Author: The Nation

  • Maritime security: Navy raises alarm over ‘illegal’ outfits

    Maritime security: Navy raises alarm over ‘illegal’ outfits

    The  Nigerian Navy (NN), yesterday, described as worrisome the proliferation of illegal maritime security organisations in the country.

    It said if unchecked, the development could worsen the scourge of insecurity in the country with a likely grave impact on national security.

    A statement by Director, Naval Information (DINFO), Commodore Adedotun Ayo-Vaughan, noted with dismay, the use of naval uniforms, accouterments by the fake outfits for their “unscrupulous activities.”

    It alleged that the self-acclaimed organisations used these naval regalia or similar ones to deceive, harass, intimidate, and defraud unsuspecting members of the public.

    According to Ayo-Vaughan, some of the organisations had sold recruitment forms to the public and conducted secret recruitment exercises, and training despite the proscription of such groups by the Federal Government official Gazette 58 Vol 100 titled “The Dissolution and Proscription of Certain Associations Order, 2013.”

    He said: “The order in Paragraph 2 states that “As from the commencement of this order, the dissolved and proscribed associations shall not be formed into any new associations by whatever name or title, within the meaning of this order.

    “Suffice to state that the NN in the past had arrested and handed over for prosecution members of some of these outlawed organisations.

    Nevertheless, their illegal activities have continued unabated in some parts of the country, particularly the South-south geopolitical zone.

    “Some proscribed maritime outfits operating illegally in the nation are Nigerian Merchant Navy, Nigerian Merchant Navy Coastal Defence Force, Nigerian Coast Guard, Merchant Navy Maritime Academy, Nigerian Merchant Navy Coast Guard Security and Safety Corps, Maritime Security Agency as well as Nigerian Maritime Law Enforcement Agency amongst others.

    “Pertinently, the proliferation of illegal maritime security outfits is worrisome and may worsen the scourge of insecurity in the country with likely grave impact on national security. It has therefore become necessary to notify the public and appeal for caution.

    Read Also: How Nigerian Navy transformed maritime sector, by experts

    “Relatedly, information about these impostors and illegal maritime outfits should be forwarded to the NN so as to facilitate the arrest of these miscreants.

    “Essentially, operatives of the NN in conjunction with other maritime law enforcement agencies will continue to maintain vigilance in order to locate, promptly apprehend and prosecute these miscreants in accordance with the laws of the land.

    “Members of the public are thus enjoined to report any suspected impostor or fake maritime security personnel to the nearest police station and/or naval base.

    In addition, members of the public are advised not to patronise or purchase entry/recruitment forms from these proscribed outfits.

    “Report suspicious behaviour of any group of persons or organisations who claim to be personnel of the NN or who are found dressed in or in possession of naval uniforms and accoutrements or similar uniforms and accouterments including those conducting fake recruitment and naval training.

    “The Nigerian Navy does not sell entry/recruitment forms to the public as is the practice of some of these fraudsters. Hence, anyone selling recruitment forms is not a naval personnel but an impostor.

    “The perpetrators of these illegalities are warned that the Nigerian Navy as statutorily empowered, will leave no stone unturned in her bid to secure the maritime environment for enhanced security of lives and properties and for the conduct of legitimate maritime commerce as well as related economic activities.”

  • Coca-Cola, others seek investment in climate safety

    Coca-Cola, others seek investment in climate safety

    The coalition has evolved from a four-member group to 30 big organisations with a commitment to build a sustainable recycling economy for food and beverage packaging waste. FBRA and its members have been able to shape public policy and take action that supports a circular economy and the evolution of waste management in Nigeria.

    The organisation’s water leadership efforts supports its climate targets by not only helping to reduce carbon emissions through efficiency and reuse but also creating significant ecosystem and carbon benefits through nature-based solutions and replenishment.

    The company in 2021, announced a holistic water strategy which aims to achieve water security across its operations, local watersheds and communities.

    Read Also: Foundation, Coca Cola donate food

    The goals related to the strategy’s key focus areas include the need to achieve 100% circular water use – or regenerative water use across 175 facilities identified as “leadership locations” by 2030.

    Work with partners to help improve the health of 60 watersheds identified as most critical for the company’s operations and agricultural supply chains by 2030.

    Analysts say the aim is to return a cumulative total of 2 trillion liters of water to nature and communities globally, between 2021 – 2030.

    In driving goal 3, The Coca-Cola Foundation’s flagship program, Replenish Africa Initiative (RAIN) was introduced to address Africa’s water challenges through healthy watershed programmes and community water programs.

    The pan-African programme aligns with the company’s global vision to replenish water in communities they operate and source ingredients through strategic partnerships in order to deliver sustainable projects, aimed at achieving the Sustainable Development Goal 6 which is clean water and sanitation for all.

    The program which was managed by the Global Environment and Technology Foundation (GETF) ran in two phases.

    At the end of the second phase in 2020, it recorded a positive impact of over 7 million people across the continent. The program replenished over 20 billion liters of water to communities and nature, improving access to water, health and sanitation which in turn improved hygiene behaviours, established and enhanced sustainable water management practices, improved environmental stewardship and community health and promoted efficient and sustainable use of water for economic development.

    To further drive the goal of water replenishment, The Coca-Cola Foundation has provided over $1.3million to two NGOs namely the Rural Africa Water Development Project (RAWDP) for Disaster Risk Reduction and Urban Resilience in Imo state; and GETF who is partnering with WaterAid on an 18-month project targeted at improving access to safe water, sanitation, and hygiene services in four communities within and around the Maiduguri Metropolis of Borno State.

