October 06, 2025
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  • Prof Tunde Adeniran, Our Teacher, Scholar, Politician and Foreign Policy Expert, is 80 Years Old
  • Prof Tunde Adeniran, Our Teacher, Scholar, Politician and Foreign Policy Expert, is 80 Years Old
  • The Roots and Ills of Godfatherism in Third World Politics
  • Botswana Ends America’s Decade-long Dominance in the 4×400 Men’s Relay
  • Explaining the Decline of Oxford and Cambridge in the 2026 ‘Good University’ Guide
  • Critical Moments in Nigerian Power Elite’s 5-Hour, Non-Stop Tributes to Chief Audu Ogbeh
  • Bongos Ikwue, Others to Perform @ ‘Evening of Tributes’ for Chief Audu Ogbeh in Abuja
  • Our Weapon Against Death: Towards a National Farewell to Chief Audu Ogbeh
  • An Enjoyable Afternoon at Quay de Cologny in Geneva
  • Nigeria’s Retreat from Constructive Engagement in the Israel-Palestinian Conflict
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Is Mohammed Hayutu-Deen, Indeed, the Contender to Beat in 2023?

Posted By: adminon: May 08, 2022In: LifeworldTags: AfDB, APC, Atiku Abubakar, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, CBN, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, Dr Goodluck Jonathan, Gov Babagana Zulum, Hon. Yakubu Dogara, NNDC, PDP, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, Uba SirajoNo CommentsViews:
Is Mohammed Hayutu-Deen, Indeed, the Contender to Beat in 2023?

The struggle for the Office of the President of Nigeria has become so crowded an affair that this series which started with Alhaji Ahmed Bola Tinubu December 16h, 2021 has barely progressed... Read more

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The World Awaits Mary Robinson’s Verdict on Akinwumi Adesina Amidst Claims of ‘Transparent Imperialism’

Posted By: adminon: July 03, 2020In: World From AfricaTags: AfDB, crisis of African agency in international politics, great power politics in Africa, international finance, ‘Transparent imperialism’No CommentsViews:
The World Awaits Mary Robinson’s Verdict on Akinwumi Adesina Amidst Claims of ‘Transparent Imperialism’

Generally regarded as a “neutral, honest, high-calibre” personality, Mary Robinson’s leadership of the three-person team reviewing allegations of ethical breaches against the president of th... Read more

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Nigeria’s Democratic Backsliding

Posted By: adminon: December 17, 2019In: BookspaceTags: AfDB, Code of Conduct Tribunal, Nancy Bermeo, Rosa Luxemburg, Social Media Bill, Universal Declaration of Human RightsNo CommentsViews:
Nigeria's Democratic Backsliding

In this piece, the author argues a thesis of democratic backsliding. Even those who may not like the piece for whatever reasons will admire the writer: a Nigeria undergraduate today writing... Read more

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Isyaku Dikko and Yakubu Aliyu Join in Unpacking Ibrahim Muazzam

Posted By: adminon: November 10, 2018In: BookspaceTags: AfDB, CITAD, DBN1 CommentViews:
Isyaku Dikko and Yakubu Aliyu Join in Unpacking Ibrahim Muazzam

Isyaku Dikko and Yakubu Aliyu might not have met but they share a same trajectory. Both were academics, then moved into journalism before moving into technocracy. Each has sent a response to... Read more

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AfDB’s Akin Adesina on Emir of Kano and the Emir’s Combustible Grand Strategy

Posted By: adminon: May 29, 2018In: World From AfricaTags: AfDB, DRC, The Coming Anarchy, UmqombothiNo CommentsViews:
AfDB's Akin Adesina on Emir of Kano and the Emir's Combustible Grand Strategy

It is a bit long but never boring video, from start to finish. There is the appetizer in what his host, Dr Akinwumi Adesina, the President of the Africa Development Bank, (AfDB), said about the emir at the beginning of the video. The pair speaks to the Nigerian paradox- united abroad, divided at home! There is the main meal and we can lump the rest into the deserts. Economists hardly agree on even the most central issues in their discipline.  But Muhammadu Sanusi 11, the incumbent Emir of Kano in Nigeria’s speech provides a useful checklist that can move forward the conversation on the African crisis. The Afrocentric verve here and there, the privileging of industrialisation and the advocacy for an African review of the China phenomenon define the grand strategy to the presentation.

