Former aviation minister,
Femi Fani-Kayode wrote a piece about US secretary of state John Kerry and
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg's visit to Nigeria and how it has something to
do with the Hausa people.
He wrote;
"Kerry comes to the
north and sees the Sultan of Sokoto, northern governors and Buhari. One week
later Facebook founder comes to Nigeria and says Hausa is a "unique
language" which he has included on Facebook. Think Nigerians think".
Hours later, former
presidential aide Reno Omokri reacted to FFK's comment. He wrote;
Olufemi Olu-Kayode I do not
understand why Kerry did what he did, but as for Zuckerberg, all he did was
state a fact. After Swahili, Hausa is perhaps the most widely spoken language
in sub Sahara Africa. That is why BBCHausa, Voahausa, Deutschewelle and other
world radio services all have broadcast in Hausa. We must applaud what
Zuckerberg has done and not cast suspicion aroundit. Doing so may encourage him
to add other indigenous Nigerian languages as Facebook languages. That said, I
appreciate a lot of your writings and suggestions. Well done.
FFK responded to Reno
Omokri
"Nice to hear from u.
Permit me to begin by saying that I never miss ur write-ups and I thank God
that we still have people as discerning and as bold as u in our country. Pls
keep it up. Now to the business of the day.
Thanks for taking your time
to respond to my post. Perrmit me to respond to you very briefly. What Mark
Zuckerberg said about the Hausa language being "unique" is not a fact
but an opinion. And it is an opinion which, in fairness to him, may well be
honestly held. It is also an opinion which you evidently share and which both u
and he u are perfectly entitled to. I am, however, entitled to disagree with u
on that opinion especially where I have good reason to do so. You see unlike
most I do not post, speak or write lightly. I take my time, I do my research
and I am very precise.
That is my style and
nature. The choice of Hausa being put on Facebook is not just a matter if
"linguistic uniqueness" I assure u. And to honestly believe that it
does borders on pure naivety. There is nothing unique about the number of
countries in west Africa that speak Hausa and I do not believe that Hausa is
the most widely spoken language in west Africa though many often say it is. It
is rather like the common refrain that the hausas number more than any other
nationality in Nigeria when we all know how and when that particular dirty lie
came about and how the British constructed it by counting the cows of the north
and adding them to the number of northerners that they counted in the first
census. If the truth be told even then and up until now the Igbo and the Yoruba
are more than the Fulani and the Hausa. If u doubt my assertion about the lack
of uniqueness of the Hausa language, please do the research and find out how
many countries that Yoruba, for example, is spoken in both in West Africa and
outside of the African continent in South America and the Carribean.
Also read up on the history
of the BBC and VOA Hausa Service and why they were set up by their respective
governments. Ditto the German hausa radio service and others. It made perfect
sense because most hausa men carried radios around with them everywhere they
went whilst their southern compatriots, being far more advanced and educated,
preferred reading newspapers and watching television. It is not just a matter
if linguistic uniqueness I assure u but evidence of the fact that the British
particularly always had, and still do have, a strong partiality for the Hausa
Fulani compared to any other nationality in Nigeria.
The reasons for that are
legion so I won't go into them here. Needless to say though, the history on
this matter is very clear and I suggest you read up on it. It appears that the
American authorities, at least the Obama/Kerry/Clinton brigade, are following
in the footsteps of the British colonial masters in terms of their preferred
friends in Nigeria and indeed American private companies like Facebook, just
like British private companies did in the former British colonies before them,
are towing the line of their governments. It is not too difficult to work that
one out for the intelligent. I guess only time will tell if I am right but
these are my views. In any case I wonder how many hausa-speaking people are on
Facebook when compared to Yoruba and Igbo.
I read far more into this
matter than u do because I am not just a politician but a historian. I also
have my views about the social media generally, its link to the top western
intelligence agencies and what its ultimate objective is. I have been proved
right in the end on most of my assertions about unfolding events in this
country and indeed world affairs as u may or may not know. I doubt that this
will be any different. Unlike most people I do not let my friendship or
personal-liking or disliking of an individual becloud my judgement.
