Author: The Nation

  • North will unite for Tinubu, says Arewa group

    North will unite for Tinubu, says Arewa group

    A group, the Arewa New Agenda (ANA) has revealed that the northern region will vote massively for the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Tinubu during the election.

    The Convener and Leader of ANA, Senator Ahmad Abubakar MoAllahyidi disclosed this yesterday while briefing reporters in Abuja on the political developments ahead of the general election.

    He disagreed with the insinuations that the north will not vote for Tinubu despite supporting a northern candidate in 2015 and 2019.

    “The north has never failed to keep to its promise; when the north makes a covenant, the north keeps to it”, he stated.

    MoAllahyidi said the north is the strongest ally of Tinubu in the contest for the 2023 primary in the same manner that the Southwest was an ally for the victory of the APC in the last two election cycles.

    He further said that Chief Olusegun Obasanjo became the flag bearer of the PDP and won the 1999 and 2003 presidential elections mainly because of the backing he received from the north.

    The ANA leader also said Tinubu scored 1,271 votes more than half of the total votes cast in the convention to win the primaries, the majority of these votes according to him came from the north. He said: “Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has visited many states in the north, made policy statements and made a committal promise to if God Almighty gives him the opportunity to serve as our next president, we the northerners will hold him accountable to that.”

  • Fed Govt to unify foreign missions’ websites

    Fed Govt to unify foreign missions’ websites

    The Federal Government has begun moves to incorporate the website of its Ministry of Foreign Affairs and those of all Foreign Missions into one unified portal.

    The unified portal will be managed under a Public Private Partnership (PPP) model.

    It will provide a platform for stranded Nigerians to reach out and get help.

    A  statement from the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC) yesterday said the Minister of Foreign Affairs Geoffrey Onyeama made this disclosure when he led a delegation from the ministry to the ICRC to seek its regulatory guidance to manage the portal using a PPP model.

    The minister told the ICRC team that they came to ICRC “to present our projects for you to see where there could be possibilities of co-operation. I have been told that we can sell this to the private sector”.

    Giving more insights, the team from the ministry said it was attempting to achieve three things with the project: Diplomatic Service Digitisation Initiative (DSDI), a Unified Website and the Nigeria Global Business Match and Citizens’ Help Desk.

    The team said that the projects aligned with the priority of the current administration which included the creation of a harmonised platform for the ministry and its missions.

    It explained that the Citizens’ Help Desk is part of the development of clear guidelines to protect Nigerians abroad, adding that the project provides multiple platforms for citizens abroad to reach out to the government officials and have their issues resolved.

    Another aspect of it is the business match-making platforms to provide global jobs and opportunities to individuals and businesses in Nigeria.

    “The very high-level infrastructure that we will need to support this are: a virtual private network, an intranet, an active directory and an electronic document management system.

    “With the services that we offer, we hope to achieve an integrated e-payment solution as well,” the Minister’s team said.

    On his part, the Director General (DG) of ICRC, Michael Ohiani, said a project of this nature could help in situations like the recent earthquake that happened in Turkey. It will provide a platform that

    Nigerians can easily reach out to the Mission to seek help for themselves or other Nigerians.

    “It is a very laudable project … If a private sector operative is given this to manage, there will be better optimization and technology deployment employed.

    “We can turn a part of it to a market place where people can key in. We have to find a way for it to make money so that the private sector can recoup its investment and remit some amounts to the Ministry.

    “We can seek a way to deploy artificial intelligence into these to make the operations more seamless.

    “We will look at the areas that will require partial commercialization, full commercialization and those that we don’t have to charge for,” he said.

    He added that the ICRC was ready to receive a business and financial model from the private sector through the Ministry on how to manage the project.

  • Fed Govt: Nigeria achieves 75 per cent self-sufficiency in rice production

    Fed Govt: Nigeria achieves 75 per cent self-sufficiency in rice production

    The Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr. Mohammad Abubakar, says the nation has achieved 75 per cent self-sufficiency in rice production through sustained investment in the value chain.

    Abubakar made this known at the Rice Value Chain Validation workshop tagged: Strengthening the Rice Value Chain in Nigeria,  yesterday in Abuja.

