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Vanguard Newspapers 21 February 2021

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PAGE 16—SUNDAY Vanguard, FEBRUARY 21, 2021<br />

Searching for Home in<br />

The Camp<br />

Title: The Camp<br />

Author: Livinus Jatto<br />

www.thecampbook.com<br />

Publisher: AuthorHouse<br />

Number of pages: 131<br />

Year of publication: 2020<br />

Category: Fiction<br />

By Adegoke Tope Mark<br />

‘As the vehicle clambered<br />

up the last hill leading to<br />

Auchi town, the subtle<br />

petrichor of wet sand mixed<br />

with cow dung and the<br />

stench from overflowing<br />

dustbins lining the main<br />

road reminded him of<br />

home.’ The Camp, Livinus<br />

Jatto<br />

What tribe you belong to,<br />

your state of origin, religion<br />

is somehow what are used<br />

as yardstick to gauge a<br />

Nigerian. It doesn’t really<br />

matter his qualification or<br />

merit, these defining<br />

yardsticks or measures are<br />

the sentimental tools for<br />

sizing up a Nigerian. Thus,<br />

the Nigerian identity is<br />

very much troubled at<br />

home too; it begs the<br />

question, what or where is<br />

home truly? This is the<br />

story of Paul Badamosi in<br />

Livinus Jatto’s debut novel,<br />

The Camp. Through this<br />

character’s many obstacles<br />

and development, we<br />

witness the displacement of<br />

a person within his own<br />

country, and how systems<br />

that favours ethnic bigotry<br />

and religion and<br />

mediocrity up-ends him at<br />

different stages of his life<br />

and career.<br />

The novel is worked into<br />

eleven chapters, with every<br />

chapter short and titled to<br />

encapsulate the core theme<br />

it focuses on. In the opening<br />

chapter titled ‘A Camp<br />

Called Home’, it follows the<br />

origin of Paul Badamosi<br />

who became Faul Badamasi<br />

through the hand of the<br />

clerk who registered him<br />

into primary school:<br />

He didn’t notice that the<br />

Hausa teacher called him<br />

Faul, with his Hausa accent.<br />

Fani-Kayode opens up on ‘defection’: I am a lion that cannot be caged<br />

Continued from page 16<br />

What more can they do to me that they<br />

have not done already? And what more am<br />

I looking for in life that I have not enjoyed<br />

over the years?<br />

Yet you say I am scared! And those that<br />

say so can barely endure one tenth of what<br />

I have endured.<br />

Some of them make noise from the safety<br />

of other countries and stay away from Nigeria<br />

out of fear of being locked up yet they mock<br />

those of us that live on the doorsteps of our<br />

oppressors in Nigeria and dare them to their<br />

faces.<br />

Some of them have not been able to face<br />

hardship or deprivation and neither can they<br />

bear it when their rights are being violated.<br />

Yet to many of us this has become the norm<br />

and we are used to it yet we still continue to<br />

struggle and fight the system regardless. Let<br />

me give you just one example. Do you know<br />

that I have not been able to travel out of Nigeria<br />

for the last 13 years because my passport was<br />

first seized by a PDP government for eight<br />

years and then by an APC government for five<br />

years?<br />

Do you know that I could not even go for<br />

medical check-ups outside the country because<br />

of that?<br />

Locked up with<br />

B/Haram suspects<br />

Did you ever hear me complain or did this<br />

ever stop me from speaking truth to power,<br />

standing firm <strong>against</strong> injustice or speaking<br />

up for the weak, the persecuted and the<br />

voiceless?<br />

Do you know I was locked up by both PDP<br />

and APC Federal Governments for no just<br />

cause?<br />

Do you know I was even locked up in Boko<br />

Haram detention centers with Boko Haram<br />

suspects?<br />

Do you know that only terrorists were kept<br />

in the facility that they kept me? Do you know<br />

that that place was worse than Gauntanamo<br />

Bay and that it was built by the British<br />

government?<br />

Neither was he aware of the<br />

future impact of the<br />