    With its giant strides in areas of climate change advocacy and circular economy, The Coca-Cola Company has indeed proven its unshaken commitment towards preserving the earth for future generations and continues to take concrete steps to invest in our planet.

  • Seplat Energy mulls 25% increase in dividend payout as revenue rises

    Seplat Energy mulls 25% increase in dividend payout as revenue rises

    Nigeria’s leading indigenous oil company Seplat Energy Plc has delighted shareholders with news that it will increase its quarterly dividend by 25 per cent from US 2.5 cents per share to US 3.0 cents per share.

    The revelation came in its statement of results for the first three months of 2023, which announced revenues up 37 per cent to US$331 million and the bottom line up a whopping 189 per cent to $57.5 million.

    While revenues grew 37 per cent, the company’s analysis reveals that cost of sales rose by just 6.6 per cent, meaning gross profits surged by 69 per cent to $198.3 million at a margin of 60 per cent, compared to 48 per cent in the first three months of 2022.

    Delving deeper into the operational update it is clear the company remains extremely professionally managed.

    Seplat again demonstrated why it has adopted the moniker of Nigeria’s leading independent by delivering average daily working interest production of 51,720 barrels of oil and gas equivalent and extending its safety record to 3.8 million person-hours without a single lost-time injury.

    Perhaps it is not a surprise then that Seplat was the first African E&P company to be awarded the coveted ISO 55001 Asset Management certification which recognises companies that manage their assets responsibly and effectively throughout their life cycle.

    Read Also: NIS’ curious charge, immediate withdrawal against Seplat Energy Plc and its directors

    Nigerian and international shareholders will be delighted to see that the Company has increased the base level of its quarterly dividend to US 3.0 cents per share so soon after it announced a special dividend of US 5 cents at its full-year 2022 results in March, for a total dividend to shareholders of US 15 cents for the 2022 financial year. Our analysis shows that this is possible because of the strong cash generation the company achieves, thanks to good management of both operations and cashflow.

    Having started the year with $404 million in the bank, Seplat added more than $55 million in the first three months of the year, a laudable achievement that will excite shareholders hopeful of higher returns this year.

    In its statement to the Lagos and London stock exchanges, Seplat’s Chairman, Basil Omiyi, went to great lengths to thank the Company’s employees, 98 per cent of whom are Nigerians, for their support.  He went on to reassure them “that the Board remains united in its determination to implement the strong corporate governance that will enable us to create a sustainable business that maximises returns for all stakeholders, while delivering an energy transition that drives social and economic benefits for all Nigerians”.

    The Company also reminded the market that, as revealed in its recent annual report, it continues to make a commendable and important contribution to Nigeria with its gas production at times powering 30 per cent of our electricity grid and its operations generating close to $1 billion in revenue share for the country and its population in 2022.

  • Buhari writes Senate, seeks confirmation of 12 nominees for NEDC board

    Buhari writes Senate, seeks confirmation of 12 nominees for NEDC board

    President Muhammadu Buhari has asked the Senate to confirm the appointment of 12 nominees as members of the Governing Board of the North East Development Commission (NEDC).

     According to a statement issued by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu, the President’s request is contained in a letter addressed to Senate President Ahmed Lawan, dated May 3, 2023.

     ”In accordance with the provision of Part 1, section 2(5)(b) of the North East Development Commission Establishment Act, 2017, I am pleased to present for confirmation by the Senate, the appointment of twelve (12) nominees as tabulated below, in the Governing Board of the North East Development Commission. 

    ”The Senate is invited to note that the tenure of the current Governing Board of the North East Development Commission will end on 7th May, 2023″, the statement said.

     The nominees include: Barr. Bashir Bukar Baale, Chairman, (North East, Yobe), Suwaiba Idris Baba, Executive Director, Humanitarian Affairs, (North East, Taraba), Musa Umar Yashi, Executive Director, Administration and Finance, (North East, Bauchi), Dr Ismaila Nuhu Maksha, Executive Director, Operations (North East, Adamawa) and Umar Abubakar Hashidu, MD/CEO, (North East, Gombe).

     Others are Grema Ali, member, (North East, Borno), Onyeka Gospel-Tony, member, (South East), Hon. Mrs Hailmary Ogolo Aipoh, member, (South-South), Air Commodore Babatunde Akanbi (rtd), member, (South West), Mustapha Ahmed Ibrahim, member, (North West), Hadiza Maina, member, (North Central) and a representative from the Federal Ministry of Finance, Budget and National Planning.   

     The President expressed hope that his request ”will receive the usual expeditious consideration and confirmation of the Senate.”

  • ADB boss Adesina: How public bus driver, lecturers came to my rescue in US as I spent my last 25 cents few weeks into five-year studies

    ADB boss Adesina: How public bus driver, lecturers came to my rescue in US as I spent my last 25 cents few weeks into five-year studies

    Vincent Akanmode, Deputy Editor

    In his dapper suit matched with trademark bow tie and pair of glasses, the President of African Development Bank (ADB), Dr Akinwumi Adesina comes across easily as an individual with an easy ride to the high wrung of success ladder. That, however, is far from the truth if his account of the ugly experience he had as a student in America is anything to go by.

