Tinubu Administration and Nigerian Government Continue Lavish Spending Spree

President Bola Tinubu has written to the National Assembly requesting approval for loans totaling N40.5 trillion ($28.93billion USD) for 2025-2026. The borrowing plan is a multi-currency facility which amounts to:
-USD $21.5 billion
-EUR €2.2 billion
-JAP ¥15BN
-EUR €65 million in grants

N40.5 trillion at 1,400/$1 = $28.93billion USD

This comes after he signed the N54.99 trillion 2025 Appropriation Bill into law to become the 2025 National budget, which kept increasing as follows:
—Initial proposal: ₦49.7 trillion (Appropriation bill by Tinubu)
—Increase by Tinubu: ₦4.5 trillion
—Revised proposal: ₦54.2 trillion (by Tinubu)
—Increase by National Assembly: ₦750 billion
—Final Approved Budget: ₦54.99 trillion

But it goes further! All this follows a set of six major World Bank loans requested by the Tinubu government which was approved for Nigeria in 2024, totaling $4.25 billion:
1) June 2024: $2.25 billion
—Nigeria Reforms for Economic Stabilization to Enable Transformation (RESET) Development Policy Financing – $1.5 billion;
—Accelerating Resource Mobilization Reforms (ARMOR) Program-for-Results – $750 million.
2) September 2024: $1.57 billion
—Primary Healthcare Provision Strengthening Program (HOPE-PHC) – $500 million;
—HOPE Governance Project (HOPE-GOV) – $500 million
—Sustainable Power and Irrigation for Nigeria Project (SPIN) – $500 million
3) December 2024: $500 million
—Rural Access and Agricultural Marketing Project – Scale Up (RAAMP-SU)

So the Tinubu Administration is requesting a loan total almost three-quarters of the 2025 national budget (N40.5 trillion/N54.99trillion = 0.737; 73.7%)? And almost seven times the World Bank loans given in 2024 ($28.93b/$4.25b= 6.81).

My collection of two of every animal is almost complete!

Questions:
—Has any regular Nigerian felt the benefits of all these loan monies besides soaring prices and decreasing supplies?
—Do you think Nigerian politicians will use this money to “serve and uplift” or “pack and eat”?
—Is this governance or stockpiling for the 2027 elections?
—Details matter, for example Tinubu getting ₦10 billion ($6.25m) for solar power at his Presidential Villa. Why not invest money to provide power for the people to ease their affliction?
—Why is the Nigerian government so wasteful and greedy?

Maybe Nigerians should lobby the Trump Administration to defund the World Bank just like USAID. To then force the Nigerian government and other African countries to live within their means… or internally collapse. With the tap of milk and honey dwindling, it would then make it easier for true leaders and revolutionaries to take full possession of government and start building a brighter future.

Nigeria has become a jungleocracy with an ineffective National Assembly (few exceptions) that is practically useless. It is a government ran mostly by marauders. People whose idea of public service is to make the public their servants and for public money to be at their service.

A lavish feast is being organized and Nigerian citizens are not invited. The younger generation must brace up to eventually pay back all these loans. Potentially even at the cost of building their own futures. What a high price to pay for allowing vandals today to rob your tomorrow.

What will it take to move Nigeria forward? The answer to this question and what is burning in the spirit cannot be discussed on LinkedIn and WhatsApp. But only in an underground bunker you need a secret password to enter conveyed only by a messenger pigeon. In a dimly lit room encircled by candles with incense burning in the background. And from a dark corner a group of hooded monks chanting cryptic Gregorian hymns just to elevate the spook. Hatching clandestine plans at the beginning of whose execution heavenly trumpets starts blowing from the Eastern cosmos. For Nigeria needs miracles, magic, and exorcisms to progress.

Dramatic yes. Point is a reckoning is coming, because something has to give. And it will. For clearly these people in office are not serious about nation-building.

