Friday 27 November 2015

REV.DR. (MRS) FLORA EJIRO KWAKPOVWE BAGS ANOTHER PRESTIGIOUS AWARD! BY FELIX N.JARIKRE.

Rev.Dr.(Mrs) Flora Ejiro Kwakpovwe. 

<a href="http://www.bloglovin.com/blog/14415719/?claim=jsjjvt2x3cz">Follow my blog with Bloglovin</a>



Haters, detractors and scandal-mongers, eat your hearts out! The award of  African Leaders of Integrity Merit Awards” given to Rev. Dr. (Mrs) Flora Ejiro Kwakpovwe on Saturday 24th October, 2015 is an eloquent testament to the fact that when one is focused on their assignment, doing the right thing with zeal and unmatched dedication, paying no attention to nay-sayers, recognition would not be far off.

  Formal Presentation of the Award.

The Advisory Board, Board of Editors, and Management of Integrity International Magazine nominated Rev.Dr. (Mrs) Flora Ejiro Kwakpovwe as one of their awardees in the 11th edition  yearly International Leadership Conference on Development tagged: “ Good Governance: The Challenge of Modern Africa” with a keynote address delivered by Professor B.I.C. Ijomah, CEO, Centre for Policy Studies & Research, Nigeria.

Behold the Plaque!

The event took place at the Conference Hall, Palm Beach Hotel, Lome, Togo. Awarded alongside Rev. Dr. (Mrs) Kwakpovwe, the A.G.O. Manna Prayer Mountain World-wide and co-publisher, Our Daily Manna, were other notable and distinguished personalities who had also excelled in their professional endeavours and respective businesses.

Certified: "African Leaders of Integrity Merit Awards."

Calling on the need to sensitize African leaders to embrace the virtues of integrity like transparency, honesty and accountability in leadership, Rev. Dr. (Mrs) Kwakpovwe says the aim of the conference and award is to create awareness for how integrity could promote and sustain leadership in Africa.



Saturday 14 November 2015

(Part Two) Speaking Louder Than Money-Power: Practical Manifesto For a Purposeful Life. By Felix N.Jarikre.

Felix N.Jarikre
<a href="http://www.bloglovin.com/blog/14415719/?claim=jsjjvt2x3cz">Follow my blog with Bloglovin</a>




“When a person has a vision that transcends himself, that focuses on an important course or project that he is emotionally connected to, then the real course of least resistance is to put service above self.” – Stephen Covey.

The urgency of the call for leadership does not permit us to waste our time in criticism, frustration, or complacency, but to engage the political process. There are some educated people reading this now who are probably unemployed and searching for elusive jobs. They are angry, frustrated and perplexed. Yet they question their leadership role, thinking it is safer to merge with the status quo, instead of resisting it. They see nothing wrong with being foot-soldiers of manipulative politicians who brazenly steal elections and go to one church or the other to do a thanksgiving for their fraudulent victory. “God gives power to whom He will” is a brain-deadening mantra of these electoral thieves, and their co-conspirators. Losers are cynically advised to go to courts, so-called judicial temples that are formatted in Nigeria to protect only the lawless rich. In an irony of self-flagellation, these youths, looking for food to eat, take to the social media to justify the electoral heists under one false premise or other.
  
Author Marianne Williamson said: “Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure...It’s our light, not our darkness, that frightens us...You are a child of God. Your playing small doesn’t serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won’t feel insecure around you...As we are liberated from our fear, our presence emotionally liberates others.”

Don’t disqualify, remove or restrain yourself  because you think you don’t have the pedigree, status, credentials or money to engage the political process. We should not mistake our insecurity for humility. Late Stephen R. Covey in his seminal book, The 8th Habit, consistently maintained that leadership is a choice, not position.  A wise man said: “Evil triumphs when good men do nothing.”  Do you have the passion to change what you are agitated about?  Now here’s a reminder that passion, the fuel that burns away opposition, cannot be faked or crafted. Does your speech-making carry any moral authority to command money

To engage the political process by putting service above self, what you need fundamentally is wisdom. It takes wisdom to give you the abundant mentality that money cannot give. WISDOM IS SUPERIOR TO MONEY. Wisdom gives you an authentic voice that is timeless, inexorable and self-evident. Wisdom gives you a voice that is not subordinated, or seeking to be validated by the opinions of others. Basically, the wisdom from above comes to make you a leader and commander, resourceful and fruitful. Jesus says in the book of Luke: “For I will give you a mouth and wisdom, which all your adversaries shall not be able to gainsay nor resist.”

 Practically, how do you identify wisdom?  You have wisdom when you sacrifice your material substance to sustain others less fortunate to enable you have the moral authority to speak the words of God from your heart.

No matter how your speech-making is challenged by people, to rejoice steadfastly, and not waver in doubt and irresolution , is another confirmation that you have wisdom.

