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BBC Sex for marks generalizations by Prince Justice
Here we go again with another round of self hating speeches inspired by BBCs sex for marks video demartketing West African tertiary institutions. If you just arrived on planet Social Media, you will think BBC just Mungo Parked the source of carnal sin for the first time ever.
You probably didn't hear of the Dr Richard Akindele caught on audio, sacked and jailed, nor numerous other occasions where the institutions or even student cultists have dealt with the offender.
BBC shows just two cases to disparaged the hundreds of institutions across the subregion. This is the same BBC that fought tooth and nail to hide the sordid child and sexual abuse through its management ranks for decades. Details of sexual depravity towards underage and vulnerable by its brightest stars and directors were eventually revealed. Yet, nobody painted the BBC as a sexual abusive institution, not to talk of tarnishing the whole British media industry as corrupt and not fit for our West African audiences.
Are we to forget the Me too sexual abuse movement ravaging Hollywood, which by the way started from the catholic church?
I think we all know that power and money enables sexual harassment, EVERYWHERE!
However, rather being a globally extended Me Too to West Africa, this unfair generalization and sensationalism is for the demartketing of West African tertiary institutions for the sole benefit of their competitors, the British tertiary instructions that rely heavily on Nigeria and Ghana students to fill their budget shortfalls. Foreign students pay about thrice what their domestic fellow students pay.
About a decade ago, with the coming of the Conservative government, educational subsidies were cut and the institutions were encouraged to milk foreign students as an alternative source of income. A little leeway was given with a government subsidy government for the employed, which Nigerians were wise to take up.
Many non-Ivy league institutions welcomed Nigerian students as a blessing even without common O'levels and turned a blind eye to the gross malpractices, as Nigerians students out of the £15,000 (N7m) grants paid agents to sign them in classes and paid online Indians to do their coursework while still having enough left to build houses in Nigeria. The British institutions turned a blindeye to the fact that many of their graduates couldn't speak common English as long as their books balanced. From about last session, the unemployed and disabled program was stopped and the British tertiary institutions ran into losses. I know of one in Ealing that went into liquidation.
So, the BBC expose has to be viewed with caution. It is to mainly inspire a loss in confidence in West African tertiary institutions, prompting doting fathers to dig deep into their pockets, and that of the commonwealth, to send their girls to an overpriced educational system which does nothing but to promote further cultural and political disillusionment. An educational system that starts its program by teaching six year Olds that homosexuality and other sexual depravity is right, and ends with the conclusion that the Black Race is pathologically inferior.
Yes, some Men can be shameless pricks when in position of power anywhere under the Sun, but this BBC report that generalizes and castigates an entire subregion with just two cases is an unfair misrepresentation. This is how they castigated our traditional cultural values as satanic, as well as our political and economic systems. Therefore we should view the report with a wider perspective. Sexual harassment is a Man thing of every Race and not a West African affliction.
I have viewed the introduction of BBC Yoruba, pidgin and Igbo with suspicion and raised alarm of mind conditioning by our colonists, the British. The funding for BBC Yoruba and Igbo came from the same imperialists, MacArthur Foundation that sponsored the corruption propaganda that brought Buhari to power. We must be wary of moralist propaganda pushed by the likes of BBC whose primary objective is our mental and cultural slavery.
The British army didn't recolonize us but British media that pushed corruption propaganda in 1966,1983 and 2015. The greatest war for the liberation of the Black Race is the war of the mind and soul of the Black Race. For a thousand years, Arabs and latter Europeans have colonized us with moralist propaganda that denigrate West African institutions and make us discard ours for their own institutions.
Instead of reacting with self hate and redirecting millions needed here in Nigeria into the British system, think and realize that when we decry moralist propaganda, it is not a denial of immorality but it's use as a tool of sociopolitical disorientation.
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SEX FOR GRADES?
Having watched the BBC Africa Eye documentary with the above title I think that the story told does not match the message sought to be conveyed to the public by the title.
Beyond the jokes and giggles I have decided to critically analyze what the BBC has put out and I conclude that the decision to publish the video is a very serious error on the part of the people who decided to air the video .
This is because this whole work involved people’s precious reputation and there can be no room for error or to stretch the argument. The allegation and what is put forward to established or substantiate it must be on all fours.
What was alleged? That some lecturers in some African universities sleep with their female students in return for high grades. It amounts to accusing the lecturers of the criminal offense of blackmail or extortion.
What is expected from the accusers’ video? BBC and it’s collaborators were supposed to present to us evidence. Hard evidence. That a lecturer had sex with a student and indeed gave a grade A to that student because of the sex. Or that a student who was poor in class obtained a grade A or B because of a sexual encounter she had with a particular lecturer. Or that a female student, but for sex had with her lecturer could not have obtained the grade A or B she was awarded in a particular subject. It also means the lady must have read a course taught by the lecturer.
