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Thursday, 12 April 2018

ShortStory I Smart Genius


SMART GENIUS

        “Mister Ken,” Adamu called. “Why were you not on seat yesterday?” He furiously queried.

           Mr. Adamu Danjuwa was the Human Resources Manager (HRM) of Capricon manufacturing company.

         Between late eighties (1980s) and early nineties (1990s), Capricon was undoubtedly a very notable firm across the federation that everyone, even an imbecile that existed within the stated period, could testify to the fact. Even beyond the period in question, Capricon Nigeria Limited as it was fondly called based on what was inscribed on its major signpost in line with its incorporation, never relented in making the general public and the society at large feel its impact to the extent that it was rated and widely recognized as the best among equals. To say the least, it never tolerated any excuses from its staff when it called for business right from when it was incorporated in 1985, June precisely.

         The company, which was mainly into cosmetics production particularly soap, cream and perfume, understood that the consumers come first before any other person or thing. This was why their products which were popularly known as Danza soap, Danza Cream, Danza perfume as well as Danza body spray remained cosmetics that any rational being wanted to behold.

         To assert that Adamu was one of the brains behind the prospect of the company is an understatement; Adamu who was one of the pioneer members of the firm, was one of the best three personnel, if not the overall best, the company could reckon with owing to his outstanding and brilliant contributions toward its enviable growth.

         On his part, Mr. Ken Okafor who joined the firm barely a year back was a staff of the Marketing department. On that fateful day, he was being queried due to truancy; he couldn’t make it to the office the previous day as a result of circumstances beyond his control and Mr. Adamu Danjuma was really mad over the attitude. Ken was actually ill on that day, so he decided to take a rest without even making effort to notify the management.

        “I was sick, sir.” He responded apprehensively.

         He was standing directly opposite Adamu who was seated in his office.

        “Sick…?”Adamu ranted.

          Mr. Danjuma’s furious physiognomy was not really prompted by Mr.  Ken’s absence but owing to the fact that the management was kept in the dark by the man in question. He absorbed the nonchalant act as a letdown which was tantamount to dismissal based on the company’s rules.

         “Yes sir,” Ken replied, remained jittery. “I suddenly fell ill and there was no way I could reach the company.”

          Though there was nothing like GSM during the era but Ken was meant to send a message across through any available means, probably a relative or friend. The fact was that he took the consequence of the act for granted.

         “You amuse me, Ken.”

           Ken quickly adjusted himself, stood still.

         “To start with,” Adamu rode on. “Were you not supposed to be treated by the company’s clinic?”

         “Sir, I didn’t even have the strength to…”

         “Will you stop amusing me?” interrupted Adamu, kept mute. “If our staff don’t use the clinic, then what was the essence of establishing it?” he supplemented after a brief silence.

           Ken remained speechless and calm.

         “When you came into this company twelve months ago, February 1994 precisely if I am not mistaken,” Adamu rode on. “I painstakingly read the riot act to you.”

         Ken became jitterier.

       “And in that very act, you were categorically informed that this company doesn’t condone truancy or laxity.”

         Ken who was dressed in corporate attire felt like defecating in his boxers.

         “And as I speak to you right now,” Adamu proceeded fiercely. “I want you to know that you have abused that directive.”

           At this juncture, Ken needed not a seer to disclose the fate that awaited his person.

         “The most confusing part is that,” the boss said, paused. “You are yet to realize that you belong to one of the most sensitive departments in this highly reputable firm.”

           There was maximum silence.

         “It will interest you to know that,” he continued. “Since 1986 I joined this company till date, I have never for once missed my duty post.”

          Ken couldn’t believe his ears.

        “The records are there,” boasted the HRM. “You can check for yourself.”

        “I am very sorry, sir.” Ken hesitantly dished out, lowering his head.

        “There you go wrong,” Adamu chipped in. “In this company, you don’t rob Peter to pay Paul.”

        “Sir, it won’t repeat itself.” He assured fearfully.

        “Mister Ken Okafor,” Adamu called ruthlessly in a high tone, hitting his right hand on his table.

