Editorial cartoons on this page appear four days a week on the back page of THISDAY
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Saturday, 21 February 2015
Wednesday, 18 February 2015
Sunday, 15 February 2015
Charity Begins At Home
This 1983 Guardian cartoon was based on a statement made by a
governorship candidate in one of the states in the South-West during his
campaign to seek a second term. Though the statement was instructive enough to
incite his followers to violence – and indeed they caused untold mayhem- but it
failed to generate enough votes to return him and his family to the governor’s
lodge!
Politicians seeking elective positions in the 2015 elections, having tucked away members of their family, are doling out money and food to their followers and making provocative statements capable of inciting violence, which they hope will buy them votes. Meanwhile, their financial supporters are keeping a respectable distance until after the battle is “lost and won”!
Politicians seeking elective positions in the 2015 elections, having tucked away members of their family, are doling out money and food to their followers and making provocative statements capable of inciting violence, which they hope will buy them votes. Meanwhile, their financial supporters are keeping a respectable distance until after the battle is “lost and won”!
Wednesday, 4 February 2015
Tuesday, 3 February 2015
APC Begins Town Hall Meetings
APC begins Town
Hall meetings
“To flag off scheduled town hall meetings
across some Nigerian states, APC Presidential Candidate General Muhammadu
Buhari interacted, a few hours ago, with the business community in the nation's
commercial hub, Lagos. Foluso Phillips, of the Nigerian Economic Summit Group,
asked the candidate which policies of the present federal government would be
changed and which would continue. Buhari prefaced
his answer with, "this is going to be a positive change." Thereafter
he referred to an article he read (or was it a cartoon?) showing someone
overlooking a cliff. That's where Nigeria is at now. It's either we fall off or
take calculated steps back. The task ahead, he said, would be to look at the
policies that need to be continued or those to be changed completely.
As the interaction was being rounded off, I overheard one of the businessmen say "But they said he's senile."
As the interaction was being rounded off, I overheard one of the businessmen say "But they said he's senile."
The above statement was posted on Taiwo Obe’s wall. A
couple of responses to it were curious to know which cartoon the general was referring
to. Well, look no further, I have found the cartoon….
The General must have a highly retentive memory to have
been able to recall the cartoon he saw about 30 years ago! I suspect the
cartoon in question was the one I made showing a self-possessed Head of State
as he headed for the precipice. Reproduced above.
It was one of the many cartoons I made depicting soldiers
and officers behaving badly that got me into trouble with the regime of General
Buhari, to the point that an officer from the Department of Military Intelligence
visited the Guardian office for a “friendly chat” and “advised” that the regime
would prefer not to see cartoons of men in military uniform in the Guardian. I
got around it by using metaphor. I simply stripped them of their uniforms and
donned them the caps of hostile neighbours, shylocks, extortionists, unscrupulous
company or club chairmen, etc.
A
few months later, a Military Intelligence Officer who came to the Guardian on some
other mission popped in my office on his way out and said, “We got the message
and we’re watching”
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