hugh Clifford

During the Second World War, about 1940, the country was divided into 4 administrative units : Colony of Lagos and the Northern, Eastern and Western provinces. This separateness was deepened by Sir Arthur Richard’s constitution of 1946. And with Macpherson’s constitution of 1951,the regional autonomy was increased. The country at that time was in a state of political instability and there was a possibility of 3 countries emerging from Nigeria; Lagos later joined western province.

Later, there were constitutional conferences of 1954, 1957, 1958, 1959 and 1960 which resulted in the 1960 Independence.

The failure to create more states in 1958 planted the most viable seed of anarchy into the evolution of the country.

This is a wonderful day, and it is all the more wonderful because we have awaited it with increasing impatience, compelled to watch one country after another overtaking us on the road when we had so nearly reached our goal.

Adapted from The Speech Declaring Nigeria’s Independence by Nigeria’s First Prime Minister Alhaji Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa – October 1, 1960

The center was weak. But the regional leaders had each fortified their regions. Tribalism and regionalism went viral in the political system of the country. The people fighting for independence were blindfolded by their regional power and forgot to harness a single Nigeria. Tribalism and regionalism were serving the opposite purpose of unity. The only united voice the leaders had was on Independence from the British.

Finally, the push for an independent 3 Nigeria was successful in 1960. The tribalism rode and it accumulated to the imbroglio that resulted in the 1967 civil war. The effect of the civil war as since then being a force pulling Nigeria to and from since then. The bad blood between the Eastern and Northern regions is still affecting the Nation till date. The great grand children of the Eastern leaders are still in the fight, bombing pipelines everyday. All these has crippled the Nigeria economy. A wait and creation of more states could have averted all these chaos.

No gainsaying that the European were not only exploiting our country for cheap labour and our resources, but it was this same people that encouraged us to actively use our hoe and cutlass. In order to facilitate the easy transport and processing of agricultural and mineral products, they built many infrastructure.

To aid communication, post offices and telecommunication facilities were built. At the same time, we started using money. They exploiting us but indirectly they were building us. A little stay with us could have made the infrastructure we are still struggling with today grew better. Even a blind person wouldn’t dispute the commanding lead of South Africa in Africa in all developmental areas. What was the cause? It is because of the prolonged White influences.

Until the 1960 Independence, the Nigeria economy was majored on agriculture. Independence came and agriculture was being gradually swept under the carpet. We found oil and forgot what even the European saw in us and came to exploit. The same instability that was not taken care of in 1960 led to 1967 civil war and that has posed major problems to the oil centered economy of ours. This same oil was one of the fundamental causes of the civil war. With oil production crippled, we are now turning back to agriculture.

Even the infrastructure left by the colonial masters was badly handled. It’s glaring we weren’t equipped to take over when the independence came. If we had waited a bit more, we could also have benefited what the United States of America and South Africa are enjoying now. We rushed and the political leaders fight was driven by their silent intention to take over the rulership of Nigeria and enforce their tribe upon the country. Why not sacrifice more and let them refine us more since they had the tools to do so and we didn’t? Why did we deceive ourselves into another form of slavery?

Except Botswana, no African country has since achieved anything near the world standard with the hands of the Europeans. South Africa isn’t near us in population, in amount of mineral resources yet, they better than us in every aspect and now they have the best economy in Africa. Now, South Africa is a dream nation for many Nigerians.

To say the Europeans exploited us will be to condescend the human nature of selfishness. They were helping us while achieving their self interests. Had they stayed longer, I’m confident things would have turned out better. Even though people who planted the seeds might not have really eaten from it but their great grand children wouldn’t be suffering now.