Is this what happened in the video? NO. No sex. No evidence of a grade upgrade as a result of sex. No evidence that a lady wrote an exam and the result slip showed a higher grade than deserved, if we look at what was written on the examination answer sheet.
In the end the BBC only established that some lecturer was lewd in his conversation with somebody who was not even a student or even if she was, she did not have sex and definitely did not write any official exam organized by the University.
Sex was discussed but not had. No grades were awarded because of sex. So why sex for grades? Was that even a proposal ? More questions than answers.
By: Femi Fani-Kayode
“Nigeria is not one and has never been one. It is a ‘state of nations’ and not a ‘nation-state’. The traitors in the south are heroes in the north whilst the heroes in the south are traitors in the north. The value system of the north is totally opposite to that of the south. The lenses through which we see justice and equity can never be the same. The Nigerian state is the tragedy of 20th century in Africa”- Aare Kurunmi Kakanfo, “Nigeria Is Burning”, Facebook, 30th September 2019.
I could not have put it better myself. Today our nation celebrates 59 years of independence from our external colonial masters and 59 years of servitude, subjugation, tyranny and oppression by our internal colonial masters. Permit me to share the following.
In August 1958 my beloved father of blessed memory, the Balogun of Ife, Chief Victor Remilekun Adetokunboh Fani-Kayode Q.C., S.A.N, C.O.N successfully moved the motion for Nigeria’s independence. Parliament passed the motion and the British colonial authorities acquiesed to it.
Two years later, on October 1st 1960 (which is 59 years today) amidst great joy, hope, promise and fanfare, the first of our two chains of servitude and bondage was broken and Nigeria became an independent nation.
I commend Papa and his generation for this great achievement. His motion freed us from the chains and shackles of the external colonial masters and I am very proud of that.
However there is still much work to do. 59 years later we still have the second chain and shackle of bondage and servitude to remove and that is the chain and shackle of our internal colonial masters who have proved to be even more relentless, ruthless and murderous than the first.
Since the end of our civil war in 1970, which resulted in the ethnic cleansing, mass murder and genocide of no less than 3 million innocent Biafran civilians, and despite all acts of provocation and injustice from those that see us as nothing but conquered vassals, the good people of the south and the Middle Belt have been reasonable and restrained and have refused to react violently.
Instead they have patiently and politely protested against and peacefully struggled with that chain and shackle of Fulani bondage.
Since independence we have attempted to get a better deal for our people from within a united and “indivisible” Nigeria but we have failed woefully.
Rather than getting better, things are actually getting significantly worse and the noose of slavery and handcuffs of servitude are getting tighter.
The last four years under President Muhammadu Buhari, who is undoubtedly more of a President of the North than a President of Nigeria, provides an eloquent testimony to that.
His Government is shamelessly, unapologeticallly and unabashedly a Government by the Fulani, for the Fulani and of the Fulani sprinkled with a small handful and pitiful coterie of southern and Middle Belt useful idiots and accursed slaves who have no sense of decency or self-respect, who, like Esau, have traded their future and destiny for a mess of pottage and who have sold their souls to the devil and their peoole down the river.
For the Yoruba people particularly I am convinced that the only way to break that second and last shackle and chain of servitude and bondage is for the South West to exercise her inalienable right of self-determination and leave Nigeria.
The battle for restructuring which many of us have supported and fought for over the last 25 years is long lost and its advocates are no longer being heard.
We have failed to succeed in that noble cause because those that believe that they own own Nigeria and that they were born to rule her in perpetuity have treated that quest with contempt and ignored it with disdain.
They have met our reasonable demands for devolution of power and the establishment of an equitable and true Federation where all men, regardless of ethnic nationality or faith, are regarded as being equal before God, with an uncharitable and unreasonable display and unequivocal and unprecedented degree of arrogance and impunity.
As a consequence of their unbridled intransigence, insatiable lust for power and control and inexplicable desire to dominate and enslave each and every one of us, it is increasingly clear to me and millions of others that Nigeria can never change as long as she continous to exist as one.
Yet we as a people those of us that are interested in freedom can no longer continue to subject ourselves to the indignity of living in the insufferable bondage that they have forced and foisted on us.
Given the foregoing, the only option left for us if we are to maintain our self-respect and dignity and win our freedom is division and separation.
I am therefore glad to publicly identify myself with the proud Yoruba nationalists of the Balogun Collective and other Yoruba self-determination groups who have risen to the occassion, who have said enough is enough and who believe that it is time for the rise and establishment of the mighty nation of Oduduwa.
The Yoruba people, always so ready to accept and accomodate others and always so liberal and generous, deserve no less.
Though ours is a peaceful and passive struggle and not one that is interested in the usage of arms or indulging in any form of violence, anarchy or lawlessness, it would be a grave error on the part of anyone to underestimate our determination or test our resolve.
