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Emeka Enechi

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Emeka Enechi
5 시간

Nigeria Must Rise Above Perfidy.

Prosperity is not inherited. It is governed into existence - Ukatta Oganvo (1871 - 1974).

Why Nations Fail by Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson is a compelling inquiry into why some societies achieve lasting prosperity while others remain trapped in poverty. Its central claim is deceptively simple; nations rise or fall largely because of the political and economic institutions they construct. Geography, culture, and resources matter far less than how power is organised and how opportunity is distributed.

To illustrate this argument more vividly, we look at the divided city of Nogales.

On one side is Nogales, Arizona, part of the United States, and on the other is Nogales, Sonora, part of Mexico. The two communities share the same climate, ancestry, and history. Families live on both sides of the fence. Yet their standards of living are strikingly different. Incomes, education, healthcare, and public safety are far stronger in the north than in the south.

The absurdity is unavoidable; a few metres of boundary line separate two worlds.

Acemoglu and Robinson use Nogales to dismantle popular explanations for inequality. If geography were decisive, both sides would look alike. If culture were the key, shared traditions would produce similar outcomes. If natural resources determined prosperity, neither side would stand out. Instead, the difference lies in institutions.

The American side benefits from “inclusive institutions”, systems that distribute political power widely and protect economic participation. Property rights are enforced, courts function reasonably well, leaders can be removed through elections, and businesses operate with predictable rules. These conditions encourage investment, innovation, and long-term planning.

By contrast, the Mexican side reflects more “extractive institutions,” shaped by a history of elite dominance and weak accountability. Political influence is concentrated, corruption is more prevalent, and economic rules often favour narrow interests. For ordinary citizens, effort does not always translate into reward, and opportunity remains uncertain.

The fence, therefore, is not merely physical, it separates two incentive systems. It determines whether ambition is nurtured or frustrated, whether trust in the state grows or collapses. Nogales becomes a living experiment in how governance shapes human destiny.

From this local example, Acemoglu and Robinso build a global theory. They trace how political struggles, revolutions, reforms, and power bargains, produce institutions that persist for generations. Where elites fear competition, they suppress innovation. Where power is constrained, societies tend to flourish.

This framework is especially relevant to our dear country Nigeria and most African states.

Nigeria is rich in human talent, natural resources, and entrepreneurial energy. Yet it continues to struggle with unemployment, insecurity, infrastructure deficits, and widespread poverty. Like Nogales, the problem is not primarily geography or culture. It is institutional.

Many of Nigeria’s challenges reflect extractive tendencies; weak rule of law, politicised courts, opaque public finance, patronage networks, and limited accountability. Economic success is often linked to proximity to power rather than productivity. Public office becomes a route to private enrichment, not public service. The resultant consequence in our environment is that citizens rationally distrust institutions, and long-term investment suffers.

The lesson from Why Nations Fail is not that Nigeria lacks capable people or noble traditions. It is that its institutional incentives frequently reward the wrong behaviour.

First, Acemoglu and Robinson underscore the importance of credible property and contract rights. When entrepreneurs fear arbitrary taxation, seizure, or regulatory harassment (as has become the lot of Nigerian entrepreneurs), they underinvest. Strengthening judicial independence and regulatory transparency is therefore not a technical luxury but a development necessity.

Second, political inclusion matters. When large segments of society feel excluded from decision-making, politics becomes zero-sum and violent. Expanding internal party democracy, protecting electoral integrity, and decentralising meaningful authority can help transform politics from competition for spoils into competition over ideas.

Third, state capacity must serve the public, not factions. Efficient tax systems, professional civil services, and accountable security institutions are foundations of inclusive growth. Without them, even well-designed policies fail in practice.

Finally, the Nogales example warns against fatalism. Mexico’s side is poorer, but not doomed. Its condition is the result of historical choices. Likewise, Nigeria’s difficulties are not inevitable. Institutions are human creations, shaped by struggle and reform.

To its credit, Why Nations Fail does not promise easy solutions. Institutional change is slow, contested, and uncertain. Elites rarely surrender privileges voluntarily. Acemoglu and Robinson insist, and rightly so, that transformation is possible when citizens organise, demand accountability, and build coalitions for reform.

In the end, Nogales is more than a border town. It is a mirror. It shows how invisible rules structure visible lives. For Nigeria, the message is clear; development will not come primarily from oil, aid, or slogans, but from rebuilding institutions that reward honesty, protect effort, and constrain power.

