THE AFRICA PEACE INITIATIVE

“Let us promise to make peace not just a priority, but a passion. Let us pledge to do more, wherever we are in whatever way we can, to make every day a day of peace.” UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon

Duke IgwiloIt was recorded that the United Nations Security Council deployed a record number of peacekeepers to 19 peace operations around the world in 2007. At present, more than 100,000 blue berets and civilian staff are serving in the field to build and keep peace around the world.

In Africa, most countries within the continent have witnessed a fair share of violent conflict since independence. Read more »

THE CONSTITUTION AND SUSTAINABLE DEMOCRACY IN NIGERIA - CHALLENGES AND PROSPECTS

BY HIS EXCELLENCY CHIEF (DR) ALEX EKWUEME
FIRST CIVILIAN VICE PRESIDENT
A PAPER DELIVERED AT THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SUSTAINABLE DEMOCRACY IN NIGERIA: CHALLENGES AND PROSPECTS

ORGANISED BY THE FOUNDATION FOR GOOD GOVERNANCE AND DEVELOPMENT IN NIGERIA
HELD AT IMPERIAL COLLEGE, LONDON, SOUTH KESSINGTON CAMPUS
ON SATURDAY 25TH JUNE 2005

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Remembering the weaverbird

Introduction

Distinguished ladies and gentlemen:

We assemble here this afternoon in celebration; we assemble for an exhibition in celebration of Christopher Okigbo. This morning we had a literary feast; this evening we shall have a cultural feast; this afternoon-now-we will be having a visual feast. All these three sessions constitute the celebration Christopher Okigbo for today. But this celebration does not end today. It will continue in our homes, in schools, in every gathering wherever the poetry of Christopher Okigbo is read.

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What Nigeria Lost By Abacha’s Untimely Death

Well-thought Out Provisions Of The 1995 Constitution: By Alex Ekwueme

May 29, 2005

I was an elected member of the 1994-1995 National Constitutional Conference, which sat exactly for one year (June 26 1994 -June 26 1995) and had reasonable time to discuss and ponder over many thorny issues that concerned the Nigerian polity. We were anxious that the military should disengage as soon as possible and hand over to elected civilian governments at all levels. At one time we passed a resolution, later rescinded, setting January 1996 as the date for hand over. The work of the National Constitutional Conference culminated in a two-volume report, Volume 1 of which was report of the constitutional conference containing the draft constitution 1995.

In December 1995 we held a very successful “All politicians summit” At Eko Hotel, Victoria Island, Lagos which I had the privilege to chair. I describe the summit as “very successful” notwithstanding its disruption by agents of the government. It was obvious that General Abacha was in no hurry to disengage. We then formed the Institute of Civil Society, which again I had the privilege to chair, one of whose objectives was to sensitize the Nigerian public on the need for an early return to democratic ethos as we considered military rule which is imposed on and not elected by the populace, a vicious form of colonialism. It eventually materialised that Abacha set October 1, 1998 as the date for the transition from military to civilian government. But it was soon clear, judging by the decisions of all the five registered political parties to nominate him as the sole presidential candidate that it was his wish to hand over from Abacha as a military head of state to Abacha as civilian president. Some of us did not think that this was the right thing for Nigeria and at a meeting of the “G34″ in April 1998, we decided to advise Abacha by a well considered memorandum not to countenance the prompting by sycophants that he should succeed himself. Within two months of the G-34 memorandum, Abacha was dead and so the question of self-succession also died a natural death.
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Whither Nigeria: Thoughts on Democracy, Politics and the Constitution, 1992-2000

Alex I. Ekwueme
Hardcover, Nwamife Publishers, ISBN 9783360310 (978-33603-1-0)

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From State House to Kirikiri

Alex I. Ekwueme
Hardcover, Nwamife Publishers, ISBN 9783117440 (978-31174-4-0)

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