Author: The Nation

  • Chelsea may outbid Man United for Osimhen

    Chelsea may outbid Man United for Osimhen

    Chelsea are prepared to “go crazy” for Napoli striker Victor Osimhen this summer amid likely competition from Manchester United, according to reports in Italy.

    Osimhen, who has already registered 25 goals and four assists in all competitions for Napoli this season, is expected to be one of the hottest names in the summer transfer window.

    It is not only because of his form but also due to Napoli’s being reportedly open to listening to offers for him at the end of the season.

    Calciomercato claims that Napoli president Aurelio De Laurentiis is asking for over €100million (£88m) for the Nigeria international and would not mind starting a bidding war.

    The Italian outlet adds that Chelsea are “ready to go crazy” for him this summer.

    The west London club are said to be prepared to make a “monstrous” bid to beat the competition to the striker’s signature, which, Calciomercato adds, Napoli might find hard to turn down.

    Osimhen’s Premier League dream may help Chelsea’s transfer pursuit, but they are not the only English club in the race.

    The report mentions that Manchester United have already made their move to approach the player and they see him as the right player for Erik ten Hag.

    Both Chelsea and Manchester United clearly need a new striker, although unlike the former, Ten Hag still has Marcus Rashford to rely on in terms of scoring goals.

    The Blues, on the other hand, are the lowest scoring team in the top half of the Premier League table, with Kai Havertz being their leading goalscorer with seven goals.

  • 2023 AFCON: Super Eagles bounce to face-saving win in Bissau

    2023 AFCON: Super Eagles bounce to face-saving win in Bissau

    Nigeria wriggled their way back to the top of Group A of the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) qualifiers after Moses Simon’s 30th  minute penalty condemned hosts Guinea Bissau to a home defeat.

    The Eagles, just as it happened in the first leg in Abuja, created chances but failed to get behind goalkeeper Jonas Mendes.

    Turkey-based Osayi-Samuel won the spot kick after showing bravery to drive forward and drew the foul while the penalty was well converted by Simon who sent the goalkeeper the wrong way to send the away bench into celebration.

    The Djurtus looked dangerous as they did in the first leg in Abuja but failed to unscramble the new Kenneth Omeruo-Semi Ajayi equation in the centre of Nigeria’s defence, even as Bright Osayi-Samuel again showed plenty of evidence that he has come to stay at the Super Eagles’ right back.

    Osimhen was denied by the upright in the 59th minute when he flashed a shot past Mendes, and four minutes later, the Napoli man simply blew it skywards after being put through by Samuel Chukwueze.

    Victory meant the Eagles returned to the top with nine points, with Guinea Bissau second on seven and Sierra Leone, who spanked Sao Tome and Principe on Wednesday, third on five points.

    The next round of the qualifiers will be in June, when Nigeria visit Sierra Leone and Guinea Bissau take on bottom-placed Sao Tome and Principe.

  • MAN’s burden

    MAN’s burden

    • Nigeria must fix power and do local refining for manufacturing — and other sectors — to burst alive

    The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) just restated the trite: that high cost of energy: both electric power and petroleum products, is stunting manufacturing.

    But this is only a window into how high energy costs attack the manufacturing bottom- line.  Nevertheless, that sad tale is true of other sectors: banking and allied services, telecoms, agriculture and agro-processing, mining, transportation, nano, small and medium-scale ventures and every sector of the economy.

    Energy is about the near-sole reason the Nigerian economy is less competitive.  These energy-pushed constraints also explain the limited job opportunities and the mass poverty plaguing the land.

    By its Manufacturers CEO Confidence Index (MCCI) for 4th Quarter (Q4) 2022, MAN again underscored the imperative for competitive energy costs for the Nigerian economy.  The MCCI is the quarterly pulse of the economy, as gauged by manufacturing chief executives.  

    Ranged from one to 100, any index point below 50 shows the sector’s lack of confidence in the general economy.  Any point above 50 is the contrary.  Of course, when the general economy booms, manufacturing too would be healthy and spritely. That composite score is called Aggregate Index Score (AIS).

    For Q4 2022, the AIS was 55.0, marginally down from 55.4 points for Q3 2022.  MAN explains this decline to mainly the crisis in the energy sector, and therefore calls for policy improvements to boost that vital sector.