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Emeka Enechi
10 시간 - 일체 포함

"Freedom, in any real sense, entails not merely liberation from physical or political constraints but also the capacity for reason, introspection, and enlightened consciousness. Only through such a disciplined mind can one find true liberation and navigate life beyond the confines of dogma and prejudice." - Ukatta Oganvo - (1871 - 1974)

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Emeka Enechi
21 시간

Who Killed the NELAN Five? Nigeria Must Confront Its Silence.

By any reasonable standard, the disappearance of five Nigerian engineers in Ebonyi State in November 2021 should have provoked one of the most thorough investigations in the country’s recent history. Instead, it has become another tragic example of how silence, delay, and institutional weakness conspire to bury truth.

More than four years later, the fate of the five NELAN Consultants engineers remains officially unresolved. No verified bodies, no conclusive forensic report, no successful prosecutions and no public inquiry. Instead, we got only contradictory statements and fading public memory.

Yet these were not anonymous victims of chance. They were professionals on official duty, supervising a publicly funded infrastructure project. Their disappearance was not a private tragedy, it was a failure of the Nigerian state.

The missing engineers were Engr. Nelson Onyemeh – Lead Consultant/Director, Engr. Ernest Edeani, Engr. Ikechukwu Ejiofor, Engr. Samuel Aneke and Engr. Stanley Nwazulum

They were experienced civil engineers working for NELAN Consultants, based in Enugu. On November 3, 2021, they travelled to Ebonyi State to supervise work on the Abakaliki Ring Road project. They never returned.
Their vehicle disappeared with them, their phones went silent and Nigeria was left with unanswered questions.

Like you find in films of fact and fiction, in the weeks after their disappearance, officials announced that the engineers had been killed and buried. No graves were shown, no bodies presented and families were not consulted.

Later, bodies allegedly recovered were subjected to DNA tests and found not to belong to the missing engineers. By then, confidence in official narratives had collapsed.

What followed was worse than incompetence; indifference. Investigations stalled, public briefings ended, political attention shifted elsewhere and the case slipped into obscurity.

For the families, this meant permanent uncertainty, and for the public, another reminder that justice in Nigeria is negotiable.

Nigeria’s development ambitions depend on professionals, engineers, surveyors, consultants, working in difficult environments. These men were part of that national effort. When such professionals can disappear on a government-linked project without consequence, a dangerous message is sent; service is expendable, and accountability is optional.

This is not merely a security issue, it is a governance crisis.

A state that cannot account for five citizens on official duty cannot credibly promise safety to millions.

Every unresolved case weakens public trust, every abandoned investigation emboldens criminality and every unanswered question deepens cynicism.

The NELAN case has become a symbol of institutional failure; to investigate rigorously, communicate honestly, protect citizens, and deliver justice.

It also damages Nigeria’s international reputation. Development partners and investors watch such cases closely. When contractors vanish and inquiries evaporate, confidence erodes.

No country builds prosperity on uncertainty.

To the question of “Who Killed Them”, the honest answer is that Nigeria does not know, or has chosen not to say.

Were the engineers victims of communal violence, organised crime, political interests, contract-related disputes or something else entirely?

Speculation thrives where facts are absent, and rumours multiply where institutions are weak.

This is the true tragedy; not only that five men disappeared, but that the state failed to pursue the truth with urgency and transparency.

Justice delayed has now become justice denied. But it is not too late to act.

Nigeria needs an independent judicial inquiry into the disappearance, full forensic and evidentiary review, public disclosure of findings, accountability for any official negligence and prosecution where evidence warrants.

This is not an extraordinary demand, it is the minimum expected of a serious country.

“Who killed the NELAN Five?” is not only about five engineers. It goes beyond their killing and disappearance. It is about whether Nigerian lives matter equally, whether public service is protected and whether truth still has value in governance.

A nation that forgets its victims forgets itself.

Until this case is resolved openly and credibly, it will remain a stain on Nigeria’s conscience, an open wound in our justice system.

Silence is not neutrality, it is complicity.

And Nigeria must decide whether it will continue to live with unanswered deaths, or finally insist on the truth.

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The exchange between Alex Otti and Don FM journalist Mr. Chika Nwabueze, in Umuahia, has sparked debate because it sits at the intersection of governance, accountability, and media responsibility. Both sides raise legitimate concerns, and both missed an opportunity to elevate public discourse.


Let us examine carefully.


Dr. Otti’s response reflects a familiar governance mindset: “Our mandate is to deliver on promises, not to argue spreadsheets.”

From this perspective, he sees infrastructure, reforms, and service delivery as the real evidence, expects journalists to come prepared with facts if they want to interrogate policy outcomes and views media chats as serious governance platforms, not casual exchanges.



