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Katon Gyese Landlord: A Master of Denial (2)

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Katon Gyese Landlord: A Master of Denial (2)

By: Balami Lazarus.

Following the Katon Gyese story, this piece is the conclusion of the master of denial. Permit me to briefly describe Katon Gyese. Is one of the wards in Tudun Wada District, Jos Plateau State, laying in a quiet, serene natural environment where streams and hills are common sights? In spite of its natural beauty, most Katon Gyese houses are poorly planned and built, characterized by narrow paths and alleys; their major but only main road is the gateway; and they are not motorable. Unless otherwise stated, one can surmise that Katon Gyese is not motorable in the true sense of the word.

As earlier written in the previous work, I will mention names, and this is exactly what I will do herein. But let me quickly say this: in my years of writing for news papers and magazines, I have observed that some people don’t like their names mentioned even in genuine matters concerning them, for reasons best known to them. But as a historian, I was taught to write or narrate events with facts, figures, names, and places, and this tells you that no historian or public interest writer will ever write without supporting his work with what I said above. Therefore, names are meant to be mentioned, called, or written because they are your means of identification as a person and in document(s) like this write-up and others.

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It was 10:30am, Monday morning of August 7, 2023, sitting in my office in Abuja, studying the reply in response to the Letter of Complaints on some issues raised by tenants occupying the property of one Mr. Daniel Ghaji Hassan, written, signed, and dated June 27, 2023, by one Barrister Walshak Stephen Gwankat, a fine young lawyer gentleman who carried out the instructions of his client to the latter, including a verbal version of what Mr. Ghaji had most likely told him. I laughed and dismissed some of the contents of the response as being put away for the trash or to be thrown back at his client. Well, lawyers being who they are, I will not blame them.

This saga is between Mr. Daniel Ghaji Hassan and his present tenants, who described him as a “master of denial,” having engaged him one-on-one face-to-face on matters related to his property on several occasions. The property is said to be surrounded by issues such as electricity, the main gate, and fittings and fixtures, some of which were carried out by tenants for their comfortability with the intention of improving the value of his property, but Mr. Daniel Ghaji has distanced himself from this good intention of his tenants and has since declined to be called or addressed as a landlord. “My fear is he might deny this too,” said one tenant.

Behold, he is now challenging them for such an action instead of appreciating them and wisely coming to understanding with his tenants. And in their opinion, when speaking to Mr. Daniel Ghaji Hassan regarding his property, you need a witness to do so. This is contrary to what he once said: “The relationship should be that of a family, and I should not be called a landlord.’ The occupants of the property in question owned by Mr. Hassan are full of praise for his in-house representative, Mr.Dakup Kitagak Yoila, a gentleman to the core who has put in his personal time and resources to see to these challenges aforementioned.

Similarly, findings by the tenants at the Jos Electricity Distribution Company (JEDC) office through one Mr.Austin  Lucky and one Salisu reveal that something is wrong with the pre-paid meters installed by Mr.Daniel Ghaji Hassan, and they were told to “go back and sort out with your landlord”. All efforts to get things sorted out with Mr. Hassan proved in vain. According to them, he seems unconcerned, and this has left some tenants to live for about a year without light.

It is necessary to come to terms with your tenants as a landlord, looking at Mr.Daniel Ghaji Hassan’s relationship with the occupants of his house. Landlords should relate to and listen to the complaints of their tenants; this will go a long way toward maintainace and valuing their properties.

Balami, a Publisher/Columnist (8036779290)

Katon Gyese Landlord: A Master of Denial (2)

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University Courses: Marketable and Non-Marketable Courses—How True?

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University Courses: Marketable and Non-Marketable Courses—How True?

By: Balami Lazarus

Let me make it clear hereinafter that I am not against any academic course or the role of guidance and counseling for good career choice, provided that our young men and women will be guided properly. Not long ago, I visited a friend who teaches at one of the universities. It was interesting to be with him, having spent years without seeing each other.

My friend and I took time out and had a long discussion on national issues concerning our country in an attempt to proffer verbal solutions that will only end and stop as mere talks, which most Nigerians are good at doing, including this writer.

In furtherance to our discussion, I was very particular about education and how to improve the sector in terms of standards, academic excellence, and skills. I also raised the issue of corruption in the system. In the process I immediately recalled what some parents and guardians are peddling around saying: “There are marketable and non-marketable courses in our universities.

“For me, I know that for hundreds of years, universities are known to be great centers of teaching, learning,learning and research, contributing to arts, science, and technology for the purpose of national development. My friend was quick to add that “the academic corruption is perpetrated by some lecturers and students, monetarily and sexually.”

Having discussed the corruption bug. I asked the university Don if there are any courses as marketable and non-marketable courses in our universities. This one question gave the Don a good laugh. He looked at me and said, “I have spent years as a teacher in the university academic department. I have never heard of any course(s) known as marketable and non-marketable academic disciplines or any faculty/department that run such courses.

As young secondary school students aspiring to go to the university to study courses of our choices where our interest lies and looking forward to becoming either political scientists, engineers, lawyers, historians, or doctors, and so on. In this regard, we had never heard or been told by our teachers or parents that there are marketable and non-marketable academic courses. Therefore, we should study the marketable courses.

The question I always asked myself was, where are these courses? What we have in our universities are courses leading to different human endeavors. Whatever one decided to call these courses, what is obtainable today is the need to have to add skills to your academic training; employers of labor are today skills-oriented for those who are hoping to be employed.

Balami, a Publisher/Columnist, 08036779290

University Courses: Marketable and Non-Marketable Courses—How True?