         Ken became extremely attentive and perturbed on hearing the mode of the call.

       “Give me one reason you shouldn’t be fired.”

          At this point, Ken was actually seeing a totally different creature, which implied that the HRM had been speaking in a friendly manner all those while he was revisiting the company’s Act.

         The unexpected oral query wasn’t just confusing and devastating but threatening; it was no doubt a rhetorical test no matter how clever the offender was. Hence, there was an undiluted tranquility.

        “You can leave.” the angered boss instructed, demonstrating with his left arm.

          Ken who was dumbfounded, stood still, appeared like an electrocuted gorilla.

        “I said, leave my office.” shouted Adamu who was also clad in corporate attire.

          Consequently, Ken complied, thus left for his office in the marketing department.

          First thing in the morning the following two days being 15th February 1995 – barely one year after he received his employment letter, Ken got the sack having attended to the written query issued to him on the day he left Adamu’s office; he received the disengagement letter in his office from his Secretary.

           The scenario yielded a very painful mood, but all he could do was to move on with his life; after all, life continued.

            * * * * * *

         “What’s the name?” Mr. Steven verified as soon as one of the interviewees assumed his seat.

          Steven was a member of the 5-man committee set up by the Management of Capricon to conduct an oral interview for their prospective staff. The company’s HRM, Mr. Adamu Danjuma was one of the members of the committee and happened to be the head.

          That day being 2nd of March 1995 marked the commencement of the assessment exercise.

        “My name is Olatunji Seun.” The interviewee replied.

          Seun who walked in with a plastic file in his left hand happened to be the third applicant to be assessed by the team. The team was already with a copy of his Curriculum Vitae prior to his entrance, and they were perusing it right before him.

           Something remarkable transpired on that very day; the moment Seun walked into the complex room, he observed that Mr. Danjuma’s face was very familiar, but on the contrary, the latter never recognized the former.

          Adamu happened to be Seun’s course mate in the University of Ibadan (U.I) nine years back but the fascinating part was that Adamu was a dropout. He quit his studentship during his first year (100 Level), which was 1986, due to financial challenges.

           He secured his job same year with a forged degree certificate but since his engagement with the company, he had never been found wanting in any way because of his natural brilliance.

          While the interview lasted, Seun continued to look at Adamu who alongside his junior colleagues was dressed in the company’s white T-shirt, black jeans and black plain shoes, with a view that the man in question would reciprocate to the gesture, all to no avail. Hence, it became obvious to him that the boss didn’t recognize his face even a bit.

         To be continued, please.

 

Comrade Fred Nwaozor
Executive Director, Docfred Resource Hub (DRH) - Owerri
______________________________
frednwaozor@gmail.com
+2348028608056
Twitter: @mediambassador 

 

Tuesday, 27 March 2018

Opinion I Police Orderlies, VIPs And The IGP's Order

POLICE ORDERLIES, VIPs AND THE IGP’s ORDER

       
It’s not anymore news that sustenance of adequate security in any given country remains a major responsibility the government owns the governed. This is the reason the various security outfits in such a society including the police, among others, are invariably charged to stop at nothing towards doing the needful in their respective jurisdictions.

         
Penultimate week, precisely on Monday, 18th March 2018, during his meeting with Police Commissioners and Assistant Inspectors-General (AIGs) at the Force Headquarters in Abuja, the Inspector General of Police (IGP) Mr. Ibrahim Idris ordered immediate withdrawal of all police orderlies attached to “Very Important Persons” (VIPs) and firms – particularly private individuals and companies – with exception of financial institutions like banks.

        
The order was following what the boss described as the “effects of the current security challenges in the country”. He stated that the need for streamlining the deployment of orderlies to VIPs was aimed at enhancing effective and efficient policing across the length and breadth of the nation.

        
Mr. Idris however disclosed that business entrepreneurs, multi-national organizations, corporate individuals and entities that require such services and are found to be worthy, will be considered from the Special Protection Unit (SPU) of the Nigeria Police Force (NPF) on application for re-validation through states’ commissioners.