    Aside from navigating the crisis with numbers, MAN’s observation is trite.  Indeed, no one needs to be an economic whiz to figure that out.  The solution, as MAN again rightly noted, is to do local refining and fix electricity supply.

    The chronic fuel crisis was embedded with the structural adjustment programme (SAP), introduced in 1986.  It stresses imports, when it’s “cheaper”, than local production, brandishing seductive “globalisation” as its theory-in-chief.

    The Obasanjo Presidency, as part of its economic reforms, would apply this grand theory to petroleum downstream.  Because the turn-around maintenance (TAM) of the four public refineries which the defunct Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) owned was steeped in chronic corruption, it opted to liberalise or deregulate petroleum downstream by exporting crude and importing refined petroleum products.

    That product importation is unsustainable, since it could lead to economic collapse, has led to the clamour for local refining.  In  truth, that clamour has drawn great traction, especially in the last seven years, though action had lagged behind wishes.  

    Still, Nigeria would appear on the cusp of local refining. Dangote Refinery and Petrochemicals (650, 000 barrels-a-day) is close to berthing.  It is the biggest of the new refineries.  

    Also, some smaller-scale refineries, like the Edo Refinery, Ikhoba-Okha: 6, 000 barrels a day, are already in operation, though their capacities are making little dent on the fuel consumption demand.  Besides, the new Nigerian National Petroleum Company Ltd, (NNPCL) has embarked on TAM of the four public refineries, in different stages of progress, with the intent of boosting local refining capacity.

    But until all of these projects come on stream and local refining is embedded again, neither manufacturing nor any other sector can breathe a sigh of relief — which is why the government must take MAN’s advice to not take its eye off the ball and swiftly complete these projects.

    Still, local refining can only offer manufacturing and the general economy temporary relief — as alternative source of energy to power operations.  The ultimate solution lies in constant electricity.

    The power reforms have been all but a mess.  The electricity distribution companies (DisCos) have been the weakest link in the chain, no thanks to the crony capitalism that brought most of them to life.  With DisCos, the basic electricity vendors’ failure to secure their revenue, generation and transmission, at the higher end of value chain, can draw neither fair nor full nourishment for their investment.

    So, to fix electricity, fixing the DisCos is imperative.  It is scandalous that many of them lack funds to invest in as basic a thing as the pre-paid meter, the instrument that best secures their revenue. So, they resort to the fraudulent and grossly unfair estimated billing system.

    The outgoing Buhari Presidency has made some inroads in improving the electricity sector.  But even its best efforts have still not met market satisfaction.  That is why the next government must treat constant electricity supply, at fair costing, as a life-and-death matter.

    Indeed, it is virtual life-and-death for the economy.  It is the kiss of life that MAN craves; and every sector of the economy demands.

  • PDP’s axe on the bigwigs

    PDP’s axe on the bigwigs

    SIR: The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) recently announced the suspension of some party bigwigs. They are former Ekiti State governor, Ayo Fayose, former senate president, Anyim Pius Anyim. It also referred the governor of Benue State, Samuel Ortom, to the national disciplinary committee over his reported involvement in anti-party activities.

    Those suspended are believed to have worked against the interest of the party, either overtly or covertly, at the just concluded general elections.

    PDP was so sure of victory at the polls because it was banking on the presumed disenchantment by Nigerians with the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). They overlooked the fact that the APC presidential candidate who is now the president-elect, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu is someone who has spent over 20 years building bridges, and forging alliances across the political divide. It went into the election with a divided house and fell flat on its face. The results have shown that had it gone to the polls with a united house like it did in 2019, it would have won convincingly.

    Instead of it learning from its defeat, and beginning to plan and strategize towards 2027, it is dividing itself even further with the suspension of some political heavyweights in its fold, some of whom might be tempted to defect to other parties. How will the PDP win future elections if it expels all those with the capability to ensure its electoral success?

    The root of the political crises in the PDP is the refusal of the party and its presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar, to remove the national chairman whom many chieftains of the party are not comfortable working with. This isn’t a first in the PDP. In 2013, many governors and other party chieftains openly rebelled against the then national chairman, Bamanga Tukur. He was pressured by the party hierarchy to resign in order to placate those who had grievances against him and prevent them from leaving the party. Why did the PDP not do the same with Iyorcha Ayu? What is Ayu’s electoral value that PDP saw nothing wrong in sacrificing many governors and other party bigwigs in order to retain him in office?