misspelling of his surname,<br />

which now read<br />

“Badamasi”. At first glance,<br />

Badamasi and Badamosi<br />

looked the same, but the<br />

politics of Nigeria made this<br />

almost innocuous difference<br />

a matter of survival. The<br />

Northerners spelt theirs<br />

Badamasi, while those from<br />

the Southwest, mostly<br />

Yorubas, and Binis in the<br />

Midwest spelt the same<br />

name Badamosi.<br />

Whichever way it was<br />

spelt, it meant<br />

approximately the same<br />

thing. (pg. 9)<br />

Paul who was born to a<br />

stern and disciplinarian<br />

father learned from the<br />

onset of his childhood the<br />

complexity of his identity.<br />

His parents migrated from<br />

Midwest Nigeria<br />

somewhere called Tabo<br />

Gido-Ora to seek a new life<br />

in the northern part of<br />

Nigeria called Badaka State<br />

immediately after the Civil<br />

War. Badaka is a fictional<br />

state but resembles any<br />

cosmopolitan urban centres<br />

in the north that has<br />

various ethnic groups<br />

domiciled there. The<br />

author here is leaving the<br />

setting blank thereby<br />

creating a kind of template<br />

anybody with similar<br />

experience can copy theirs<br />

on. This makes the story<br />

ring true and shows the<br />

history of a nation is knitted<br />

with its peoples:<br />

The difference between<br />

the North, the South, the<br />

East and the West replicated<br />

throughout the whole<br />

national life of Nigerians<br />

and defined Paul’s growth<br />

and development as it did<br />

the growth and<br />

development of the<br />

country. These differences<br />

determined who could<br />

legitimately claim to have<br />

a stake in the entity called<br />

Nigeria. It shaped Paul’s<br />

evolution. It also played an<br />

important role in the<br />

stunned growth of the<br />

country. Both Paul and other<br />

Nigerians conduct<br />

themselves as if they were<br />

internally displaced. (pg. 9)<br />

As the narrative is<br />

centred on Paul, it follows his<br />

frustrations and<br />

disappointments in his<br />

quest to arrive at a place or<br />

point where he can call<br />

home. When he decides to<br />

visit his parents’<br />

hometown, he discovers<br />

home is just an idea as he<br />

has become an alien in his<br />

parents’ state of origin. They<br />

come from a minority<br />

group as ‘Midwestern<br />

Northerner’. He also<br />

discovers that baggage<br />

comes with certain<br />

advantages and<br />

disadvantages. The<br />

advantage being that<br />

standard could be lowered<br />

for him to scale through<br />

educational challenges. The<br />

author writes that the pass<br />

mark for JAMB, a tertiary<br />

entrance examination in<br />

Nigeria, can be lowered for<br />

northerners to fulfil the<br />

federal quota or character<br />

as stipulated by the<br />

constitution. This, he<br />

attests, through the<br />

protagonist entry into the<br />

university. The advantage<br />

he thought he had soon<br />

turned into a big<br />

disadvantage as he couldn’t<br />

apply for a bursary from his<br />

Badaka State because he is<br />

not legitimately recognised<br />

there because his parents<br />

only settled there and<br />

therefore cannot lay claim<br />

to his place of birth.<br />

Do you know how terrifying that was and<br />

that I could have been killed or maimed whilst<br />

there?<br />

Yet did you ever hear me complain about it,<br />

submit, compromise, give up or back down<br />

from criticising the government or previous<br />

governments because of these trials and<br />

tribulations?<br />

How many of your so-called “relevant” and<br />

“great” leaders can bear such torment and<br />

injustice without cracking? Did you ever see<br />

or hear me crack? Did I ever break?<br />

Do you know what horrors my first wife<br />

Regina and my daughter Remi were subjected<br />

to by a PDP government? Do you know why<br />

they had to go into exile and live abroad?<br />

Do you know what hell my ex-wife Precious<br />

and first son Aragorn were subjected to by the<br />

APC government?<br />

Do you know the tears we shed secretly and<br />

