dimanche 22 juillet 2012
5986. UNE DES CAUSES DE LA GUERRE EST LA SURPOPULATION CE QUI OBLIGE LA NATURE A RENDRE FOU LES HUMAINS EN SURNOMBRE PUISQUE ÇA PREND TROP DE TEMPS DE LES LAISSER MOURIR DE FAIM ET DE SOIF COMME LES LAPINS AUTRALIENS UNE FOIS QU'ILS AURONT DÉTRUIT TOUTES LEURS RESSOURCES ET LEUR ENVIRONNEMENT
*
AFRICAN VIEWPOINT: SHOULD BIRTH CONTROL BE MANDATORY?
THE UN ESTIMATES NIGERIA'S POPULATION COULD GROW FROM 160M TO 400M BY 2050
11 July 2012
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-18781723
In our series of viewpoints from African journalists, Sola Odunfa in Lagos gives Nigeria's President Goodluck, the leader of Africa's most populous nation, some advice about birth control.
I have always wondered how many children a man or woman should have, and my conclusion each time has rested on the Lagos slang:
"It's a matter of cash".
If you are rich you may have as many as the late Sir Olateru Olagbegi, the highly revered traditional ruler of Owo in western Nigeria, had.
His children swear that he sired 70 - unassisted. And they all are successful in their various callings.
On the other hand if you are a "common" man or woman, that is you do not own a house and car and you must seek an appointment before you may see your bank manager, you must limit your family size to what the political elite dictate.
Otherwise you all starve and your children end up living under the bridge.
The stark reality needs no argument.
We see it and feel it on the streets of Nigerian cities on a daily basis.
THE RICH AND THE POOR HARDLY MIX
Children of the one are taken to school in air-conditioned, tinted-glass cars and buses.
“The more the number of children - the more the poverty” Yoruba proverb
HEAD START
"Common" children of the "common" man are either hawking in the morning traffic for survival or dodging that scourge of Nigerian city roads - the commercial motorcycle - on their way to school, many barefooted.
Not all children in Nigeria are able to go to school, many work as street traders
One already has a head-start in the race of life, although nothing will stop the exceptionally bright and lucky from catching up the others at or before the tape.
The late business mogul and later politician Moshood Abiola - of 12 June presidential election fame - makes a good example.
«The president admitted that children were gifts from God, but then so is the hair on our head which we control by barbering”
He was raised in poverty but in later life few of his privileged contemporaries in school matched his academic and business successes.
He remains one of the rare exceptions to the Yoruba saying of "omo bere - osi bere", that is, the more the number of children - the more the poverty.
The point is that in this age any child who must be a success in life needs formal education; and education does not come free - it is a matter of cash.
Some Nigerians say that President Goodluck Jonathan does not have "the charisma of a leader" but I say that he knows how to describe situations graphically.
'DOWN-TO-EARTH LOGIC'
«Why not bring education to everyone's reach?”
This is a sample from his address at the inauguration of the National Population Commission in Abuja about a fortnight ago:
"Sometimes you get to somebody's house living in a well-furnished duplex. "The husband and wife there may have two, three, four children. The mai guard [security guard] guarding them have nine children."
The president admitted that children were gifts from God, but then so is the hair on our head which we control by barbering.
Then why not control the number of children? It is down-to-earth logic, one would say.
In response to Nigeria's galloping population, the president is contemplating legally enforced birth control.
At the end of the day though, since the problem is down to education and education is a matter of cash, why not bring education to everyone's reach?
The cost to government may be less than the billions of naira stolen annually by officials and you get birth control without pain.
AFRICAN VIEWPOINT
Elizabeth Ohene: Taking sides Cash crisis?
Zuma the monk?
Grassroot convictions
'I want to stop giving birth'
Comments (48)
*
NIGERIAN PRESIDENT GOODLUCK JONATHAN URGES BIRTH CONTROL
27 June 2012
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-18610751
Nigerians should limit the number of children they are having, according to the country's leader.
President Goodluck Jonathan said people were having too many children, and went on to back birth control measures.
He said that in particular, uneducated people were having too many children, and urged people to only have as many children as they could afford.
The United Nations has estimated that the population of Nigeria could grow from 160m to 400m by 2050.
Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa, and previous attempts to encourage adults to have fewer children have failed
BBC Nigeria correspondent Will Ross says population growth is increasing pressure on the land which is a major trigger of violence in the country.
Mr Jonathan said legislation and policies aimed at controlling the number of births might be considered in future.
He said he had asked the National Population Commission to inform people about birth control before taking the issue further.
The president acknowledged that the issue was a sensitive one, saying: "We are extremely religious people... It is a very sensitive thing.
"
Mr Jonathan was quoted as saying: "Both Christians and Muslims, and even traditionalist and all the other religions, believe that children are God's gifts to man.
