Super User
How to edit WhatsApp messages after sending (and why it isn't working)
WhatsApp has released a new feature that allows users to edit messages after sending them. In recent years, several messaging apps have introduced features enabling users to unsend or edit messages with typos, grammatical errors, or wrong information. Most recently, Apple released the edit message feature for iMessage with a 15-minute time cap, and WhatsApp is following suit.
Editing a message on WhatsApp is very easy. All users need to do is press and hold a message, then select the 'Edit' button from the pop-up menu. They can then change the message in the text field and resend it. The new message will be displayed with an 'Edited' tag and a time stamp, indicating when it was edited. Editing messages on WhatsApp has been a long-requested feature, and one that has been available on other messaging apps like Telegram for years.
Why You Can't Edit WhatsApp Messages
Since WhatsApp has a large user base, it might be a while before the edit message feature is available for everyone. In an official blog post, WhatsApp says the "feature has started rolling out to users globally and will be available to everyone in the coming weeks." If users don't see the edit button yet, they'll need to wait until the update is available for their device. Those who have turned off auto app updates can manually check if a newer version is available by searching for WhatsApp on the Google Play Store or Apple App Store and tapping the 'Update' button if available.
Although WhatsApp now allows users to modify messages after sending them, this can only be done within 15 minutes of sending the message, similar to Apple's iMessage. If more than 15 minutes have passed since a user has sent a message, they won't see the edit option. Competitor apps like Telegram offer up to 48 hours to modify messages. WhatsApp's shorter time limit reduces the chances of people misusing the feature, as users who realize they've made a genuine typo or error will usually want to change their message immediately.
Before the edit message feature, WhatsApp users only had the option to delete a message they wanted to unsend. Like deleted messages, edited messages on WhatsApp will be displayed with a disclaimer, so that recipients are aware the contents have been edited. However, unlike iMessage, WhatsApp doesn't reveal the user's edit history, so any embarrassing typos will be hidden.
ScreenRant
New study of 100,000 workers says having a tough job leads to this surprising health benefit
Maybe think of this before you quit or opt for early retirement.
Here we are in the midst of the Great Resignation, with people in all lines of workconsidering whether it's really worth it to them to continue the paths they're on.
Then, from out of almost nowhere comes a new health study suggesting you might want to think twice about ditching your job.
In short, if your work is challenging, stimulating, demanding, and involves high levels of responsibility, the mental workouts you give your brain each day may help safeguard you against what is probably the medical condition most feared as people grow older: dementia.
Writing in The BMJ, which is the peer-reviewed journal of the British Medical Association, lead author Mika Kivimki, a professor at University College London's Institute of Epidemiology and Health Care, along with his colleagues concluded two fascinating things:
First, people whose jobs are highly mentally stimulating wind up with a lower risk of dementia in their later years than those with less-stimulating work
Perhaps even more important, there's support for the idea that the nature of the work might help contribute to the lower rate of dementia, rather than simply reflecting a correlative relationship.
Let's go to the methodology. This was actually a study of studies, meaning that the researchers looked at analyses that incorporated more than 100,000 participants over a 17-year period, tracking the types of work that each person did, and their likelihood of being diagnosed with dementia later in life:
[The study] suggests that people with cognitively stimulating jobs have a lower risk of dementia in old age than those with non-stimulating jobs. A possible mechanism for this association is the finding that cognitive stimulation is associated with lower levels of plasma proteins that might inhibit axonogenesis and synaptogenesis and increase dementia risk in old age.
What that means in practical terms is that having a job that requires you to use your brain constantly under the right kinds of conditions can lead to less likelihood of brain difficulties later in life.
What are the right kinds of conditions? The researchers listed two main factors:
Cognitive stimulation, which basically involves demanding tasks and requirements
High "job decision latitude," also characterized as "job control."
Less demanding jobs with less control were linked to a higher degree of dementia.
This is a pretty accessible study for non-scientists, so I do recommend simply reading it in full. Also, it's not behind a paywall. But in terms of workplace and career guidance, what are the takeaways?
First, it's an argument in favor of finding and keeping the most challenging job you can find -- obviously, "challenging" in a positive sense of the word.
This isn't an argument for sticking with a position where you work for a toxic employer, or have to deal with a difficult commute. Rather, it's about never-ending growth, always seeking more responsibility, and looking for the kind of work that challenges you to learn and do new things.
(It's the difference between being paid to do Sudoku puzzles, and getting paid to count 10,000 toothpicks every day.)
Next, it's an argument in favor of continuing to work -- perhaps even giving up the notion of traditional retirement.
Again, nobody is saying to stick in a role that doesn't hold your attention or challenge you in a positive way. But, given the sheer degree to which so much of our society seems to view work-life as a vehicle designed simply to get you to retirement, maybe this kind of research suggests there's another, healthier path.
Worth noting: The researchers differentiated work-related cognitive stimulation from non-work-related cognitive stimulation, and found that work-related stimulation is likely far more beneficial.
So, perhaps forget about the notion that people can look forward to early retirement, living lives of leisure, and engaging part-time in activities that produce the same results. This study, at least, suggests that won't work.