    Represented by Deputy Director, Rice Value Chain, Federal Departmentof Agriculture, Usman Bashir, he said rice value chain had been thefocal point of the agricultural transformation  of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration through sustained investment and other development partners.

    He said the ministry had developed and launched the National Rice Development Strategy (NRDS) 11 from 2021 to 2026 in collaboration withpartners to serve as a framework for the development of the ricesub-sector in the country.

    According to him, the NRDS is a private sector-driven initiative aimed at leveraging the linkages between the public and private sector to provide an impetus for the transformation of the rice value chain through innovation and sustainable investment.

    He said the measure was to achieve a competitive value chain capable of producing the rice commodity of high quality and affordable for Nigerian population and export.

    Abubakar said the ministry had provided critical support to strengthen each segment of the commodity value chain through research andinnovation by affiliated institutions.

    According to him, the institutions have the mandate for the development of improved varieties and new farming technologies for rice crops among others.

    Abubakar, however, said in spite of the giant strides made by the country in the sub-sector, there were gaps that needed urgent attention by all stakeholders to achieve set objective of self-sufficiency.

    “The gaps include lack of comprehensive data on all key indices and players in the sub-sector, provision of affordable mechanization services for increased efficiency and productivity.

    “Others are access to affordable and quality inputs such as fertiliser, seeds and pesticides, access to flexible financing among others.

    “Tackling these challenges will require concerted effort by all stakeholders in the rice value chain through constructive interaction,” he said.

    The President, Rice Farmers Association of Nigeria (RIFAN), Alhaji Aminu Goronyo, assured that the association would partner with the financial sector to address all challenges bedeviling the industry.

    Represented by his Special Assistant, Muhammad Alibaba, he identified finance as key, adding that successes recorded in rice production were achieved through the CBN anchor borrower programme.

    He, however, called for effective, sustained, and easily accessible financing in order to take advantage of all the challenges affecting business opportunities.

  • ‘Nigeria generated $4.8b from non-oil exports in 2022’

    ‘Nigeria generated $4.8b from non-oil exports in 2022’

    Nigeria generated a total of $4.8billion as revenue from non-oil exports in year 2022, the Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC), Dr Ezra Yakusak, has said.

    Yakusak, who stated this at its 2022 Exporters’ Performance Appraisal meeting held in Owerri, yesterday, said the generated revenue was a result of accelerated “Export for Survival” campaigns carried out by the Council last year.

    The NEPC boss, who was represented by the C’s Trade Promotion Advisor in Imo, Anthony Ajuruchi, added that in the year under review,  Nigeria-made products were exported to 122 countries, with Brazil topping the list for most products.

    He enumerated other achievements of the NEPC to include the establishment of domestic export houses and export trade houses in Togo, Cairo, Kenya and China, as well as the registration of 3,986 exporters across the country, with two of the registrants drawn from Imo.

    He said the NEPC coordinated the Nigeria – Gambia Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) exhibition, with the result that export order worth $250,000 was generated, a Memorandum of Understanding signed and new Nigeria made products introduced into the Gambia market.

    He said the NEPC also coordinated the participation of 20 Nigerian export companies at the 2022 Togo International Trade fair, with two of the companies from Imo, namely; Green Health Limited and Logos Super Food.

    “In 2022, our holistic efforts and accelerated Export for Survival campaigns resulted in all these achievements. In Imo State alone, a total of 805 MSMEs were trained on non oil export business, 39 new companies were registered for export and three exporters acquired FDA certification for their products with the help of the NEPC ,” he said.

    He, however, said that in year 2023,  the NEPC would be targeting increased non oil exports through more participation at trade fairs, better packaging and labeling of products, more formal exports and the use of the Onne non oil export terminal, in Rivers.

    The Chief Executive Officer of Green Health Limited, one of the companies that participated in the Togo International Trade Fair,  Mrs Amaka  Apolomo, thanked the NEPC the international exposures of her products at the trade fair, adding that participation at the event was a huge boost for her company as she secured more export orders.

  • Active mobile lines subscriptions hit 222m

    Active mobile lines subscriptions hit 222m

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) yesterday said mobile active lines subscriptions have  grown from 206 million in June 2022 to 222 million by December same year.