    In a commencement address he delivered to the Calvin University, Michigan, USA Class of 2023 last Saturday, Adesina recalled how he arrived in the US in 1983 for his university education with a paltry 750 dollars on which he had to survive for six months.

    His home government had failed to pay his scholarship, and he had to pay 100 dollars for rent every month, leaving him with the task of feeding, taking bus rides and incurring other expenses on the balance of 150 dollars for half a year.

    Adesina told the bewildered audience: “I arrived in America in 1983 with only 750 dollars. My scholarship from my home country was not paid. I was stuck in America.

    “I had to survive on 750 dollars for six months! Yes, you heard me right: six months! Of this, my rent was 100 dollars a month, leaving me with 150 dollars with which to survive.

    “Each day, I walked several kilometres to school in the bitter cold and snow of Lafayette, Indiana, because I could not afford bus fares.

    “Neither could I afford basic things. I had to improvise. Everything was about value for money.

    “Eventually, I came down to my last 25 cents in the world!

    “As I approached the bus on that bitterly cold day, I put my 25 cents in the till. The bus driver said, ‘that’ll be 50 cents please.’

    “I told him that’s all the money I had. Kindly, he put his hands in his wallet and paid the balance of 25 cents.

    “That same day on getting to campus, one of my professors, Dr John Connors, called me in. I let him know my situation. He gave me 100 dollars and said, ‘You can pay me back in five years after you finish your PhD studies.’

    “But Dr Connors did more. He helped me get an assistantship with another professor, Dr. Phil Abbott, for my master’s degree, and then with another professor, Dr. John Sanders, for my PhD degree, who both paid for my tuition and provided me with decent stipends.” He recalled that the trust his benefactors invested in him paid off as many years after, he went on to win the World Food Prize known as the Nobel Prize for Agriculture.

    Adesina, whose address was titled ‘Be God’s Instrument of Change’, recalled how some of his lecturers came to his rescue at various times and various stages of his academic career out of selfless disposition, asking the graduating students to also allow themselves to be used by God as change instruments.

    “There is nothing wrong with making money, ” he said. “Life, however, is more than working for mere silver and gold.

    “Riches are fleeting, but real wealth is touching the lives of others. Stock markets oscillate up and down as people trade riches, but real wealth, the type that is acquired from the lives of those that you will touch, lasts forever.

    “The pure joy of the poor of the poor lifted out of poverty. The pure joy of a child able to eat and grow healthy. The pure joy of children able to go to school and have a world of opportunities open to them. The pure joy of what a little kindness can do to change the destinies of many.

    “How could my professors have known at the time that they were helping someone who would later become a World Food Prize Laureate?

    “How would they have known that they were helping someone who would later become the President of the African Development Bank Group?

    “Yes, the African Development Bank Group that was ranked last year by Global Finance as the best multilateral financial institution in the world.

    “How could they have known that this skinny kid would go on to manage not 25cents…but 208 billion dollars? They are instruments of change; destiny shapers!

    “These encounters and  experiences have helped define who I am and my approach to life… serving humanity and making a difference.”

    The ADB boss said he sees his role in bank as delivering hope for millions of people, saying: “In the past seven years, our work has impacted the lives of 350 million people.

    “I am excited that we have helped to connect 20 million people to electricity.

    “On a field trip to one of the project villages in Kenya not too long ago, I met one of our beneficiaries. Her name was Grace. She was very excited.

    “When she was asked whether she knew the President of African Development Bank, that is myself, she said, ‘I do not know the President of the African Development Bank. I do not even know the African Development Bank. All I know is that we once were in darkness, now we have light.’

    “That is a lesson there: let your works and good deeds impact the lives of people, especially those who will never know you.

    “Today, we are building what we call the Desert to Power initiative; a 25 billion dollar investment to harness the power of the sun and deliver electricity to 250 million people.

    “When completed, it will be the largest solar zone in the world. It will spark hope for millions more like Grace.”

    Adesina told the Class of 2023 that the present and the future belong to their generation, adding that their creativity and dynamism would make a difference for good.

    He said: “In front of me today, I see builders and shapers of hope. You have been well prepared to go into the world to be the change makers.

    “You have received a world class education. You have been exposed to great ideas, and you’ve worked alongside faculty and students from all around the world.

    “You are ready and the world awaits you; a world that faces new challenges, many of them happening simultaneously.

    “At the top of this is climate change, which poses an existential risk for the world. We must do all we can to keep global warming to no more than 1.5 degrees Celsius.

    “We need innovations to power the world better with renewable energy. We must do all to feed the world. It is not acceptable that over 2.3 billion  people in the world go hungry.

    ” God did not create stomachs to go empty; He created them to be filled. There must be a hunger-free world.”

    The ADB boss said the COVID-19 pandemic has taught us all the importance of global pandemic preparedness and the need to ensure that no one is left behind when it comes to access to affordable health care.

    “After all, all lives matter, regardless of where one lives in our global village, whether you be rich or poor. We all belong to God’s family.

    “He who cares for each of His creations expects us to go into the world and do likewise. I am confident you will do so throughout life.”

    He said there is much to do to bring about peace in the world with rising tensions and fragility. “And there is much to do to ensure equal opportunities for all.

    “Regardless of one’s economic, social or racial background, we must create a level playing field for a more just, fair and equitable world.

  • Zambo Anguissa

    Zambo Anguissa

    Cameroon midfielder Anguissa is indispensable in the Napoli midfield, providing quick ball movement and progression up the field in a trio alongside Piotr Zielinski and Stanislav Lobotka.