The theory as to why is fairly straightforward: Work-related cognitive stimulation amounts to tens of thousands of hours, while non-work-related cognitive stimulation amounts to less total time in most cases, and also doesn't involve the same risks associated with not putting in the required effort.
Maybe that's too much to absorb; maybe it's too limited to make big career decisions on.
And of course, you have to make your own choices. But if you're wondering whether a challenging job that demands your full attention is the right thing for you -- at least now, you have another factor to consider.
Inc
Senate amends CBN Act to allow FG borrow more from CBN
Senate has amended the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Act — increasing the “ways and means borrowing” threshold for the federal government.
During an emergency session held on Saturday, the senate raised the limit from a 5 percent of revenue threshold to a maximum of 15 percent that the government can get from the CBN.
Ways and means is a loan facility through which the CBN finances the government’s budget shortfalls.
The facility allows the government to borrow from the apex bank if it needs short-term or emergency finance to fund important projects.
According to Ibrahim Gobir, senate leader, the amendment was necessary to “enable the federal government to meet its immediate and future obligation in the approval of the ways and means by the national assembly and advances by the CBN”.
“Mr President, my respected colleagues, permit me to lead the debate on this bill which seeks to amend the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) act to increase the total CBN advances to the federal government from 5 percent to a maximum of 15 percent,” Gobir said.
“The bill was read for the first time in this chamber on Wednesday, 24th May, -2023.
“The very essence of this bill my respected colleagues is to enable the federal government to meet its immediate and future obligation in the approval of the ways and means by the National Assembly and advances to the federal government by the Central Bank of Nigeria.
“This amendment is very consequential and it needs the support of us all. This is to enable the federal government to embark on very important projects that will inflate and rejig the economy.
“I, therefore, urge you all to support the passage of this bill.”
Section 38 of the CBN act, 2007, stipulates that the total amount of ways and means advances outstanding shall not at any time exceed 5 percent of the previous year’s actual revenue of the federal government.
But the federal government’s borrowings from the apex bank have repeatedly exceeded the 5 percent threshold.
“All advances shall be repaid as soon as possible and shall, in any event, be repayable by the end of the federal government financial year in which they are granted and if such advances remain unpaid at the end of the year, the power of the bank to grant such further advances in any subsequent year shall not be exercisable, unless the outstanding advances have been repaid,” the act reads in part.
The Cable
PDP uses social media to terrorize, bully judges, Supreme Court alleges
The supreme court has accused Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) of using social media to bully and terrorise justices.
Inyang Okoro, justice of the supreme court, spoke on Friday while delivering judgment in an appeal filed by the PDP seeking to void the election of President-elect Bola Tinubu on the grounds that his running mate, Kashim Shettima, was guilty of double nomination.
The five-member panel of the apex court dismissed the appeal and held that the appellant had no locus standi to institute the suit.
Okoro held that the appellant tried to mislead the apex court by claiming that the lower court found that there was indeed a double nomination.
“The appellant stated to this court that the court below found that there was indeed double nomination and that the 4th respondent knowingly allowed himself to be nominated in two constituencies,” Okoro said.
“I have searched the entirety of the record and indeed the judgement of the court below and there is no such finding. To think that learned senior counsel will mislead the court is sad.
“For public policy sake, I must state that indeed the 4th (Shettima) respondent withdrew from the nomination for Borno central district on the 6th of July 2022 exhibited as exhibit APC 1 on page 58 of the record of appeal.
“The political party sent to the INEC same 6th of July, 2022 the notice of withdrawal. The political party further sent on the 10th of July 2022, a notification of dates for the conduct of fresh primaries for the senatorial district and the latter letter exhibit APC2 on page 59 of the record carried the reference of Exhibit APC1.
“That is as at the 6th of July, 2022 there was no longer nomination of the 4th respondent for Borno central senatorial distict and there could not have been double nomination on the 14th of July 2022.
“Using the social media to terrorize and bully the justices of the supreme court by the appellant is appalling and unprofessional.
“The appeal is without merit and is dismissed. I abide by the award of cost in the lead judgement.”
The Cable
Christian teacher banned from class for 'misgendering' student
- Christian teacher Joshua Sutcliffe was banned from the classroom by the Teaching Regulation Agency for failing to properly use the preferred pronouns of a transgender student.
- The Christian Legal Centre said that the agency’s ruling was believed to be the first time a teacher was banned by the department for misgendering a student, according to the press release.
- “I have been bullied and pursued and have had every part of my life scrutinized for expressing my Christian faith and biological truth,” Sutcliffe said in a press release.
A Christian math teacher was banned from the classroom in the United Kingdom for “unprofessional conduct” after misgendering a transgender student, according to a Tuesday press release from Christian Legal Centre (CLC).
CLC is representing Joshua Sutcliffe, a former teacher at The Cherwell School in Oxford, after he came under investigation by the Teaching Regulation Agency (TRA) over allegations that he misgendered a biologically female student, referred to as Pupil A, who identifies as a male, according to The Telegraph. The TRA ruled this week that Sutcliffe had engaged in “unprofessional conduct” and accused him of “bringing the profession into disrepute,” according to the press release.