the number of times we suffered and were<br />

forced to go underground for no just cause?<br />

Do you know the kind of stress and torment<br />

this put us through? Do you know that all our<br />

bank accounts were frozen for five years?<br />

Did all that stop me or stop us from standing?<br />

Did we not endure and bear it all with dignity<br />

for years and still continue to make our<br />

contribution to national affairs with zeal and<br />

passion?<br />

Yet leaders like me that make these sacrifices<br />

and speak truth you describe as having no<br />

relevance, no consistency and you hate.<br />

You mock, ridicule, insult and believe the<br />

very worst about us at the drop of a hat. Some<br />

even have the nerve and effrontery to say we<br />

are not politicians simply because we have<br />

not run for elective office.<br />

It is those who speak truth and that are<br />

courageous enough to expose and confront<br />

evil that you hate, judge and always think and<br />

assume the worse off at the drop of a hat.<br />

Do you know that despite facing the most<br />

vicious persecution and prosecution for seven<br />

long years the court found me not guilty of<br />

corruption whilst I was Minister of Aviation<br />

and Minister of Culture and Tourism and<br />

acquitted and discharged me?<br />

How many of your leaders can endure going<br />

to court for seven years before four different<br />

CHRISTMAS, NEW YEAR: NPDC, NOSL remember<br />

Eastern Obolo communities, others<br />

T HE<br />

P e t r o Nigerian<br />

l e u m<br />

Development Corporation<br />

(NPDC), in conjunction<br />

with their partner, Natural<br />

Oil Field Service Limited<br />

(NOSL) (a subsidiary of<br />

Sterling Oil), reached out to<br />

host communities in<br />

Eastern Obolo during<br />

Christmas/New Year.<br />

600 bags of rice, 66<br />

cartons of noodles, 66 bags<br />

of salt, 66 cans of cooking oil<br />

and cartons of wine were<br />

handed over to Engr. Hope<br />

Etetor, son of the<br />

paramount ruler of Eastern<br />

Obolo LGA who represented<br />

Dr Charles Mboung, leader<br />

of the Local Government<br />

Committee on Oil and Gas,<br />

in the presence of other<br />

committee members, Mr.<br />

Uro Bills and Mr. Loveday<br />

Ekuyok, at the admin head<br />

office of NPDC in Eket.<br />

The NPDC team was<br />

represented by Mr Olutope<br />

Bello while Group Capt<br />

Ettete Ekpo (rtd) led the<br />

NOSL team which paraded<br />

Mr. Eugene Unwana, Mr.<br />

Ubong Eti and Mrs. Emem<br />

Thomas. About 33<br />

communities from Eastern<br />

Obolo benefitted from the<br />

gifts. They include<br />

Akpabom, Elekpon,<br />

Atabrikang and Okoroete.<br />

Bills and Loveday lauded<br />

the kind gesture in spite of<br />

the adverse economic<br />

situation in the country,<br />

saying they got only rice in<br />

2019 but got salt, cooking<br />

oil, noodles and wine in<br />

addition to rice in 2020.<br />

They urged NPDC and<br />

NOSL to continue to reach<br />

out to their communities,<br />

improve engagement with<br />

them to ensure a conducive<br />

environment for their<br />

operations.<br />

In a brief chat with the<br />

Base Manager, Mr Fabian<br />

Ebri, in his office, he said, in<br />

addition to the items given<br />

to the Eastern Obolo<br />

communities and<br />

neighbours, military and<br />

some governmental<br />

agencies got another 1,200<br />

judges and in the midst of a vicious media<br />

witch-hunt in which most people who knew<br />

nothing about the case had declared me guilty?<br />

How many of you could have survived<br />

that without capitulating, cracking,<br />

begging and bending the knee?<br />

Do you know that I have been facing<br />

prosecution for the past five years in two<br />

separate courts for doing absolutely nothing<br />

wrong except leading a presidential campaign<br />

<strong>against</strong> Buhari and for Jonathan in 2015 and<br />

as a consequence of politically-motivated and<br />

malicious charges which were filed only<br />

because of my bitter and vicious opposition to<br />

the Buhari government?<br />

Do you know that under my tenure as<br />