The strength in his position is that it signals seriousness about governance, rejects superficial questioning and encourages higher journalistic standards.

In many ways, he is saying: “If you want to challenge me, do it properly.”

That is not unreasonable.


However, in democratic systems, the burden of proof lies with those in power, not with citizens or journalists.

The journalist’s question was legitimate; What measurable economic impact has your administration produced?

This is a core accountability question as it touches on employment, revenue, investment, poverty reduction, GDP contribution, ease of doing business and SME growth.



These are not “hostile” questions, they are basic governance metrics. The strength in the Journalist’s position is that it represents public interest, seeks evidence-based governance and promotes transparency.

A governor should reasonably be expected to have these figures at hand, or have aides who do.


Dr. Otti fell short in statesmanship. Critics are right to question the tone.

Statesmanship is not only about competence, it is also about demeanour and institutional maturity.

A more statesmanlike response might have been, Over the past two years, our internally generated revenue has grown by X%, investments by Y%, and road infrastructure by Z%. My office will make the full data available.”

That would have projected confidence, strengthened credibility, silenced critics and educated the public.



Instead, his response appeared dismissive. This matters because power should not appear defensive, public communication shapes political culture and leaders set the tone for institutions.

Even when justified, irritation from officeholders weakens democratic norms.


At the same time, many critics of the journalist are also right. He failed in professional rigour.

Modern political journalism is increasingly data-driven. Serious reporters today often arrive with budget figures, audit reports, past policy benchmarks and comparative state data.



If Mr. Nwabueze had said; “Your IGR grew from ₦X to ₦Y. Unemployment remains at Z%. How do you reconcile this?” It would have been a much stronger intervention.

So yes, journalism must evolve beyond “open-ended questioning”, preparation strengthens accountability and evidence forces substantive answers. Dr. Otti exploited a weakness that shouldn’t have been there.


On a bigger picture, this episode exposes a deeper Nigerian problem: institutional opacity.

In mature systems government dashboards are public, performance reports are routine, independent data exists and Think tanks analyze policy.



In Nigeria and its many subnational governments - states and local councils, data is fragmented, reports are inconsistent, access is limited and verification is hard.



So journalists often operate in a data vacuum and makes confrontations like this inevitable.


At the heart of this controversy is a philosophical question: Who bears primary responsibility for accountability?

In democratic theory, the government owes citizens evidence, the media facilitates that process and citizens are the ultimate principals. So while journalists should prepare, governments must institutionalize transparency.


Accountability is not a debate contest, it is a duty.


The optics do not do either the governor or the journalist any good.

While supporters see Otti’s response as confidence, zero tolerance for mediocrity and reformist seriousness, others see it as arrogance, evasion and weak communication strategy.

Both interpretations are plausible. Which one sticks will depend on whether his administration later publishes clear performance data. If it does, he looks vindicated, and if it doesn’t, the criticism gains force.


This episode ultimately reveals not just about one question. On leadership, it reveals technocratic leaders must learn political communication, results must be narratable and competence alone is not enough, on journalism it also reveals that Nigerian media needs stronger research culture, data literacy is now essential and questioning must be evidence-based. It also challenges governance to ensure that performance reporting is systematic and transparency proactive, not reactive.




In fairness, while Dr. Otti is right to demand seriousness and value substance, he was wrong to sound dismissive, thereby missing the opportunity to educate. On the other hand, Mr. Nwabueze was right to ask for impact data and represent citizens, he was underprepared and allowed himself to be outflanked.

Neither Dr. Otti nor Mr. Nwabueze fully covered themselves in glory.


Finally, for reform-oriented states like Abia, perception matters. If performance is real, it must be measured, published, defended and debated.



Strong institutions grow when leaders welcome scrutiny and journalists sharpen their tools. This exchange shows Nigeria is still learning that culture.

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3 디

Every plant has a memory. – Ukatta Oganvo (1871 – 1974).

Long before laboratories and synthetic fragrances, people trusted leaves, bark, and roots to cleanse the body and calm the skin. Chuum was born from that older knowledge — a body wash made entirely (100%) from tropical plants, gathered not for perfume, but for purpose.

When you lather Chuum, you are not masking your skin; you are returning it to balance. No harsh chemicals. No artificial scent. Just plants doing what they have always done.

Some products promise beauty. Chuum delivers respect.

Because the skin remembers what you feed it.

Herbal Body Wash.

Tropical Botanical Cleanser.

100% Herbal • No Synthetic • No Artificial Fragrance.

CPSR completed
SCPN registration confirmed
INCI list verified
Claims reviewed for compliance
Batch traceability active
UK Responsible Person details correct.

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