“Following an investigation, the TRA commenced a prosecution and after a 7-day hearing recommended a prohibition order removing Joshua from the classroom,” the press release read. “The order can be reviewed at the earliest after two years. Despite Joshua’s pleas for leniency and hearing good character evidence from two parents of children he had tutored, the Department of the Secretary of State for Education dismissed Mr Sutcliffe’s positive contribution to teaching concluding ‘that a prohibition order is proportionate and in the public interest’ in order to maintain ‘confidence in the profession.'”
WND News Services
What to know after Day 458 of Russia-Ukraine war
WESTERN PERSPECTIVE
Ukraine says Russia eases Bakhmut attacks, Kyiv talks up counteroffensive
Russian troops have temporarily eased attacks in and around the besieged eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut to regroup and strengthen their capabilities, a senior Kyiv official said on Saturday.
Separately, senior Ukrainian officials indicated their forces were ready to launch a long-promised counteroffensive to recapture territory taken by Russia since the start of the war.
Russia's Wagner private army began handing over positions to regular troops this week after declaring full control of Bakhmut following the longest and bloodiest battle of the war.
Kyiv though has insisted that its forces still control a small part of the city.
In a statement on Telegram, Ukraine Deputy Defence Minister Hanna Maliar said Russian troops were continuing to attack but that overall offensive activity had decreased.
"Yesterday and today there have not been any active battles - neither in the city nor on the flanks," she wrote, adding that Moscow's troops were instead shelling the outskirts and approaches to Bakhmut.
"(Russian) troops are being replaced and regrouped," Maliar said. "The enemy is trying to strengthen its own capabilities."
Kyiv is expected to launch a highly anticipated counteroffensive soon to retake Russian-occupied territory.
Oleksiy Danilov, secretary of Ukraine's National Security and Defence Council, told the British Broadcasting Corporation that the push could begin "tomorrow, the day after tomorrow or in a week".
Presidential aide Mykhailo Podolyak, speaking to Britain's Guardian newspaper, said preliminary operations such as destroying supply lines or blowing up depots had already begun.
The governor of the southern Russian region of Belgorod said he had come under artillery fire on Saturday when trying to enter the town of Shebekino, which is only about 7 km (4.5 miles) north of the border with Ukraine.
"I couldn't even get out of the car. Shells were exploding in a neighbouring street," Vyacheslav Gladkov wrote on Telegram. This week Ukraine-based ethnic Russian fighters launched a cross-border raid into the region.
Ukraine's top general, Valeriy Zaluzhnyi, posted a sleekly produced video on Saturday showing Ukrainian troops swearing an oath and preparing for battle.
"The time has come to return what is ours," he wrote.
RUSSIAN PERSPECTIVE
West’s involvement in Ukraine conflict grows day by day - Kremlin spokesman
Western countries are becoming more and more involved in the Ukraine conflict day by day, Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov said in an interview with the ‘Moscow. Kremlin. Putin’ TV program.
An excerpt of the program was posted by anchor Pavel Zarubin on his Telegram channel on Saturday.
"It’s hard to say where the breaking point is. In fact, the breaking point should bring nations of the collective West to senses, but regrettably, it is not happening. Obviously, the degree of direct and indirect involvement in this conflict by the countries of the collective West is surging day by day," he said when asked about limits of the escalation.
Peskov was asked this question in the context of new arms supplies to Kiev.
"This may protract the conflict, but will not turn the tide drastically. It cannot turn the tide at all," Peskov emphasized.
"Russia will press on with the [special military] operation, and Russia will ensure its interests one way or another and achieve the designated objectives," he added.
Reuters/Tass
All we know after Day 43 of battles of Sudan military factions
Truce reduces fighting in Sudan, but little relief for humanitarian crisis
Khartoum was calmer on Saturday as a seven-day ceasefire appeared to reduce fighting between two rival military factions although it has not yet provided the promised humanitarian relief to millions trapped in the Sudanese capital.
A truce signed on Monday by the two fighting parties - Sudan's army and a paramilitary group called the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) - aimed to secure safe passage for humanitarian aid and lead to wider talks sponsored by the United States and Saudi Arabia.
The conflict, which erupted on April 15, has killed at least 730 civilians and caused 1.3 million Sudanese to leave their homes, fleeting either abroad or to safer parts of the country.
On Saturday, witnesses said that Khartoum was calmer, although sporadic clashes were reported in the afternoon and evening in the city's southern districts and across the Nile in western Omdurman, a key entrypoint to the capital.
In a statement, the RSF accused the army of violating the ceasefire and destroying the country's mint in an air strike. The army had accused the RSF on Friday of targeting the mint.
It also late on Saturday said it would engage in talks aimed at extending the ceasefire, which is due to end on Monday night.
The army said meanwhile that its call on Friday for army reservists was a partial mobilisation and constitutional measure, adding that it expected large numbers to respond to the call.