    Its Executive Vice Chairman, Prof Umar Danbatta, made this known at the Army Resource Centre, Abuja, while making a presentation at the 2023 Edition of Youth, Civil Society and Stakeholder Summit on Curbing the Destruction and Vandalisation of Telecom and other Critical National Infrastructures in Nigeria.

    Danbatta also said his Commission and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) were working together to deliver a free, fair and credible elections with the use of digital platforms.

    He said from the data on subscriptions, it was clear that Nigeria’s telecoms markets continued to grow in relation to increase in infrastructure, network capacities and digital economy platforms, among others.

    Represented by the Principal Manager, Department of TechnicalStandards, Mr. Chukwuma Nwenwu, the EVC noted that the Summit becameimperative considering Nigeria’s preparations for the 2023 general

    elections where use of digital platforms for communications would playkey role.

    He said vandalisation of telecoms infrastructure has remained a subject of concern to all stakeholders, as reports are received from

    Mobile Network Operators on the effects of vandalism on their operations across the country.

    Danbatta said: “We receive reports of vandalization of telecom infrastructure from the operating telecom companies and these acts impact on the delivered quality of services and the availability of

    the digital platforms.”

    He lamented that disruption of the network services and disconnection of digital platforms, congestion of alternative backup routes/networks, interruption of social and economy activities were issues of concern to the Commission.

    Danbatta noted that loss of revenue, ripple effect of vandalism on other networks and network elements as well as delay in network recovery were of concern to all stakeholders.

    Speaking on the elections, Danbatta said: “The forthcoming elections, national activities and programmes, communication with friends and families, conducting banking activities especially use of Point of Sales (PoS) machines, all depend on the national telecom infrastructure.

    “We all need to protect and preserve these infrastructure, as it will impact severely many aspects of our daily lives and activities in the event of its disruptions.

    “The general election is only few days from today and technology, as you are all aware, will play a crucial and key role in delivering free and fair elections to Nigerians.

    “The NCC is, therefore, working very hard and collaborating with the INEC to ensure that election results are transmitted electronically as required by law.

    “We all have a duty to protect the national telecom infrastructure as such to benefit from the dividends of democracy and good governance.

    “The youth and civil society, as critical stakeholders in the development process of any society, have a duty to educate the public of the importance of protecting telecom infrastructure located in their immediate vicinity.”

  • Normalcy returns as marketers steady petrol price

    Normalcy returns as marketers steady petrol price

    • Depot owners assure on N172 per litre ex depot price
    • NMDPRA to sanction petrol stations rejecting POS, transfer

    After five months of petrol scarcity, normalcy is gradually returning to the filling stations. Across the Lagos metropolis yesterday, petrol queues had reduced drastically, with motorists not spending more than 35 minutes in the worst instance, compared to hours and days since it started in September lasting uptill last Monday.

    The development follows the concerted efforts of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), the Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria (MOMAN), Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN), Tankfarm Owners and Operators Association, DAPPMAN and other critical stakeholders, in ensuring that the five months old situation was brought under control. On Monday, the NNPCL Chief Executive Officer, Mele Kyari, had assured that by next week, queues would have disappeared completely at filling stations.

    A motorist, Olalekan Okusan, told The Nation, yesterday, that he did not spend up to five minutes at FAGBEMS filling station in along Berger expressway where he bought petrol. Other motorists who shared their experiences yesterday, said the situation has greatly improved as none of them spent more that 35 minutes at any of the filling stations they visited.

    The vast improvement is hinged on the improved supply of the product witnessed since last weekend and the improved compliance of depot owners with the N172 per litre ex depot price of petrol. This had been a knotty issue at the peak of the scarcity, with IPMAN members claiming they bought the product for as much as N241-N270 per litre ex depot at a time when official ex depot price sold at N148 per litre; leading to their selling at a pump price of between N300 and N350 per litre at the pumps.

    Yesterday, the Chairman, Ijegun-Egba Tankfarm Owners and Operators Association, Lagos State, Arebowale Olujimi, made it known that petrol is now fully available in the country and is being sold at the Federal Government regulated price of N172 per litre in all the deports across the country.