"So it is difficult for you to tell any Nigerian to number their children because... it is not expected to reject God's gifts."
90 comments
RELATED STORIES
Nigeria three-baby plan 'tricky'
Profile: Nigeria's Goodluck Jonathan
Rwanda moves to limit family size
AFRICAN VIEWPOINT: SHOULD BIRTH CONTROL BE MANDATORY?
THE UN ESTIMATES NIGERIA'S POPULATION COULD GROW FROM 160M TO 400M BY 2050
11 July 2012
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-18781723
In our series of viewpoints from African journalists, Sola Odunfa in Lagos gives Nigeria's President Goodluck, the leader of Africa's most populous nation, some advice about birth control.
I have always wondered how many children a man or woman should have, and my conclusion each time has rested on the Lagos slang:
"It's a matter of cash".
If you are rich you may have as many as the late Sir Olateru Olagbegi, the highly revered traditional ruler of Owo in western Nigeria, had.
His children swear that he sired 70 - unassisted. And they all are successful in their various callings.
On the other hand if you are a "common" man or woman, that is you do not own a house and car and you must seek an appointment before you may see your bank manager, you must limit your family size to what the political elite dictate.
Otherwise you all starve and your children end up living under the bridge.
The stark reality needs no argument.
We see it and feel it on the streets of Nigerian cities on a daily basis.
THE RICH AND THE POOR HARDLY MIX
Children of the one are taken to school in air-conditioned, tinted-glass cars and buses.
“The more the number of children - the more the poverty” Yoruba proverb
HEAD START
"Common" children of the "common" man are either hawking in the morning traffic for survival or dodging that scourge of Nigerian city roads - the commercial motorcycle - on their way to school, many barefooted.
Not all children in Nigeria are able to go to school, many work as street traders
One already has a head-start in the race of life, although nothing will stop the exceptionally bright and lucky from catching up the others at or before the tape.
The late business mogul and later politician Moshood Abiola - of 12 June presidential election fame - makes a good example.
«The president admitted that children were gifts from God, but then so is the hair on our head which we control by barbering”
He was raised in poverty but in later life few of his privileged contemporaries in school matched his academic and business successes.
He remains one of the rare exceptions to the Yoruba saying of "omo bere - osi bere", that is, the more the number of children - the more the poverty.
The point is that in this age any child who must be a success in life needs formal education; and education does not come free - it is a matter of cash.
Some Nigerians say that President Goodluck Jonathan does not have "the charisma of a leader" but I say that he knows how to describe situations graphically.
'DOWN-TO-EARTH LOGIC'
«Why not bring education to everyone's reach?”
This is a sample from his address at the inauguration of the National Population Commission in Abuja about a fortnight ago:
"Sometimes you get to somebody's house living in a well-furnished duplex. "The husband and wife there may have two, three, four children. The mai guard [security guard] guarding them have nine children."
The president admitted that children were gifts from God, but then so is the hair on our head which we control by barbering.
Then why not control the number of children? It is down-to-earth logic, one would say.
In response to Nigeria's galloping population, the president is contemplating legally enforced birth control.
At the end of the day though, since the problem is down to education and education is a matter of cash, why not bring education to everyone's reach?
The cost to government may be less than the billions of naira stolen annually by officials and you get birth control without pain.
AFRICAN VIEWPOINT
Elizabeth Ohene: Taking sides Cash crisis?
Zuma the monk?
Grassroot convictions
'I want to stop giving birth'
Comments (48)
*
NIGERIAN PRESIDENT GOODLUCK JONATHAN URGES BIRTH CONTROL
27 June 2012
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-18610751
Nigerians should limit the number of children they are having, according to the country's leader.
President Goodluck Jonathan said people were having too many children, and went on to back birth control measures.
He said that in particular, uneducated people were having too many children, and urged people to only have as many children as they could afford.
The United Nations has estimated that the population of Nigeria could grow from 160m to 400m by 2050.
Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa, and previous attempts to encourage adults to have fewer children have failed
BBC Nigeria correspondent Will Ross says population growth is increasing pressure on the land which is a major trigger of violence in the country.
Mr Jonathan said legislation and policies aimed at controlling the number of births might be considered in future.
He said he had asked the National Population Commission to inform people about birth control before taking the issue further.
The president acknowledged that the issue was a sensitive one, saying: "We are extremely religious people... It is a very sensitive thing.
"
Mr Jonathan was quoted as saying: "Both Christians and Muslims, and even traditionalist and all the other religions, believe that children are God's gifts to man.
"So it is difficult for you to tell any Nigerian to number their children because... it is not expected to reject God's gifts."
90 comments
RELATED STORIES
Nigeria three-baby plan 'tricky'
Profile: Nigeria's Goodluck Jonathan
Rwanda moves to limit family size