Those who remain in Khartoum are struggling with failures of services such as electricity, water and phone networks. Looters have ransacked homes, mostly in well-off neighbourhoods. Food supplies are dwindling.
On Saturday, Sudanese police said they were expanding deployment and also called in able retired officers to help.
"Our neighbourhood has become a war zone. Services have collapsed and chaos has spread in Khartoum," said 52-year-old Ahmed Salih, a resident of the city.
"No one is bothered to help the Sudanese people, neither the government nor internationally. We are humans, where is the humanity?" he added.
The UN and aid agencies say that despite the truce they have struggled to get the bureaucratic approvals and security guarantees to transport aid and staff in safer parts of the country to Khartoum and other hot zones. Warehouses have been looted.
The UN World Food Programme on Saturday tweeted that it had begun providing food aid to people in Khartoum, but added that "safety, security, and access are critical so we can increase our support to 500,000 people".
RAPE REPORTS
Fighting also flared in the city of Al Fashir, capital of North Darfur state which had remained calm in recent weeks after a separate local truce there.
Heavy artillery could be heard near the central market and eastern districts, forcing many residents to seek refuge elsewhere in the city, said local human rights monitor Mohamed Suleiman. Several people were injured, he said, but Reuters could not confirm the number.
Outside of Khartoum, the worst hit city is El Geneina, on the border with Chad, which has seen an onslaught of militia attacks that have destroyed its infrastructure and killed hundreds.
The governmental Combating Violence Against Women and Children Unit said late on Friday it had received reports of 25 cases of rape of women and girls in Darfur and 24 reports of rape in Khartoum since the conflict erupted.
It said that victims had described 43 of the men as wearing RSF uniforms and either riding vehicles with RSF licenses or located in RSF-controlled areas.
"The unit expresses its grave concern over reports of gang rape, kidnapping ... and reports of women and girls facing sexual assault as they go out to seek food," it said.
The RSF has denied reports that its soldiers are engaged in sexual assaults or looting.
Reuters could not independently verify the unit's allegations.
Reuters
As Buhari conducts Tinubu round the Villa… - Festus Adedayo
Forget their pretensions and volte-faces, when outgoing Nigerian public officials wake up tomorrow, May 29, they will wake up into emptiness. That void cannot be filled by the wealth they acquired in office. Nor can it be impeached by Muhammadu Buhari’s reported haste to flee Aso Villa tomorrow. At the launch of a book on his administration at the Presidential Villa on Friday, the outgoing president had said: “I assure you, I have been counting the days; I am looking forward to Monday very desperately. I will use the weekend to sign some of the papers so that from Eagles Square, I will fly to Kaduna and eventually go to Daura.”
Buhari's wife, Aisha, was to later rubbish his de-masculinity of Aso Rock. In its stead, she replaced it with a desire for the continuation of the flow of the free money and power of government. At the launch of a book entitled The Journey of a Military Wife on Friday, she asked for First Ladies whose roles the constitution does not recognize to be given parity of office privileges with their spouses. Under Nigerian law, presidents and allied officials are given their salaries for life, their medical treatments and that of their family members paid for by the state, with yearly procurement of vehicles and other benefits, among many others.
“They should consider us as former First Ladies. They should incorporate the First Ladies, give us some privileges that we deserve as First Ladies,” she demanded. Aisha also further gave the issue a feminist re-reading, against the grain of the African masculinist cultural background which has ensured centuries of uneven devolution of powers. The system should not give these privileges “just to the former presidents,” she advised.
Of all life’s existential acquisitions – wealth, fame, women, money, power and the lot – the most transient, most fleeting and ephemeral of all is power. Power is the most un-enduring. Former presidential spokesman, Reuben Abati, put it in its crudest, street lingo form when he said, eight years ago, that his phone stopped ringing immediately he stepped out of power. Power is the fair-weather friend that will not be there for you in your time of loneliness. It perhaps was what the holy writ had in mind when it ascribed to life the fleetingness of vapour.
While all their acquisitions in office in the last four or eight years may still be there – cars, houses, money and the lubricants of power, (forgive my sexism) – by now, power must be carrying away its last portmanteau from the apartment of the yesterday public office holder. Yoruba put this existential emptiness starkly when they refer to ex-power wielders as eni ana – yesterday’s men. It was from Late Governor Abiola Ajimobi – God rests his soul – that I first encountered the Yoruba proverbial capture of the evanescence nature of life. Yoruba capture it in their wise-saying when they say that no one rushes to make way for he who once rode a horse – a kii yago f’elesin ana.
One of the reasons for the emptiness that these public officials will begin to encounter from tomorrow stems from the monarchical nature of Nigeria’s presidential democracy. Officials of western democracies where our system of government was inherited would find it easier to confront this emptiness of power and office. This is because, with them, office carries less indiscriminate wielding of power. Here in Nigeria, we are driven by the Kabiyesi syndrome perception of power. The public official is the unquestionable titular, second-in-command only to the gods. This is why, for these Nigerian office holders, the transition tomorrow from power to the streets is capable of making one miserable. It can be likened to the deposition of a king, a man who was once the Kabiyesi – the unquestionable.