My reasons for believing
what I believe will be made manifest at the appropriate time. If u are really
interested in knowing what those reasons are I suggest you exercise a little
patience and u will find out. U may even learn something from it. By the way
unlike u I think it would be an excellent innovation if Facebook introduced
other Nigerian languages like Igbo, Yoruba, Ijaw etc.. As far as I am
concerened the more inclusive it is the better. I wish u well and please keep
writing those excellent essays on the situation in our country. Shalom.
Omokri responds to FFK
Dear Olufemi Olu-Kayode
Thank you for your kind
rejoinder to my response to your take on Mark Zuckerberg's comment on the Hausa
language. Here is my response.
That Mark Zuckerberg called
Hausa a unique language is not born out of any conspiracy against the Yoruba,
Igbo or any Southern Nigerian ethnic nationality. The Hausa language is not an
invention of the Hausa people. The language was invented by God and so whenever
anyone praises it, they are not praising the Hausa people, they are praising
God.
You say I am naive for
accepting, as Zuckerberg does, that the Hausa language is unique. Really? Hausa
language is the only indigenous African language that is officially spoken in
five African nations including Nigeria, Niger, Ghana, Cameroun and Sudan. If
your argument is true and I am indeed naive then you would have to agree with
me that BBC News, Radio France Internationale, Voice of America - VOA, DW
Deutsche Welle, China Radio International and Voice of Russia are equally
naive, because, like Facebook, they all have a Hausa language service.
You may be right about the
British/American conspiracy. I never delved into that and I defer to your superior
knowledge of history and statecraft. Your father, Remilekun Fani-Kayode, QC,
was a first class statesman and the apple did not fall far from the tree. My
point of departure from you was strictly and solely as touching your
insinuation against Mark Zuckerberg.
By including Hausa as an
official Facebook language, Zuckerberg recognizes the fact that while there are
literally tens of millions of Yoruba, Igbo and other indigenous Nigerian
language speakers who can communicate in both their native language and
English, the same cannot be said about Hausa speakers. In Benin, Togo, Brazil
and other nations where you have a large concentration of Yoruba speakers,
these omo oduduwas can express themselves in English, French, Spanish or
Portuguese.
There are literally tens of
millions of Hausa speakers who can only communicate in Hausa. This does not
make them illiterate. Indeed, long before we in the South could read and write,
these Hausa speakers have been reading and writing Hausa in the centuries old
Ajami script.
It is to accommodate these
particular class of Hausa speakers that, in my opinion, Facebook added Hausa as
an official language, and not as part of some conspiracy of Britain and America
to undermine the Southern parts of Nigeria. You may recall that Zuckerberg and
his wife recently invested $25 million in Andela. That would be a most strange
way to undermine the South given that all of Andela's founders and most of
their fellows are from the South. Talk is cheap but money makes things happen.
Zuckerberg talked about Hausa, but he put his money in a Lagos tech hub. Does
that not say something to you?
The mistake we in the South
often make is to see ordinary Hausas as our enemies. Not true. The Hausas as a
people are some of the most decent Nigerians and are to be differentiated from
the feudalists who have retarded their progress as an ethnic nationality. What
they need from progressive and freedom loving Nigerians is solidarity not hostility. This was the
point of view that the late Aminu Kano tried to pass across to us down South.
What Facebook has done
deserves commendation and not condemnation. Again, having said this, I must
maintain that I have a high regard for your intellect and this intervention
should not be interpreted as a confrontation.
God bless you.
Reno Omokri
FFK to Reno
Reno Omokri, now I am
beginning to get a little irritated by
you. Is there anywhere that I condemned you, Zuckerberg or Facebook for having
your/their views?
If so please point it out.
Perhaps you don't know the meaning of the word "condemned" yet you
seem so eager to use it.