My father and his generation broke the first chain of servitude which was the bondage of the British.
It is my sacred duty and divine obligation and that of members of mine to break the second chain which is the bondage and subjugation of the Fulani. We shall not fail.
Happy Independence Day Nigeria!: Femi Fani-Kayode
“Nigeria is not one and has never been one. It is a ‘state of nations’ and not a ‘nation-state’. The traitors in the south are heroes in the north whilst the heroes in the south are traitors in the north. The value system of the north is totally opposite to that of the south. The lenses through which we see justice and equity can never be the same. The Nigerian state is the tragedy of 20th century in Africa”- Aare Kurunmi Kakanfo, “Nigeria Is Burning”, Facebook, 30th September 2019.
I could not have put it better myself. Today our nation celebrates 59 years of independence from our external colonial masters and 59 years of servitude, subjugation, tyranny and oppression by our internal colonial masters. Permit me to share the following.
In August 1958 my beloved father of blessed memory, the Balogun of Ife, Chief Victor Remilekun Adetokunboh Fani-Kayode Q.C., S.A.N, C.O.N successfully moved the motion for Nigeria’s independence. Parliament passed the motion and the British colonial authorities acquiesed to it.
Two years later, on October 1st 1960 (which is 59 years today) amidst great joy, hope, promise and fanfare, the first of our two chains of servitude and bondage was broken and Nigeria became an independent nation.
I commend Papa and his generation for this great achievement. His motion freed us from the chains and shackles of the external colonial masters and I am very proud of that.
However there is still much work to do. 59 years later we still have the second chain and shackle of bondage and servitude to remove and that is the chain and shackle of our internal colonial masters who have proved to be even more relentless, ruthless and murderous than the first.
Since the end of our civil war in 1970, which resulted in the ethnic cleansing, mass murder and genocide of no less than 3 million innocent Biafran civilians, and despite all acts of provocation and injustice from those that see us as nothing but conquered vassals, the good people of the south and the Middle Belt have been reasonable and restrained and have refused to react violently.
Instead they have patiently and politely protested against and peacefully struggled with that chain and shackle of Fulani bondage.
Since independence we have attempted to get a better deal for our people from within a united and “indivisible” Nigeria but we have failed woefully.
Rather than getting better, things are actually getting significantly worse and the noose of slavery and handcuffs of servitude are getting tighter.
The last four years under President Muhammadu Buhari, who is undoubtedly more of a President of the North than a President of Nigeria, provides an eloquent testimony to that.
His Government is shamelessly, unapologeticallly and unabashedly a Government by the Fulani, for the Fulani and of the Fulani sprinkled with a small handful and pitiful coterie of southern and Middle Belt useful idiots and accursed slaves who have no sense of decency or self-respect, who, like Esau, have traded their future and destiny for a mess of pottage and who have sold their souls to the devil and their peoole down the river.
For the Yoruba people particularly I am convinced that the only way to break that second and last shackle and chain of servitude and bondage is for the South West to exercise her inalienable right of self-determination and leave Nigeria.
The battle for restructuring which many of us have supported and fought for over the last 25 years is long lost and its advocates are no longer being heard.
We have failed to succeed in that noble cause because those that believe that they own own Nigeria and that they were born to rule her in perpetuity have treated that quest with contempt and ignored it with disdain.
They have met our reasonable demands for devolution of power and the establishment of an equitable and true Federation where all men, regardless of ethnic nationality or faith, are regarded as being equal before God, with an uncharitable and unreasonable display and unequivocal and unprecedented degree of arrogance and impunity.
As a consequence of their unbridled intransigence, insatiable lust for power and control and inexplicable desire to dominate and enslave each and every one of us, it is increasingly clear to me and millions of others that Nigeria can never change as long as she continous to exist as one.
Yet we as a people those of us that are interested in freedom can no longer continue to subject ourselves to the indignity of living in the insufferable bondage that they have forced and foisted on us.
Given the foregoing, the only option left for us if we are to maintain our self-respect and dignity and win our freedom is division and separation.
I am therefore glad to publicly identify myself with the proud Yoruba nationalists of the Balogun Collective and other Yoruba self-determination groups who have risen to the occassion, who have said enough is enough and who believe that it is time for the rise and establishment of the mighty nation of Oduduwa.
The Yoruba people, always so ready to accept and accomodate others and always so liberal and generous, deserve no less.
Though ours is a peaceful and passive struggle and not one that is interested in the usage of arms or indulging in any form of violence, anarchy or lawlessness, it would be a grave error on the part of anyone to underestimate our determination or test our resolve.
My father and his generation broke the first chain of servitude which was the bondage of the British.
It is my sacred duty and divine obligation and that of members of mine to break the second chain which is the bondage and subjugation of the Fulani. We shall not fail.
Happy Independence Day Nigeria!