    Why are they still making the same mistake so soon after their loss in the polls? Are they planning to convert the PDP into the personal estate of Atiku and Ayu?

    Politics is about permanent interests not friends. Nigerians expect virile opposition from the PDP as it is the only opposition party with a national spread that can give the ruling APC a run for its money. The earlier it gets its acts together, the better for our democracy.

    •Peter Ovie Akus,

    New Jersey, USA.

  • Free scoring defender Sodiq hits brace, eyes Super Eagles shirt

    Free scoring defender Sodiq hits brace, eyes Super Eagles shirt

    Former Messiah FC and Remo Stars defender Rasheed Sodiq has elevated his free scoring skills in Europe after notching a superb brace against Fk Sasa in 15th and 25th minute respectively in a friendly match recently.

    Sodiq scoring spree contributed to the success of Messiah FC of Lagos and Premier league side Remo Stars some years back and he has continued on the same form for his European clubs.

    The 22-year’s ability is far beyond protecting his backline, he has moved to be a free scoring player and has set sight on impressing for the national team handler for a place in the Nigeria team.

    He said: “I am used to scoring goals, I learnt scoring from great defenders in the world and coaches. It is something I love doing whenever the opportunity arises. “

    “When I was in Messiah FC and Remo Star, I scored beautiful goals and on several occasions I contributed to some victories. So, I have trained myself towards scoring goals whenever I see the opportunity.”

    “I will score more goals, It’s a privilege for me and it’s gives me special attention as a defender “

    Sodiq said he’s not going to lose sleep of having the opportunity to play for the national team having decelared he’s ripe enough to be selected for the Super Eagles team led by Pesiero.

    “Of course, I will shock the world if i get opportunity to play for Nigeria. I want the coach to ignore league barriers and give me opportunity and be convinced,” he added.

    Sodiq has become the rave of the moment in the Macedonian top league.

    After joining FK Skopje in January on a free transfer, the electrifying defender wastes no time getting applause from the Macedonian media as the new rock in the league.

  • Ngige meets NLC, CBN officials over planned stay-at-home

    Ngige meets NLC, CBN officials over planned stay-at-home

    Minister of Labour and Employment Senator Chris Ngige on Monday met with officials of the Nigeria Labour Congress(NLC) and Central Bank of Nigeria(CBN) in a bid to stop the planned picketing of CBN offices nationwide by NLC because of unavailability of naira notes

    The ten-man delegation of the NLC was led by the President, Comrade Joe Ajaero and the General Secretary, Emmanuel Ugboaja while the CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele was accompanied by two Deputy Governors, Kingsley Obiora (Economic Policy) and Ade Shonubi (Organised Private Sector).

    The Congress threatened to embark on nationwide industrial action if the cash crunch, fuel scarcity and electricity tariff increases were not addressed by the Federal Government.

    The NLC directed workers to stay at home from Wednesday if there were no improvements in the situation.

    In response, the CBN made old naira notes available to commercial banks and directed the banks to operate during the weekend to ease the cash crunch.

    The NLC is expected to review the situation on Tuesday and take a decision on the planned nationwide protest.

    In a statement at the end of the meeting by the Director, Press and Public Relations of the ministry, Olajide Oshundun, Ngige refuted the allegation by the NLC that the ministry did nothing about the unavailability of naira notes.

    Read Also: Will NLC strike end cash crunch?

    He said on receiving the letter from NLC, he forwarded it to the CBN Governor before travelling out of the country for an International Labour Organisation (ILO) Governing Board meeting and directed the Permanent Secretary and Trade Union Services and Industrial Relations Department to follow-up.

    The Minister maintained that the ministry took the necessary step by sending the letter to CBN Governor who received it and assured that action would be taken.

    Emefiele said when he received the letter from the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment, he called the President of NLC, Ajaero to brief him on steps taken to alleviate the sufferings of the masses and equally made appointments and had discussion with NLC president and had fruitful discussion.

    He said large volumes of funds were made available to the deposit money banks and they were directed to open their branches on Saturdays and Sundays and they complied under strict supervision by the CBN.