~Dr. Ikenna A. Ezealah

References:
—People’s Gazette https://gazettengr.com/tinubu-seeks-another-n40-trillion-foreign-loans-as-nigerias-revenue-crashes-amidst-investors-exodus/
—Nairametrics https://nairametrics.com/2025/04/11/nigerias-debt-to-world-bank-surges-by-2-36-billion-in-2024-after-approval-of-six-loans/
—Channels TV: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b1emxYhQmRI
—Budgit: https://budgit.org/post_infographics/2025-fg-approved-budget/

The African Continental Railway System (ACRS)

In Africa, what type of transportation network is best suited to unlock the free movement of persons, seamlessly connect all parts of the continent, and enable the dynamic movement of goods and services?

Before law school, I read the AfCFTA agreement twice and created a series of charts and flowcharts to make the information easily accessible. I reflected on the AfCFTA’s goal of promoting the free movement of people and its aim to enhance economic integration and unity across Africa, and I noticed how it aligns with the African Union’s Agenda 2063 free movement goals.

Considering these objectives, I asked myself what form of transportation would best enable the free movement of people across Africa? And I envisioned a comprehensive and fully integrated African Continental Railway System (ACR). 

Airplanes are important modes of transportation, but to best unlock the movement of people, goods and services in Africa, it is my conviction that an African Continental Railway System is best suited to the African dynamics and disposition.

African leaders could collaborate to create a framework for a Continental Railway System, linking all regions of the continent and allowing citizens to travel freely between countries. First, a continental network could be established, followed by regional railway frameworks aligned with the ACR for seamless connectivity. National governments could then layer their railways in coordination with these regional and continental plans. The economic, political, and social impact of such a system would be transformative, releasing a socioeconomic sonic boom into the future.

A continental railway would facilitate the movement of people, goods, ideas, and resources, allowing Africans to live in one country and work in another. Imagine a person living in Nairobi (Kenya) who can work in Enugu (Nigeria). Consider a developmental project in Abijan (Côte d’Ivoire) that can be partially staffed by technical experts from Yaounde (Cameroon) who would get there daily through a highspeed railway linking the countries.

But it would also create jobs across countries for Africa’s growing population, sparking continent-wide productivity and skills development. Rail construction, operation, engineering, and logistics would involve an unprecedented transfer of skills and training, contracts, public-private partnerships, allowing African youths to play a central role in building and sustaining a unified infrastructure. The ACR would facilitate industrialization and manufacturing by also igniting the steel industry in Africa. For it would be Continental Law in promoting self-sufficiency that the production of all components of this Railway System must happen in Africa! Regional hubs connecting businesses, factories, industrial sites, cities, schools, and cultural centers would open Africa to itself, fostering a rich and reciprocal exchange of culture, resources, and labor. Africans could experience the continent’s natural landscapes, while work and leisure become truly continental. 

Imagine traveling on the ACR from Conakry (Guinea) to Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) or Khartoum (Sudan) to Pretoria (South Africa). On the major pit stops African people from different ethic groups would embark and disembark. Think about the human and cultural connection! Imagine seeing and experiencing the diverse landscapes and natural wonders of Africa as you travel! It is impossible to see and appreciate the natural beauties of the land through air like you would closeup in a railway!

While challenges would undoubtedly arise, such an initiative would require comprehensive planning, precise coordination, tactical execution, public-private partnership, and the continuous engagement of citizens. However, if Africa’s leaders could establish the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to create a single trade market, they can achieve the same framework for the ACR. It just takes a bold vision, firm will, commitment to planning, and a tenacity for execution! The realization of this vision may take some time, but part of a visionary’s work is to establish frameworks for the future. And I believe the African Continental Railway System represents the best means of achieving a connected Africa for the free movements of persons and goods.

Let African leaders, governments, and institutions take note.

Let nation-builders in Africa step forward, bold and courageous, to build the African future! Leaders of Africa, it is high-time to think big and start leading with bold visions and diligent hands that work to realize it for the progress and development of the African people!

Onward & Upward!

~Dr. Ikenna A. Ezealah, Ph.D., MBA
Builder of the African Future

March 6, 1957—The Birth of An Independent Ghana

Happy Independence Day Ghana!