        
In view of this, according to him, a memorandum would be forwarded to the President for approval, and that would henceforth “serve as a guideline or template for deployment of police officers to VIPs, political office holders” and public officers in general.

        
The IGP, who recently ordered that all prohibited arms and ammunition should be returned to the police within twenty one days, equally used the occasion to frown at the ongoing proliferation of the police Spy Number plates, covering of Plate numbers as well as illicit use of siren among highly placed Nigerians. Hence, urged his men to take maximum control of the anomaly.

       
Though the order seems to be the first of its kind under the reign of Mr. Idris, it bears essentially the same content as similar directives issued by his predecessors such as Ogbonna Onovo, Hafiz Ringim and Solomon Arase but failed to hold water in the long run. It suffices to assert that it is almost as often as the instruction for officers to desist from mounting roadblocks on our major roads, yet as days unfold, the ugly practice takes a different dimension. This is exactly where my utmost worry lies. 

         
It is gathered that about 150,000 police personnel out of a total workforce of about 400,000 across the country are attached to private individuals and companies, leaving only about 250,000 to take charge of state and community policing. The given statistics is a clear indication that these police officers are more used in the quarters they were not primarily meant for, hence the compelling need to have a review of the Force’s deployment policy.

         
I cannot agree less with any Nigeria who opines that the country is at the moment strongly in need of more hands as regards community policing. This is why Mr. Idris needs to expedite action towards ensuring that this directive of his does not fall on deaf ears as we have always witnessed in the past.

         
It’s even mind-boggling when noted that some of these police orderlies are safeguarding alleged culpable individuals. The system has become so bad that any influential person can walk up to the police quarters and demand for any number of orderlies, and such request can never be turned down. This is arguably a worrisome situation that deserves a keen and drastic attention.

        
It can’t be untrue that after several weeks of urging prohibited arms and ammunition to be returned to the police, many civilians are still illicitly in possession of the said devices. Does such behaviour not signify that most individuals are mightier than the institutions, or more powerful than the extant laws?  

        
As IGP Idris has also lamented over the lingering proliferation of the Spy Number Plates, covering of Plate Numbers and illegal use of siren, he ought to equally take into cognizance of the ongoing unauthorized use of tilted glasses that has abruptly become the order of the day in various nooks and crannies of the Nigerian society.

         
More so, it’s pertinent to acknowledge that the NPF needs to be boosted with additional manpower and working incentives to help in cushioning the excruciating effects of insecurity ravaging virtually every facet of the country. Each day, we are reminded that unemployment remains one of the greatest socio-economic bedbugs living in our midst, yet the workforce of most of our institutions are nothing to write home about.

          
As the IGP has later instructed that the implementation of the new order ought to fully take effect from April 20, 2018 rather than the earlier directive that bore ‘immediate effect’ to enable the various Commissioners of Police (CPs) aptly carryout the consignment , I enjoin them to ensure that the past mistakes aren’t repeated in this era. Think about it!

 

Comrade Fred Nwaozor
Executive Director, Docfred Resource Hub (DRH) - Owerri
__________________________________

frednwaozor@gmail.com
Twitter: @mediambassador            

   

Opinion I As Eboe-Osuji Makes History In ICC

AS EBOE-OSUJI MAKES HISTORY IN ICC

        
In one of the serious conversations I had in the past with a professor friend who is equally my old time mentor, the don categorically told me that the best thing that could happen to any rational human creature was to leave legacies on the sands of time. Therein, I strongly looked into his eyes and asked him, “what is the best step to be taken to ensure that such feat is actualized?”

         
In a candid manner, he responded unequivocally “my dear, you will never leave legacies if you are not a sound and independent thinker”. To throw more light, he further stated that independent thinkers do not allow anyone to think for them, hence on a daily basis, they cough up reasonable time thinking of how to make a difference. This simply signifies that whatever we do in life is begotten by our thinking faculty.

         
It is indeed glad and amazing to note that while many were invariably busy thinking of how to ferment trouble in the land, a certain Nigerian jurist was doggedly busy thinking about how to make remarkable history. He is no other than Judge Chile Eboe-Osuji of Imo State extraction.