Tomorrow, the baton of power will change. History has been unusually kind to Buhari. Like Olusegun Obasanjo, he has had the opportunity of being the Nigerian Head of State twice, both as military and civilian leader. He could have been killed in 1983 the same way his fellow coup plotter, Ibrahim Bako, had life snuffed out of him in the process of staging the coup. In their bid to dispossess Shehu Shagari of presidential power, Bako had been detailed to Shagari’s presidential residence. Wearing a civilian attire, Bako had come to Shagari’s residence in company of an armed detachment. As fire raged between his troops and the Brigade of Guards soldiers commanded by Captain Augustine Anyogo, Bako got shot dead as he sat in the passenger side of a Unimob Utility truck. Buhari survived to rule Nigeria.
Again, through what many called the uncanny but misplaced generosity of Providence, Buhari administered Nigeria for yet another eight years. Though he had recently engaged in a last-minute attempt to re-write his own history, the general impression is that he was a failure. The BBC said Buhari, “the last of a generation of British-trained military men who went on to govern the country” would be “leaving Nigerians less secure, poorer and more in debt than when he came to office in 2015.”
That same last Friday, Buhari took the President-elect, Bola Tinubu, round the Presidential palace on familiarization tour. This is the place that will be Tinubu’s abode of power in the next four years, all things being equal. His wife, Remi also went her own round, cosseted by Aisha. Vice President Yemi Osinbajo had earlier conducted Kashim Shettima round the VP wing of the State House.
Thereafter, Tinubu made many promises to Nigerians, praying to God for good health to be able to deliver. He also promised to fight corruption. However, I think that the greatest task we must put on Tinubu’s shoulders is the task of restoring Nigeria to a country where the guilty get their deserved comeuppance, no matter how highly placed, while the just get their deserved dividends. He must return Nigeria to that critical stanza of the Nigerian national anthem which says that Nigeria’s goal is “to build a nation where peace and justice shall reign.” Those two variables – peace and justice – are not mutually exclusive. They are co-joined like a Siamese. To seek peace where there is no justice is inequity. Both go simultaneously. Jamaican reggae icon, Peter Tosh, put it succinctly when he sang, in his Jamaican patois, that “everyone is crying now for peace, none is crying now for justice; I don’t want no peace, I need equal rights and justice.” Once Nigeria arrives at that critical juncture where there is equal rights and justice, all other social indices will begin to fall in place. Nigeria fell on the social ladder because injustice grows lusciously daily in the land like ferns in a plantation.
Before now, the system gave the right measurement to both the high and the lowly. Judicial scale of judgment did not discriminate between the high, mighty and the peasant, the lowly. I will cite four instances in history, two pre-colonial and two post-colonial, which indicated that Nigeria was once a country where justice reigned.
Two depositions of highly rated Yoruba Obas during the pre-colonial era come first. They are followed by the execution of a Yoruba Oba and the fourth, a top-rate elite in the Nigerian society who was hanged for murder. Obas constituted the highest echelon of the Yoruba society of the time. These depositions, rarely talked about in history, were that of Ijebu Obas, Akarigbo Oyebajo (1891-1915) and Awujale Adenuga (1925-1929). Oyebajo had become Oba in his mid-20s in 1891. Akarigbo Oyebajo apparently basked in his belief in the permanence of his position as an Oba and the power of his cordial relationship with Governor Gilbert Thomas Carter and his successor, McCallum, Henry Edward.
This apparently led to the Akarigbo being appointed in February 1902 as a member of the Central Native Council. Oyebajo was thus prompted to become high-handed, especially in his relationship with his chiefs. The result was a widespread dissention from them. He began to monopolize the accruing stipends that came to him from the colonial government and refused to share them with these chiefs who custom required him to so do. The chiefs, in 1911, then got him tried in court for extortion and larceny. His situation was worsened by the fact that the District Commissioner, H. F. Duncombe, could not stand him and in spite of Horatio Jackson, editor and publisher of the tabloid Lagos Weekly Record’s plea on his behalf to the colonial office, the Akarigbo was subsequently deported to Calabar and died on July 11, 1932.
Adenuga, 33 years old when he was appointed Awujale, from the word go,showed immense immaturity in superintending over the enormous judicial, executive and legislative powers he wielded as Oba. He began to abuse them from day one of his kingship. A few months into his being in office, the colonial government reprimanded him for extorting forestry fees from his subjects and in 1928, he got two other reprimands for grafts, one of which was collecting bribe in February of the year to favour ascension to the Onipe of Ibu stool. In March of same 1928, he was implicated for attempting to cover up a case of homicide. In the October of the same year, he was alleged to have attempted to rid the town of Joseph Igu, also widely known as Frugality, an anti-corruption crusader who was a pain in the neck of maladministration.