On this momentous day, March 6, 2025, I join the people of Ghana and the Global African community in celebrating the anniversary of Ghana’s independence, achieved under the leadership of the Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah! I also honor The Big Six of Ghana (Kwame Nkrumah; Joseph Boakye (‘J.B.’) Danquah; Emmanuel Obetsebi-Lamptey; Ebenezer Ako-Adjei; William Ofori Atta; Edward Akufo-Addo)—and all others who contributed to the struggle for Ghana’s political liberation. Their efforts not only secured Ghana’s independence, but also set a precedence for other independence movements across Africa.  

On March 6, 1957, Ghana became the second African country to gain independence. Although it is widely regarded as the first, historical accuracy gives that distinction to Sudan, which gained independence from British-Egyptian rule on January 1, 1956—making it the first African country to gain independence in the year 1956, before Ghana.

Sudan’s colonial administration was unique —it was governed under an Anglo-Egyptian Condominium (1899-1956), meaning it was jointly ruled by Britain and Egypt, rather than being a direct colony of a single European power. So, while Sudan was the first African country to gain independence in 1956, Ghana (1957) was the first African country to gain independence from direct European colonial rule (British Gold Coast).

As a Garvey-Nkrumah Legal Fellow, our delegation visited Ghana and Rwanda in the Summer 2024. After completing our official business for the trip—including a meeting with the President of Ghana—we visited the Kwame Nkrumah Memorial Park & Mausoleum in Accra. The previous Summer, I had read Dr. Nkrumah’s autobiography and had devoted time to understanding him not just as a leader, but as a person—exploring his deeper aims and motivations. This experience was deeply inspiring and further reinforced my commitment to African nation-building!

On July 19, 2024, I stood beside Dr. Nkrumah’s statue, mirroring his forward-pointing gesture that powerfully embodies his famous words: “Forward ever, backward never.” Then I knelt before his grave, filled with different intuitions. Sometimes in life, the most precious things cannot be shared.

“Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, a thousand thanks for your positive example of visionary African leadership, and your unbending commitment for the welfare and progress of the African people. Most of all, your natural reverence for God. These are noble qualities desperately lacking in African leadership today, and we feel the big gap left by your absence.”

I will carry the torch of African progress forward, working diligently to ensure it burns brighter in this generation—singularly focused on the mission of African nation-building!

Confidently I walk the path of destiny—“Forward ever, backward never”—focused upward, forever onward!

Happy 68th Independence Day Ghana!

~Dr. Ikenna Ezealah
“Builder of the African Future”

Top 10 African GDPs v. Elon Musk’s Net Worth (2024)

Just for fun, I asked ChatGPT to compare the current GDPs of African countries with Elon Musk’s net worth (estimated at $248 billion). While the figures should be verified, the preliminary result is:

Elon Musk is the 5th largest economy in Africa, with a net worth greater than 50 African countries. Here’s the numerical breakdown.

Top 10 African GDPs v. Elon Musk Net Worth (2024)

1. South Africa – $373 billion
-Musk’s net worth is 66.5% of South Africa’s GDP
-Difference: South Africa’s GDP exceeds Musk by $125 billion
2. Egypt – $347 billion
-Musk’s net worth is 71.5% of Egypt’s GDP
-Difference: Egypt’s GDP exceeds Musk by $99 billion
3. Algeria – $266 billion
-Musk’s net worth is 93.2% of Algeria’s GDP
-Difference: Algeria’s GDP exceeds Musk by $18 billion
4. Nigeria – $252 billion
-Musk’s net worth is 98.4% of Nigeria’s GDP
-Difference: Nigeria’s GDP is only larger by $4 billion
5. Ethiopia – $205 billion
-Musk’s net worth is 121% of Ethiopia’s GDP
-Difference: Musk’s net worth exceeds Ethiopia’s GDP by $43 billion
6. Morocco – $152 billion
-Musk’s net worth is 163% of Morocco’s GDP
-Difference: Musk’s net worth exceeds Morocco’s GDP by $96 billion
7. Kenya – $104 billion
-Musk’s net worth is 238% of Kenya’s GDP
-Difference: Musk’s net worth exceeds Kenya’s GDP by $144 billion
8. Angola – $92 billion
-Musk’s net worth is 270% of Angola’s GDP
-Difference: Musk’s net worth exceeds Angola’s GDP by $156 billion
9. Cote D’Ivoire – $86 billion
-Musk’s net worth is 288% of Cote D’Ivoire’s GDP
-Difference: Musk’s net worth exceeds Cote D’Ivoire’s GDP by $162 billion
10. Tanzania – $79 billion
-Musk’s net worth is 314% of Tanzania’s GDP
-Difference: Musk’s net worth exceeds Tanzania’s GDP by $169 billion

