Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Counting the Costs of Insurgency: Nigeria vs Boko Haram






In mid-April 2014, the Nigerian terrorist group, Boko Haram, whose name translates roughly into “fraud is a sin”, abducted more than 200 school girls from their hostel in Chibok, a village in the northeastern Nigerian state of Borno. This act, along with two bombings in the capital city, were seen in part as an attempt to damage Nigeria’s credibility and stop the first World Economic Forum (WEF) conference hosted in Nigeria.

The WEF was successfully staged. But till this day the over 200 abducted school girls are yet to be brought home, despite the government efforts and public outcry from Nigerians, especially on social media with the famous #BringBackOurGirls campaign.

The group has previously attacked the United Nations headquarters and the Nigerian Police Force headquarters in Nigeria’s capital, Abuja. It is also responsible for a series of fatal church, mosque and market bombings, among other incidents.

No doubt, Boko Haram has inflicted broad psychological, social, political and economic damage on Nigeria and its peoples. And if its attacks continue, one casualty, in addition to the loss of human life, may be the country’s growing reputation as Africa’s investment hotspot.

In March 2014, a long overdue rebasing exercise made Nigeria Africa’s largest economy, with a GDP of approximately $510 billion, surpassing South Africa. Interest in Nigeria as an attractive albeit difficult investment destination predates the surge in GDP, though continued political instability and growing security concerns may make both local and foreign-owned businesses think twice before building and growing operations in the country.

In his paper, The Costs of Terror: The Economic Consequences of Extended Terrorism, written for the Konrad Adenauer Foundation, Adam Klein, an associate with the Washington DC-based law firm, Wilmer Hale, concluded that terrorists can harm economies by reducing consumer and investor confidence; forcing governments to invest in security, which reduces efficiency in key vulnerable industries such as transport and trade, among others, and redirects investment from more productive sectors; and potentially triggering wider geopolitical, religious or ethnic conflict, causing further economic disruptions.

At this point, the biggest economic casualty of terrorism in Nigeria has been interstate trade. An increase in Boko Haram activity over the past five years has seen scores of businessmen – particularly those of southern origin or Christian faith – relocate from Nigeria's northeastern regions to other parts of the country. Their exit, in addition to a federally mandated state of emergency rule, has hampered the local economy in Adamawa, Borno, and Yobe states where Boko Haram has been most active. Other northern states like Kano and Kaduna have also been impacted. Businesses with operations in the North, among them banks, transportation and telecommunications companies, have at times suspended operations because of an inability to provide security for their employees. Business does not thrive under siege.

According to the Performance Standards detailed by the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA), a unit of the World Bank Group, investors do not have a solid base for doing business in a given environment if government is unable to assess and manage environmental and social risks and impacts and to safeguard and secure investments. Although reports indicate that business confidence in the country still remains relatively high, if Nigeria cannot check growing security concerns and guarantee a safe business environment, investors may look elsewhere. Nigeria need only look to Kenya, where the Somali Al Shabaab terrorist insurgency has taken its toll on a previously robust tourism industry, leading to a reduction in GDP as dwindling numbers of tourists reduce earnings outlooks in the hospitality industry.

The recent trends have not proven prohibitive for all businesses. At the WEF on Africa some $68 billion in investment was promised to Nigeria, despite the shadow of recent terror attacks. South African retail major, Shoprite, has also defied security concerns by opening its first outlet in the northern commercial hub of Kano, Nigeria’s second largest city.

However, if Boko Haram is not stopped, Shoprite’s move will be the exception in the future. The Nigerian government needs to do more to fight terrorism. It also needs to tackle the underlying causes of terrorism in more subtle ways. In a March 2013 European Scientific Journal publication, Nigerian academics pinpointed economic disenfranchisement and the social malaise bred by poverty and unemployment as root causes of the growing insurgency in Africa's largest economy. Combatting terrorism will take political, military and diplomatic engagement, but the country’s political elite will also have to look at the poverty and desperation that nurture it.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Blasphemy?





”First there was& “is” God; He got bored and decided to create angels.  For some time it was exciting but after a couple of eons with angels praising and worshiping Him and all what not, the routine got boring. Lucifer added some spice with the whole rebellion thing and shook up the place a little but after some eons boredom crept in again…and that was what planted the idea of the creation of man. 
Men were given the power to be gods on earth basically…. They were to rule their lives and destinies and earth however they pleased. Unlike the angels they were not compelled from creation to praise and worship God, they could choose…to serve Him, Lucifer or themselves.
The creation of Man in essence ended the boredom in heaven, because Men and their actions or inactions on earth served as entertainment for all the inhabitants of Heaven; and till this day there has never been a dull moment. “


A movie or a book or something I stumbled into led to the formation of this train of thought.
I like to think I’m a Christian, because as irreligiously barbaric as my childhood was I decided of my own freewill to walk in His ways or at least make a conscious effort to. But it seems that I have never been able to just “accept” some things without questioning them and although I feel guilty and a tad bit abnormal compared to my Christian sisters, I strongly believe that God gave us the power to sieve and muse before making decisions…because 1. It’s funner for our audience and 2. Well if He wanted sheep minded people He wouldn’t have made us the way we are…

The imbalance of our “stage” amongst other things make me wonder…most poor people are lazy but on the other hand a lot of hard working folks are poor and continue to labor in vain till death ends their misery, not all those that seek His kingdom first and obey every word in our rule book have every other thing on earth added onto them. If we are gods on earth to rule the earth as we please, is “every other thing” not fulfillment and the possession of the wealth of earth- our stage? Because when one dies nothing on earth really matters. There’s no point dwelling on suffering right now. I refuse to drift to that state of mind…

Moving on… the Israelites- amusing people- were and might still be God’s favorite and He made sure everyone knew it, which might explain why they always got away with their misdemeanors.  Daring Gentile nations  faced  the consequences of messing with them. They knew He loved them and more often than not they took advantage of that.

