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Thursday, 16 April 2015
Buhari, Oby Ezekwesili, Chimamanda Adichie, Shekau make 2015 TIME '100 Most Influential People' list
The news magazine will publish its annual list of the most influential people in the world later on Thursday, April 16 but the magazine's official website reports that the celebrity couple made the cut.
Nigeria’s President-elect, Muhammadu Buhari has been named one of the world’s most influential people by TIME Magazine.
Other Nigerians who made the list are former Minister of Education, Oby Ezekwesili, bestselling author, Chimamanda Adichie and Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau.
Muhammadu Buhari - A new choice for Nigeria (by Aryn Baker)
Muhammadu
Buhari made history in March by becoming the first candidate to oust a
sitting Nigerian President through the ballot box. Now he has to live up
to voters’ expectations.
From battling the Boko
Haram insurgency to tackling endemic corruption, Buhari has many
challenges ahead. The greatest may be overcoming his past as a military
ruler who seized power in 1983. Already the born-again democrat is
demonstrating the inclusivity necessary to lead a nation riven by ethnic
and religious tensions.
“We must begin to heal the wounds and work toward a
better future,” he said in his April 1 victory speech. “We do this first
by extending a hand of friendship and conciliation across the political
divide.” It’s a promising start for a President-to-be who wants to
leave a legacy to match the historic conditions of his election.
Oby Ezekwesili (by Sister Rosemary Nyirumbe)
Like
northern Uganda, where I live, northern Nigeria is very isolated. For
many years, the women who were abducted from our region remained
invisible.
So although I have not met Obiageli
Ezekwesili, I know the #BringBackOurGirls campaign that she championed
is very important. It would have taken a long time to raise awareness
about the girls taken by Boko Haram without her using her platform as a
former Minister of Education.
We need to remember
that these girls are undergoing psychological and maybe physical
torture. So I love that the campaign says, “Bring back our girls,” and
not “Bring back my child.” Everybody is in unison with the parents and
the relatives. Everyone is feeling their pain. Everyone will be ready to
embrace the girls and offer them care and compassion if they are
rescued or manage to escape.
It has been a year, and the girls haven’t been
rescued, but she has made a difference by speaking about it. Not just
speaking but shouting. I know some people will say she is too
loudmouthed. The loud mouth is needed. People hear it.
Chimamanda Adichie - Conjurer of character (by Radhika Jones)
It’s
the rare novelist who in the space of a year finds her words sampled by
BeyoncĂ©, optioned by Lupita Nyong’o and honored with the National Book
Critics Circle Award for fiction. But the Nigerian writer Chimamanda
Ngozi Adichie is just that sort of novelist.
A
MacArthur “genius” grant recipient, Adichie writes of the complex
aftermath of Nigeria’s colonial history and her nation’s rise to
prominence in an era when immigration to the West no longer means a
one-way ticket. With her viral TEDxEuston talk, “We Should All Be
Feminists,” she found her voice as cultural critic. (You can hear it
rising midway through BeyoncĂ©’s woman-power anthem “Flawless.”)
She
sets her love stories amid civil war (Half of a Yellow Sun) and against
a backdrop of racism and migration (Americanah). But her greatest power
is as a creator of characters who struggle profoundly to understand
their place in the world.
Abubakar Shekau - Scourge of Africa (by General Carter Ham (U.S. Army, retired)
Most
Americans do not yet recognize his name, but the citizens of Nigeria,
Africa’s most populous country, know Abubakar Shekau all too well: he is
the most violent killer their country has ever seen. Shekau took over
the terrorist organization Boko Haram in 2009 after the group had been
weakened by Nigerian government forces.
Shekau,
who is believed to be in his 30s, began to stage increasingly daring
kidnapping and killing raids on schools, churches and mosques thought by
Boko Haram to be violating their interpretation of Islam. The taking of
over 200 schoolgirls in April 2014 brought Boko Haram into the
international spotlight.
By most accounts, Boko
Haram has killed more than 10,000 people and is spreading into
neighboring countries. Shekau’s latest action may finally summon a U.S.
response: he has publicly aligned his group with ISIS, the terrorist
group that holds territory in Syria and Iraq and has expanded its reach
into Yemen and Libya.
Credit: Times Magazine ...
Credit: Times Magazine ...

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