    Olujimi, at a media parley in Lagos, revealed that so far this month, the NNPCL has given over 150 million litres to marketers. “We are telling Nigerians and confirming it to everybody that this product is coming at the government regulated price and that Nigerians can trust us and trust this business, but the very key factor is for the NNPCL to ensure consistency of supply of the product,” he assured.

    Going forward, therefore, Olujimi said it is expected that the product would be sold at retail end of the business  at affordable prices which government has fixed for each and every areas where Nigerians could get the product at the right pump price and at all the filling stations across the country. He warned that any deport found selling the product at more than N172 per litre ex depot price to all the retailers, will be made to face the full wrath of the law.

    The Ntion checks however showed that while majority sold the product at between a pump price of N184 and N195 per litre, most of the independent marketers retained their price at N300 to N350 per litre- a price they opted for when they sourced petrol at N270 per litre ex depot.

    The ease is expected to spread round the country by the weekend as other major marketing companies are already taking a large chunk of the product to the north central up to the northwest and to the northeast.

    “Rainoil is covering as much as the South-south, Southeast and majors parts of Lagos and its environs in the Southwest. It’s a large spread, about 33 percent to 35 percent of the entire nation distribution comes from this particular neighbourhood (Ijegun) and we are giving Nigerians the assurance that petrol is available. More vessels will be coming in the week and next week, so the product is here and I want to assure Nigerians and the general public that a 150 million litres coming from here will be distributed across the country at the right regulated price,” Olujim further reassured.

    The National Operations Controller, IPMAN, Mike Osatuyi, said with this new price, his members would be appropriately brief while any deport that sells above the N172 per litre should be reported.

    Osatuyi, expressed the need to effectively sustain the supply so that there would not be any gap. He said there is already a surveillance committee monitoring IPMAN members against selling above the government regulated price.

    “We are complying with the government rules and regulations on this; we are fully in support of government activities to ensure the flow of the product across the country at the regulated price,” he stated.

    While thanking the federal government for intervening, Osatuyi however expressed concern on the sustainability of the supply at the regulated price. “What worries us as IPMAN members is how the government will sustain the supply to the system; we don’t want a situation where our members will buy two trucks today and it will take another three weeks before we get to buy at N172 per litre ex depot again, that’s the crux of the matter,” he worried.

    In a related development, the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA), yesterday threatened to sanction any petrol retail outlet rejecting the use of Point of Sale (POS) and transfer for payment.

    General Manager, Corporate Communications, Mr. Apollo Kimichi, made this known in a press statement.

    The Authority, he said, frowns at the development which is causing untold hardship for Nigerians at a time when all hands should be on deck to assist the government in the transition to the new Naira.

    “Retail outlets are directed to ensure the free use of POS and bank transfer for the sale of petroleum products to alleviate the suffering of customers at this critical time. The Authority and security agencies will be at retail outlets to ensure compliance with this directive and any filling station found violating this directive will be duly sanctioned,” the statement read in part.

  • N28b invested in Lagos N-Power programme

    N28b invested in Lagos N-Power programme

    About 45,192 beneficiaries have benefitted from a total investment of N28 billion in N-Power programme in Lagos State.

    The Commissioner for Wealth Creation and Employment, Hon. (Mrs.) Yetunde Arobieke, made this known in Lagos yesterday in an interactive session with beneficiaries of the National Social Investment programme (NSIP)

    She said the N-power programme, a component of NSIP, was established to equip young Nigerians between the ages of 18 to 35 years with the tools and skills necessary to succeed and thrive.

    According to Mrs.  Arobieke, “For the first time in the history of Nigeria, over two million unemployed youth were engaged by the Federal Government for a period of two years while in Lagos, over 500,000 beneficiaries benefitted with varying amounts of  monthly stipends.”

    She explained that there are two categories of schemes in N-power, the Graduate and Non- skill schemes.

    The graduate scheme, she explained, has three components: N- Teach, N-Health and N- Agro, while the Non- Skill section has four components, N- Build, N- Skill, N- Creative and N- Knowledge.

    Some of them, she indicated, were employed into the Lagos State service by Governor Babajide Olusola Sanwo-Olu.

    Mrs. Arobieke said NSIP, the umbrella of all the initiatives, was established by the Federal Government of Nigeria in 2016 with the mandate of lifting poor Nigerian citizens out of poverty net.

