Tag: Pandemic

  • Expert warns of another global pandemic

    Expert warns of another global pandemic

    Dr Ibrahim Abubakar, a professor of infectious diseases at the University College London, says there will be another pandemic and it will not be 100 years from now.

    Abubaksr said this at a meeting of the UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) in New York. He said it was not a question of if, but when, adding that the answer was sooner than anyone wants.

    He said this was because the global healthcare system remained drastically isolated. He noted that a pandemic could not be stopped by one country alone, adding that effective partnerships could stop the next pandemic

    “Infectious diseases will not respect borders,” Abubakar warned.

    He said it was therefore expedient that health systems to ensure equity, dignity and universal access must also be agile to implement policies across borders.

    The infectious diseases expert noted that stopping pandemics and promoting broader global development, required robust partnerships and consistent investment in multilateral systems as a practice, not just an ideal.

    Abubakar noted Member States recently adopted a pandemic prevention treaty which endeavours to limit the likelihood of future pandemics.

    Lok Bahadur Thapa, Vice President of ECOSOC said that if the council was to meet the ambitions of the 2030 Agenda, it must re-imagine cooperation.

    Thapa said cooperation must not be seen as a transactional action but a dynamic, inclusive and future-ready partnership.

    Meanwhile, the High-Level Political Forum (HLPF) on Sustainable Development is convening at UN Headquarters in New York to discuss progress.

    Delegates will also discuss otherwise towards the globally agreed 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    The first 16 SDGs deal with specific aspects of development, such as poverty, gender equality and climate change, however, the 17th puts forward a path to achieve the others.

    This path lies in embracing global partnerships between state governments, civil society organiaations, communities and the private sector.

    SDGs currently has an annual financing gap, which exceeds four trillion dollars, the partnerships of today are not sufficient to realise the goals for tomorrow.

  • WHO releases 6 policy briefs to end COVID-19

    WHO releases 6 policy briefs to end COVID-19

    World Health Organisation (WHO) on Wednesday released six short policy briefs that outline key actions that all governments must take to end the COVID-19 pandemic.

    WHO Director General, Tedros Ghebreyesus, announced this at a news conference at the UN health agency’s headquarters in Geneva.

    He said the policy briefs are based on evidence and experiences of the last 32 months, outlining what works best to save lives, protect health systems, and avoid social and economic disruption.

    He added that the briefs will serve as urgent call for governments to take a hard look at their policies and strengthen them for COVID-19 and future pathogens with pandemic potential.

    He explained that the documents, which are available online, include recommendations regarding vaccination of most at-risk groups, continued testing and sequencing of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, and integrating effective treatment for COVID-19 into primary healthcare systems.

    He, therefore, urged authorities to have plans for future surges, including securing supplies, equipment, and extra health workers.

    The briefs also contain communications advice, including training health workers to identify and address misinformation, as well as creating high-quality informative materials, he added.

    He said WHO had been working since New Year’s Eve 2019 to fight against the spread of COVID-19 “and will continue to do so until the pandemic is truly over.

    “We can end this pandemic together, but only if all countries, manufacturers, communities and individuals step up and seize this opportunity.”

    According to him, as the number of weekly reported deaths from COVID-19 plunged to its lowest since March 2020, the end of the pandemic is now in sight.

    He said “we have never been in a better position to end the pandemic. However, the world is not there yet. A marathon runner does not stop when the finish line comes into view. She runs harder, with all the energy she has left. So must we.

    “We can see the finish line. We’re in a winning position. But now is the worst time to stop running. The policy briefs outline the key actions that all governments must take now to finish the race”.

