Wednesday, April 22, 2009

AMERICANS IN THE EYES OF NON-AMERICANS

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Jonathan Power, a columnist at the Punch Newspaper here in Nigeria stated some things an ordinary American will find difficult to believe even though some of their renowned scholars such as Samuel Huntington (The Clash of Civilisation, 1999) had previously said the same thing.

From what I read, Jonathan made it known that Americans are full of themselves. This is made vivid in a statement credit to former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright “America is the indispensable nation” and “We stand tall and hence see further than any other nation”, which means other nations are dispensable and that American indispensability is the source of wisdom. So we non-americans see them as arrogant and unilaterism. Take for instance, the US government has in the last two years attemted to unilaterally prevent other countries from acquiring military capabilities that could counter her conventional superiority; enforce American law territorially in other societies; grade countries according to American standards on human rights, drugs, terroism, nuclear proliferation and religious freedom; apply sanctions against countries that do not meet American standards on these issues; promote American corporate interests under the slogans of free trade and open markets; shape World Bank and International Monetary Fund policies to serve the same corporate interests; intervene in local conflicts in which it has relatively little direct interest, gave travel warnings to her citizens for destination such as Nigeria labelling them highly volatile etc.

I will give kudos to Jonathan and even to the Punch Newspaper for having the guts to write and publish this piece: even I had to reaaly think deep before realizing that it is true, one hundered percent true.


Culled from The Punch, Friday January 23 2009, page 50, Vol. 17 No. 20, 313

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

NIGERIA LOSES BID FOR INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT

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It is indeed a great pity that Nigeria of all country had to lose out of the ICC elections for six vacant post of Judges which took place on Tuesday, January 20 2009 in New York.

Yes it is true that the candidate for Nigeria during the election in person of the honourable barrister Chile Eboe Osuji who is presently the head of chamber of the International Criminal Tribunal on Rwanda based in Tanzania is a renowned scholar of international law and well respected but that does not mean he is the right candiate for the job.

I think it is high time the Nigerian government start mixing fresh faces for position in the internationalarena and I believe we lost that election due to the present state of our image as a highly corrupt nation with the Harllebuton and Siemens bribery scandal and not so good human right record.

Culled from The Punch, Friday January 23 2009, page 50, Vol. 17 No. 20, 313