Inundated with complaints of the Akarigbo’s excesses, the colonial government instituted a judicial commission of enquiry with a charge to assess the Ijebu Native Administration, vis a vis the Akarigbo’s style of governance. In the report submitted on January 18, 1929, Adenuga was found guilty of corruption and deposed to Ilorin. In 1934, he was tried alongside a Yesufu Idimota and ten others, for attempted assassination of his successor Akarigbo. Adenuga was then imprisoned in Abeokuta and went through the indignity of being manacled in public and publicly carrying latrine buckets from his cell corridor to the main latrine. He was however acquitted by the West African Court of Appeal on May 27, 1935 and at the age of 58, he died miserably.
The third case had to do with the first Yoruba Oba to face public execution. It occurred in the current Ekiti State in 1949. This was the 43rd Alaaye of Efon-Alaaye, Oba Samuel Adeniran, the Asusumasa Atewogboye II. He, his herbalist, a servant and another named Gabriel Olabirinjo, after the end of their trial for murder, were all hanged by the colonial state, having been found to have murdered a 15-month-old baby girl by the name Adediwura. On January 10, 1949, the baby, who was hitherto seen playing in her father’s compound, suddenly disappeared. Oba Adediran was promptly informed and he publicly pretended to have joined in the baby’s search. The prosecution later found out that after young Adediwura’s kidnap by Oba Adeniran’s herbalist, she was brought to the Alaaye’s palace where she was butchered, right in the Oba’s presence. He then swore all the dramatis personae in this killing to an oath of secrecy. That same police from whose body wriggles out maggots today, in 1949, swung into action upon the matter being incidented. Three suspects, Enoch Falayi – the herbalist, Gabriel Olabirinjo and Daniel Ojo, were promptly arrested. One of them eventually spilled the beans, incriminating Oba Adeniran.
The trial judge, NS Pollard then delivered his judgment: “With acceptance of that statement as evidence of tacit admission of the facts therein, there is not only ample corroboration of the evidence…it goes further and is evidence of admission of facts from which no other conclusion is possible than that the appellant counseled and procured the murder of this child and was rightly found guilty thereof.” With this final pronouncement, Oba Adeniran, Asusumasa, the palace herbalist, one of Kabiyesi’s servants and a Gabriel Olabirinjo, were eventually hanged by the neck “until you be dead.”
The last case is the notorious and infamous case of Ibadan-born land baron, Jimoh Ishola, a.k.a. Ejigbadero. Ejigbadero was a mascot in the Papa Ajao, Mushin, Agege and Alimosho areas of Lagos during his notorious reign. Ejigbadero was also the Chief Executive of Jimsol Nigeria Limited, a company that specialized in nail manufacturing on Matori Road, Mushin in the 70s. More importantly, he was a land baron of note who was dreaded for his shrewd disposition towards lands. He had sold land to a man simply known as Raji Oba in Alimosho and wanted to retrieve it from him.
Thus, on August 22, 1975, which incidentally was his child-naming day, Ejigbadero, an illiterate, perfected the plan to dispossess Oba of the land. He had a bandstand readied at the front of his house and a huge crowd, which had come to celebrate with him. He came out resplendently dressed and sprayed a huge wad of naira notes on the face of the musician, enough to arrest the crowd. Amid hails, Ejigbadero retreated into his house, changed into a French Safari suit, a gun tucked in his pocket and hopped inside his Peugeot 504 saloon car. Through the back entrance, he and six of his thugs sped to Alimosho where he confronted Oba and shot him point blank in the head.
Ejigbadero came back home, changed into his resplendent dress and sprayed noticeable cash again. Unfortunately for him however, the deceased’s wife, Sabitiu recognised him from where she was hiding. He was subsequently arrested by the police and slammed with a two-count charge of murder. Ejigbadero’s alibi was that he never left the party which dragged on from 6.30 pm till the wee hours of the morning of August 23, 1975. From the High Court judgment of guilt and hanging by the neck which was pronounced on him by Justice Ishola Oluwa, his appeal, presided over by Justices Mamman Nasir, Adetunji Ogunkeye and Ijeoma Aseme, down to the Supreme Court where Darnley Alexander, Atanda Fatayi-Williams, Ayo Irikefe, Mohammed Bello and Chukwunweike Idigbe held fort, on October 22, 1978, Ejigbadero was found guilty and sentenced to death. One funny drama at the Supreme Court was that, as Idigbe pronounced the lead judgment, being illiterate, Ejigbadero kept asking his lawyer, in conk Ibadan dialect, “Sowemimo, emi ni won so?” (Sowemimo, what did the judge say?)
Ejigbadero was connected in the social and political circuit of Nigeria at the time, even being friends with high military epaulettes at the time, including the high and mighty in decision-making cadre of Nigeria. Musicians struggled to sing his praises. One of them sang that as inscrutable as it was to find out the source of water inside the pod of coconut, so was it unfathomable to locate Ejigbadero’s wealth. Yet, the system gave him his right comeuppance. In fact, the Obasanjo government quickly ensured that he was executed before the October 1, 1979 handover to civilians, nursing the fear that with Ejigbadero’s links, he might secure undeserved pardon.