    Anguissa is set to win the first major trophy of his career at the age of 27 after blossoming under coach Luciano Spalletti and finding a spiritual home in Naples after a tough time at Fulham. In February he spoke to BeIN Sports about “rediscovering the joy of playing” at Napoli.

  • EFCC closes case in £2.6bn fraud charge against Petro Union directors

    EFCC closes case in £2.6bn fraud charge against Petro Union directors

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has closed its case in a £2.6 billion alleged fraud charge slammed on an oil firm, Petro Union Oil and Gas Limited, a consultant to the company and three of its directors.

    The Consultant is Abayomi Kukoyi (trading under the name and style of Gladstone Kukoyi & Associates), while the company’s directors on trial are Prince Kingsley Okpala, Prince Chidi Okpalaeze and Prince Emmanuel Okpalaeze.

    While closing its case before Justice Mohammed Liman of the Federal High Court in Lagos on Friday, the anti-graft agency called its last witness, Nathaniel John Webb, a senior investigative officer at the National Crime Agency (NCA) in the United Kingdom.

    Giving his evidence before the court, Detective Sergeant Webb told Justice Liman that the NCA was assigned to investigate the activities and status of the two firms, Gazeaft Ltd and Goldmatic Ltd that were allegedly used by the defendants to perpetrate the crime.

    The witness also informed the court how he made enquiries at Barclays Bank in London on the status of these two firms and found out that they have both been wound up and the accounts closed in 1987 and 1989 respectively. He further told the court that when the cheque for £2.6 billion drawn on Gazeaft Limited was presented to Union Bank for clearing in 1994, the company and its account at Barclays Bank were not in existence.

    He also told the court that there was no evidence of the lodgment of the £2.6 billion cheque at Barclays Bank at any time during the existence of Gazeaft Limited and while the account was in existence.

    Earlier, an investigative officer with the EFCC, Suleiman Yusuf, had also testified in the matter. In his evidence-in-chief, Yusuf told the court that he was part of the team that arrested the defendants.

    “I am one of the team that investigated this matter. We investigated the matter as a team, and I played many roles at the time. During the investigation, the National Crime Agency (NCA) in the United Kingdom was contacted for enquiries on the two firms used in perpetrating the fraud”, the witness said. The report of the investigation of the NCA was sent to the Attorney-General of the Federation and has been tendered as evidence before the court.”

    Read Also: N855m fraud: EFCC asks court to quash convicted Indian’s pardon

    Following the conclusion of EFCC’s case, the defence lawyers informed the court that their clients would be filing a no case submission.

    The EFCC had on 27th January 2021 re-arraigned the four Directors on a 13-count charge of alleged £2.6 billion fraud. They were earlier on February 13, 2020, arraigned by the anti-graft agency on a 7-count charge bordering on the alleged offence. The defendants’ trial subsequently resumed after they all pleaded not guilty to the amended charge.

    One of the counts against the defendants read as thus: “That you Petro Union Oil and Gas Limited, Prince Isaac Okpala (now deceased), Abayomi Kukoyi, Prince Kingsley Okpala, Prince Chidi Okpalaeze, Prince Emmanuel Okpalaeze and Princess Gladys Okpalaeze (now at large) on or about 29th December, 1994 within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court fraudulently procured a Barclays Bank cheque dated 29th December, 1994 in the sum of £2,556,000,000.00 made payable to Gladstone Kukoyi and Associates, purporting the said cheque to be meant for foreign investment in the construction of three  refineries and petrochemical complex in Nigeria, when you knew that the said cheque to be false and you thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 1(2) (a) of the Miscellaneous Offences Act, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 1990 and punishable under same Section.”

    Further hearing in the matter has been adjourned to June 21 for the hearing of the defendants’ no case submission.

  • Beyond the scramble for National Assembly leadership

    Beyond the scramble for National Assembly leadership

    “When legislative and executive powers are united in the same person, or in the same body of magistrates, there can be no liberty; because apprehensions may arise, lest the same monarch or senate enact tyrannical laws, to execute them in tyrannical manner”.
    -Baron De Montesquieu

    Ahead of the May 29th inauguration of President-elect Asiwaju Ahmed Bola Tinubu and state governors-elect, another fierce form of post-election campaign is going on in the National and state  houses of assembly newly elected and returning members. The battle for the leadership of the 10th National Assembly has been as fierce as it has been interesting coming with all the Nigerian political fireworks that include but not limited to regional and religious sentiments.

    The 2023 elections has come and gone but left in its trail a very intriguing cocktail of membership of the legislature. Unlike in the past especially in the last eight years where the National Assembly was  between two political parties, the All Progressives Congress  (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), the 10th Assembly  would see an additional major political player, the Labour Party (LP).

    The 109 senators is made up of 59 APC senators-elect, the PDP has 36 senators-elect up from its 33 in the out-going 9th assembly. The Labour Party secured 8 senatorial seats, the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and the New Nigerian Peoples Party (NNPP) each has 2 seats while the Young Progressives Party (YPP) and All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) each has one senatorial seat.

    For the House of Representatives, it’s an interesting development as opposition parties now have a majority with 182 members-elect that enhances their chance of electing the leadership and which obviously they seem poised to take. The APC seems to have won 175 seats, the PDP 118 seats, LP 35 seats, NNPP 19 seats, APGA has 5 seats, SDP and ADC each won two seats while YPP as one while three seats seem to be pending.