Imagine if we added large Western multinational firms to the comparison? The result would be disastrous. African people please listen to me… if you do not make big changes soon (starting with your “leadership”) then in the next 10years you will be completely swallowed by the global economy. Already now you are mashed up at the edge of the throat. One “throat-thrust” and you will fall headlong in the stomach to be digested.

There is but one way out…to heed the clarion call for vigorous nation-building!

Onward & Upward!

~Dr. Ikenna Ezealah

Africa Needs A Common Language!

Years ago, when I read the African Continental Free Trade Agreement document, the last paragraph surprised me:

“WE, the Heads of State and Government or duly authorised representatives of the Member States of the African Union, have signed and sealed this Agreement in four original texts in Arabic, English, French, and Portuguese languages, all texts being equally authentic.”

Not one of those languages is originally African! A document meant to represent African interests is not presented in an original African language. Do you see the linguistic confusion in Africa today?

To develop as a unified body, Africa needs a common indigenous language as a unifying element among its diverse peoples and ethnic groups. Genuine cooperation, strategic alignment, mutual understanding, and policy coherence, which facilitate economic development, assume simplicity and ease of communication. Africa cannot claim this today.

If you study the development of both historical and modern world powers, one common element that facilitated their growth was linguistic homogeneity. Even when different languages and dialects existed within their borders, one primary language guided them. Africa lacks this.

Today, Africa is linguistically similar to the Tower of Babel—a mixture of hundreds of local languages and dialects beneath a handful of colonial languages. In an African country, some speak the colonial language, others a broken mix of it and a local language, and still others speak only the local language. Multiply this across all African countries! What you have, in the final analysis, is linguistic chaos ripe for divisive tribalism.

Despite this, policymakers are attempting to unite Africa through policy initiatives. But what is the chance of success? How can one African truly empathize with another when they cannot even understand each other?

Real leadership demands that hard decisions be made. The African Union should take the lead, and with the cooperation of the Ministers of Education, a chosen language should be taught in all African schools starting from primary education. I am not proposing “linguicide,” as all other languages would remain intact, learned, and culturally passed on to future generations. Nor does this chosen language imply “superiority”; it is simply a means of collective cooperation. All egos, tribalism, and emotions must be put aside, and leaders must be able to make this decision objectively, without regard to ethnic affiliation—a tall order today!

Africa is still linguistically colonized and cannot fully develop as a united body so long as a local language (or a few) is not primary, and European languages remain its main form of communication. Instead of just one, each region could adopt a common language, resulting in five main African languages!

Africa needs a common language (or basket of languages), so its people have a true medium to promote unity and collective progress.

Onward & Upward!

~Dr. Ikenna Ezealah

The Call To The Global African Peoples!

Observing this Chinese Political Scientist speak, do you see how much pride he feels when he authoritatively speaks of China’s development and rise from an agrarian society to an economic behemoth? And how this commands silence from other professionals?

Who among the global African people can boast the same of Africa today? We must struggle today for the burning pride of realized growth as a people! The pride of facing centuries of setbacks and oppression and still soaring to luminous developmental heights like a phoenix!

Africans cannot fully gain that unflinching pride and confidence as a people unless they build something indigenously unique in Africa today, whose beauty and refinement matches and even exceeds foreign developments! Until then, there will always be a lingering doubt in the intuition of the African that needs to either look back to ancient glories to justify itself or look overseas at Africans doing big things in foreign countries! The latter deserves recognition, but it only reinforces the notion that you could only achieve greatness through foreign systems and societies… not yours!

China also boasted of a rich ancient history! But the world mocked: “If you were so great in ancient times, then prove yourself in the modern era!” Under Deng Xiaoping, who became paramount leader in 1978, China responded by initiating revolutionary economic reforms that catalyzed their transformation into the behemoth we see today! The ancient dragon of China resurrected and silenced all doubt!