    According to Emefiele, following the steps taken, Nigerians have been enjoying their money.

    Earlier, Comrade Ajaero said they only got a reply to their second letter to the ministry and subsequently, an invitation to the meeting.

    He said they no longer envisage any problem, since CBN has started sending cash to the banks and Nigerians were now accessing their money.

    The NLC president acknowledged that meetings have taken place in the spirit of good dialogue.

    He, however, urged the CBN to improve on their services, regretting the information gap created in the implementation of the naira redesign policy.

    Ajaero said: “NLC could not have stopped CBN from taking good decisions and implementing them in the interest of the nation. If stakeholders were invited and briefed on the policy, when the people complain, NLC would explain everything to them. But in this case, the CBN did it alone. Moreover, it is the wrong time for administering such a national policy.”

    He assured that the National Executive Committee (NEC) of NLC will meet tomorrow Tuesday 28th of March, 2023 where members from states and Local Government Areas are expected to report on availability of money, after which a decision will be taken on the planned strike.

  • Actress Olaide Oyedeji flaunts newly acquired butt

    Actress Olaide Oyedeji flaunts newly acquired butt

    Actress Olaide Oyedeji has continued to flaunt her newly acquired butt on social media.

    A few weeks ago, Oyedeji shared videos in a medical facility in Lagos, Nigeria where she underwent butt enlargement surgery to enhance her derriere.

    Despite experiencing excruciating pain from the procedure, the actress vowed to disturb the online community with her new ‘asset’.

    She went as far as nicknaming herself ‘Honeybun’, noting ‘bum was life’ while expressing gratitude to her doctor for a job well done.

    Weeks after the procedure, Olaide isn’t relenting on peppering all and sundry with her newly acquired booty as she constantly flaunts it daily on her social media page.

    Recently, she shared a video that focused on her enhanced body, particularly her butt while she shopped in a mall.

  • Super Eagles beat hosts Guinea Bissau to top Group A

    Super Eagles beat hosts Guinea Bissau to top Group A

    The Super Eagles on Monday in Bissau beat hosts Guinea Bissau 1-0 to reclaim leadership of Group A in the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) qualifiers.

    Moses Simon’s penalty kick after 29 minutes gave the Nigerian senior men’s football team the needed win to move to nine points after four matches.

    Read Also: AFCON 2023 Race: Osimhen reiterates scoring commitment to Eagles

    They have now upstaged from the apex position Guinea Bissau who toppled them on Friday in Abuja with a 1-0 win.

    Guinea Bissau are with seven points from four matches and in second place, ahead of Sierra Leone who have five points from four matches.

    Nigeria will next face the Leone Stars of Sierra Leone in a Match Day 5 fixture. (NAN)

  • NBA wants live telecast of election tribunal proceedings

    NBA wants live telecast of election tribunal proceedings

    THE President of the Nigerian Bar Association, Mr. Yakubu Chonoko Maikyau, (SAN) has called for the live broadcast of the proceedings of the 2023 Presidential Election Petition Tribunal in the interest of openness, justice, transparency and trust in the judiciary.

    Candidates of the Labour Party and the People’s Democratic Party are both challenging the results of the 2023 Presidential Election which was held on the 25th of February, 2023 and which produced Sen. Bola Ahmed Tinubu as President-Elect.

    The NBA President noted that a live telecast is in the interest of the people of Nigeria. Section 36 (1) and (3) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria provides that judicial proceedings should be conducted in public.

    Providing public access to the proceedings would meet the aspirations of the public to participate in the process.

  • The Peter Obi revolution that atrophied midway

    The Peter Obi revolution that atrophied midway

    According to Section 77 (2&3) of the Electoral Act 2022, Peter Obi is not a member of the Labour party. As a result, he is not qualified to contest the February 25, 2023 presidential election on behalf of the party. Section 77 (2) says every political party must have/maintain a register of its .members in soft and hard copy.

    77(3) says each party SHALL MAKE THAT REGISTER AVAILABLE TO INEC NOT LATER THAN 30 DAYS BEFORE THE DATE FIXED FOR ITS PRIMARIES, CONGRESSES OR CONVENTION. 

    PDP screened its presidential candidates on April 29th, 2022. Peter Obi participated in the screening and was cleared to contest. He even displayed his provisional clearance on social media.

