Saturday, September 29, 2018

EFE DIED THE DAY KIMONO DIED


EFE DIED THE DAY KIMONO DIED
It was very early Sunday morning. I was still in bed. I was in that stage when you are not sure whether you want to get up or you want to sleep some more. My phone rang. Oh no, who would be calling me this early? It probably would be one my COSON members needing some help. I checked. The name on the phone was Oge. Oge is the first daughter of my recently departed dear friend and colleague, Ras Kimono. 
I speak with Oge quite a lot. She is so pleasant but it is unusual for Oge to call me so early. I did not answer because I thought it was a mistake. The phone rang again. I picked up the phone and once again, it was Oge. I took the phone to the bathroom and tried the usual chit-chat with someone I am growing to admire quite a bit.
Oge asked me how I was and I replied that I was ok. She asked me whether I was relaxed and I thought that was odd. How could this young lady be asking this old man these many JAMB questions this early in the morning, did she have too much to drink? Then, she said that she had news that was not so good. I asked her where she was and she said that she was in Abuja. My mind started racing… Did this have anything to do with Nigeria's crazy political situation? Like most Nigerians, I had been informed that President Buhari was on his way to New York on one of his many foreign trips. Something funny seems to happen each time he travels…


"Oge, what is the matter", I asked? I heard her breath on the phone. Then she spat it out, "Efe is dead!" "What do you mean Efe is dead?" She said slowly, "Efe died this morning. Her body is at the Teaching Hospital mortuary in Lagos" My head exploded. I am supposed to be a strong man but this was too much for me to handle. I started weeping. No one told me Efe had a headache or tooth ache. How could Efe suddenly die? None of it made sense. Maybe, someone had played an expensive prank on Oge.

Saturday, September 22, 2018

THE PROFESSIONAL POLITICIANS IN LAGOS ASK AMBODE: NA PROJECT WE GO CHOP?


THE PROFESSIONAL POLITICIANS IN LAGOS ASK AMBODE: NA PROJECT WE GO CHOP?
On a recent visit to my home state of Imo, I was dumbfounded. From Sam Mbakwe 'International' Airport to the Owerri city centre, a distance of about 35 kilometers, less than 20% of the billboards that littered the roadsides was about any product or service the people were being wooed to patronize. There were no concerts or shows that the people were being invited to attend.
Every few meters of the road has been taken over by billboards proclaiming all kinds of characters with jaw-breaking titles. Each of the characters claims that he will be our next president, governor, senator, member of the House of Representatives or of the State Assembly. Name it! It is bewildering. You need to see the billboards; all kinds of colour combinations and all sizes.

The only groups still managing in any way to compete with the political advertising are the churches.
No too long ago, the biggest business in the land was not politics but 419. With digital technology, 419, the analogue type, is no longer lucrative. Now, how do you dupe anyone by fraudulently claiming to be the Governor of the Central Bank, the MD of NNPC or the Minister of Finance with Google on every smart phone? The real photos of anyone of any significance are today in living colour, on Google. Phone numbers can now be tracked with a lot more ease and with BVN, ownership of bank accounts is no longer the mystery it used to be.

Saturday, September 15, 2018

WHY I GO TO COURT (2)


WHY I GO TO COURT (2)
In our clime, people generally view anyone who goes to court as a troublemaker or maybe a pest. I go to court but I am not a trouble maker and certainly not a pest. In fact, I am a man who loves peace, very much.
But how can there be peace when there are too many trouble makers in the world? Too many liars, 419ers, hijackers, kidnappers, armed and pen robbers, and many who think that the world was created just for them and them alone. In case you don't know, the world is filled with many people walking around with only a body but no soul. They will kill you for nothing or take everything that belongs to everyone.


Yes, I go to court and take on those who do not believe in the rule of law. I thank God that several times, I have used the courts to burst their bubble and give them a bloody nose.
As a people, we love the word, 'peace'. Our understanding of peace is that you do not question falsehood, injustice, impunity, corruption or lawlessness. If you must question them, just shout in the newspapers, on TV or on Facebook, where your questioning has little or no effect.
I prefer to go to court, take the time, provide the evidence, get a court judgment and enforce it and set a precedent. I do not do it because I am cantankerous or quarrelsome. I do it because it is the most peaceful and civilized way to ensure that the weak does not dissolve under the pressure of the wicked.