  • Pandemic Putin power play – By Biola Sobowale

    Pandemic Putin power play – By Biola Sobowale

    By Biola Sobowale

    “Let them hate me, just as long as they fear me.” Lucius Accius, 170-86 BC

    Ordinary power is the ability to make other people behave in ways they ordinarily would not – whether they like it or not. Great power is the ability to make significant impacts on other peoples’ behaviour far beyond the person’s immediate environment. Absolute power, which corrupts absolutely, is the ability to alter the course of human history and relationships among peoples in far-flung areas for ever. Irrespective of what one might think of what he had done; or one’s judgment on the matter, February 22, 2022 and the invasion of Ukraine have immortalised Vladimir Putin, President of Russia, for ever. Henceforth, historians will mention his name in the same breath as those of, Alexander the Great(356-322BC), Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821), Joseph Stalin (1878-1953) and Adolf Hitler (1889-1945) – men who sought to play god after their nation acquired vast military power and they were eager to use it. For leaders like these, might is right. The powerful do what they like; and the weak suffer what they must. Such individuals invariably don’t care what other people think about them. They have ambition; and their mission in life – to become the most powerful person on Earth – is what matters. They are fanatical about that.

    PANDEMIC AND POWER

    “I am making you an offer you cannot refuse.”

    Mafia Boss to Store Owner in Brooklyn, New York, 1967.

    A Nigeria friend was working for a successful corner Supermarket, in Brooklyn, N.Y, owned by a Chinese gentleman when one day, the local Mafia kingpin entered with six armed hoodlums. He had a contract to buy the supermarket at a particular price; which he wanted the owner to sign immediately. The Chinese looked at the amount offered; it was about half the value. He started to refuse it. One of the hoodlums jabbed a gun in his side. The kingpin hissed at the victim. “I am making you an offer you cannot refuse.” To make sure the store owner got the message; one of the hoodlums pumped bullets into a shelf of expensive wines. Very meekly, the man signed. The shop immediately changed ownership. Putin was making Ukraine an offer the small neighbouring country could not refuse without serious consequences.

    Power-mongers, like Putin, affect us like a pandemic because, once they strike, the impact if felt world-wide in one form or another. For instance, the world is just crawling out of the economic depression resulting from COVID-19 and Omicron. Supply chains are gradually being re-established and factories are humming again with activities.

    Then the war in Ukraine started. It will reverse a lot of the post-COVID gains; this time with hyper-inflation as a certainty in most countries. Prices of crude oil and gas are climbing faster than any time since 1973. Most oil producing nations will benefit; but, most countries in the world will suffer. Nigeria will be among the worst hit. Whereas, most Nigerians think higher crude oil prices will be favourable to us, economists know that we are heading for a major economic distress if crude oil price keeps rising. Here is why.

    Our production level is low and cannot be increased because rig count is at its lowest. We export crude oil and import, not only petrol, but finished products resulting from refining. They cost several times more per litre than crude oil. Right now, Nigeria is at the risk of paying more for fuel imports than we earn from crude exports. That calamity will constitute our own collateral damage on account of Putin’s War. Every single Nigerian will feel the impact. And in case you think this is a false alarm then read this.

    “Nigeria can’t celebrate $103/barrel oil price due to low production – FG”

    Mr Timipre Sylva, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources explained the economic paradox to Nigerians this way.

    “So for us who are the net importers it is also not very good for us…if you are now producing less and then you still have to make sure that the Nigerian market is supplied fully with petroleum products, then you will see that there will be a shortfall [in net oil revenue].”

    Let me explain that in plain language. The higher the price of crude climbs the more the Nigerian economy will suffer. Blame it all on Putin; but he doesn’t care.

    PERSONAL ATTRIBUTES OF POWER-MONGERS

    “Power and money, of course, drive people crazy. So, why shouldn’t people also gain power and wealth through being crazy?”

    Saul Bellow, 1918-2005, VANGUARD BOOK OF QUOTATIONS, VBQ p 195.

    If you think hard enough about the powerful and wealthy people you know, you might be surprised to realise how many of them are “abnormal”. They do and say things which other well-adjusted people shrink from virtually all the time.