A year has almost gone by and BokoHaram, an unreasonable bunch of thwarts, have gotten away with messing with Christians and it just makes me wonder, not about His existence- there’s no question about that- but about the many things He allows happen.

Is it all a game? Is it fair to test someone and push them to their limit just to find out whether or not they are faithful? Or to get upset or term it as “sin” when that person breaks down and gives in to the filth and chaos that our stage is? It’s like taunting a hungry caged  lion  with the aroma and sight of a freshly killed antelope and then placing it in front of the lion to watch it decay…. Should that lion be punished for killing the first person it sees immediately it is set free?

Automobile companies make some vehicles specially to destroy them; test cases.  They choose what vehicles should be sold or destroyed, they decide the forms, shapes, uses, type of fuel…everything.

It is a tad bit reasonable to compare Man to automobiles, He decides what happens in the long run- free will or not. Whether He’ll overlook a man’s flaws or make abrupt judgment, those that are born to occupy space and those that are born to make history. So are we just puppets? Made for amusement?

The One that practically gave His (because they are basically one and the same) life for conceited marionettes … it is somewhat unnerving to conclude that we are just pawns in some bigger stage play He has set to happen in an unforeseeable future…  ‘Tis hard to understand God, for to understand Him fully is to have Him contained, bottled and to ponder that likelihood is futile.

So will I ever become that person with indisputable conviction? At the end of my act will I have fully understood to a content extent, the ways of our Director and His vision for this play?  Will the fear of inflicting His wrath upon myself eventually subdue my endless musings?  Or will I continue being an incessant source of amusement for my audience?

Does anyone share this notion? What are your views on religion and the happenings of the world or anything that seems to have no clear meaning to you? Kindly use the comment box to relay your deliberations.


By An Ally

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Pray and Prey




...traffic of life
Pray and prey...
...comic or strife


By Jefumare © 2012

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Freestyle Praise




One that needs no leverage
That usurps protocol for fledglings
One that is King
Yet dines with the savage
One who condemns not
Who loves, and maketh whole
One who soothes
Even the adamant

One who is, was
And is to be
One whose robes
Healed and still heals
One that directs the traffic of life
My ‘yellow fever’
One that is forever
Making ways to quench my strife

My ‘Baba nla’
He sits quiet
Yet sees it
All, vivid than Plasma
My rock
Steadier than Gibraltar
Holy Spirit His avatar
Dictating o’clock

My God
My sure banker
Steady as ever
I rest assured
My peace
My source
I’ll praise
Your resource

- By Jefumare © 2012

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

How to Praise




How to praise...
Timbrels and drums
Colors of glory
Noise of joy
Laughter, praise, songs
Dancing, drums, cries
Continuous cheers
Pomp, voices, colors, smiles
Echoes of joy, voices on high
Singing, rejoicing
All for His majesty


How to praise...
Silence...
Riveting silence
...And more, cricket wimpers,
Traffic of thoughts
Soliloquoy, sonnetting, stares
Blank stares, million miles,
Metaphorical sunset, Eureka!
Frantic scribbling, plot, imagery
Blazing sunset, rhymes, its all quiet
Our praise is silent
All for His majesty


By Jefumare © 2011

Monday, August 29, 2011

Patience




Patience sits at the corner
patience is Ugly
Patience is sturdy
Patience is order
patience is a New Coat
Patience, favour finds
Patience is kind
patience is Fault and False
patience is Old Garment
patience is Discarded
patience is Impotent
patience is Disregard


Patience is a virtue
Patience pays patience
Patience is a girdle
Patience keeps faith
patience is Harm
Patience is peace
Patience is pain
Patience is truce
Patience is love and life
Patience is pretence


Patience strives
patience is Chance
Patience calms
Patience is hard to swallow
patience Blames
patience is Hollow
Patience is He
Patience is She
Patience is a call
Patience follows


By Jefumare © 2011

Friday, August 19, 2011

Loud Thoughts of an Unfaithful Servant




I wonder...
If I defile
Are my tears vile?
For your love so strong
And your mercy throngs
Yet I long question
Your patient hand,
Its likely span
And tary decide
To heavenly side

Almost always...
I plead your mercy
Awing before thee
Wishing a change
Longing courage
To divest time
Time for heavenly climes
To evenly praise
Not set ablaze
Scrolls before perusal

Till date I...
Want the uncapable
Lust the reachable
Yet with scepter's stroke
Struggles are jokes
Embellished with laughter, plagues of laughter
Yes! At the stroke of His scepter
His patience superceeds
And mercy engulfs besotted greed

I know...
That I'm saved
Yet wander and crave
That which was willed
I tilled and toiled and watered desires
Yet unsure to conquer
Doubts mastered by the master
His faith like a righteous preacher
Condemns not before judgment

I've been...
Here and there
Mind juxtaposed
Doubts and desires
His offer and judgment
But like sky of earth
He lords even in my doubtful faith
I behold; He placates


By Jefumare © 2011