In my several years serving people in the creative industry, I have met all kinds of crazy and wicked creatures. There are those who are totally consumed by their love of money. The only measure of success to them is how much money they have packed at the expense of others. To them, money is God.
I know a guy who begins to tremble and shake at the sight of any significant amount of money. Believe me, this guy was not born poor yet money has become his God. When this guy sights money, he becomes an animal. You may not believe it but my guy is convinced that once you see any measure of money, you have a duty to appropriate it, regardless of who owns it. To him, any money that comes within your sight is yours and whatever you do to grab it is ok.
When such people accuse me of stealing, I understand them. In their minds, how can he be in control of such significant amount of money and spend it to build an edifice like COSON House for the good of others when he owns no house of his own in Lagos? When they hear that COSON is distributing hundreds of millions of Naira, they sneer. In their minds infected by the crazy love of money, they cannot imagine how someone can distribute such money to others when he can appropriate all of it to himself. To them, the selflessness of Mother Theresa is a fable. The sacrifice of Martin Luther King is stupid. The 27 years that Nelson Mandela spent in prison is nonsense. After all, how much money did any of that bring? To these people, I must be either a fraud or a fool. I am neither of the two.

I have said elsewhere that I have seen from the recent arguments in COSON of which I am chairman that a number of people want the usual Nigerian quick fix. They make so much noise on Facebook and proclaim as facts things that have neither rhyme nor reason. As we argue, some people are frightened. They want everyone to quickly gather in a pepper soup joint over some bottles of lager and stout. While fairly drunk, we will sweep the key issues under the carpet, take some photographs and proclaim that everything is ok. Six months later, reality will haunt everyone again as the same issues come back with a vengeance and completely destroy everything we have built.
I have repeatedly said to people that the organization called COSON was built and nurtured on the platform of strict adherence to the rule of law. The modest resources of COSON which many today seek to control were put together with assistance of the courts and on the wings of the rule of law. We cannot be afraid of the courts. Those who want "beer parlor" peace in COSON do not understand that without the rule of law, copyright is nothing and COSON is nothing.

In the area of the development of intellectual property management in Nigeria, COSON is a Pathfinder, a Forerunner, a Navigator or if you prefer, an Explorer. The rules under which collective management must continue to thrive in Nigeria need to be clearly set out by the courts and not in a beer parlor. My personal experience should tell everyone that not everything that you read on Facebook or watch on TV is true. On Facebook or TV, you can make the most outrageous claims about anything without a shred of evidence. In a court of law, you must provide evidence to back up your claim.
Earlier this week, there appeared to be some controversy on social media following a public notice issued by my colleagues in the COSON communication department about a recent order of the Federal High Court. In a most revealing development, many of those who have pretended that they love COSON but have been secretly praying for the death of this great Nigerian institution began to crawl out of their holes and began to celebrate what they described as fake news from COSON.
It was a defining moment. I am proud that we do not disseminate falsehood or fake news at COSON. Our officials are very well trained in the value of integrity. I thank Prof (Sir) Victor Uwaifo and the many COSON members who made the watershed ruling of the Federal High Court possible. It has indeed been a defining moment.
See you next week.


Saturday, September 8, 2018

OPEN LETTER TO PROF YEMI OSINBAJO (REPRISE)


OPEN LETTER TO PROF YEMI OSINBAJO (REPRISE)
The open letter below was published over two weeks before President Muhammadu Buhari went to the NBA National Conference and repeated almost verbatim what his Attorney-General said to me in his office at the Federal Ministry of Justice in April 2017. I am constrained to re-publish the letter. That a government that has an Osinbajo, a Fashola, an Ipaye, an Itsay Sagay, a Festus Keyamo and so many other brilliant legal minds can operate with the mindset that a so called 'National Interest' is superior to the rule of law, is tragic beyond words. I cannot see how such a government can move Nigeria forward. I pray for your indulgence to read my letter again.
Your Excellency,
You may not believe it but I had planned to write this letter to you before the daylight movie of masked men and assault rifles at our National Assembly during the week watched by many across the world in living colour and with disbelief. To tell you the truth, I was not surprised at what happened. I saw it coming.

Saturday, September 1, 2018

ON NO MUSIC DAY, A WORLD WITHOUT MUSIC


SATURDAY BREAKFAST with TONY OKOROJI

Today is September 1. It is “No Music Day” in Nigeria, a day the music industry has dedicated annually to bring the attention of the Nigerian nation to the widespread infringement of the rights of song writers, composers, performers, music publishers, record labels and other stakeholders in the music industry in Nigeria.
                                           
As we have done every year in the past nine years, we have once again requested broadcasting stations in the country to devote a substantial amount of broadcast time today to programs which highlight the significant abuse of the rights of creative people in our country. This is to show solidarity with the Nigerian creative community ravaged by piracy and other forms of rights infringement. Nigerian newspapers and magazines have also been requested to publish special features on issues bordering on the infringement of Intellectual Property rights on this “No Music Day” and in the coming days.