    Short man Devil was a human species known before Christ and Mohamed trod this planet. It will exist as long as there is homo sapiens on Earth. Size apparently matters. All the four men mentioned above – Alexander, Napoleon, Stalin, Hitler — were on the average, short for their generation. Putin is no exception. Look at a picture of world leaders, with Putin among them. Compared to Biden, Turkey President Erdogan, Chinese Xi and our President Buhari, Putin is almost a midget. But, he is the most feared President in the world; because he can do (and does) what no other President would think of doing. And, he dares the victim(s) to retaliate. In fact, as Sir Tagore,1861-1941, had said “Power takes as ingratitude the writhing of its victims.” So, as far as Putin is concerned, the rest of us wretched human beings are ungrateful for not appreciating his genius and greatness. He will be remembered by history; his exploits will be studied in universities and military academies until the end of time. We are supposed to applaud this performance, to thank God to be alive to witness this great atrocity — instead of grumbling about it. It is almost certain that if Hitler were to re-incarnate he will perfect his act and create a bigger Holocaust; kill more people before going down again. Incidentally, the only global leader who recognised Putin’s “genius” was US Ex-President Donald Trump – another screw-ball.

    Powerful individuals like him don’t regard their citizen as human beings; only tools to be used to satisfy their, quite frequently, unhidden ambitions. Whether there are 100 million or 1.5 billion; they represent so many assets to be sacrificed for one man’s ambition, or place in history. That is why the first thing they do is to enslave their own people. Everything they do, every step they take is approved unanimously by zombies.

    “An ambassador is an honest man sent to lie abroad for his country.”

    Sir Henry Wotton, 1568-1639.

    Foreign Ministers still go round the world lying just as they did more than 400 years ago. But, in this case, it is doubtful if the Russian Foreign Minister was ever honest. Dictators don’t want honest men around them. They select people like Hitler’s Joseph Goebbels, 1897-1945 – for whom no falsehood is too much.

    Thus, once Putin made up his mind to wipe out Ukraine, all the lies and pretensions by his Foreign Affairs Minister, and Putin himself were designed to buy time for Russia to finish its plans for the invasion. The Foreign Minister went about assuring the world that there was no plan to attack. A lot of deluded people believed him – including Ukranians. By January this year, I was telling anybody and everybody that Russia would invade. Simple-minded individuals argued with me and were convinced that the issue could still be negotiated. My Personal Assistant, Korede, has a friend in Kyiv who was in touch almost daily. During a call, three days to the start of war, I asked Korede to tell her and other Nigerians to leave as fast as they could. She replied that Kyiv was calm and no war was expected. Now, they are all trapped. Yet, Putin does not give a damn if Nigerians, South Africans or Norwegians die by the thousand as a result of his war. They are all expendable. It is his ambition that counts. Now, several Nigerian families are now in distress. The kids they joyfully sent to Ukraine might return home; a lot of money lost and kids education suffer as a result.

    WHAT TO EXPECT NEXT

    “Brute force without wisdom falls by its own weight.” Horace, 65-8BC, VBQ 63.

    This article started two days after Russia invadedUkraine as I expected. The first part is being ended a week after the war started in earnest. Fighting is still going on. But, the drama is not going as Putin has scripted it. Within four days of fighting, the Ukranians have demonstrated more guts and grits than the war-monger expected. Their resistance must have reminded Putin of Russia’a own defiance of Nazi Germany’s overwhelming power during the Second World War, WWII. In the Battle of Stalingrad, August 1942-February 1943, the Russians faced the worst barrage of any nation in St Petersburg, later called Stalingrad, but, they eventually overcame the stronger Germans in the end. Between Hitler’s and Stalin’s forces, close to 8 million Europeans died during WWII. They didn’t care.

    Not surprising, the over-confident Putin seen on television screens globally has given way to a confused and more desperate one. He cannot lose this war. But, absolute victory is now appearing out of reach. So, he made the first attempt to re-organise. He suggested negotiation with the Ukrainian leader in Belarus. It was a crude attempt to achieve easy victory. The offer was refused because once the Ukrainian President landed in Belarus, he would have been arrested and forced to surrender, and, at best, would have been allowed to go into exile. Most likely, he would have been executed as a “war criminal” and a puppet government would have been installed in Ukraine. Prolonged war became inevitable; which is exactly what Putin does not want.

