Friday, August 19, 2011

Tithing in filth




Gone are the days in Nigeria when being a pastor, prophet or Imam is not the first choice of profession for anyone not the least the young ones. Doing the 'work' of God was not so attractive to many people in the same manner that being a professional politician had no attraction.


The job of a priest was a humble one. The priest was supposed to be a moral exemplar. So, the crave or even lust for money and material objects was not a priority for him.


The perception of the politician is different in the eyes of the people. The politician was viewed as a liar and a morally dishonest person. He was the direct opposite of the priest.


But times have changed.   Whether for a priest or politician, what matters is financial reward. These days, many university graduates in the country pound the streets for non-existent jobs. Many never-do-well have turned to politics as a way of surviving the harsh economic reality. Many more have suddenly received 'revelations' to become God's representatives on earth. In paid programs on the TV, Radio and inside public commercial buses, pastors and prophets are 'reaching' out to the people.

MONEY IS THE ROOT OF ALL EVIL

The message tag is simple. God's people are not supposed to live in poverty. Financial prosperity is not a sin even though the holy book may have said that "money is the root of all evil". Special prayers are even organized for church members and non-member friends of the church.


The feedback too for these 'men and women' of God has been substantial. It comes in the form of tithes. For the priest, tithes are an indicator of his job performance. If the tithes brought by members are huge, it shows the pastor is doing a yeoman's job. In this case, it would not matter where the money for the tithes is coming from. The pastor does not care a hoot about the source of tithes brought by members.


On the contrary, if members are scrounging to pay their tithes, it is a profound statement on the (in)effectiveness of the priest. He needs to stoke the 'fire' of prayer for his members so they can bring 'juicer yeild' next time.




The pronouncement made by the anti-corruption agency in the country, the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC) that religious leaders should show more concern about the sources of huge tithes received from members of their congregation, if the war against corruption is to succeed in the country may not cut any ice afterall.
 
This is simply because in the church, tithes are 'economic indicators' that determine whether a pastor is doing a good job or not.



Chair of the anti-graft agency, Mrs. Farida Waziri told her audience recently at a one-day interactive seminar on economic and financial crimes for state senior executives in Calabar, Cross River State that it become the practice for corrupt government officials and dubious members of the public to pay huge sums as tithes to religious bodies without being asked the source of the wealth.



She wants religious leaders to find out if the huge funds paid by members as tithes were legitimately earned.



FILTHY LUCRE

What is 'filthy lucre' to the EFCC is 'blessing of God' to religious leaders in the country. And this relative perception is where the problem lies.



"Prosperity must come legitimately. I feel a responsible pastor should know where the tithe of his worshiper is coming from. How and where did you make the money that you are bringing in as tithe? It is not enough for your member to bring in a huge amount and you say- God bless you", Mrs. Farida wanted to tell religious leaders.



"Pastors should be responsible through their members (who are top government officials, members of the public) to want to know how they make money they bring to church. So, it goes beyond just preaching prosperity, they should let the people know that religion is beyond that. For any soul to prosper it means that soul must be in right standing with the principles that God has laid down by doing the dos and refusing the don’ts", she added.



The agency's head of legal unit in Enugu, Mr. Johnson Ojogbani, disclosed that over N300b ( $195m) recovered had been returned to either the agencies they were stolen from or the coffers of the Federal Government.



Corruption is a bane of the country's growth and development. In both government and public spheres, illegitimate money changes hands.



Religious leaders and the anti-corruption body need to have the same perspective on what constitutues 'illegitimate wealth' if the country is to be sanitized.





 























Friday, August 12, 2011

Amnesty International alleges unlawful killings in Nigeria




Human Rights watchdog, Amnesty International has said Nigerian soldiers in the Joint Task Force (JTF) sent to Borno State, North-East Nigeria have been responsible for at last 23 deaths and for burning a market.

A woman was shot dead on Wednesday in clashes between soldiers and suspected members of Boko Haram in the northern town of Biu in the state and a church was set on fire.

According to newspaper reports she was holding her young child at the time she was shot and killed.

Authorities in Nigeria have upped military presence in the north-east as the government tries to force an end to the Islamist group Boko Haram's armed uprising.

Boko Haram - which roughly translates as "Western education is forbidden" - has carried out a wave of killings and bombings in Nigeria in their attempt to overthrow the government and create an Islamic state.