    The four components of NSIP, she explained included N-power programme, National Home-Grown School Feeding Programme (NHGSFP), Household Uplifting Programme, otherwise known as Conditional Cash Transfer(CCT); and Government Enterprise and Empowerment Programme (GEEP).

    She said the  programmes were initially under the Office of the Vice-President of Nigeria, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo (SAN), but were moved to the Federal Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development in 2019 following the creation of the Ministry.

    According to her, the  programmes were being implemented by the 36 States of the federation including the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

  • NDIC: We have enough funds to settle depositors of 20 failed banks

    NDIC: We have enough funds to settle depositors of 20 failed banks

    Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) said it has realised enough funds to pay all depositors and creditors of all the 20 closed microfinance, primary mortgage, and Deposit Money Banks.

    It, however, called on the depositors and creditors of affected banks to come for verification and payment of the money that are in excess of their guaranteed sums.

    The Managing Director/CE of NDIC, Malam Bello Hassan, stated this yesterday during the NDIC Special Day at the 44th Kaduna International Trade Fair.

    The deposit money banks, primary mortgage banks, payment service banks and mobile money operators were all insured up to N500,000 per depositor per bank, while those of microfinance banks were insured up to N200, 000 per depositor per bank.

    Hassan, who was represented by the Manager, Communications and Public Affairs Unit, Tanko Ibrahim Yahaya, said: “Recently, the corporation repeated its call to depositors of 20 closed banks on which it has declared full (i.e 100%) liquidation dividends, to come forward for verification and payment of their deposits that are in excess of the guaranteed sums.

    ‘’The implication of this is that through our dogged liquidation activities, the Corporation has realised enough funds to fully pay all depositors of the closed banks.

    “Similar notices were also sent to creditors of seven DMBs in liquidation, as well as depositors and ex-staff of two MFBs and a PMB, details of which are still available on our website and social media handles.

    “I call on depositors, creditors and shareholders of the listed closed banks to avail themselves of the verification platforms provided by the Corporation to claim their funds’’, he said.

    “We are happy to notify the general public that the Corporation has won the court case with shareholders of the defunct Fortune Bank International, hence all depositors of the defunct bank can now visit our offices across the country to file their claims for the purpose of reimbursement of their trapped deposits in the bank or use the other channels,” Hassan said.

  • Heightened savagery from Imo

    Heightened savagery from Imo

    The grim fate of the late Christopher Ohizu, beheaded sole administrator of Ideato North Local Government area of Imo State, shows how easy it is to foment anarchy but how difficult it is to fend off opportunistic crimes, which such free-wheeling outlawry embeds.

    Since these latest Imo killings — several others have been reported after the Ohizu murder — the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has been screeching it had nothing to do with them: neither the free-wheeling killings nor the campaign against the 2023 elections.

    IPOB could well be innocent of it all.  But can it in all honesty and in all good conscience wash itself off the free hate campaigns of Nnamdi Kanu, its leader, during his heyday of romantic anarchy? 

    And those elders who back them lost their voices instead of thunderously supporting the voice of reason — can they right now wash their hands off this mess? 

    The ill-fated Ohizu should never have happened.  It’s just a low, low cruelty that belonged to atavistic times — even then, it wouldn’t have been less ugly and less condemnable — and certainly not 21st century Nigeria.

    The victim was seized from his Imoko community home, after which his kidnappers set his house ablaze.  Horrors of horrors!  They didn’t reportedly only receive N6 million from his panicked kith-and-kin, who somewhat hoped for his safe release, they went ahead to behead him with this arms tied to his back.  They then videoed their gory exploits and released that grisly video clip on their victim’s own WhatsApp account!

    Now, what are these people — humans?  Or beasts of the most bestial essence?  Even if fellow humanity is too far from these brutes, what happens to their common Igbo kindred spirit?  It’s concentrated horror from the darkest of hearts!

    The vile fellows swore they were neither IPOB nor Eastern Security Network, the IPOB militant arm — just Biafra agitators.  But why their reference to both IPOB and ESN, in the first instance?  Why not reference to MASSOB, which had been in Biafra activism far longer before IPOB’s doomsday version?