Gradually, justice began to die in Nigeria. Today, the Nigerian landscape is littered with the blood of the righteous and the gloat of the powerful. With it came the death of shame and the ascendancy of shamelessness. Not long ago, the children of Ejigbadero remembered their executed father in a lavish ceremony that spoke to this level of societal shamelessness. Soon, the children of one of the most notorious and infamous armed robbers in Nigeria, Ishola Oyenusi will troupe out to celebrate his own passing too. It is a reflection of the societal loss of shame. Oyenusi, popularly known as Dr. Ishola, hailed from Araromi in Okitipupa area of Ondo State. Renowned for carjacking, bank holdups and heists, Oyenusi, on September 8, 1971, with six other members of his gang, were executed.
Going by logic and antecedents, it will be difficult for Tinubu to properly situate the scale of justice in Nigeria. His IOUs will predictably tilt towards those same principalities and powers for whom injustice is a core condiment in their broth. I pray however that he pleasantly shocks cynics like me. If he does, hope will begin to build in the Nigerian people, as Maya Angelou wrote in her poem, Still I Rise, “With the certainty of tides, Just like hopes springing high.”
The Lion of Ojiagu at 63
My ex-boss, former governor of Enugu State and Senator representing Enugu East, Chimaroke Ogbonnia Nnamani. will be 63 years old on Tuesday. At different fora in the last 16 years since I left Enugu State, many people have demanded that I availed them the chemistry that ensured that I succeeded in working in the Coal City State. My submission is always that, Nnamani protected me from the sharks of government who you would find in every polity across the three regions of Nigeria.
Nnamani gave me my first public service teeth. Before Enugu, I was a mere theoretician who didn’t know that life existed outside of the confines of theoretical postulations. He was detribalized and ethnic-blind, to the core. I left my Imalefalafia, Oke-Ado, Ibadan office in 2003, pregnant with stereotypes about the Igbo man. One by one, those stereotypes collapsed, like the walls of Jericho. If I had been to the southeast before then, it was scant. My sojourn however afforded me a peep into the purity of the mind of an Igbo man and knowledge of virtually everywhere in Enugu State. With Nnamani, where I hailed from did not matter; it was my contributions that defined me.
At meetings when my colleagues naturally veered into discussing issues in their mother tongue, Nnamani cautioned them: “Do you want Adedayo to think we want to sell him?” he queried and in his characteristic jocular manner, he turned to me to ask when I would be marrying an Igbo lady so that I could break the language barrier logjam!
The height of it all was sometime in 2005 when he asked Osita Ugwuoti of blessed memory to hand over to me as head of the governor’s media and Special Adviser on Media. With Nnamani, your output, not your ethnicity, mattered. When we left office in 2007, he insisted I must also go to the Senate with him, where he entrusted his finances in my care, without knowing, as the Yoruba say, the bird that laid my egg. When the world expressed shock that he queued behind Bola Tinubu in his quest for the presidency, rather than his kinsman, I saw a recreation of my Enugu experience in that equation. Yoruba constituted the core of his personal relationships as governor.
Nnamani is not your run-of-the-mill man. He requires hyper activity from anyone who works with him. He is composed of a tireless, boundless energy, the type that is rare among leaders.
Here is wishing he Lion of Ojiagu, Agbani, a very happy 63rd birthday.
Tackling faulty foundations in the marriage union - Taiwo Akinola
For no other foundation can anyone lay than that which is laid, which is Jesus Christ ~ 1 Corinthians 3:11.
Introduction:
There are many couples out there these days who seem to be in perpetual emotional pain because of certain agonizing marital issues. These harrowing experiences are most noticeable in marriages that are contracted on faulty foundations, especially in homes plagued with gross ignorance as to how to tackle the inevitable mess of such foundational errors.
Happy, healthy, successful, harmonious and lifelong marriages don’t just happen, neither can they be willed into existence by wishful thinking. They’re usually worked out: built on the solid foundation of God’s Word and continuously spiced with the ingredients of bible virtues (Philippians 2:12-13).
Now, the foundation of every structure is of paramount importance, and very crucial to its future. It’s the foundation that determines how long the building can keep standing. Structural stability and durability are dependent on the depth and strength of the foundation.
Oftentimes, wall cracks, broken tiles and uneven floors are indicative of foundational failures. Again, if doors become jammed or windows don’t close properly, the problems are sometimes traceable to the foundation. Normally, fixing foundational issues requires professional expertise to maintain the structural integrity of the building.
No matter how beautiful, fanciful, attractive, splendid, magnificent or grandiose a building is, if its foundation is not as solid and deep as it should be, or if it is deficient in any way, the building is doomed to collapse eventually. A building is only as strong as its foundation.
One important factor that’s often considered in designing a foundation — shallow or deep, solid or otherwise — is its load-bearing capacity. When a foundation is loaded beyond its bearing capacity, the structure built on it is bound to collapse ultimately.
Meanwhile, these principles that go for physical buildings also go for homes and marriages. The foundation of a marital relationship determines its strength, health, durability and success. Yes, a marriage is as strong as the basis on which it is founded.