    The global response to the invasion was also more overwhelming than Putin expected; and the economic sanctions are hurting Russians than he anticipated. Like a kidnapper cornered, he has raised the risks to the entire world.

    “There are no desperate situations; only desperate men.” (Goebbels).

    Since the United States dropped two atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, to bring WWII to a quick end, every country in possession of nuclear weapons, has deliberately avoided talking about using them irrespective of how tough the situation had been for them militarily. The US lost the Viet Nam war; and, lately, the one in Afghanistan without ever mentioning nuclear arsenal. But, that is because the US has never had a leader like Putin. His order for Russian nuclear defences to be placed on high alert was nothing less than a signal to the world that nothing is forbidden in this war. He would rather take millions of people worldwide down with him than go down in defeat alone. Again, that is not surprising.

    The reason for his new threat is easy to understand. Even an absolute dictator recognises that he is not God. Among his closest and trusted aides are people envious of his power, infuriated by some of his policies and who are aware of how much his personal security costs the country. They want to take him out – if they can. But, with his iron-grip on power, they need a divine opportunity such as the Ukraine adventure. Putin has taken a gamble which is hurting every Russian very badly; and, it cannot be covered up. So, he must succeed or be in trouble at home. He must continue fighting, even escalating the conflict into a global confrontation, as a prelude to a negotiated settlement which will provide him with the excuse to retrace his steps without much loss of face or clout.

    In that connection, he would need the reluctant help of the European and American governments. They should now be preparing a set of proposals which might be interpreted as a win-win settlement to help Putin save face. He is, at any rate, now a globally despised man. NATO and neutral nations in Europe, which became scared of the Russians, after WWII, should acknowledge, the legitimate concerns of Russia, despite Putin’s personal characteristics. The United States, in particular, should remember the response of late US President John Kennedy, 1917-1963, to the presence of Russian missiles stationed in Cuba in the 1960s. America declared it unacceptable and was prepared to go to war – if need be with nuclear weapons. President Biden should be honest enough to admit that America would not allow any powerful nation, acting under any alliance to place weapons within 40 kilometres of its territory. Why should they expect Russia to act differently?

    Putin’s major faults in all these include his impatience with diplomacy; and his bully’s instinct. For people like Putin, “there is no dispute which a punch in the nose cannot resolves.”

     

    To be continues….

  • Nigeria could have been worse – Buhari’s aide, Onochie

    Nigeria could have been worse – Buhari’s aide, Onochie

    Aide to President Muhammadu Buhari, Lauretta Onochie has said the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic could have been worse in the country if not for the President.

    The Personal Assistant to President Buhari on New Media stated this on Tuesday, comparing the impact of the pandemic in Nigeria to other countries.

    Onochie stated that the Nigerian President managed the pandemic well and was able to minimise the hardship occasioned by the pandemic.

    “I recently travelled to the United Kingdom. Some Major brand shops have closed down. Those open, have closed many branches. Some are now only online. I couldn’t find my desired mobile phone to buy.

    “People have lost and are still losing their jobs. I know and spoke to some people, who have lost their homes already. It’s a sad situation in the UK as it is in the USA. Prices have gone up. From about £8 an hour to hire a cleaner, its now £14 an hour. But they all rightly blame the Pandemic, not PM Boris Johnson nor Pres. Joe Biden.

    “Nigeria is part of the global community devastated by pandemic, but Nigeria is better than most. Let’s be supportive. Nigeria’s Pres. Buhari has managed and minimised the hardship occasioned by the pandemic. It could have been worse,” Onochie stated.

  • Pandemic lockdowns leave $10trn hole in global economy

    Pandemic lockdowns leave $10trn hole in global economy

    A strong rebound this year would still leave the world down with an estimated 10 trillion dollars due to the coronavirus pandemic and lockdowns, according to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD).