There are many who will go after the emir after watching this video. Philosophers would certainly be one of those because he has splashed mud on a key fascination for them. Local protagonists of  unchecked neo-liberalism would certainly not be happy with him because he is contesting the space from within with a new orthodoxy. But this video would also have its fans, in fact, the majority although what the video demands is beyond fandom. It is not for fans or haters of the emir but for thinkers. It is a tough video, from the technical difficulty of uploading it from YouTube here to the content in terms of the silent debate on the mess in which Africa is.

One of China’s statements in developmentalism

In fact, Africa is a threat to all now – to the poor, powerless humanity trapped in its poverty as well as to the rest of the world, at least the Western world. That is what Western authors such as Robert Kaplan articulated in his widely read book in the international policy mill – The Coming Anarchy. But an African Political Scientist of note has equally said that, since SAP, much of African countries are either at war or just coming out of war or just about entering war. That was in 2005 and nothing has changed. In 2018, three of the continent’s much talked about powerhouses-Nigeria, South Africa and Egypt – are in crisis. The newer power houses such as Ethiopia and Kenya are not at peace either. Beyond Rwanda and Botswana, there are no such great sustainable success stories. The never ending war in the DRC must be the continent’s greatest embarrassment that such a rich land could be turned into a permanent waste of human beings since independence, engineered and sustained by forces Africa is too weak to do anything about. Add South Sudan to that and it is time to go drink Umqombothi because, as the street wisdom goes, he who drinks goes to sleep and he who is asleep escapes committing sins, thereby paving the way for admission into Heaven.

As far as this video is concerned, Emir Sanusi is worth listening to at all party headquarters, think tanks, universities, NGOs, media houses and so on for sketching out what is clearly a grand strategy for de-securitising Africa. The video has touched an ensemble: from the knowledge requirement for industrial leap, the technocratic requirement, the energy framework,  the inter-African trade necessity, the imperative for responding to negative corruption perception rating, an Afrocentric re-conceptualisation of the migration imbroglio, his models of critical or sensitive governance in Africa and the bad guys thereto, the need to undo the interior-coastal differential in African development, Dangote’s strategy of conquering challenges of industrial investment in the era of the famished presence of state-based elbow room and a host of such critical themes. It is debatable but there is a sense in which the video can be comfortably reduced to his point about the imperative for an African re-engagement with China vis-a-vis getting it right.

That point ought to have been a running debate across Africa, not the current continental silence. Even for curiosity sake, China since 1978 ought to be well understood across the continent. 1978 was when the ‘liberals’ miraculously succeeded in taking over and reworking orthodoxy in favour of an assemblage of ideas, models and expertise from wherever, following the paradigm of welcoming cats of all colors, provided they caught mice. It could have gone either way. Today, it is such a phenomenal success story which no one has provided an apt enough phrase to capture. As late as last March at the 19th China Development Forum, Stephen Roach of Yale University said “No large developing economy has ever done what China has done …, transforming itself into the world’s most powerful export machine”. Roland Berger, founder and former head of the global strategy consulting firm by that name agreed with Roach by saying that China had confounded every forecast about it in the last 40 years and it had become uninviting to predict what could happen next. Mark Moody-Stuart, former head of Shell simply said China from 1978 is a story in “astonishing achievement” and thus the role model that other developing countries cannot but be interested in, mentioning Africa in particular.

It is against this background that what the Emir said at the May end Board of Governors meeting of the African Development Bank, (AfDB) in Busan, South Korea must be subject of further debate. Although he used Nigeria a lot to illustrate most of his claims, many of his listeners felt he was speaking to the situation in their own country:

 

 

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Would Resurgent Pan-Africanism Crush the ‘Majimbo’ Virus in the Restructuring Campaign?