Truth is, virtually every marriage is bound to experience storms, wind and rain occasionally, no matter who the couple is or the level of the anointing they carry. The storms could be financial, child-bearing, health-related, etcetera. But, at such times, it’s your belief system that will determine how you’ll weather the storms.
Marriages built on the strong foundation of God’s Word will not only survive but also thrive amid the terrifying storms of life. Contrariwise, marriages built on faulty foundations risk ultimate collapse (Matthew 7:24-27).
It’s quintessential for Christians, therefore, to settle for nothing less than godly Christian partners with whom they can effectively weather the storms when they come, and rescue their homes when the winds become contrary.
No matter what you put into your marriage, if the foundation is faulty, it may collapse anytime if nothing is done to rescue it. It’s very important, therefore, to carefully investigate the foundation upon which your marriage is built, and effect repairs where necessary to rectify the situation and reset your family life.
The Causes of Faulty Foundations In Marital Unions
We generally describe a thing as being faulty when it has unattractive or undesirable features. A faulty marital foundation, therefore, refers to the presence of flaws or anomalies at the lowest bearing of the marriage relationship, which may eventually give rise to major catastrophes in the union.
Foundational problems are usually deep-rooted, and can manifest in marriages for various reasons, namely, satanic manipulations, socio-cultural dissonance, marital illiteracy and evil seeds from third parties.
Marital fault-lines are clearly evident where relationships are based on lies, ill-motivated acts of charity, societal/parental pressure, premarital sexual intercourse, materialistic tendencies, chronic class consciousness, selfishness, competition, selfish ambitions, immaturity, inadequate preparations for marriage, traditions and cultural impositions, etcetera.
Moreover, there is a spiritual foundation for every marital failure. The only viable basis for a happy marriage is God’s Word (Psalms 127:1-2). Our Creator God is also the founder of the marriage institution; thus, He’s the only Inerrant Matchmaker. Once this foundation is sick, the marital union will then be exposed to demonic pollutions that may ignite troubles anytime, degrade marital harmony or even totally destroy the union.
Furthermore, a marriage without proper premarital courtship is built on a faulty foundation. Many unmarried people take many important things for granted during courtship. Such attitudes invariably lead to pains, with stubborn issues they may find hard to correct during marriage.
Marriage isn’t a joke, and human beings are complex in nature (Jeremiah 17:9). Hence, it’s too simplistic to assume you know any man or woman just by his or her face value at first sight. A lot of problems in marriage could be avoided if couples took time to truly know and understand each other before going into it.
Partners should trash out gray areas, such as family background, old habits, addictions, shared visions, joint responsibilities, financial philosophies, health status, faith status, and prospective family size before going into proper marriage. Preferences for management of disagreements and crises should equally be ironed out during courtship.
Courtship generally involves careful observations of each other’s attitudes, likes, dislikes, facial reactions to situations, temperaments, etcetera. If you lack these information about someone with whom you intend to live for the rest of your life, and you assume that the union will be harmonious, you may be a stunning joker.
Again, a marriage relationship founded on beauty alone is unfortunately built on a faulty foundation, and may not last. Beauty doesn’t last! When beauty forms the only basis for a marriage, it is simply built on vanity and as with all vanity fare, such a marriage is always short-lived (Proverbs 31:30).
From my counseling experiences, I discovered particularly that people who unduly consider themselves as being alluringly beautiful, and set much store by it, can be self-absorbed, callous, conceited, very arrogant, patronizing and overtly entitled. Such wrong attitudes could constitute major threats to proper marital relationships. Remember Vashti (Esther 1:9-22)!
Now, the important questions are: how can these foundation-related challenges be tackled, and how can couples re-ignite the flame of love and keep it burning in their homes?
Biblical Tips for Repairing Faulty Marriage Foundations
The Bible says, "If the foundation be destroyed, what can the righteous do?" (Psalm 11:3). However, this isn’t auto-suggesting that the righteous is any way hopeless in the face of a faulty marital foundation. No, not at all! The righteous can choose to rectify his marital fault-lines by trusting in the Lord God, and by following His guidelines (Jeremiah 32:17).
The following drastic measures must be taken to repair the fault-lines and rescue the otherwise doomed marriage: identification of family foundation, confession of sin and genuine repentance, aggressive prayers and intercession, breaking of evil covenant and curses, and restitution where applicable. The Axe of God must be readily engaged to uproot every unprofitable implants that cause painful cracks in the home.
Furthermore, the couple must resolve to keep God first in the marital relationship, being Christ-centered in everything and striving to maintain a good biblical family relationship always (Ephesians 5:21-25).
The couple must also become readily open to sound biblical counsels at all times, demonstrating kingdom-mindedness in their togetherness, laughing together and making time to converse and to communicate as one body in Christ.
Friends and brethren, these useful steps require committed efforts on your part, but the blessings and the rewards of such efforts are priceless and immeasurable. You must determine today to remain faithful to your marital vows. May God’s grace sustain you and your home until the end, in Jesus’ Name, Amen. You won’t miss it. Happy Sunday!
** Bishop Taiwo Akinola,
Rhema Christian Church,
Otta, Ogun State, Nigeria.
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