    The reason is the notoriety IPOB has acquired over a short period of time, though it would be tough to be roped into a crime, if it was really innocent of this one.  What’s more?  The clamour against elections, for short-term gains had also been an IPOB trademark, just as was the infamous sit-at-homes, which has petered out now.

    The security agencies should not only nab these brutes, they should also seize their soulless sponsors. 

    As for IPOB, it should learn to moderate its messaging.  A revolution is senseless if all it does is consume own children.  That’s the long and short of IPOB campaign in the South East — self-defeatist.

  • The futile plot to sabotage Asiwaju’s presidential project

    The futile plot to sabotage Asiwaju’s presidential project

    By Ojo Emmanuel Ademola

    uring his campaign rally in Abeokuta, Ogun State, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the APC presidential candidate and the front-runner in the coming presidential election, hinted at a plot to frustrate his hugely-accepted presidential ambition. He spoke angrily against a mysterious fuel scarcity that suddenly popped up at the tail end of the APC regime that is famous for taming the ennui of fuel scarcity and which, at present, appears intractable and against an opaque monetary policy that was suddenly propped up just before the election and which stands out for the jarring contradictions and oddities that had made it look confusing while levying suspicious difficulties on the generality of Nigerians. He, nonetheless, and in an exceptionally confident and self-assured manner, vowed he would defeat all those behind these policies and eventually emerge victorious in the coming February election.

    That is vintage Asiwaju; bold, suave, confident, courageous and decisive. He doesn’t know how to snake through his feelings when he sees threats discreetly. He doesn’t cower away and hide in cowardly diplomatese when he sees a battle. He doesn’t know how to wear an affable mien and pretend through a challenge. He doesn’t know how to cower away in fright when there is a battle to fight. Asiwaju is defiant and bold when he sees a battle. In this situation, he calls out the cowardly saboteurs that hide under indecent policies to constitute obstacles to his God-appointed desire to take up the challenge of turning round the fortunes of Nigeria, as he did that of Lagos.  

    Many Nigerians took Asiwaju’s statement seriously. Asiwaju is not your ordinary Nigerian who claws through innuendos and speculations on government policies and issues that affect Nigeria. He is versed. He is knowledgeable. He is well-connected. He has the benefits of men, women, young, and old and resources needed to read well policies, issues and developments that affect Nigeria and Nigerians. This remains the reason why he has been able to dominate the country’s political sphere today from the position of sole opposition governor in 2003.  So Tinubu has enough vital information and facts to back any statement or position on Nigerian governance. Tinubu is too vast and knowledgeable on Nigerian issues such that any utterance he makes carries such a hefty weight that proves its credulity.

    Are there some people or forces opposed to Tinubu’s presidency that they can go to any length to frustrate his ambition? Yes, there are. Many people and forces desire to stop Asiwaju. That is natural. That is even legit. There is nothing wrong with that. There is nothing illegal about it. So, it should be no big deal that some people and forces would be strenuously exerting themselves to stop Asiwaju. Every person with ambition has faced such obstacles.

    But then, why should some people levy war on the generality of Nigerians just to constitute obstacles on the paths of one man to rule Nigeria, as the present hoarding and fuel supply restriction portend? Why should state officials introduce and adamantly stick to an inchoate currency policy like the present Naira redesignation and enforcement of a cash withdrawal policy which negatively impacts the generality of the Nigerian people, just to stop one man’s political dream? These are areas where opposition or obstacle to Asiwaju’s ambition becomes strange, queer and destructive. These are akin to a boxing watch below the belt to score points. Opposition to someone’s ambition and dream is legitimate. Still, when it veers towards levying mass torture to stop an aspiration, it becomes devilish. It panders to the extreme guile and inordinate selfish desires of the perpetrators of these villainies.

    My concern with such in this article is how extreme some people can go to satisfy their selfish political desires. My problem is that people can deviate from the norm, tow the paths of mass ruination to quench their deadly desires, caring no hoot what becomes of the generality of the people for whom political ambitions aim to serve. My concern is that some people can get so desperate as to pull down the whole house in order to satisfy their bestial interests, as the present hoarding of fuel and the artificial monetary scarcity are scorching Nigerians. It is at this level that opposition to other peoples’ ambitions and political interests becomes evil. The current project to create a syndicated crisis, make the Buhari/APC government look bad and make the candidate of APC unpopular heading to the February election is an evil project. It is an extensive and humongous project that wouldn’t mind taking down the whole of Nigeria with it if that would stop Asiwaju. It is an expansive project that melds the opposition and the fifth columnists working with the APC government together. They have joint interests that converge at stopping Asiwaju by all means.