It takes wisdom to deliver a nation. With wisdom, Joseph in the Bible rescued the nation of Egypt from perishing in hunger while money failed the land. Ideas, not money, still rule the world. The Bible in Ecclesiastic chapter 9 from verse 14 talked about how every man forgot the poor man who delivered the city (nation) by his wisdom. Yes, the man who had the keys that delivered a nation from being a war booty remained  anonymous due to his lack of money. Can you imagine how painful and humiliating it is to be forgotten, ignored and despised by the very people that you rescued from perishing?  Yes, to be shunted aside without recognition and honour on what is supposed to be your day of reckoning because of your poverty could be very troubling. Everyone wants to be recognized and celebrated for some noble achievement or deed.

 Donald Trump, the billionaire U.S. Republican presidential candidate, recalled how at eighteen he was taken by his father to the opening of  Verrazano-Narrows in New York city, one of the most elegant and longest suspension bridge in the world, erected at a cost of $320 million after fierce opposition by local politicians. According to Trump, at its opening, the 85 years old Swiss engineer, Othmar Amman, who designed this remarkable bridge was ignored and nobody ever mentioned his name, while the politicians that opposed the bridge’s construction were praised and celebrated. Of the event, Donald Trump said: “I realized then and there that if you let people treat you how they want, you’ll be made a fool.”  At least, from the billionaire’s perspective, to be ignored without a mention of your name equates with being made a fool, a non-entity! Not a very pleasant thought!

We have a common saying here in Nigeria: “A poor man with ideas has no reason to open his mouth in the presence of a rich man.” Should you now neglect your leadership role to pursue money? You better not! PURSUE WISDOM INSTEAD! Poverty is the term used to describe a situation where there is a lack of money. Destitution of mind describes a situation where there is a lack of wisdom.  Yet there’s no shame being poor if you have wisdom. Certainly, it’s better to be a poor man temporarily to enable you escape destitution of mind.  Undeniably, DESTITUTION OF MIND IS WORSE THAN POVERTY.

A man who has no money cannot afford to downgrade his speech. It’s delusional to think that your words are not sound and relevant because of your poverty. Being afraid to speak freely what you desire from your heart is self-defeating. Don’t restrain your mouth and go into silence because you fear people would not bother to hear you. If people refuse to hear you, God is waiting to hear you. To be heard is to be remembered. Malachi wrote in the Bible: “Then they that feared the LORD spake often one to another: and the LORD hearkened, and heard it, and a book of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the LORD, and that thought upon his name.”

Working on the way you speak is serious business. Take it not for granted. How you speak on any issue close to your heart must be purposeful, deliberate but spontaneous. What you say must be objective and applicable to resolve specific situations. Downgrade money from the level of having the ability to master your speech. Once you allow money-power to determine the way you think, the decisions you make, and the direction your speech would go on a daily basis, you are in deep trouble. On the other hand, you should learn how to master and control money by your speech-making ability. Don’t allow money pretend to be what it is not. Money has only one purpose: to be given away, not hoarded!

Your true personality is not defined by the shape or height of your body; or the colour of your skin; or where you come from; or the size of your bank account, but by the manner of language spoken from your heart. TO BE CONTINUED.

Tuesday 10 November 2015

Irrepressible Femi Kayode Kicks Again! Target:Sectional Appointment of New EFCC head.


Buhari's brash insensitivity to the South is on the rampage again as he appoints another Northerner,Ibrahim Mustafa Magu to replace Ibrahim Lamorde as the new head of EFCC. It is easy to relate with Femi Kayode's outrage as Buhari has relentlessly enthroned nepotism and sectionalism under the guise of looking for "competence and meritocracy" in making key strategic appointments. How long Nigerians will tolerate this tendency is another question. The impression must not be allowed to gain ground that there are no "saints" in the South to head EFCC!

On the pro-Biafra march,the authorities should not treat it with disdain or resort to hardball tactics.It remains a peaceful protest.To treat it otherwise will backfire.Attention should be paid to their grievances,not with scorn but compassion. A word is enough for the wise.

Friday 6 November 2015

Speaking Louder Than Money-Power: Practical Manifesto For A Purposeful Life In Nigeria And Elsewhere.(Part One) By Felix N.Jarikre

Felix N.Jarikre.
<a href="http://www.bloglovin.com/blog/14415719/?claim=jsjjvt2x3cz">Follow my blog with Bloglovin</a>




Without any question, the political leadership of  Nigeria suffers from a desperate lack of vision and a destitute mentality. Their overriding aim is to capture and maintain power. With violence, bare-faced deception, lies, extreme propaganda, judicial trickery, they would stoop to anything, no matter how base, in their attempt to take advantage of the weakness of their opponents, and push them out of power. Reducing politics to a thinly-veiled organised criminal activity, the people for whom they claim to be fighting are disposable.  Psychologically unprepared to lead the people on the path of  abundant prosperity and progress, the knee-jerk reaction of the political leadership at any point in time is to inflict massive hardship and misery on them in the name of fiscal prudence and discipline.