Now Africa, the world smirks and mocks you as being a developmental pariah! What is your response? Debates of slavery and colonization are losing their luster! Valorizing ancient African glories has value, but those were achievements of our ancestors, we in the modern era must prove ourselves! The Law of Universal Movement demands continual proof of capacity through constant progress and development! Onwards, ever onwards must be the forward drive to prove ourselves ever anew!

Only applied potential and realized capacity that brings a new standard of excellence through ennobled indigenous developments will empower African people with radiant pride and confidence, and also silence the mocking and doubts! Only deeds and original accomplishments as a people will do this!

Builders of the African Future, there is absolutely no other way to achieve this but through diligently harnessing the immense talents and capacity of the global African peoples, then strategically applying its unified power in the organized framework of a developmental vision that unleashes Africa’s modern potential and gives the world a marvel to behold! No matter how daunting the challenge, let us stand up courageously and brace ourselves to meet it as a united force for the transformative good! For Africa can and must rise!

…Hence the call to nation-building!

Onward & Upward!

~Dr. Ikenna Ezealah

Addressing The Recent Change In Nigeria’s National Anthem

Recently, the Nigerian President led a campaign and signed into law a change in the national anthem. The previous national anthem “Arise, O Compatriots”, created by five Nigerians and then was put to music by Benedict P. Odiase, is now replaced by “Nigeria, We Hail Thee”, which was written in 1960 by British expatriate Lillian Jean Williams and was initially adopted as Nigeria’s national anthem when the country gained independence on October 1, 1960.

“It is my priority” the President said, as citizens were given no input or involvement in the process. A minor issue was prioritized, despite major issues and urgent national priorities troubling the lives of the Nigerian citizens such as inflation, skyrocketing cost of food, inconsistent power, insecurity, dilapidating infrastructure, underfunding of education, departure of multinational firms, the downward spiraling economy, and much more. This move, reflecting misplaced priorities, poor timing, and a myopic insensitivity to the historical backdrop of the British colonial legacy by reimposing an anthem on Nigerians that a foreigner created and not the Nigerian people, is tragic evidence of lack of leadership and vision. An anthem is too personal for a people to be outsourced.

The words of “Nigeria, We Hail Three” were touted as being more inspirational and befitting. But no matter how inspirational the words of any chosen anthem are, the real question is: do the actions of the Nigerian political class as representatives of the citizenry reflect it? No! Can you find traces of respectable value system in most from the political class that gives meaning to the words of the national anthem? No! In the now former anthem, the first word is “Arise”, which is to awaken to higher vision, values, and sense of duty. To transcend ethnicity and petty politics, in order to listen to the call of service that, through diligent implementation, furthers the welfare of the whole. How many citizens and political leaders in Nigeria’s history up to the present can say they have even fulfilled this first word? Words change conditions only when practice empowers them to manifestation. The new anthem will not change the behavior of the political class, so instead of changing anthems the right move would have been to look within and change. If this proved too difficult, then it is the poor leadership and the political class that should have been changed, not the anthem.   

Moving beyond constructive criticism and notwithstanding the atrocious timing of the change in national anthem, I will now offer a solution and explain how a change in the national anthem can be approached that would encourage greater inclusive and a sense of collective ownership. Here are the ten recommended steps to properly changing the national anthem:

  1. Host an open townhall with members of the public from all levels of society, government officials, organizations and civil society.
  2. Make a live case to the people. Describe the origin, meaning, parties, timeline, and development of the anthems within the historical context of the country’s history, then share reasons why a change is necessary.
  3. Invite comments, questions, healthy debate, and exchange of diverse ideas so people are included in the purpose and process.
  4. Announce a “National Anthem Rewrite” initiative in which the Nigerian citizens are encouraged to create and submit a national anthem, and a recitation video to a national commission and on social media. The objective is to empower the Nigerian people to take ownership, unleash their creativity, and ensure the recited words of national pride arise from their spirit!
  5. All created anthems will be reviewed, finalists will be selected, then one chosen; or different elements of some can be combined to create one whole anthem. A citizen’s commission will adjoin the national commission to participate in the decision-making process.
  6. The bill introducing a change to the national anthem will then be presented to the National Assembly, where it should be passed after some discussions.
  7. A signing ceremony will be organized with members of the public from all levels of society, government officials, organizations, and civil society.
  8. A band/group comprising different tribes and regions of the country will be composed to sing, record, and perform the national anthem.
  9. The author(s) of the anthem, the public, and others will be invited to Abuja for the first live performance of the group in a day of national unity. The event will also feature performances by Nigerian artists, poets, and comments by civic and academic leaders. The author(s) in a ceremony will be given an award(s) by the President in recognition of their creative contribution to the country. Then, the multiethnic group garbed in their native attires will sing it live for the first time. Their voices, united with the audience, will reverberate proudly through the Nigerian ether!
  10. The lyrics will be engraved in a large plaque and decoratively mounted tall in a wall in the Statehouse Aso Rock Presidential Villa and the National Assembly Complex.

This way, the Nigerian people are involved, centered, and use their own abilities to define the meaning of their anthem instead of a foreigner. It is indolence, lack of vision, and want of creativity that makes African leaders always ready to adopt foreign ideas, systems, and institutions, without the indigenous impetus to harness the abilities of their people, build on their cultural heritage, and create something original.

Here, many will remonstrate, saying “Nigeria was not named by Nigerians, must we change that too?” If we are serious, yes! How did Nigeria get its name? According to Richard Bourne in his book:

“The name ‘Nigeria’ had been coined by his [Frederick Lugard’s] wife and admirer, Flora Shaw, colonial editor of The Times, in a letter she wrote to her paper in January 1897. She used it to define the territories abutting the River Niger that were then being traded in or claimed by the Royal Niger Company” (Nigeria: A New History of a Turbulent Century; p. 3).

Thus, Nigeria was named not with any historical symbolism, rich cultural meaning, or existential ideal for its future development, but based solely on a colonial convenience of grouping people together in relation to a landmark! And you my people conveniently accept that and even defend against any change because you have grown “accustomed” to it? How deep have we sunk in Africa! Now contrast this with the reason that Dr. Kwame Nkrumah gave in his autobiography about renaming the Gold Coast “Ghana”. He spoke about how in the very early days of the Christian era before England was important, his African ancestors had attained a great empire:

“It is said that lawyers and scholars were much respected in that empire and that the inhabitants of Ghana wore garments of wool, cotton, silk and velvet. Thee was trade in copper, gold and textile fabrics, and jewels and weapons of gold and silver were carried.

“Thus we may take pride in the name of Ghana, not out of romanticism, but as an inspiration for the future. It is right and proper that we should know about our past. For just as the future moves from the present, so the present has emerged from the past. Nor need we be ashamed of our past. There was much in it of glory. What our ancestors achieved in the context of their contemporary society gives us confidence that we can create, out of that past, a glorious future, not in terms of war and military pomp, but in terms of social progress and peace.” (The Autobiography of Kwame Nkrumah; p. 195-96)

What a difference of day and night in the naming of “Ghana” and “Nigeria”! One rich in historical meaning and an inspiration for the future, while the other is just a geographic convenience lacking substance. Perhaps the difference is that Ghana has had the fortune of a visionary leader at the head of government, while Nigeria has not! Nigeria has even historically worked hard to ensure its most talented and industrious citizens are deprived of every opportunity of leading government, so that an avaricious cabal of tribalistic, vacuous, and visionless officials can continue plundering the national coffers while pushing the people in penury toward the abyss of infamy. How will a change in anthem effect a change in this rot? A gargoyle that changes its shirt is just a gargoyle in a beautiful shirt. Except here the shirt is now “foreign made”.

To effect change in Nigeria and Africa, our leaders need to become scholars of history in addition to an elevation in values and thinking, so our present actions build from the past. Follow me therefore on a quick diversion to explain the meaning of “Ghana”.

