bill Archives — Viqta.com https://www.viqta.com/tag/bill/ Tech, scholarships, opinions and general information Sat, 29 Feb 2020 21:09:37 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 Foreign Education for Boko Haram Members: What Balderdash! https://www.viqta.com/foreign-education-for-boko-haram-members-what-balderdash/ Sat, 29 Feb 2020 21:09:37 +0000 http://www.viqta.com/?p=833 It’s disheartening sometimes realising how some so-called leaders in this country think! This is especially because some foreigners might draw their conclusions about the citizens here based on what these people do. The other time, someone proposed a hate speech bill, perhaps, principally targeted at keeping Nigerians mute on social media. Now, another “lawmaker” is […]

The post Foreign Education for Boko Haram Members: What Balderdash! appeared first on Viqta.com.

]]>
It’s disheartening sometimes realising how some so-called leaders in this country think! This is especially because some foreigners might draw their conclusions about the citizens here based on what these people do.

The other time, someone proposed a hate speech bill, perhaps, principally targeted at keeping Nigerians mute on social media. Now, another “lawmaker” is proposing a bill that would offer free foreign education to “repentant” Boko Haram members. You said what! So forgiveness is not enough? Hm.

No education image

Truthopology

An Irony of a Bill

It is befuddling trying to figure where the ideas for some legislative bills in this country emanate from. I think the legislature is increasingly becoming a joke! It’s not like I have been a big fan, anyway; things are just getting worse.

The Good Book said something about not casting our “pearls before the pigs.” In other words, we should not give something valuable to someone that does not appreciate or know the value.

Based on what I have heard people say about Boko Haram in the past, the two words in the term “foreign education” represent two things they are opposed to. So what’s the sense in offering their members things that they detest?

Apparently, someone thought differently.

Yet, these are people who have destroyed a whole generation’s education. But what they deprived others of was most likely substandard, “local” education. Now, they are getting a better education as their reward. What the heck!

Encouraging the bad

In my own opinion, the “Bill for the Establishment of the National Agency for the Education, Rehabilitation, Deradicalisation and Integration of Repentant Insurgents in Nigeria and for Other Connected Purposes” is a scary proposition. It’s somewhat like an encouragement for violent behaviour.

This raises the likelihood that some other groups might surface in the future and its “repentant” members can expect some benefits after committing all sorts of atrocities. Is this really what the country wants?

There are many people who are dissatisfied about one thing or another in this country. So they can all be violent to achieve their aims?

What about Jobs?

This country teems with millions of unemployed people. According to a report, the Minister of Labour and Employment has projected that the unemployment rate will surge to 33.5 per cent in Nigeria this year.

We are looking at 1 in every 3 Nigerians of working age not having a job!

It makes me wonder whether the bill, which has passed first reading, also includes plans to provide jobs for the so-called repentant Boko Haram member after their foreign education. Otherwise, it will make for double insults and injuries to every law-abiding Nigerians.

Some people will even argue that it was the lack of a livelihood that make some persons to join the sadistic militant group, and rightly so. So education is now the best they could get?

In case jobs are also part of the deal, that might spell more trouble for the country. It could send the message that the millions of unemployed people should toe the same path to get their much-desired job.

The free foreign education part should immediately be removed from the bill if it’s truly meant for the good of Nigeria. Vocational training should suffice in its place.

The Boko Haram situation is a good example of what happens when government fails to do things that nip possible problems in the bud. You don’t come up with ridiculous “solutions” afterwards!

The post Foreign Education for Boko Haram Members: What Balderdash! appeared first on Viqta.com.

]]>
Hate Speech Bill: Isn’t This Absurd? https://www.viqta.com/hate-speech-bill-isnt-absurd/ Wed, 13 Nov 2019 08:31:08 +0000 http://www.viqta.com/?p=826 Just when you thought you have seen and heard it all, some folks around here somehow still contrive to surprise or shock you – maybe, just a little. I was listening to a favourite on-radio comedy programme today when I heard about a proposed hate speech bill. It wasn’t the first time I heard about […]

The post Hate Speech Bill: Isn’t This Absurd? appeared first on Viqta.com.

]]>
Just when you thought you have seen and heard it all, some folks around here somehow still contrive to surprise or shock you – maybe, just a little.

I was listening to a favourite on-radio comedy programme today when I heard about a proposed hate speech bill. It wasn’t the first time I heard about something like that – learnt about similar months ago. I tend not to bother much about things political leaders do in this country anymore. What piqued my interest was a mention of death penalty against persons found guilty of hate speech. Really!

hate-speech

Pixabay

What’s really the gain of this ‘democracy’?

This is a question I have asked myself on several occasions over the years. If I’m going to be frank with anyone, freedom of speech is the only benefit of democracy I will likely mention if I am asked to cite one without thinking about it.

Even the freedom of speech of a thing already has a question mark hanging over it. However, that’s another topic on its own.

Democracy should mean a lot more than just freedom of speech. But, hey, that’s the only benefit that I can say I enjoy more under the current system of government. Now, my opinion is simply based on my experience of ‘democratic’ and military regimes in this country, plus historical facts.

Not that the right to freedom of speech means a lot around here, though. We keep talking, but it’s like there is no effect at all. However, we’d rather retain the right.

Now, some people seem to be trying to take away the only benefit democracy in this country seems to offer, under the guise of ‘hate speech.’

This hate speech bill is actually a sad reminder that the so-called democracy in the country isn’t far from what obtained during the years of the military.

Is a bill against hate speech that bad?

Hate speech is an appalling thing. Everything possible should be done to stop it! So, I have no problem with promulgating a law to this end.

I’d probably not have paid much attention to the bill, which has just been reintroduced, before the Senate. The only thing that just piqued my attention was the mention of a death penalty. I had to search online to confirm if that part was true.

I found out that death penalty was prescribed in the first hate speech bill proposed by the current deputy chief whip Aliyu Abdullahi in the previous Senate. What is unclear, however, is whether that remains a part of the new bill.

The scary thing in all of this is that one cannot be fully sure what truly constitutes hate speech. This is going by apparent interest of government in censoring what Nigerians post on social media.

Who knows? Omoyele Sowore would probably have been found guilty of so-called hate speech the other time. You just can never tell. This is why caution needs to come into play with the hate speech bill currently before the Senate.

Inappropriate use of force

In my opinion, the newly re-introduced bill is somewhat like wrong channelling of energy. It is somewhat like killing a gnat with a sledgehammer or a bazooka – in the light of the alleged penalty.

We often hear about how corrupt politicians get sentenced to death in China. That, to me, represents more appropriate use of force.

Corruption is a bigger problem, probably the biggest, in this country. I think we should instead be talking of death penalty for those found guilty of it.

The National Assembly has never proposed a bill including capital punishment for corruption. Or did I miss it? Yet, someone there could think of the same for hate speech as if it’s a greater evil.

I don’t condone hate speech. But there are other offences for which a death penalty may be more appropriate, including corruption and kidnapping.

The post Hate Speech Bill: Isn’t This Absurd? appeared first on Viqta.com.

]]>