    But there is no gain in saying that these dark forces are struggling in vain. Asiwaju himself emphatically stated that much at the same Abeokuta rally and events and trends that have so far unfurled in the process leading to the February election show that Asiwaju is unstoppable in his dream of leading Nigeria at this turn of our history. Those who have bandied together like desperate heathens to stop Asiwaju are struggling in vain because Asiwaju is like a train in full motion that can’t be stopped midway through a journey. I have solid reasons to maintain this position.

    Firstly, Nigerians know that the Nigerian presidency is about competence and proof of the capacity to deal decisively with the statehood problems confronting Nigeria. Nigerians know that only Asiwaju has the proven capacity and competence to take the country down the paths of development and progress at this turn of our history. Good enough, none of the other dreamers for the job has made any claim to equal or superior competence than Asiwaju, so he has warehoused the trust of Nigerians that he is best equipped and competent for the Nigerian presidency, and a momentary sabotage by negative forces and principalities can never unhinge this.

    Secondly, Asiwaju has an unbeatable governance template in Lagos that is unstoppable in terms of growth and progress to flaunt. The rising fortunes of Lagos, as well as the universally-acknowledged fact that Asiwaju birthed and watered the template that has assured this exponential progress, has succeeded in convincing Nigerians that in Asiwaju, Nigeria has a redoubtable achiever whose Midas touch stands to influence the fortunes of the country positively. So, it is guaranteed that the desperate prattle of the opposition and the fifth columnists within the APC will never reverse the huge advantage Asiwaju has already gotten among Nigerians who have invested so much faith in his capacity to re-enact the positive Lagos story in Nigeria if elected president.

    Thirdly, through the campaign trail so far, it is obvious that the coming election is almost an Asiwaju affair. With his major challenger, Atiku mired in humongous corruption scandals and with his camp and party shredded in cyclical schism and unamendable division, it is becoming obvious from the enthusiasm and attendance at the rallies and other strategic engagements that form parts of the campaign process, that the game is Asiwaju’s as he draws unprecedented crowd and enthusiasm that cuts across the board in all the states he has campaigned in deference to the sparse, unenthusiastic attendance Atiku and other contestants draw.

    Fourthly, Asiwaju has shown his deep organisational and strategic prowess by the way and manner he had engaged Nigerians from all persuasions and walks of life through his innovative Town-Hall-Meetings and such other fora that are hitherto alien to Nigerian politics. His opponents copy poorly, yet they don’t have the depth and zeal to match Asiwaju’s originality, which he is imbuing in the current campaign. With his strategic engagements, he has been able to lock down the votes and support of critical population segments, and this can never be undone by the actions of a desperate but deficient opposition to his ambition.

    Fifthly, Asiwaju has done much more work and has so far worked far more harder than other candidates in the current campaign. He maintains a tighter, more crowded and more busier campaign schedule than all the other candidates combined. This shows that, contrary to the frustrated campaign of the opposition alleging that Asiwaju is not healthy, he had demonstrated that he leads a healthier, more robust and fit life than his opponents. He has shown that he is far more fitter for the job, and millions of Nigerians are seeing this in the ongoing campaign, thus disproving the baleful, outlandish and dense propaganda of the distrusted opposition.

    Sixthly, Tinubu has produced a clear, cadent and expressive manifesto embedded in his Renewed Hope plan for Nigeria. This clearly spells out his programs, policies and plans for the country, as well as the process of actualisation of these policies. This contrasts with the shambolic, unclear and fuzzy programs of his opponents. Nigerians have come to trust Asiwaju based on the clearness and explicit nature of his Renewed Hope manifesto, as this proves the fact that Asiwaju has proved his hugely-successful tenure in Lagos. There is the belief writ large amongst Nigerians today that, like in Lagos, Tinubu knows the way and the process to strike success in governance, unlike others that stumble their way through governance hence their unproductive and forgotten tenures in previous governance positions.