    So as the preparation for the inauguration of the 10th National Assembly in June hot up, political horse-trading seems to be at its peak. The ruling APC is working very hard to clinch the leadership of the two chambers but the opposition parties seem to be working hard to make their presence felt too. It has been an interesting political chessboard game so far.

    At the apex of the political chess board is of course is the regional and religious voices. The President-elect is from the South-West geo-political zone, his Vice-President-elect is from the North East. Both are Muslims. The permutations for the leadership of the Senate is that for balancing and equity, a zone with no representation at the  two most vital elective positions, the Senate presidency and House Speaker positions ought to go to other zones in the national political setting. However, the South-East and South-South regions are equally insisting that their regions ought to be considered. They claim that the out-going President Buhari is from the North-West and as such other zones can have some prime positions.

    On the other hand, while most political watchers would assume that the position of the North is already being occupied by Senator Kashim Shettima the Vice-President elect, the North Central feels that they too can have a slice of the cake. However, given the house rules of the senate, being a ranking member is one of the prerequisites for leadership. The South-East has former governor Orji Uzor Kalu and Senator Osita Izunaso as ranking members returning to the 10th senate. Governor David Umahi of Ebonyi state seems equally ready to try his luck at clinching the leadership position. He feels that having been a former member of the Anambra State University of Technology students Senate and as chairman of the South-East governor’s forum, he is qualified to lead his colleagues in the senate.

    From the South-South zone, Senator Goodswill Akpabio and his supporters equally believe he fits the bill to be elected Senate President.  In politics, nothing is cast in iron. Interest is the driving force, whether for self, group or nation. How the leadership struggle plays out would be interesting to watch given the very intriguing incidents that led to the Bukola Saraki-led 8th assembly that introduced high-wire drama to his emergence or that of governor Tambuwal as the Speaker of the House of Representatives and Emeka ihedioha as Deputy Speaker in 2011.

    However while the struggle goes on, the Roundtable Conversation feels that more often than not, elected legislators either ranking or new do not appreciate the full import of legislative duties. Being representatives of their constituencies, their role in any democracy cannot be over-emphasized. Their three core roles are; law-making, Oversight functions and  lobbyists for their constituencies. In America that Nigeria seems to have borrowed their democratic style, the Senate and the Congress are serious game changers after every election.

    The legislature is very important in every democracy not for the individuals elected but for the profound role thrust on members by the constitution. In America for instance, the mid-term elections often define a lot of political roadmaps and is often a subtle verdict on the incumbent administration and the personalities of the candidates vying for seats. There is more accountability because the voters hold each candidate elected to their promises individually and for their allegiance to the very definite party political ideologies.  The two major political parties, the Democratic and Republican Parties have well-defined ideological positions on issues of the economy, immigration and other social issues.

    Legislators are held to account because a lot of the success or failure of democracy  depends on how well they play their roles in upholding the democratic tenets for the welfare of their constituencies that add up to the whole national development.  Constituents in developed democracies do not spare legislators when they get indolent or shirk responsibilities. The people take a direct hit and revolt at the polls or even vote for a recall midway into a candidate’s tenure. Legislators are equally recognized for how steadfast they are in upholding their duties in the interest of the people whether on a partisan or bi-partisan basis.

    The legislators in Nigeria on the contrary still need a lot of learning to do about their position in a democracy. Is it a question of self, party or national interest? Is the Nigerian legislature truly independent or are they an appendage of the executive at all levels? Where does the duties to the people clash with individual or party interests?

    The election of legislative leadership must be taken very seriously. It must be about the choice of the legislators because the leadership are of more firsts amongst equals and not necessarily an election of superior humans in the circumstance. Each arm of the National Assembly must assemble and evaluate the qualities of all those vying for leadership positions either in the House of Representatives or the Senate.  Competence must be key criteria and the legislators must have leadership qualities like integrity, wisdom and social qualities that define good leaders.

    As the jostling for leadership hots up, the political parties and the returning and newly elected legislators prepare for their inauguration, the Roundtable Conversation must remind them that the political landscape of Nigeria has changed. The awareness about democracy is on the high, the people have learnt to hold leaders accountable and it might be hardly business as usual.

    The accountability project seems to have started with the last election. Many legislators were not re-elected, even seven former governors failed in their bid to go to the Senate. This ironically has never happened since 1999 that a sitting governor lost a senatorial election. The big political parties, the APC and PDP lost their former strongholds, APC lost Lagos, Katsina and Osun,  PDP lost Abia, Benue and Sokoto in the presidential elections. Many ranking national assembly members lost their elections.

    Invariably, the people seem to be paying attention. They equally now understand the value of an active legislator. The fact that a new Labour party gained some seats in both state and national assemblies must be instructive and as such those with the mandate must be very careful and focused. The derogatory term, ‘rubber stamp’ senate must be taken seriously. What did the 9th assembly do wrong? Why has that tag joined the political lexicon of Nigeria? These are questions every legislator at state and national levels must sincerely answer.

    The people are the centerpiece of democracy and as such their interest must be the focal point of every elected official. Technology and the internet have made assessment very easy for the people. People now trace their representatives and document their activities on a daily basis. Legislative duties are well cut-out and each elected person must understand fully that it is a very important job.

    All eyes would be on the legislature at state and federal levels. The state governors either newly elected or second term governors must realize that the separation of powers is what energizes democracy. They must seize operating like emperors by interfering with the legislators in their states. The legislators must on their part try to earn the respect of the people by weaning themselves off the undue influence of the executive.