    Although the global economy could expand by 4.7 per cent in 2021, it would nonetheless wind up “short of 10 trillion dollars,” about twice Japan’s gross domestic product (GDP), compared to if the pandemic had never happened.

    “Last year, the global economy posted its sharpest annual drop in output since statistics on aggregate economic activity were introduced in the early 1940s,” UNCTAD said on Thursday.

    While wealthy economies have proposed huge damage-limitation fiscal spending, such as the U.S. 1.9-trillion-dollar “stimulus package,” and while China returned to growth in late 2020, people in smaller and poorer countries are struggling, UNCTAD warned.

    Developing countries are bearing the brunt of the downturn due to “limited fiscal space, tightening balance of payments constraints and inadequate international support,’’ leading to some of the largest personal income drops relative to GDP.

    “Even a small downturn in economic activity can be devastating,” UNCTAD said, describing fallout from pandemic restrictions as predictably severe in developing economies such as the Philippines and Malaysia.

    On Thursday, UNCTAD also upped its earlier prediction of 4.3-per-cent global growth in 2021, citing a possible “stronger recovery in the United States.”

    In January, the World Bank said the global economy could grow by 4 per cent in 2021, while the International Monetary Fund opted for a rosier 5.5 per cent.

  • COVID-19 pandemic unlikely to end in 2021 – WHO

    COVID-19 pandemic unlikely to end in 2021 – WHO

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) says it is unlikely the Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic will end in 2021.

    “I think it will be very premature and unrealistic to think that we are going to finish with this virus by the end of the year.

    “What we can finish with – if we are smart – is hospitalisations, deaths and the tragedy associated with this pandemic,’’ Mr Michael Ryan, Director of WHO’s health emergencies programme, said at a news conference on Tuesday.

    Ryan said that WHO’s focus at present was to keep transmissions as low as possible and vaccinate more and more people.

    According to the official, delivery of vaccine doses has improved compared to 10 weeks ago although there are `huge challenges’ in distributing them.

    “If the vaccines begin to impact not only on death and hospitalisation, but have a significant impact on transmission dynamics and transmission risk, then I believe we will accelerate toward controlling this pandemic,’’ Ryan said.

  • How eating less meat can help reduce risk of pandemic

    How eating less meat can help reduce risk of pandemic

    Eating less meat can help reduce the risk of a pandemic, in addition to saving the environment, the UN Environment Programme said on Wednesday.

    The programme said this while announcing a new Chatham House report.

    “At a time when so much of the world continues to battle the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s never been more obvious that the well-being of people and animals, wild and farmed, are intertwined,” said Philip Lymbery, of Compassion in World Farming, which also backed the think tank.

    If ecosystems continue to be destroyed, the population’s food supply will be at risk, they warned.

    A move towards more plant-based foods are necessary to ensure biodiversity loss will not accelerate, they add.

    In addition, more land needs to be protected, and agriculture needs to become more environmentally friendly, they said.

    Natural ecosystems have been increasingly converted into arable land and pasture in recent decades, leading to loss of animal habitats.

    “The intensive farming of billions of animals globally seriously damages the environment, causing loss of biodiversity and producing massive greenhouse gas emissions that accelerate global warming,” said famed primatologist Jane Goodall in the UNEP statement.

  • Bayern punish player for getting tattoo during pandemic

    Bayern punish player for getting tattoo during pandemic

    Bayern Munich dropped World Cup winner Corentin Tolisso on Saturday and hit the France midfielder with an undisclosed “heavy” fine for breaking their hygiene rules during the coronavirus pandemic by getting a tattoo.

    “Corentin Tolisso has violated our guidelines… which is very annoying and cannot be tolerated,” Bayern chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge fumed in a statement on Saturday.

    “We are very grateful that the Bundesliga games can currently take place despite the prevailing coronavirus situation.”