    He resigned from PDP on Thursday May 26th, 2022 and joined the Labour party the following day, that is, on May 27th, 2022.

    Labour party conducted its presidential primary on May 30th, 2022 and produced Obi after Professor Pat Utomi’s voluntary withdrawal.

    According to section 77(3), quoted above, Labour party must have submitted its comprehensive register of members to INEC 30 days before its presidential primary.

    By calculation, 30 days to May 30th, 2022 was April 30, 2022. (But) As at April 30th, 2022 when labour party submitted its party register to INEC, Peter Obi was a member of PDP meaning that his name could not have, simultaneously, been in the Labour party’s comprehensive register submitted to INEC.

    The questions that then arise are:

    Can a person who is not a valid member of a political party contest as its presidential candidate?

    Can a political party nominate a non member as its candidate in the presidential election?”

    The Presidential Election tribunal will see interesting fireworks in the days ahead – Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa (SAN) in ‘PETER  OBI IS NOT THE PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE OF LP’.

    Unknown to most Nigerians whilst the Labour Party was aggressively weaponising  ethnicity and religion as its dual path to the presidency, it was nothing but a house built on sand, and  certain to collapse, sooner or later.

    For that, and some other reasons, it should not be a surprise to Nigerians that ‘Obidientism’, as revolution, like the Russian 1905 Leaderless Revolution before it, will finally die unsung, albeit, after its loud, boisterous and riotous beginning especially in pentecostal churches where Peter Obi became a constant, and on the  social media, where its adherents, the Obidients, were spewing insults like insults were going out of usage.

    Nigerians have, since after the governorship and state legislative elections, began to ask the following questions:

    What became of Peter Obi who, after shining like a thousand stars at the presidential election, suddenly went limb at the governorship and state legislative elections?

    What of the noisy clan of the Obi-Media Inc?

    Where are the whining television anchors who did nothing besides excoriating APC, and its presidential candidate, as if that was the way to harvest votes for the 62- year old man they were doing everything to re-package like he was 40 something?

    Who would have believed this is a guy who ended a 2- term governorship almost  a decade ago with his name emblazoned in the PANDORA PAPERS?

    Every minute you watch them, you’d see them pink- eyed, like they were about going lachrymose. There is, indeed, the one with the permanent scowl, always presenting like he was lecturing Nigerians.

    So what do they do now, having been proven to be more royal than the king? 

    So involved and trenchant were they, you would readily know they were at a commissioned job.

    What a helluva, but friuitlesss, job they ended up doing.

    And we ask: what became of their exertions, daily having for guests, only those they know shared their jaundiced perspectives? Indeed, Nigerians have it on Governor Wike’s word that they once had as guest, somebody who kidnapped the wife of a Southsouth monarch. You only just have to share their views.

    It was that bad.

    There were also those ones on WhatsApp platforms who suddenly became emergency medical practitioners, forever diagnosing all manner of morbidities.

    I personally shared two platforms with some of these individuals and, honest to God, they could make you puke. Thanks be to God, I have long made the undertaking that I was not going to lose a single friend on account of any politician, qua politician. But that did take an effort because you read them, sometimes, and you’d wonder if logical thinking has not been banned.

    Indeed on one of the platforms, we are already asking if the gentlemen had since gone on exile, ahead of the big PDP chieftain who owns the patent to voluntary emigration,  in case  a particular individual gets elected president.

    I digress.

    So what became of Mr Peter Obi’s popularity after the presidential election in which he shone so brightly. That was, of course, before the final debacle of a third place, despite the deluge of opinion polls which had him as the unmatchable winner?

    I am, of course, not unaware of the fact that failure is an orphan. But exactly what happened after that incredible Tsunami: from Lagos to Makurdi, Nasarawa to Jos, Benin to Asaba etc, sending many a sitting governor scampering? Need we talk about Lagos, the epicentre of gun – ho Pentecostalism where group nativity also thrumped common sense, to eventuate in what Nigerians would soon know was no win at all.

     You won’t believe this, but there is already a trending WhatsApp video   showing some happy – go lucky   youths hoisting the IPOB FLAG at, of all places, ALAUSA, the Lagos state capital.