If I wanted to condemn you,
him or anyone else I would do so loudly, openly, clearly and gladly but I
havn't done that: I simply disagreed with you and I was very civil about it
which I really didnt have to be because you don't deserve it.
In any case are you the spokesman of Mark Zuckerberg
and Facebook or indeed that of the hausa people of northern Nigeria?
Is that your new job since
you stopped working under my friend and brother Reuben Abati at the Villa and
managing social media for the Jonathan administration?
Can those you want to
defend today not explain and defend themselves adequately? Do they need you?
Could they not have found someone more qualified? Are you really the best they
have got?
And if you insist on being
their defender-in-chief when were you appointed? Honestly Reno my dear little
brother you need to have your little bottom spanked for being so cheeky and
naughty.
I have known the north and
interacted with northerners far more than you and for far longer so I don't
need lessons from you or anyone else about
who or what they are, either for good or for bad.
And neither do I need to
say only things that are politically correct about them.or anyone else because,
unlike you, I have paid my dues politically and in terms of public commentry
for over a period of 27 years.
I worked in the Presidency as President
Obasanjo's spokeman as far back as 13 years ago. I don't know where you were
then.
I ran, not one, but two
Federal ministries as the Hon. Minister over 10 years ago and since then I have
been in the thick of the political fray and drama.
I know who I am and I don't
need to please anyone with what I say. I was in NADECO risking my life fighting
against military rule and for the late Chief MKO Abiola's June 12th mandate
when you were probably still wearing diapers.
I know the north and indeed
this whole country far better than you ever possibly could and over the years I
have gained and gathered a lot of experience.
I have also suffered for
Nigeria far more than you have. I say this all with the greatest humility
knowing that it is only God that made it so and that enabled me to survive it.
The result of all that is this: I do not suffer fools gladly and I say things
as they are.
I have no apology to you or
anyone else for that. If others had cultivated the courage to be as bold and
forthright as I have been on national issues over the years we would not be in the mess that we are
in this country.
You dare to lecture me
about northerners and I wonder how many you actually know? I wonder how many
you have ever fought for or defended in the past?
I also wonder how many you
have stood up against when they crossed the line? I have done both over a
period of 27 years and it cost me dearly but I have never shied away from it,
whichever way, and I will continue to do so. I have also lived in the north for
the last 13 years.
Our mutual friend Nasir El
Rufai often warned me about you but I never listened to him. Now you have
proved him right and all because you want to please your foreign and new-found
northern friends.
Sadly your gospel of
appeasement at all costs is shared by many naive souls who come from the same
village as you but that does not mean that we should allow you to infect the
rest of the south with it.
That slavish mindset and
shameless sentiment has brought much suffering to the people of the south-west
and south-south and it is one of the reasons why we made the wrong choice about
which side to fight on during the civil war.
We will never make that
mistake again if it ever comes to it no matter how hard fence-sitters and
appeasers like you try.
The more our people are
killed and our churches are burnt in the noth the more we will protest and
speak out. And the more we will resist it and warn the radical islamists of the
core muslim north together with the Fulani herdsmem from hell to desist from
their murderous and genocidal ways.
Not even 100 million Reno
Omokiri's can stop us from doing that and neither can they make us love those
that commit these heinous crimes.
You are spouting the sort
of drivel that you are throwing up here about how wonderful the core north is
even though thousands of southerners, Middle Belters and christians are slaughtered at the drop of a hat in that same core north for no just cause on a
daily basis. They even come down to the south in their thousands with their
cows to do it these days.
Maybe you should come home
and see what is really going on here rather than writing those great
anti-government articles from the relative safety of Califiornia.
If you can muster the
courage to do that you will discover that political correctness is a very
expensive luxury which we simply cannot afford.
Some of us are right here
and we have refused to run away from the evil that has gripped the land even
when we had every opportunity to do so.