President Muhammadu Buhari travelled to India in October, and granted an interview to Nigerian Television Authority and Channels TV.  Defending himself against the claim that he is slow, the president of  Nigeria says his government does not know where the money to develop infrastructure would come from, talk-less of paying cabinet ministers. According to him, before his coming to power the second time around, Nigeria was materially and morally vandalised by agents of corruption who had the capacity to fight back against any attempt to expose and recover their loots.

If the president’s intention was to lower the people’s expectations to avoid disappointment from the government, he failed woefully. He only succeeded in casting a pall of despair and gloom over an unsuspecting populace. Some of his self-serving acolytes might imagine what Buhari said to be truth-telling, but it inadvertently revealed a failure of imagination, lack of creativity and resourcefulness in governance.

Thankfully, Buhari’s so-called truth-telling did not go unchallenged as men like Alhaji Balarabe Musa, Second Republic governor of old Kaduna State saw it as a ruse to score political point and gain cheap popularity. Challenging the president to quit lamenting, he said, “When you have people, you have everything. If you have 170 million people, you have 170 million ideas. And it is not possible to fail like that. What we need is leadership. A country with our huge human resources, crude oil deposits, flourishing agricultural profile cannot be said to be broke. What we need is a government that can perform. We have APC government that is in power, and for five months, they are not doing anything, and all they are saying is that Nigeria is broke!” 

Truly, in the face of ravaging unemployment, massive retrenchment and layoff of workers, and businesses grinding to a halt, can the people dare hold Buhari’s government accountable to an economic agenda that is yet unknown? What can be done to prevent oneself from stepping over the edge of hysteria at a time when the president is saying there is no money to develop infrastructure because the country has been vandalised , materially and morally, by ogres of corruption?  Can we dare to entertain ourselves with a dose of hope and optimism that Buhari and his crew are prepared to deploy fresh ideas to tackle unemployment, deteriorating health services, and epileptic electricity supply? 

Rather than surrender to mental paralysis or despair, Buhari’s government should have the presence of mind to reflect and know that Nigerians ( including the 95 percent Wailing Wailers and 5 percent Lamenting Lamenters) are fed up with recycled excuses and blame-games from the government. They are impatient with economic stagnation. They are impatient with Buhari’s enthronement of nepotism and tribalism under the guise of  holding on to “competence and meritocracy.” They are impatient with bad roads and bad governance. They might be manipulated for a time and railroaded to applaud what is thoroughly inexcusable, but they remain impatient with political leaders who glibly say “I-don’t-sign-cheques” to excuse mismanagement, misallocation and misappropriation of public funds.

Yes, they are impatient with leaders who say “corruption-is-hard-to-define” because they don’t take bribes. How or why would you take bribes when in Nigeria, it is easy for a state governor to mistake the common purse for his own personal purse?
Nigerians want actions now, positive, innovative and practical actions that would take them on the road of economic recovery, development and prosperity. They refuse to be disposable cannon-fodders for politicians to step onto power and opulence.

The stakes are high. Buhari is comfortable with maximum power, and he is not afraid to show his ambition for power. He says he wants to be remembered as one “patriotic leader who fought corruption to a standstill.’ All well and good. Corruption itself is a symptom of an underlying sickness in a man or woman who is  destitute of the truth”. Indeed, corruption is a by-product of mental slavery. Corruption thrives where there is mental destitution. Where fresh ideas to develop the society, making it more productive and efficient, are not given room to take roots, and grow, corruption flourishes. Where money-power, and not ideas, rule, corruption takes wings 
.
  But for journalists and other concerned Nigerians who insist that the president should not use this fight as a pretext to hound or persecute his political enemies, the days and months ahead are going to be dangerous and treacherous. Would they be treated as saboteurs, those who insist that Buhari should not remove himself from accountability and transparency?  Could the president expect neglectful silence from Nigerians if he treats his political friends with kid-gloves who are alleged to be neck-deep in official corruption?  

One thing I know. For too long, we have allowed the same cycle of expired politicians and retired military generals with stale, degenerated ideas to re-invent and bring themselves into political relevance, riding rough-shod over us
.
This is not the time to sit on the sideline, and be satisfied with how critical we are of government policies. We must get involved, and not abdicate to others our responsibility to serve the society, at whatever level.

 I am a teacher of the Bible, and have decided to write a series of articles on the above subject, drawing inexorable lessons and principles from the Bible, as a guide for anyone to intervene and contribute  as a leader and commander within the political space of  Nigeria and elsewhere...To Be Continued.