    The 26-year-old central midfielder, who won the 2018 World Cup with France, was dropped for Saturday’s home league game against Hoffenheim.

    Having “gotten a tattoo this week”, Tolisso broke the club’s strict hygiene rules, designed to limit the players contact outside the squad during the pandemic.

    A video was posted on Friday which showed Tolisso getting a tattoo on his right forearm while not wearing a protective mouth-and-nose mask.

    Tattoo parlours in Germany are currently closed due to the current lockdown.

    According to the European champions, the Frenchman has been handed a “heavy fine”.

    Sports director Hasan Salihamidzic told Sky that Tolisso “knows he made a mistake. He will receive a fine that we will donate to charity. It’s a fine he will feel.”

    In Tolisso’s absence, Marc Roca partnered Joshua Kimmich in the central midfield against Hoffenheim.

    Bayern already have midfielders Leon Goretzka and Javi Martinez in quarantine after contracting COVID-19.

  • 2020: An Alternative View – Issa Aremu

    By Issa Aremu

    Perhaps no year in our generation has been so smeared like 2020! We are witnesses to a “Year abuse” as it were. Witness some smear newspaper headlines: “Year of Coronavirus”, “Year of Face-masks” , “2020: What a Year!” , “Year of Deaths”, “Year of Kidnappers”, “Year of Bandits” ad Infinitum.

    Obviously 2020 was a year of “death expectancy” as distinct from life expectancy envisaged by United Nation Development Programme (UNDP). Every body must have known somebody who also knew somebody who sadly caved in to the Covid: 19 (2020 trademark!).

    Same for banditry of varying hues and the cruelty it wrecked on lives and livelihoods. But even at that, an additional smear of the year of adversity will be one smear too addictive. Indeed serial smears and name callings of this year only further point to its significance and uniqueness in Gregorian Calendar.

    The 193- Member States United Nations (UN) was founded in 1945 on the ruins of World War II. Does any body still remember that the 75th anniversary of the global body is ongoing as much as we all must dutifully wear the face mask against a rampaging Virus in 2020? United Nations in its 75 years is yet to successfully rally members states against the scourge of war as contained in its high-sounding Charter dealing with global peace and global justice. On the contrary, dis(United) Nations (apology to Fela ) has supervised more deadly wars than the WW1 and WW11, inclusive of forgotten wars in Africa.

    But a single year: 2020 has energized entire humanity on preservation of lives and livelihoods on a scale never witnessed with unprecedented sense of urgency, sincerity of purpose. 2020 has reset the world to rightly allocate scarce resources from the wasteful weapons of mass destruction to worthy feverishly search for vaccine production. With all it’s woes, 2020 is the year of “vaccine sovereignty” as opposed to “vaccine dependency” as every nation searches saves its citizens’ lives first. Interestingly nobody saw this year coming.

    2020 escaped all predictions of pundits, armed chair soothsayers and forecasters. The Israeli bestseller Yuval Noah in his thought provocative book brought to the fore : “21 Lessons for the 21st Century” with respect to religion, immigration, equality, justice, liberty and terrorism. Interestingly he conspicuously missed out on lessons from the bagful of past pandemics such as Third Cholera Pandemic (1852–1860), Flu Pandemic (1889-1890) Sixth Cholera Pandemic (1910-1911)Asian Flu (1956-1958), Flu Pandemic (1918) and HIV/AIDS Pandemic! 2020 has brought out the point: it’s not yet the end of history of afflictions for humanity. The annual Special Edition of the British Economist is my favorite “window” through which I peep into every new year with respect to trends and scenarios about global political economy.

    Hamish McRae (Journalist and Author,) in an article entitled: “The long view: Lessons from a past attempt to look far ahead” made a bold attempt at visioning for the next 30 years last year. In the Economist’s (THE WORLD IN 2020) edition, he offered “five predictions”; “There will be 10 billion people in the world”, “China will be clearly the world’s largest economy” though it’s “ ageing and declining population” would make it insular, “Some three-quarters of the world’s population will be middle- class” , “The United States will remain the most vibrant, outward looking and wealthy region in effect winning the tussle with China for global influence”, “Technological advances will enable the world to give Decent lifestyle to most of its 10bn” .