Please endeavour to do the
same then perhaps we may take you more seriously. Hundreds of your fellow Niger
Deltans and southerners are languishing
in jails all over the country today simply because they supported a southern
Christian called President Jonathan during the election yet you hsve not even
cared to visit any of them.
Have you ever reached out to their families or
tried to bail them out? Have you been to the jails and cells to offer them care
or words of comfort and encouragement?
Have you even gone there to
pray for them and express solidarity with them? Warimpa Dudafa your former
colleague at the Villa has been there for over 150 days now.
Have you gone to see
him? What about Ikime and Robert when
they were there? What about all the others? The answer is no because I have
asked.
Yet you were in the last
government with them and many others but you couldn't even stand in solidarity
with them when they needed you the most.
And if you did you insisted on doing so from a safe distance. It is a
shame.
Then you have the nerve to
talk about "southerners" making a mistake about northerners in a
disparaging and condescending way. What a nerve you have got!
Your sarcastic assertion
about the BBC and the other international radio stations being "naive as
well" is nothing less than asinine.
The truth is that you are
the naive one. You alone and not them. If you really believe the garbage that
you wrote here then you are not just naive but dangerously naive and far dumber
than I first thought.
I say this because the
governments that own and control the BBC, the Voice of America and the others
know exactly what they are doing.
If only you knew the
history of imperialism in Africa and indeed the Third World and how it evolved
and if only you were capable of appreciating the reality of neo-colonialism and
history of the African people you would be in a better position to comprehend
and understand what I am saying.
If only you knew what we as
a people in Nigeria and Africa suffered in the hands of the western
imperialists over the last 100 years you would appreciate this intervention
instead of attempting to treat it with contempt just to impress your friends at
Facebook and in California.
It is the naivity and
ignorance of people like you that has put us in the mess we are in today and
that has placed us firmlyl under the yoke of our intetnal colonial masters.
I urge you to continue to
attempt to appease those that see you and those that think like you as nothing
more than glorified monkeys and see how
far it gets you.
As for Mark Zuckerberg he may do whatever he pleases with Facebook
because he owns it. In the final analysis it means nothing to me.
Like I said earlier, he is
entitled to his views. I have no problem with that and neither should you or
him have any problem with mine.
It is only in your strange
Warri vocabulary that disagreeing with someone or not sharing that person's
opinion is tantamount to "condemning" him.
I am sure that he is very
happy with you for attempting to defend him here but surely you could have done
a far better job than you did.
Keep writing critical
essays against the government from California or wherever you are because it is
far easier for you to do so from there.
Those of us that are here
and that are not just arm chair critics and political commentators but that are
actually in the fray of politics will continue this fight right here in the
theater of war: and unlike others we won't run and hide in Mark Zuckerberg's
California.
My regards to your family.
Omokri responds to FFK
Dear Olufemi Olu-Kayode
Thank you for your last
response.
Since it has reached the
stage where you are irritated with me, I think it is best to leave well enough
alone. Let us agree to disagree without being irritated by each other. I have
said all I need to say on the matter of Mark Zuckerberg's description of the
Hausa language as being unique. and I have heard all you have to say. Thank God
we are both professing Christ followers and are thus familiar with the advise
of Saint Paul in 2 Timothy 2:24 "the servant of the Lord must not strive;
but be gentle unto all men, apt to teach, patient."
I believe that affection is
better than perfection. I choose to maintain my brotherly affection for you at
the expense of perfection in my argument.
By the way, I was in
Nigeria two weeks ago. I preached at Holyhill Church, Abuja. The pastor Sunday
Ogidigbo publicized my visit. If I was a coward as you claim and was speaking
from the safety of California, why would I visit Nigeria after my strong and very
public criticism of the current administration?
Let me drop my pen here.
God bless you and yours.
Reno Omokri
Fani makes a big deal out of everything just go and return the stolen money
ReplyDeleteA free world, freedom of expression ride on Mr Kayode
DeleteEverybody is entitled to their opinion.
ReplyDelete