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With Fury of a Tempest, Alau Dam Flood 

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With Fury of a Tempest, Alau Dam Flood 

By: Balami Lazarus 

Who wants to be a millionaire? a television quiz program anchored by one Frank Idoho, which I hardly missed. I recalled a question once asked: Where is Lake Alau? In the options, there was Borno state among other states. The young man on the hot seat gave a wrong answer. I believe because Lake Alau was then not popular, unlike its cousin, Lake Chad. 

Not much is known about the Lake, Alau, and the dam known and called Lake Alau Dam put together. Let me first start with the lake as a natural geographical feature, a large body of water surrounded by land. However, and to the best of my findings, there is no available written document on the history of this lake in question. But it held that the Lake was there many years traceable to the period of the Kanem- Borno Empire. While the present Alau was a small settlement that emerged during the formative years of Shehu’s dynasty from 1846 to the present day. It later grew into a village with people of Kanuri extraction. 

Alau is today part of the Konduga Local Government Area of Borno state, some few kilometers away from Maiduguri city center. For the purpose of providing portable drinking water and to improve agriculture through irrigation farming and fishing, a dam was constructed by the past administration of the state from 1984 to 1986. The project was tagged as Water for Borno. Thereby, Lake Alau Dam has become part of the people’s lives, for its importance cannot be quantified. 

The recent Alau Dam flood that nearly swept away the city of Maiduguri came with a raging fury of a tempest in September 2024 I will liken to one of the works of William Shakespeare—”The Tempest.”TheTempest”. That of the play was simply and deliberately raised to humble palace traitor Antonio and his co-conspirators, who ousted Duke Prospero, whom they marooned on a deserted island, leaving him to his fate. But ours came with devastating destruction and killing with ravaging effect from head to tail, which has caused unestimated damage. 

The flood was not because of the heavy rainfall experienced last season but from the overflow of the dam and subsequent breakoff of its decks. My last visit to Lake Alau Dam with some friends was years back. What was observed and saw were obsolete facilities that were outdated, old, and weakly decked. There was nothing to show that the dam is being cared for. But while growing up in Zaria as kids, we were so used to seeing Kubani and the University (ABU) dams being opened up to let out large quantities of water to avoid overflow and flooding. Has Alau Dam ever experienced that? Has it been dredged? 

Therefore, the 13-man committee led by Mr. Liman Gana Mustapha, a professional town planner, may wish to consider these questions as an inroad to finding a lasting solution to the flood matter. 

Balami, a Publisher/Columnist. 08036779290

With Fury of a Tempest, Alau Dam Flood 

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The Rise and Fall of Garkida, a Social Decline

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The Rise and Fall of Garkida, a Social Decline 

By: Balami Lazarus 

In my recent visit to see my aged mother in Shaffa, a small rural town. In a chat with some of my peers, Garkida came up, and one of us immediately informed the group that the town is socially dredged. I made some findings, and you may wish to agree. I believed students of history my generation were once taught about the rise and fall of great empires, kingdoms, rulers, warriors, and other historical events during our secondary school days. In the cause of those lessons, our imaginations were always taken far to other lands. 

We never thought that someday there would be a fall or decline of our own, which could be a town, village, or settlement, but never like the fall of the known historical empires/kingdoms of Oyo, Jukun, Fante/Ashante, Kanem-Borno, Songhai, etc. To rise is a difficult task in life or in the course of growth, be it individual, town, or city. But to fall is easy. Garkida has rose and fallen, or, to say, declined socially. Once a bubbling rural town in Buraland, being in Gombi Local Government Area of Adamawa State has nose-dived from the social ladder. 

As a historian, I will not subscribe to the use of the term fall; it will defile my histo-journalistic sense of reasoning because Garkida is a proper noun and is there real. So it will rather go well with me and perhaps some readers of this essay to accept Declined as a better use of historical language for the purpose of this work. I am not a native of Garkida and have never lived there, but it was the home of my cousins and nieces long before now. 

As a young man, I had it well with friends when the town was in her social chemistry and apogee. In spite of her decline, the arrears in our kitty, notwithstanding the flow of time, are the mutual friendship, an indelible mark in our social life. I remember clearly as a holiday-maker with my grandmother at Shaffa, Garkida was the in-thing in our youthful days because of the mass social activities that used to take place there. 

There were social interactions with friends and relatives from different places, parties of all kinds—a social front burner. And to most of my peers, it was the center of today’s mobile social handle—Facebook, where you meet and make new friends. That was Garkida for us. As a rural town, it flourished with glamour, elegance, and pride, triggered by the social engineering of Who is Who? The creme de la creme of her sons and daughters who made nane in their vocations or professions that promoted and spread the name of Garkida as social lighthouse. 

It was the abode of top military brass in the ranks of generals. Her businessmen once made the town tick as a cluster of has.  It was the nerve of vogue and socialites in Buraland. There was declined in this capacity. Historically, Garkida came to the limelight and appeared on the colonial map of Nigeria in 1923, when the white Christian missionaries of CBN/EYN first settled there and made it their home on the 17th March of the aforementioned year. The beginning of her social mobility started in the 1970s, through the 1980s, to the dawn of the 1990s, her zenith. 

I doff my hat for the united daughters of Garkida; credit goes to them; their exposures, taste, beauty, love, elegance, sophistication, unity of purpose, and social agrandisement made them wives of husbands of men from far and near who are of different walks of life. The women of Garkida were a central force, once the venus de milo of the town before its social decline. I cannot conclude this article without appreciating the fact that Garkida was the center of learning and vocational training and once the hold of good and efficient healthcare services in Buraland and its neighbors. Today, Garkida is no longer in the vantage position. 

Balami, a Publisher/Columnist, 08036779290.

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