         
Judge Eboe-Osuji, a fine lawyer with a difference, was on Sunday 11th March 2018 elected the President of the revered International Criminal Court (ICC). The legal luminary, who bagged his Bachelor of Law degree from the University of Calabar, Cross-River State and was called to the Nigerian Bar in 1986, is the first Nigerian to record such a feat.

        
The ICC, which is an intergovernmental body and international tribunal, has the jurisdiction to prosecute individuals for the global crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity as well as war crimes. Its primary intent is to complement existing national judicial systems. Hence, it exercises its functions when national courts are unwilling or unable to prosecute criminals, or when the United Nations (UN) Security Council or individual states refer situations to the court. It commenced its statutory duties precisely on 1st July 2002.     

         
Judge Eboe-Osuji, born on 2nd September 1962, further obtained his Masters of Law degree from McGill University in Montreal, Canada in 1991 and Doctor of Law degree from the University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands. On December 16, 2011, he was elected as a judge of the ICC; he won the office in the fifteenth ballot in the Assembly of States Parties with 102 votes.

         
He would be serving as President in the war crimes tribunal for a three-year term with immediate effect, alongside Judges Robert Fremr of the Czech Republic and Marc Perrin de Brichambant of France who were respectively elected as First Vice-President and Second Vice-President. The presidency, consisting of the president and the two vice-presidents, plays a key role in providing strategic leadership to the ICC.

         
In his victory statement, which he released immediately after the election, Judge Eboe-Osuji said, “I am deeply honoured to have been elected by my peers as President of the International Criminal Court. As I take up my duties, I feel encouraged that I am able to rely on the wide experience of the two vice-presidents,…, both of whom I have closely worked with previously…”

         
The 55-year-old Judge Eboe-Osuji who practised briefly in Nigeria after he was called to the Bar before migrating to abroad, had prior to his election as the President of the ICC served in various capacities. From 1997 to 2005, he worked at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) as prosecution counsel and senior legal officer to the judges of the tribunal.

        
From 2005 to 2007, he worked in Canada as a barrister and law lecturer. He became the Legal Adviser to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay, in 2010; just to mention but a few. It’s noteworthy that he was equally called to the Ontario and British Columbia Bars, both in Canada.

        
I therefore join other well-meaning Nigerians – both home and in the Diaspora – to celebrate this rare gem who has proven that he has hitherto been working round the clock to write his name in gold; that he is a true Nigerian; that he’s one of the few who believes in leaving footprints on the sands of time; that he’s unarguably an independent thinker.

        
However, as we celebrate this Imo-born distinguished fellow, it’s worthy of note that he is expected to see this position as a stepping stone, and not the limit of his career. In view of this, I challenge him to work extra mile toward ensuring that in the next three years when he is expected to take a bow, he would be leaving the jurisdiction far better than he met it.

        
Judge Chile Eboe-Osuji needs to take into cognizance that millions of Nigerians now look up to his person, hence the need for him to carry out his obligatory duties as a role model. He mustn’t be reminded at all times that, by recording this feat, he has written his name in the Guinness Book of Record, thus is required to do everything humanly possible to defend it.

        
The Nigerian government, on its part, ought to as well learn how best to celebrate their own when he/she makes them proud. Their appreciation shouldn’t stop at a mere Twitter tweet. Overtime whenever a Nigerian distinguished him/herself in the global sphere, you would only observe a government official – on behalf of the Presidency or as may be the case – congratulating the fellow merely via a tweet on the social media. We must go beyond such gesture while appreciating our own for updating the country’s presence on the world map.

         
As this unique jurist makes history in the ICC, as much as I enjoin him to sustain the tempo, other Nigerians thinking how to ferment trouble are equally urged to individually have a rethink with a view to thinking how remarkable history could be made. And, it’s needless to state that the government ought to be willing to seek the wealth of experience of such a citizen who has succeeded in writing his name in gold. Think about it! 

 

Comrade Fred Nwaozor
Executive Director, Docfred Resource Hub (DRH) - Owerri
__________________________________

frednwaozor@gmail.com
+2348028608056
Twitter: @mediambassador                    

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