    Nigeria is in dire straits at the moment with huge debt burden, mass poverty, insecurity and infrastructural decay. The oversight functions of the legislature at all levels have never been more crucial. Our legislators must look beyond the euphoria of electoral victory and the scramble for leadership of state and national assemblies and stand up to be counted as being on the side of the people and democracy through their active and committed adherence to their duties. The coming years would expose each individual political actor and when the chips are down, the difference will not be about who gets what at the leadership level or which party has what but the sum total of the dividends that the people get. The die would be cast after the inauguration.

    The dialogue continues…

  • Enemies of Nigeria’s football

    Enemies of Nigeria’s football

    The real enemies of football in Nigeria are those who administer the game here and their acolytes, including those sit-tight administrators across the 774 Local Government Areas. Indeed, there are State FA chairmen and members who have spent between 12 years and 28 years in these positions. They are the viruses that have stunted the growth and development of soccer in the country to date.

    One wasn’t, therefore, shocked when the NFF executive board members met in Abuja last month and ruled among other laughable decisions that the board of the Interim Management Committee (IMC) should be reconstituted with a deadline of 30 days for its implementation, it was clear that there was certainly some kind of hidden agenda to clear the deck of the IMC members whose pronouncements in recent times have effectively addressed some the problems facing the domestic league.

    How the board members forgot that the IMC started with a timeline which was extended by the NFF to run for the duration of the league which they began showed the depth of folly in the federation. Not one member remembered an earlier decision to extend the IMC’s tenure which sought to compliment the applause from Nigerians over IMC’s good works and the noticeable improvements in the domestic game.

    The executive board issued a communiqué which was the seal of approval to their kamikaze decision. It is clear that the NFF members do not discuss the minutes of their previous meetings to refresh their minds on what was discussed and the decisions taken. If they did, they wouldn’t have embarrassed themselves. It glaringly showed a failure of leadership in the executive. What do they really discuss?

    Like a thief at night, the federation in another communiqué following the hue and cry from Nigerians acknowledged the tenure extension which they gave earlier. This writer wasn’t impressed when the federation announced the composition of its Disciplinary and Appeals Committees, with mostly those who have been in those committees in the past. Same as the same, no thanks to a lamentation of one of those losing politicians.

    The Appeals Committee met last week and produced a document which threw out most of the decisions taken by the disciplinary committee, chiefly those involving Wikki Tourists and Remo Stars. What exposed the hand of injustice by the Appeals Committee was its decision to suspend the catalyst of the brouhaha. This Appeals Committee brought forth a needless comparison between assault and a tap on the chest of the referee who refused to come onto the field of play, following what he faced in the 15 minutes the referees spent in the dressing room.

    Read Also: Fit-again Jamilu Collins hails NFF, Peseiro, Eagles’ team-mates

    Sadly, this Appeals Committee is populated by referees some of whom have been battered by irate fans of clubs. These battered referees have forgotten their bitter experiences. Otherwise, the question to ask them is if the tapping of a referee in his line of office is justifiable. Have the former referees in the Appeals Committee forgotten so soon that the tasks of securing the stadium where games are played before, during and after matches is the prerogative of the hosting clubs, not the host’s State FAs?

    Are the former referees in the Appeals Committee saying they aren’t familiar with such despicable behavioural patterns by overzealous home teams’ officials when they were still in active practice? Where is it in the law books it is justifiable for the home team’s official to visit the referee’s dressing rooms at halftime? By the admittance of the committee that the home official erred and his subsequent suspension, does it not suggest to them that the home club should be responsible for the misdemeanour of its staff? Or are the Appeals Committee’s members saying that the home side’s official was going to serve the referees food or drinks? What happened to the stadium’s stewards? Shouldn’t it be the duty of stewards specifically assigned to the dressing room?

    Dear Appeals Committee, when somebody taps your chest under any kind of circumstance, how would you describe his action, especially if such a person isn’t your mutual friend? Is it right for anyone to tap his fellow being on his chest for no reason? Assaults start with a tap either vicious or gentle, dear Appeals Committee members. If what happened to the referees inside the dressing room was just a tap on the chest, why did all four referees refuse to come out to handle the second half of the game? Tap indeed. The Appeals Committee members have forgotten that the referees are human beings, fathers, brothers, nephews, grandfathers and uncles who are knowledgeable to recognise threats to their lives.

    I’ve decided to interrogate this Appeals Committee’s judgment because in my days at Thisday newspaper and National Interest newspaper. I condemned the brutal treatment meted on at least three of the members of this committee by club vagabond. In fact, I got the telephone numbers of these two former referees when I called them to narrate their close shave.

    Need I say that I was a pioneer member of the defunct member of IMB headed by the late Chief Oyuki Jackson Obaseki aka Moving Train? It is good to give this perspective to the discussion before one is accused of doing others’ bidding.

    The Appeal Committee ought to have known that the referee is the sole judge and custodian of time. The referee’s decisions are final, especially in Nigeria’s arena which doesn’t operate with the Video  Assistant Referee (VAR) gadgets which in climes where are utilised to interrogate the referee’s decisions on the field of play.

    The home club’s official’s presence in the dressing attests to the fact that he was found in an unauthorised place. If yes, going by the official whose suspension was upheld, then a case of encroachment was also established. One would, therefore, want to know the committee’s decision on that issue of encroachment. Did the Appeals Committee consider that fact such an intruder in the referee’s dressing room could easily have had a gun (God forbid) hidden underneath his coat of clothes to kill the referees, if the access route was so porous? Unfortunately, the victims of this misplacement of justice are scared of challenging these types of decisions.

