I am a great fan of your magazine, National Geographic, and your
sister platform, National Geo Wild, and your coverage of natural history,
particularly the behaviour of animals in the wild.
I must commend you and
your organization for the high level of commitment, attentiveness to details
and professionalism consistently and habitually displayed in your various
reports both in print and the broadcast form. As a journalist of many
years standing myself, I will like to suggest to you and your various channels,
a story idea that you may probably find interesting, for professional reasons
and for reasons of corporate social responsibility. Kindly pardon my
presumptuousness in this regard, but I crave your understanding. Knowing how
busy your schedule is likely to be, I will try to be quick and as specific as
possible.
This is about my country, Nigeria, a land of over 900, 000 sq.
kms., with rich biodiversityand ecosystem, and definitely the largest
market for both human and natural resources in Africa. Since May 2015,
when a new government took over power at the centre in our country, I have
observed a curious and intriguing change in the behaviour of animals in
Nigeria, suggestive of a certain transmutation, or perhaps transformation
within the animal ecosystem, resulting in patterns of behaviour and
interaction that may be of interest to your readers and viewers.
The most recent incident in this regard and the trigger for this
letter is the current news in Nigeria about how a snake, described as a
mysterious snake, has reportedly swallowed a sum of N36 million ($100k)
belonging to the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB). JAMB is the
national regulatory body in charge of admissions into tertiary institutions,
very much like UCAS in the United Kingdom. This incident occurred we are
told, in the process of the attempt by JAMB to audit the accounts of
its zonal headquarters. In Makurdi, one Ms. Philomena Chieshe who has now been
suspended, allegedly could not account for the said N36 million, being part-proceeds
from the sale of forms for students seeking university admissions. When
interrogated, she reportedly said her maid had confessed to the missing money
having been taken by a mystery snake.
As a media channel that reports animal behaviour, this must be
of great interest to you. I don’t know whether this happens in other
parts of the world, but here in Nigeria, we now seem to have a variety of
snakes that are attracted by the smell of raw cash, and which feed on vaults
and bags of money. A documentary on this new variety of snakes, and a
proper documentation of the genus and peculiarities would be good for filming.
What exactly does the smell of national currency do to snakes? How nutritious
is paper currency to snakes? The JAMB Registrar, Professor Isi-aq Oloyede
who has turned JAMB, for the first time in its existence, into a revenue
generating body by plugging all loopholes within the system, and without
increasing any fees, is insisting that this is a case of corruption and that he
will get to the root of it. The Professor probably may not understand the way
of snakes and the new variety in Nigeria. He is a good man and I like
him. I wouldn’t want him to be bitten by snakes.
Your investigative intervention should assist him. Your experts
and investigators can deploy the tools of science and investigative journalism
to seek out these snakes and catch them in action, and document for
your numerous patrons, this new scientific development. Right now in Nigeria,
we are preparing for the general elections scheduled for 2019. We need
information and knowledge because if the Makurdi snake gets away with the N36
million, the same snake and its family could return in 2019 to swallow ballot
boxes and papers and thus compromise Nigerian democracy.
I am, however, tempted to believe that the snakes in Makurdi may
have become quite audacious, in reaction to a recent declaration, under this
same political administration, by a high-ranking state official, that he bought
two houses in Dubai from the sale of snakes! Are snakes vengeful? Is this
nemesis? Do they resent being sold for profit? Do snakes have the capacity to
feel and settle scores? Could the sale of snakes, with the profit of houses in
the UAE by a senior official, have motivated some snakes in Benue state to
swallow money meant for the national treasury? What does the process of
swallowing, and the digesting of money by snakes entail? Many young Nigerians
and I believe other persons across the world will learn a lot from this.
I therefore hope you will consider this a very urgent subject
for your consideration and editorial intervention. Sir, the truth is
that animals all over Nigeria are growing and becoming wild. They
have no respect anymore for Nigeria’s constituted authority. We could wake up
one of these days to hear that elephants have invaded the Central Bank of
Nigeria, and swallowed all the bank’s vaults, leaving the entire country
impoverished. The way things are, nobody will be surprised. I am sure you would
not want that to happen, considering Nigeria’s strategic importance and
population. If that were to happen, neither Africa nor the West would be able
to handle the natural and humanitarian crisis that would ensue. And if
that were to happen, I am sure you will not want to miss the story.
I made the point that Nigeria has become such a wild zoo where
the animals no longer respect constituted authority, and where there seems to
be a conflict of roles between animals and human beings. Let me elaborate
a little. Every year, Nigeria holds what is called Armed Forces
Remembrance Day on January 15. One of the highlights of the event is the
release of pigeons by the President at the end of the ceremony to symbolise the
release of peace upon the land. I became really worried about the
Nigerian animal kingdom when in the last three years, the pigeons
released by the President simply refused to fly. Government officials shouted
at the pigeons to fly. Some waved their hands and even tried sign language.
Some professional sycophants flapped their armslike birds to guide the
pigeons. But no way! The pigeons just jumped onto the floor and behaved as if
they were having an evening-time promenade.