Minister of Aviation there were no plane<br />

crashes whilst the year before I came in there<br />

were five and 453 died in those crashes?<br />

Do you know that I put a stop to those crashes<br />

and that I am the only Minister of Aviation in<br />

Nigerian history under which there were NO<br />

plane crashes?<br />

Poll<br />

Do you know that despite all the challenges<br />

and persecution I was recently polled by 85%<br />

of the readers of Vanguard Newspaper that I<br />

was the loudest and most consistent voice of<br />

opposition <strong>against</strong> the Buhari government<br />

over the last five years?<br />

All this yet you label me a coward and<br />

someone that has achieved nothing?<br />

Do you know that most of those leaders you<br />

revere and love so much are cowards who are<br />

unable and unwilling to risk all and speak<br />

truth to power.<br />

All they are able to do is to mislead you and<br />

their followers to hate and insult those of us<br />

that really care for you.<br />

Joker<br />

Honestly some people need mental health<br />

checks and medical attention!<br />

And for anyone to say I will not be welcome<br />

in a party that I have not publicly expressed a<br />

desire to <strong>join</strong> amazes me.<br />

The joker that claimed I was rejected by the<br />

bags of rice as NPDC and<br />

NOSL considers them<br />

important stakeholders.<br />

Ebri said NPDC and NOSL<br />

will constantly reach out to<br />

all involved in making<br />

their operations smooth<br />

and peaceful.<br />

From left: Mr. Eugine Unwana, Group Capt Etete Ekpo<br />

(rtd), Mr Olutope Bello, Engr. Hope Etetor, Mr.<br />

Loveday Ekuyok and Mr. Uro Bills during the<br />

presentation.<br />

Some of the items donated.<br />

Ekpo, leader of the NOSL<br />

team, in a chat after the<br />

presentation, assured all<br />

that the company, as<br />

always, would continue to<br />

give attention to the welfare<br />

of host communities and<br />

other stakeholders.<br />

APC needs to tell me where and when I applied<br />

to <strong>join</strong> them and what my registration number<br />

was!<br />

Did I tell you I am leaving PDP for APC? Or<br />

did I tell anyone that I will stay in PDP forever<br />

no matter what happens or no matter what<br />

they do to me or to the country?<br />

You see, unlike most, I am a one-man army<br />

and riot squad and I am accountable to no<br />

man or party. I am only accountable to God!<br />

Unlike most, I do not do things in the dark<br />

and I do not shy away from speaking the truth<br />

or my mind once it is set.<br />

When and if I ever choose to make a move I<br />

will be clear and categorical and I will let the<br />

world know, so hold your hate fire till we get<br />

to that bridge.<br />

Yet know this: I owe no-one any explanation<br />

for what I will do or will not do tomorrow, I<br />

will gladly live with the consequences of my<br />

actions and decisions and I will defend myself<br />

and explain my actions when I choose to do<br />

so if I believe it is ever necessary.<br />

2023 realignments,<br />

new alliances<br />

I do not know what the details are yet but,<br />

before 2023, there WILL be many<br />

realignments and new alliances. Both parties<br />

will see many shifts and many individuals will<br />

change sides.<br />

This is because we must get it right in 2023<br />

and we must ensure that whoever takes power<br />

at the center, regardless of party affiliation,<br />

restructures our country and takes our nation<br />

to the promise land.<br />

We must build bridges and secure the peace,<br />

unity and progress of this country and most<br />

important of all we must avoid civil war and<br />

do all we can to save our nation from armed<br />

conflict and fratricidal butchery.<br />

That is the challenge before us today and<br />

that is the reality of Nigerian politics.<br />

Whilst others meet secretly and hide from<br />

the cameras in their quest to achieve these<br />

objectives, I will not. I am the beloved of the<br />

Lord and I am a LION!<br />

No man born of woman can silence my roar!<br />

I am who I am. I am FFK.

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