Sources say Nigeria army's conduct has alienated the local community. Many residents of Maiduguri, the Borno State capital are now said to be more scared of the army than they are of Boko Haram.

Last month, Borno state Governor Kashim Shettima admitted that the army had been guilty of excesses in Maiduguri.


Timeline of Boko Haram's Terror

2002: Founded
2009: Hundreds killed when Maiduguri police stations stormed
2009: Boko Haram leader Mohammed Yusuf captured by army, handed to police, later found dead
Sept: 2010: Freed hundreds of prisoners from Maiduguri jail
December 2010: Bombed Jos, killing 80 people and blamed for New Year's Eve attack on Abuja barracks
2010-2011: Dozens killed in Maiduguri shootings
May 2011: Bombed several states after president's inauguration
June 2011: Police HQ bombed
June 2011: 25 people killed in attack on bar
July 2011: Motorbikes banned in Maiduguri to prevent drive-by shootings
July 2011: Thousands of residents flee Maiduguri after a series of attacks

Thursday, August 4, 2011

African Arts on World stage

End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) is more serious in Nigeria than HIV/AIDS"

"End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) is more serious in Nigeria than HIV/AIDs"

End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) is more serious in Nigeria than HIV/AIDS. There is hardly any family in Nigeria that has not felt the trauma of the ailment or outright death by ESRD. Whereas ESRD is like HIV/AIDS, an impossible, if not terminal condition, proper diagnosis is still poor and treatment is very expensive and futile for the poor who usually cannot afford the cost of kidney transplantation. For instance, Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) has said that to treat ESRD, it will take a "moderate rate" of not more than N2 million!

There is hardly any major hospital in Nigeria today that does not have ESRD patients pining away, perhaps wishing for death.

From The Nation, Nigerian Independent daily

Ogoniland oil spills: Shell admits Nigeria liability

Ogoniland oil spills: Shell admits Nigeria liability

Oil giant Shell has accepted responsibility for two devastating oil spills in Nigeria's Ogoniland region.

The Bodo fishing community sued Shell in the UK, alleging that spills in 2008 and 2009 had destroyed the environment and ruined their livelihoods.

Their lawyer said they would seek hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation for one of the world's "most devastating oil spills".

Shell told the BBC it would settle the case under Nigerian law.

Experts who studied video footage of the spills say they could be as large as the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster in Alaska, when 10m gallons of oil destroyed the remote coastline, the UK's Guardian newspaper reports.

Until now, Shell has claimed that less than 40,000 gallons were spilt in Nigeria, it reports.

'Severe poverty'
Correspondents say the spillage was caused by pipelines which ran through the village.

Shell stopped pumping oil from Ogoniland in 1993 after the writer Ken Saro-Wiwa - who was later hanged - led a campaign against it for allegedly destroying the environment.

Marine life has been devastated within the 2,000 hectares of the creek and the mangroves have been, without exception, destroyed”

Martin Day
Lawyer for claimants
Martyn Day, representing the 69,000-strong community, said they would demand "adequate compensation immediately".

"This is one of the most devastating oil spills the world has ever seen and yet it had gone almost unnoticed until we received instructions to bring about a claim against Shell in this country [UK]," he said.

He said the community had three sets of claims.

The first claim - for at least $100m (£61m) - was to clean up the area.

The second one was for damages to the community land and the final one was for losses suffered by individual families, Mr Day said.

"The Bodo people are a fishing community surrounded by water. What was the source of their livelihood now cannot sustain even the smallest of fish. The spills have caused severe poverty amongst the community.

"Marine life has been devastated within the 2,000 hectares of the creek and the mangroves have been, without exception, destroyed," Mr Day said.

Shell said it accepted the spills were caused by equipment failure and not by sabotage or theft, which it said caused most of the spills in the oil-producing Niger Delta region.

It said it would pay compensation in accordance with Nigerian law but warned it "could take several months to reach a conclusion".

Mr Day said the settlement could set a precedent for other communities in the Niger Delta to seek compensation in British courts.

Communities have repeatedly claimed that international oil firms fail to respect their rights and contaminate their land with oil spills, though the companies dispute this.

From the BBC

Nigeria Ogoniland oil clean-up 'could take 30 years'

Nigeria Ogoniland oil clean-up 'could take 30 years'

Nigeria's Ogoniland region could take 30 years to fully recover from the damage caused by years of oil spills, a United Nations report says.

The long-awaited study says complete restoration could entail the world's "most wide-ranging and long-term oil clean-up".