    Is anyone shocked by the way players, coaches and referees were beaten groggy by Gombe fans? Soldiers drafted to restore peace were marvellous, going by the accounts of the players and coaches. Gory pictures of what happened in Gombe litter social media. Pictures from the dastardly acts in Gombe revealed that one of the players disfigured one of the referees with punches. Would this committee also ask for evidence of how the referee was beaten to pulp, weeks after incident? What is clear is that until  referees are killed as a fallout of mayhem in a stadium fracas, government won’t pay attention to this time bomb. Trust government to constitute  a judicial panel to investigate a matter that had been begging of attention. Must a fan die for action to be taken? You tell me.

  • Professor Richard Joseph and the 2023 polls

    Professor Richard Joseph and the 2023 polls

    Despite his status, academic renown and reputation as one of the foremost political scientists with specialization on the politics of Africa particularly Nigeria, Professor Richard Joseph appears to have been substantially swayed by the largely propagandistic opinion polls that predicted a Peter Obi/Labour Party (LP) victory in the 25th February presidential election and the attempt to rely on this failure in electoral futurology to discredit the polls. In a brief critique of the election in the Chicago Tribune, the author of the classic, ‘Democracy and Prebendal Politics in Nigeria’ which was a rigorous and insightful analysis of the politics of the Second Republic, opined that “A highly touted system of electronic transmission of votes failed, leading to the manual collation of ballots. Accusations swirled that the failure was contrived so the results could be manipulated. Disregarding the protests on February 28 the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) declared Bola Ahmed Tinubu, a former governor of the most populous State, Lagos, to be the elected President”.

    Not surprisingly one of those quoted in Professor Joseph’s piece presumably with some subtle approbation was the globally acknowledged novelist and thinker, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, who in an open letter to President Joe Biden of the United States, had excoriated the election in which her fellow Igbo kinsman, Peter Obi, came third despite his much hyped pre-election probability of emerging triumphant in the polls.

    Thus, echoing Chimamanda’s letter characterized by flawless prose reminiscent of her fiction but of negligible analytic value, Professor Joseph writes that “Peter Obi, a former governor from the South-East, galvanized a large following, particularly among youths, and was officially credited with 25% of the presidential vote. His ethnic group, the Igbos, feel excluded from Nigeria’s highest offices, and a fair share of power since the Biafran war of 1967-70. Obi’s “third force” poses a major challenge to the two-party dominant system”. Being substantially a fiction writer, Chimamanda can be forgiven for her imaginative flights of fancy in the realm of political analysis but not so a political scientist of Professor Joseph’s towering standing.

    For one, within a decade after the Nigerian civil war, an Igbo man, the cerebral Dr Alex Ekwueme, had risen to become Nigeria’s Vice President in the Second Republic between 1979 and 1983. But for the military intervention of December, 1983, and the consequent prolonged absolutist rule, there is nothing to suggest that the dynamics and interplay of political forces would not have since produced an Igbo President. Again, during the respective presidencies of General Olusegun Obasanjo and Dr Goodluck Jonathan in this dispensation since 1999, qualified Igbo men and women occupied critical, influential and powerful national offices such that the hysteria of Igbo marginalization is mere emotive fantasy.

    And while the dearth of Igbo representation particularly in the top hierarchy of the security architecture in the President Buhari Muhammadu administration was undesirable, the South-East has gained more in terms of infrastructural development in the region during the last eight years of the All Progressives Congress (APC) since 2015 than the preceding 16 years of the PDP despite the prominent positions of Igbos in government between 1999 and 2015. Professor Joseph thus ought to be more nuanced and restrained in his unquestioning regurgitation of the mantra of Igbo marginalization.

    In any case, does the perceived marginalization of an ethnic group in high political offices in a complex, plural society like Nigeria mean that the apex political authority of the presidency will be conceded to them on a golden platter within the context of competitive elections even when they ignore the imperatives of negotiation, bargaining and bridge-building needed to actualize their objectives? If indeed Peter Obi’s “third force”, presumably the LP, has come to pose a major challenge to the two-party dominant system as posited by Professor Joseph, how come that the force of the veritable political “hurricane” had petered out by the governorship and State Houses of Assembly elections of March 18 with the LP winning only one governorship seat in Abia and even unable to win majority of legislative seats in Anambra, Peter Obi’s home state which he had previously governed for eight years?

    Like Chimamanda, Professor Joseph makes much of the ‘large following’ supposedly enjoyed by Peter Obi among youths as a key factor in his undoubtedly impressive performance in the presidential election. But then, how come that his victories were in his ethnic South-East where he secured over 90% of the votes, Lagos and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), with considerable Igbo enclaves and Christian populations as well as the largely Christian-dominant areas of the South-South, Southern Kaduna, Plateau and Nasarawa states? Do we not have substantial youth populations among the electorate in the South-West, North-West, North-East and half of the North-Central where tremors of the supposed Obi electoral earthquake were hardly felt? All the claims of a national groundswell of youth support for Obi and the LP surely deserves more rigorous and serious analytic scrutiny.