When you focus on birds on NatGeo Wild, the birds are shown
flying. What’s going on here then? Why are some birds in Nigeria refusing to
fly? The President of Nigeria is the most powerful man in the land. When he
asks human beings to jump, they actually do more than jump; they make an effort
to somersault. But birds, common birds, are defying Presidential orders. What
kind of birds are these? A deaf and dumb specie? Or are they resisting being
used as symbols of peace? Is it possible that birds have witchcraft? - because
since those birds refused to fly, Nigeria has not known peace.
I began to suspect that something was indeed terribly
wrong with the animal kingdom in Nigeria when sometime in 2017 rats
invaded the President of Nigeria’s office! These criminal rats chased the
President out of his office for more than a month. They tore the furniture in
his office apart, littered the place with their droppings and disrupted
Presidential work. I am not making this up. The Nigerian Presidency
issued an official statement to this effect. Your publication and the Nat
Geo Wild Channel missed the story, quite unfortunately. But you have a
second chance. You can do a good story, investigating the furniture-eating rats
in Nigeria’s Presidential Villa. The President has since returned to his
office, but what if the fangled-teeth rats are still around the place? What
else will they eat? Having eaten up the President’s furniture without
consequences, or implications, they may most certainly, just decide to munch
the country’s security vote and foreign reserves! This then, is a matter of
national security. If your cameras can just unmask these disrespectful rats,
that will be the story of the decade.
I believe you will also get good stories and footages from
covering the story of cows in Nigeria. I must tell you, cows have become far
more important in my country today than human beings. Whereas many Nigerians
have become homeless and defenceless, cows have bodyguards wielding AK-47 guns,
bodyguards who insist that the life of cattle is more important than that of
human beings. In your experience, you may have heard about cattle ranches
and modern ways of processing cattle, but in Nigeria’s animal kingdom, there
has been much talk about creating colonies for cattle in Nigeria: as in plans
to take land from human beings and give to cattle! Many Governors in the
country have resisted this, even the President has said that he has no
constitutional powers to seize anybody’s land, but one young Governor, the one
in Kogi state, has donated 15, 000 hectares of his people’s land, as cattle
colony. This must make a good story for your National Geo Wild Channel.
Why would any state Governor prefer cattle to human beings? What kind of
behaviour is that? What is it really that attracts human beings to animals?
My knowledge of the Bible tells me that the battle between
herdsmen and farmers is an old, original battle. Of the two sons of our father
Adam, and our mother, Eve, one was a farmer – Cain, the other was a herdsman –
Abel. Cain killed Abel. Since then, the world has not known peace. Their
descendants have been at each other’s throats for as long as antiquity. I
sincerely hope that it is not this original battle of vengeance that is now
being re-enacted in Nigeria today over the battle of the cows and the
farmlands. Herdsmen are killing farmers and vice versa and many of us are
scared. Some people are even now saying they will create a Third Force to put
an end to the drift. But nobody is sure of what tomorrow will bring. You have
expert photographers and cameramen; they should be able to tease out the finest
strands of this story.
Should you decide to take on this story, and do a documentary on
how Nigeria has been turned into a wild zoo, within three years, I must advise
that your reporters and experts should also be prepared for the shock of
hearing some prominent Nigerians making references to animals all the time. One
of our more outspoken Senators who should be a good interview subject about ten
months ago actually told Nigerians that the seat of power, that is the
Presidency of Nigeria, had been taken over by hyenas, wolves, and jackals in
the absence of the lion-king. He also drew attention to a mortal combat between
crocodiles and fishes. This remains a great puzzle.
The wife of the President would later reply that the hyenas and
jackals would soon be expelled from the Kingdom. I am not sure this has
happened, and I do not intend to go near the place to find out the truth. I can
tell you why in a private conversation. But the other day, a prominent
government official, a Professor of Law, who should know what he is talking
about, but who has been sounding like one of the hyenas the Senator complained
about, gave a lecture in which he himself complained about how Nigeria has
become an animal kingdom! This same Professor not too long ago, also announced
that the ruling party of which he is a member, is led by
“rogue-elephants.”
I have a confession to make. I worked in government until
recently but I am frightened by the manner in which wild animals are now all
over the place. When public officials talk, they see animals. When events
occur, they blame animals. When things get missing, animals creep into the
picture. Fela, the musician once warned us about animals but I didn’t take him
serious. As a responsible media house, interested in the life and times of
animals in the wild, please hurry up and investigate how Nigeria has become a
country of snakes, fishes, hyenas, crocodiles, cows, lions, wolves and jackals
in just three years! Your audience will be supremely enriched by the effort.
I also assure you that there are many knowledgeable persons on
ground who can assist you to do a good story or a series of excellent reports.
Incidentally, we have a former President who once wrote a book titled: This
Animal called Man, and who is a famous chicken farmer to boot. We have another
former President who has a Ph.D in Zoology and was once described as a
fisherman. We also have a sitting President who before becoming President, a
second time, owned 150 cattle (I don’t know how many he has now) and who is a
life patron of the herdsmen association of Nigeria. We even have a Nobel Prize
winner, who enjoys hunting in the forest of a thousand animals. And you have me
here, waiting, expectantly, who can serve as your consultant (my charges are
modest) - as you write the story of how Nigeria, suddenly, before our very
eyes, became a country of wild animals.
Thank you very much for your time and attention. Please don’t
delay until rogue elephants swallow the Central Bank or wolves eat up the NNPC
– our treasure trove. Best regards.

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