Posted By: adminon: July 13, 2017In: SpectacleTags: AfDB, Akosombo Dam, Amilcar Cabral, ASUU, CODESRIA, ECA, Frantz Fanon, INEC, Julius Nyerere, Kwame Nkrumah, Prof Patrick Lumumba, Professor Dzodzi TsikataNo CommentsViews:
Would Resurgent Pan-Africanism Crush the 'Majimbo' Virus in the Restructuring Campaign?

Where would be the meeting point of two observable but contrasting claims on the future of the state in Africa? Would they meet at war or is it something that would be resolved by the dialec... Read more

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Were They Not Talking About Nigeria in 2019 From Kigali in 2014?

Posted By: adminon: July 03, 2017In: SpectacleTags: Addis Ababa, AfDB, Benjamin Mkapa, Dlamini-Zuma, Mo Ibrahim, olusegun Obasanjo, Paul Kagame, Thabo Mbeki, William RutoNo CommentsViews:
Were They Not Talking About Nigeria in 2019 From Kigali in 2014?

This video below is enigmatic. When it landed for Intervention on June 29th, 2017, one initial response to our inquiry was that the event in the video took place in Addis Ababa the previous... Read more

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Where Obasanjo and Thabo Mbeki Got It Wrong – Prof. Nzongola-Ntalaja (Part 1)

Posted By: adminon: June 25, 2017In: SpectacleTags: 'China in Africa', AfDB, Aluko Olokun, Amilcar Cabral, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, Chris Hani, Cyril Ramaphosa, Dr Kwame Nkrumah, ECA, Frantz Fanon, GEAR, Julius Nyerere, Lagos Plan of Action, NELSON MANDELA, NEPAD, Pan-Africanism, Prof Abubakar Momoh, Prof Okello Oculi, Prof Said Adejumobi, RDP, Thabo Mbeki, UNDP, University of SussexNo CommentsViews:
Where Obasanjo and Thabo Mbeki Got It Wrong - Prof. Nzongola-Ntalaja (Part 1)

*Poverty reduction is an indecent expression *No country in the world has developed without state Intervention in the economy *Africa has no alternative to the Lagos Plan of Action *If Chris... Read more

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What Can the AU Peace Fund Do for Africa’s Conflict Epidemic?

Posted By: adminon: May 23, 2017In: SpectacleTags: AfDB, AU Peace Fund, Donald Kaberuka, ECOWAS, UMOANo CommentsViews:
What Can the AU Peace Fund Do for Africa's Conflict Epidemic?

The question has been asked as to whether violent conflicts is endemic in the African or a product of conflict management failure. Consciously or otherwise, Africa tends to be constantly res... Read more

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Recent Posts

Prof Tunde Adeniran, Our Teacher, Scholar, Politician and Foreign Policy Expert, is 80 Years Old
Prof Tunde Adeniran, Our Teacher, Scholar, Politician and Foreign Policy Expert, is 80 Years Old

Prof Tunde Adeniran, Our Teacher, Scholar, Politician and Foreign Policy Expert, is 80 Years Old

September 30, 2025
Prof Tunde Adeniran, Our Teacher, Scholar, Politician and Foreign Policy Expert, is 80 Years Old
Prof Tunde Adeniran, Our Teacher, Scholar, Politician and Foreign Policy Expert, is 80 Years Old

Prof Tunde Adeniran, Our Teacher, Scholar, Politician and Foreign Policy Expert, is 80 Years Old

September 30, 2025
The Roots and Ills of Godfatherism in Third World Politics
The Roots and Ills of Godfatherism in Third World Politics

The Roots and Ills of Godfatherism in Third World Politics

September 30, 2025
Botswana Ends America’s Decade-long Dominance in the 4x400 Men’s Relay
Botswana Ends America’s Decade-long Dominance in the 4x400 Men’s Relay

Botswana Ends America’s Decade-long Dominance in the 4×400 Men’s Relay

September 29, 2025
Explaining the Decline of Oxford and Cambridge in the 2026 ‘Good University’ Guide
Explaining the Decline of Oxford and Cambridge in the 2026 ‘Good University’ Guide

Explaining the Decline of Oxford and Cambridge in the 2026 ‘Good University’ Guide

September 24, 2025

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