    You can then begin to imagine from that incident, what remarkable re-engineering Lagos, if not the entire adjoining Southwest, would have seen, were our half brother to have repeated the Obi ‘miracle’ in the state.

    Talking about a miracle reminds me of an interesting WhatsApp post I saw during the giddy days of a supposed Labour party victory in Lagos. It is most unlikely that the very reliable, LindaIkejiblog to which it was allegedly credited would have pulled it down, being so very popular.

    It reads as follows:

    LindaIkejiblog Official INEC Result for Amuwo Odofin LGA in the Presidential election. Whoever shared it commented as follows:

    “Amuwo Odofin!!!

    Please check the number of Regisrered Voters -322,600 and the number of Accredited Voters 57, 530.

    Add Obi’s 55, 547 to Tinubu’s 13, 318! Don’t even bother with the rest! We are beginning to see how Obi “won” Lagos.

    I actually bothered with the rest, did the addition of all party votes, and the following is what I got:

    “Total number of registered voters – 322.600.

    “Total numberof accredited voters – 57,530.

    Votes:

     APC  –  13, 318

     PDP  –  2, 383

     LP   –  55, 547

    Others  –  1, 161

    Total votes cast   –  72, 409

     Reg. voters         –  57,530     

     Over voting       –  14879.

    What does the Election Tribunal do in cases of over voting? It automatically cancels election in the affected place.

    I am not the judiciary but please take away LP’s vote here from the party’s overall tally in Lagos and see whether it still wins in Lagos state.

    This, obviously, cannot be a solitary incident and you then see how hollow Datti Baba- Ahmed’s boast on television last week about how LP won ‘yanfun yanfun’ everywhere in the country is.

    But how hollow, and effete, Peter Obi and the Labour party really are showed up most glaringly in the subsequent elections of 18 March when, apparently, not just the youths, but also the bishops, have abandoned the over – celebrated sinking “Titanic” aka Labour party.

    Even in the Southeast where Mr Obi had scored in the high 90’s in the Presidential election, 4 out of the 5 states gave him a wide berth.  Labour’s sole governorship victory was in Abia. It was worst in Anambra state where Obi was governor for 8 years but all they mostly remember him for were lifeless bodies of some youths flowing on a river.

    No, far be it that am saying he murdered them, but a king in a prosperous era is never forgotten, ditto the obverse.

    Yet they’ve vowed not to let Nigeria rest which reminds you of the child who says her mother would not sleep.

    Worse defeat is certain to befall the Labour party in future unless it finds a creative way of exorcising Mr Obi from its midst.

    For one, he is too much of a tribalist to lead a Pan – Nigerian political party.

    As governor of a state in the absolutely enterprising Southeast region where Nigerians from every part can flourish he, allegedly, not only banished Hausa traders, he discriminated between Catholics and Anglicans, as well as sent home to their respective Igbo states, all non – Anambrarian public servants.

    What leader does that?

    Less than a week to the Presidential election of 18 February, the council of state Chairmen of the party came out publicly to announce that the party couldn’t win any election, citing his clanishness.

    Many may not know it now, but Nigerians will, in future, celebrate his, and his party’s rejection at the polls.

    As a friend of mine put it “he weaponised religion, especially the anger over same faith ticket as well as the frustration of the Nigerian youths”.

    Worse, however, is that he also brought on board, as his Vice Presidential candidate, a Datti Baba – Ahmed who is likely to be far worse than him, judging by what he demonstrated on a TV station this past week.

    My friend, who also watched him, described his performance as follows:

    “I was appalled at the sheer depravity of his encounter on TV- the tone, dimension, elixirs etc were scenes from a horror film. He turned the interaction into a call for anarchy, military takeover and a liquidation of the Nigerian state. All because he lost an election.

    And concerning the anchor who watched on sheepishly as Baba – Ahmed ranted, he wrote: “he watched with utter helplessness, bewilderment and even confusion, as his guest turned the station to a platform for anarchists, fascists and demagogues. His inability to call him to order reflects very badly on him as a trained journalist”.

    Nigerians will, in future, have every cause to thank God for sending the duo back wherever they came from.

    In the meantime, they’ve gone to the Election Tribunal merely to further humor their pastor backers and their dear Obidients, as well as, but most unfortunately, the elders who, by endorsing him, called their own judgment to question.