    No real prediction: Covid:19. Of course in the wake of Covid: 19 first and second wave resurgence, “visions” had turned to be mere fictions. “Nobody knows tomorrow” after all as a popular singer once put it. Year 2020 has truly demystified the “visions” of the “The British Economist’s “futurists” and exposed them for what they were: wishful thoughts! In the entire 142-paged edition, on what 2050 would look like, no single mention of the word: “epidemic” . Covid: 19 had infected some 82.1 million humans.

    With 19.4 million infected people and a quarter of global deaths of some 1.79 million humans ( America’s 336 fatalities!), and an outgoing rouge President, (presiding over cemeteries), certainly the United States is far from being the “most vibrant, outward looking and wealthy region” in 2020 as predicted . In the new year, we must have a critical look at received wisdoms.

    2020 shows that Africans must be weary of dictatorship of “suggestions”, “predictions” or “visions”. The latest “prediction” about Nigeria is the editorial comment of ““Financial Times of London of 22nd of December ” according to which Nigeria as a country ….” “is plagued with terrorism, illiteracy, poverty, banditry, and kidnapping and risks becoming a failed state if things don’t take a drastic turn”. The UK-based newspaper in an editorial titled, ‘Nigeria at Risk of Becoming a Failed State’ cited abductions and subsequent rescue of over 300 schoolboys in Kankara, Katsina State, which revived memories of the 276 Chibok schoolgirls abducted in Borno State in 2014 as signs of “a failing state”. FT was “even academic” with Nigeria. It offered a 101 definition of a failed state:. According to it “the definition of a failed state is one where the government is no longer in control”.

    “By this yardstick, Africa’s most populous country is teetering on the brink” Really? Pray and let’s see beyond this simplistic smear of a country by FT! There is a new deadly variant of Coronavirus in UK in the last two weeks. This development had spiked the infection rates to some 2.3 millions and as many as almost 72,000 deaths in Britain. If we add the chaotic Brexit, hasn’t Bori Johnson government not lost control? Can’t we by FT’s rule of thump say UK is a failed state just as Nigeria lost control over serial abductions? 2020 has commendably exposed the fallacy of the Eurocentric patronizing selective concept of “a failed state” to explain the challenges of development in Africa. Please don’t get me wrong. I daily live the bitter experiences of insecurity, incoherent and self serving ruling elite, electricity failure, greed and corruption, policy dictatorships of IMF and World Bank.

    But which country has no citizens watching their backs in the age of a pandemic and scandalous global bad governance ? With all the technological break through and celebrated artificial intelligence, 2020 has exposed the underbelly and gross limitations of our world. If the whole world got locked down and buckled to an ubiquitous Virus, does it make ours a failed world? As we move into a new year with all it’s old baggages, it’s time Africans were optimistic about the prospects of good governance, democracy, deeper democracy ( NOT any other forms of unelected governments) and development if the continent would eradicate poverty in the 21st century. The state actors and civil society in Africa must reject pessimistic received wisdom which often declared Africa countries “failed states” through magnified challenges of development.

    2020 dramatized it all: It’s an open knowledge that the world is ravaged by a Virus pandemic. But nobody was eager to damn America “a failed state” for the mess it made of the Virus management just as it did for its 2020 elections the outcome of which incumbent Donald Trump is yet to accept. 2020 was a year most African countries got independence. 60 years after independence. The point cannot be overstated: sustainable development is only possible with optimistic perspective that must be critical of “Euro- centric concept of failed state”. Social science concepts are not value- free. If Africans say they are making progress, we possibly will work for more progress. But if all we assume is nothing but addictive failures, down loaded smears, then there will be resignation and despair, the unhelpful trade marks of underdevelopment. May 2021 promise better opportunities worthy of praises.

    Issa Aremu mni