    Read Also: A “Nigerian” scholarly luminary from the diaspora, from the Caribbean – For Richard Joseph @ 75

    Even then, Professor Richard Joseph is too honest an intellectual not to acknowledge the improvement in the electoral structures and processes in the 2023 elections relative to most previous elections. Thus, he states, “Were there machinations to secure his (Tinubu’s) commanding 37% of the popular vote? Perhaps, but that is not a novelty in Nigerian elections. However, the bar is set higher because of the work of many civil society groups, a new Electoral Act, huge government sums in improving INEC’s capacity and extensive social media”. Incidentally, Professor Joseph devotes a whole chapter in his magnum opus to ‘Electoral fraud and violence’ in the Second Republic.

    As we noted last week, the 1979 elections, despite the undisguised partisan preferences of the military umpires of the election as represented by the General Olusegun Obasanjo regime, was competitive and credible just like this year’s elections were to objective and intellectually honest observers.

    In the distinguished professor’s words in that book, “At 1.30am on the morning of 11 August 1983, a long five days after the first elections were held, Alhaji Shehu Shagari was declared re-elected President of Nigeria by a vote of 12,037,648 to 7,885,434 (for his nearest rival Obafemi Awolowo). Shagari’s vote had doubled from his 1979 total, that of Awolowo had increased by approximately 40 per cent. Of equal importance is the fact that Shagari obtained a minimum of 25 per cent in 16 states of the Federation, compared with 12 states in 1979…”.

    Pinpointing the import of the NPN’s purported victory in 1983, Professor Joseph notes that “One major cause of the electoral disorder of 1983, as earlier advanced, was the effort by the NPN to move from being a ruling party whose strength exceeded that of other parties, to one which enjoyed a monopoly of power within the political system. To achieve this objective, it was necessary for the party to increase the size of its vote in the states it already controlled, through its control of the voter registration and voting process, and to pry away from the opposition the heart of their political bases”.

    The keenness of the contest and the outcome of the elections, shows that the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) did not even attempt the kind of electoral heist perpetrated by the NPN in 1983 in the February and March, 2023, elections. Even if the party had wanted to, the reforms referred to earlier by Professor Joseph had enhanced the institutional autonomy of the electoral umpire as well as the technology-driven transparency of the voting procedures particularly the introduction of the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) machines, that made this impossible. Consequently, unlike the NPN which doubled its vote size between 1979 and 1983, the APC vote in the presidential election decreased from 15,191,847 in 2019 to 8,794,726 in 2023 while that of the PDP fell from 11,262,978 in 2019 to 6,984,520 in 2023.

    Indeed, Professor Joseph ignores the fact that both Peter Obi who contested on the platform of the LP and Musa Kwankwaso’s New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) were break away key stakeholders from the PDP and they had a combined total of 7,598,204 votes. Had they not depleted the votes of the PDP in its erstwhile strongholds in the South-East, South-South and Kano states, the latter could very well have emerged victorious if it had contested the election as a cohesive whole. This speaks to the credibility of the election. Beyond this, while the APC won 19 states in the 2019 presidential elections and the PDP 17 states and the FCT, both parties won 12 states each in the 2023 polls with the LP winning in 11 states and the FCT and the NNPP sweeping Kano. Had Professor Joseph taken all these factors into consideration, and there is no reason why he shouldn’t have, he would have been unlikely to lend his not inconsiderable intellectual weight to dishonest attempts to dent the integrity of the elections.

    In any case, the main reason cited in the public domain by the PDP and LP for questioning the credibility and integrity of the Presidential election was the non real time uploading of the results from polling units to the INEC Result Viewing Portal (IREV) as admittedly promised by the electoral body. INEC has since explained that its system suffered unanticipated glitches which made it impossible for it to do so immediately but this commitment in its guidelines has since been complied with – and all the results now fully uploaded. Since all political parties have copies of results on designated forms signed by their polling agents, electoral and security officials, they should now be in a position to compare these hard copy of results in their possession with the uploaded figures on the IREV so as to demonstrate the discrepancies between both and the consequent alleged massive rigging in favor of Tinubu and the APC. To the best of my knowledge, only one Online medium has reported yet unverified differences in the results posted on the IREV portal and the actual results declared in one state.

    The responsibility to credibly discredit the results on the IREV portal is particularly that of Peter Obi who vociferously claims to have won the election despite coming third. Just like Chimamanda, Professor Richard Joseph apparently places much store by the failures associated with the promised uploading of polling units results on IREV and the alleged implications on the outcome of the elections. But this appears to be treated only as a tangential issue in Peter Obi’s petition as the focus of his claims and prayers are on Tinubu’s alleged forfeiture of funds in the US almost three decades ago, the alleged illegibility of Tinubu’s Vice-Presidential candidate, Kashim Shettima to contest the election and Tinubu’s failure to score one-quarter of the votes cast in the FCT. None of these appear designed to demonstrate convincingly and conclusively that Obi won and should have been declared Victor in the election.

    As a one time governor of Enugu State, Senator Chimaroke Nnamani, aptly put it in a statement this week, “Obi’s petition is dead on arrival. He does not have the spread or national appeal. His appeal to non-electoral matters is to de-market the President-elect and besmirch his reputation. His petition is ego-driven, a joke carried too far. His attempt to highlight non-electoral issues is trying to embarrass the President-elect. Obi now needs to come down from his high horse to allow sedate minds to negotiate on behalf of the Igbo and the South-East for a safe landing to include our stake in the national palaver and share of the accruals of the commonwealth”. Nnamani is a medical doctor and not a lawyer but he makes eminent sense in my view.