Ghana was a kingdom of the Soninke people, who are the northernmost people of the great Mande family that occupied a territory close to the Sahara desert. To properly situate Ghana in Ancient Africa, we should be clear of ethnic clusters in that the Soninke, Malinke and Bambara belong to a group referred to as Mandingoes or Mande-speaking (The History of West Africa; p. 15-18). This is important because when interpreting historical records, the same kingdom might have been referenced with slightly different names and meanings by the people, only because the descriptions might arise from different languages of ethnic groups in the same or different broader family. This notion applies to Ghana because historically there are two traditions (perhaps more) that mention a great Soninke kingdom of gold with the names Wagadu and Kaya-Magha, which preceded the Mali Empire and its preeminent leader Mansa Musa!

In one tradition, Wagadu was a prosperous kingdom blessed with vast quantities of gold with its capital at Kumbi, and its kings bore the title of Magha or Manga. The other tradition arose out of Ta’rīkhs (Arabic texts) from Timbuktu that mention the kingdom of Kaya-Magha as predecessor of Mali, one of these texts name the capital city Qunbi (like Kumbi), while the other calls it Ghana. Kaya-Magha in Soninke language means “king of gold”. However, in Malinke, Gãna or Kãna means war chief (The History of West Africa; p. 120). Ghana was called ‘the land of gold’ by some Arab geographers. Although people use the name Ghana interchangeably for both the kingdom and capital, al-Bakrī says in his text that ‘Ghana is the title of their kings’. The ‘ghana’ was the “king of gold” and powerful protector “war chief” who ruled the land of gold, with its thriving people, social order, beauty, systems, and advancements!

Do you see the depth of thought the Osagyefo Kwame Nkrumah gave to the choice of name? How the name and concept can awaken pride in the people? Not flippant and superficial, but deep and introspective. Do you see how he insisted and persisted to reclaim the sovereign right to rename his people according to their rich heritage, and as a signpost for continuous progress? So, why does the Ivory Coast, Nigeria and others still bear their names of colonial humiliation? As a country we gain independence, yet we lack the strength, insight, and self-respect to choose our own name with relevant meaning and create our own original systems. Complacent in the comfort that it has become “customary”, we avoid the discomfort of making changes and instead choose the indolent road of either keeping things the same, or to make a change we look abroad for what we can adopt from others!

Look at Nigeria: a British education and legal system complete with judges still wearing the ridiculous colonial wigs. We are black people in Africa, the British have left, and we still insist on wearing white wigs as a symbol of our “colonial legal tradition”, even though US white American descendants of Europeans, who have a greater claim to wig-wearing due to racial homogeneity no longer perpetuate that custom. Yet it is us as black people who thoughtlessly still insist on wigs. Absolutely incredible! If original thinking is too challenging then, being facetious, we can at least wear a black African wig that resembles African characteristics!

In governance Nigeria initially adopted the British parliamentary system, and then to make a change switched to the US governance system. Where are the original systems of Nigerians and Africans? What new institutions and structures? Are we just copycats who must rely on Europe and the US for everything? And with the emergence of China will we copy them too? Under poor leadership and an apathetic citizenry, instead of looking within to produce originally, to make a change we always look abroad to copy as a certified stamp of personal humiliation. We were given free will and a brain, thus the capacity to choose and think for ourselves… it is time to creatively exercise both! We are a great people, so it is time to give life and cultural expression to our vibrant abilities as a people rich in heritage and potential!

How can an African hold the seat of leadership, then simply continue the status quo and not earnestly strive to make a change, but content with an adopted name, anthem, systems and all. Never should you accept it, for your sovereign right and indigenous pride as an African leader should forbid it! Leaders of Africa, stand up and straighten your backs or give way for others who are willing to! It is high time to awaken to high deeds and work diligently… for the self-respect, welfare and indigenous progress of the people!

The issue stated here is beyond naming, but the earnest process of Africans using their own indigenous abilities and heritage to guide all progressive developments connected with themselves and their environment! It includes name, culture, systems, institutions, architecture, theories, and everything else. The people have the right and sacred duty to participate in the forming of all symbols, systems, and institutions of their country. Here, in addition to misplaced priorities, the Nigerian government woefully failed and deprived its people from cooperating by using their own abilities to creatively form a new anthem and thus design a national meaning from their own inner beings.