    Seventhly, Asiwaju has shown, for decades, that he is a detribalised patriot and a believer in Project Nigeria who has erected impregnable structures and walls of strength across the disparate divides that make up the country. He has built infallible bridges across the length and breadth of Nigeria, and these have promised him dedicated massive support across the country. The fire-brigade actions of a malevolent opposition would not be able to withstand these bridges, as we would see in February. These bridges ensured his emphatic victory in the hugely contested APC presidential primary, and they are there to reward him in February with the ultimate presidential crown equally.

    Eighthly, Asiwaju has shown, through his family life and his policies as Lagos Governor, that he is blind to religious, ethnic and primordial sentiments. This is a critical imperative to providing value-free leadership to a diversified country like Nigeria. While other candidates play on the ethnic and religious fault lines of the country, Asiwaju preaches and prescribes tolerance across the board and the downplaying of the divide lines on national issues. He has proven his tolerance and acceptability across the board and the prescription of such for the good of the Nigerian commonwealth. These have ensured the tightened grip he has on a majority of Nigerian electorates as the election draws nearer, and the grip is too tight to be loosened by the sly activities of the opposition.

    Ninthly, Asiwaju is well tutored on the nuances of electioneering as well as the antics of opposition interests, so he won’t easily fall prey to the plots, schemes and shenanigans of desperate opposition interests. Asiwaju’s capacity is borderless and across boundaries. His reach is infinite. His constituency is catholic, and his means are limitless. These have made him build an opposition that vassaled a ruling party, took effective control of the governance of the country and which has sentenced the once-ruling party to a bile-ridden, distraught and frustrated opposition today. Asiwaju’s enormous contacts have stood him in good stead to withstand the many booby traps and snare the hurting Nigerian opposition set on his way since 2015. His far-reaching contacts ensure that he stays several miles ahead of those that have fervently plotted his downfall since 1999. He vanquished the imperial Obasanjo as Lagos governor, made mincemeat of Jonathan and the PDP government from 2011 to 2015, made PDP devour the sand in such an emphatic manner and easily took the APC ticket in what was predicted to be a tight race. A hideous opposition working cowardly to sabotage the system so as to make APC and its government unpopular as to frustrate Asiwaju’s ambition would be very easy meat for a veteran fighter and survivor like Asiwaju to handle.

    Tenthly, Asiwaju still has the support, trust and confidence of the biggest and most potent and powerful political structure in Nigeria today. The APC may have some black legs within (and this is natural for any human organisation). APC may still have moles working for a dishevelled PDP and its candidate. Still, the truth is that all other opposition parties combined don’t come near APC in strength, reach and capacity, so the actions of a few (even if strategically placed) blacklegs won’t do much to shred the awesome might of APC, which is ranged for Tinubu.

    So, the coming presidential election still remains an exclusive game. Asiwaju is a game master of repute, a formidable tactician, a logistician and a master crafter that knows his way around the Nigerian political space like the master he is. Antics of a frustrated opposition account for the least of the political issues he had been dealing with on his way to the top. So when he boasted that he would defeat the present conspiracy of the opposition, those versed with his rich political history knew he was stating the obvious.

    With his Abeokuta revelation, the lifeblood has been sapped from the conniving opposition and their cahoots in the APC government. Their fall is a matter of very little time because they draw their devious energy from working under the cover, believing no one knows their game. But Asiwaju took that cover off in Abeokuta; hence their fall is too eminent. Even as I write this piece, I am getting information that there has been a massive ramp-up in fuel distribution across Nigeria, thus paving the way for the eventual resolution of this artificial energy crisis. The solution to the currency crisis is well nigh with Asiwaju’s revelation. So, in Asiwaju’s impending presidency, Nigeria will have a bold, fearless and courageous leader who would be ready to frontally deal with the heinous saboteurs actively engaged in the act of doing everything to cripple the Nigerian state to satisfy their selfish interests. They know that Asiwaju is coming to give them a real battle, so the present sabotage of the fuel supply chain and currency restrictions are parts of their deadly projects to frustrate him. Like he emphatically said in Abeokuta, they will all fail because they are dealing with the owner of the game himself.

    Prof. Ojo Emmanuel Ademola