Communities faced a severe health risk, with some families drinking water with high levels of carcinogens, it said.

On Wednesday, oil giant Shell accepted liability for spills in 2008 and 2009.

The Bodo fishing community has said it will seek hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation.

Nigeria is one of the world's major oil producers.

'900 times recommended levels'
The assessment of Ogoniland, which lies in the Niger delta, said 50 years of oil operations in the region had "penetrated further and deeper than many had supposed".

Continue reading the main story
Analysis

Peter Okwoche
BBC News
During a visit to a village in Ogoniland in 2007, I went to a small stream that gave people water for all their daily needs. The effects of oil spillage were clear. On the surface of the water there was a thin film of oil. Villages moved it with their hands before scooping water.

Villagers told me no fish had been seen in the stream for more than five years. They told me people had been killed by oil pipes exploding and others had developed health problems after inhaling fumes from burning oil well heads.

When I visited the village again in 2011, oil spillage had worsened. Villagers no longer drank water from the stream. They walked for up to four hours to get water.

Over the past two decades, successive Nigerian governments have failed the people of Ogoniland. I doubt this report will change anything. In the meantime, the voices of secession in Ogoniland will grow louder.

"In at least 10 Ogoni communities where drinking water is contaminated with high levels of hydrocarbons, public health is seriously threatened," the UN Environmental Programme (Unep) said in a statement.

Some areas which appeared unaffected were actually "severely contaminated" underground, Unep said.

In one community, the report says, families were drinking from wells which were contaminated with benzene, a known carcinogen, at 900 times recommended levels.

It said scientists at the site, which lay close to a Nigerian National Petroleum Company pipeline, found oil slicks eight centimetres thick floating on the water.

This was reportedly due to an oil spill more than six years ago, it said.

The report, based on examinations of some 200 locations over 14 months, said Shell had created public health and safety issues by failing to apply its own procedures in the control and maintenance of oilfield infrastructure.

But it also said local people were sabotaging pipelines in order to steal oil.

The report says that restoring the region could cost $1bn (£613bn) and take 25-30 years to complete.

"The environmental restoration of Ogoniland could prove to be the world's most wide-ranging and long term oil clean-up exercise ever undertaken if contaminated drinking water, land, creeks and important ecosystems such as mangroves are to be brought back to full, productive health," Unep said.

'Not attributing blame'
The report, which is regarded as the most detailed study on any area in the oil-rich Niger Delta, was in part paid for by Shell after a request by the Nigerian government.

Continue reading the main story
Oil in Ogoniland: Troubled History


1958: Oil struck in Ogoniland
1990: Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (Mosop) formed, led by Ken Saro-Wiwa
1993: 300,000 Ogonis protest at neglect by government and Shell
1993: Shell pulls out of Ogoniland after employee is beaten
1994: Four community leaders killed by mob of youths. Mosop leaders, including Ken Saro-Wiwa, arrested
1995: Mr Saro-Wiwa and eight others tried and executed; widespread condemnation of government
2003-2008: International attention switches to armed conflict started by other communities in Niger Delta
2011: Shell accepts liability for two Ogoniland spills
Amnesty International, which has campaigned on the issue, said the report proved Shell was responsible for the pollution.

"This report proves Shell has had a terrible impact in Nigeria, but has got away with denying it for decades, falsely claiming they work to best international standards," said Audrey Gaughran, Amnesty's global issues director, said.

But earlier, Unep spokesman Nick Nuttal told the BBC's Network Africa that the study was not intended to "blame any particular stakeholder operating in Ogoniland".

"What we are indeed really seriously hoping is that this might actually close the chapter in what has often been a sad, tense and sometimes violent story, going back several decades.

"We are hoping that this might build some sense of co-operation between all the various players in this part of the world."

He also stressed that Shell's admission of liability for two spills had nothing to do with the Unep report.

Shell said on Wednesday that it took responsibility for the spills, which took place in 2008 and 2009, and would settle the case under Nigerian law. The Bodo fishing community had alleged that the leaks had ruined their environment and livelihoods.

Ogoni communities have long complained about the damage to their communities, but they say they have mostly been ignored.

The issue was highlighted by the writer Ken Saro-Wiwa, who was executed in 1995 by Nigeria's military government, sparking international condemnation.

The campaign forced Shell to stop pumping oil out of Ogoniland but it continues to operate pipelines in the region and spillages have continued.

From the BBC