Wrong and shameful, poor leadership lacking in vision, this is the sentencing of the Laws of Nature and many Nigerians, for which my words are the iron gavel that pounds in judgment! Wake up…Arise O Compatriots!

~Dr. Ikenna Ezealah

AI Tools For African Development & News

I am reaching out to see if anyone knows of an AI African development/news synthesizer. An AI product that aggregates news, latest developments, historical facts, government actions, policy dialogues, investments, innovations, and geopolitical matters across all reportable sectors in every African country. Included in this should be thought-leaders in podcasts, academia, and civil society.

In one tool I want to reach and vigilantly monitor developments in the entire continent in an all-encompassing manner from the past to present, information consolidated and tightly coordinated, to see everything happening at the same time like an eagle looking at the whole continent from space.

If you know of any existing tools or any such tools in development, please share so I can experiment.

Based on the above description, it is important that African governments enact policies and take actions that rigorously monitor and authenticate the AI data inputs (sources AI is using for its information), but also the outputs (where the gathered information from people is being collected and what the AI company is doing with it). AI should not become a Trojan Horse in the African continent, so it is the task of leadership to ensure the inputs and outputs are under scrutiny through firm policy implementation and monitoring. The best case scenario is Africans building AI technologies that can compete with foreign ones, so they personally control the inputs and outputs.

From a business standpoint, AI companies will be a great investment. From a legal perspective, AI law and regulation will be in high demand and a lucrative career. From a human perspective, AI should support human value systems and be an efficient assistant for productive activities but not dictate or distort them. The AI tsunami has already started and will affect everything, so the focus at this point is how to properly harness it to serve good goals and positive activities that bring value to society.

So, if you know of any such tools mentioned above, please share.

~Dr. Ikenna Ezealah

Africa And Western Liberal Democracy

“We [African countries] made a mistake adopting western liberal democracy” 

…stated Former President Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria when he met members of the House of Representatives in Abuja on Monday who are championing the reintroduction of the parliamentary system of government. As reported by The Premium Times Nigeria. 

Obasanjo is stating what for years I have been emphatically saying to African people after deep reflection and comprehensive assessment of past, present, and future. Namely, that the western liberal democratic system is not suitable for the African people who have a different nature and cultural heritage. 

The liberal democratic system is good for the US, and the parliamentary system is good for Europe, but both systems and all other imported foreign systems are ineffective and inefficient for the African people. Even detrimental for progress. I will take it a step further:

“No African country can blossom to its potential by perpetuating the adopted parliamentary or liberal western democratic system!” 

This is an immutable fact of unchangeable objective reality. These systems are beneficial for western countries, but not for Africa. 

“We ruled ourselves before the advent of colonialism. We had empires and striving kingdoms.” Obasanjo said. Thus, there is a knowledge of different African frameworks that African people today have abandoned and need to recover and modernize!

What is the next step? 

My proposal is to call a Continental Constitutional Council (CCC), which will feature key representatives of various ethnic groups, regions, governments, and sectors in African society. Each group will bring knowledge of different governance systems and societal structures of different empires, kingdoms, and ethnic groups throughout African history. 

Next, they should meticulously study these indigenous systems and structures, combine them in new ways, assess present realities, and modernize them into different potential models. Next, they will return to their various countries equipped with this general body of knowledge and potential models, then the specific country or region will engage their citizens and different sectors of society in order to design a system that modifies and localizes the knowledge exchange of the CCC. 

The African people should not adopt or copy, but create a new governance system from their inner beings and by improving past systems. Thus, everything must become new! We must build and create what we need for ourselves. 

I applaud the preliminary effort of the Nigerian officials who are asking questions and exploring a new system. To the Nigerian government I will say: 

“I am fully prepared and committed to join this initiative of Constitutional redesign and governance restructuring for indigenous nation-building. So, if you call requesting my involvement… anytime, anywhere, you will find me energetically action-ready.”

To the African people, true progress for you lies in actively using the abilities of your souls to continuously build on the knowledge of your ancestors. 

Onward & Upward!

~Dr. Ikenna Ezealah