Category: Commentaries

  • Empowering Nigerian youth – A future shaped by collective action

    Empowering Nigerian youth – A future shaped by collective action

    Sir: In a historic move that underscores the federal government’s commitment to the young people, President Bola Tinubu inaugurated the Planning Committee for the National Youth Conference, setting a new impetus for the country’s future.

    I am inspired by the president’s visionary leadership and the opportunities this initiative presents for young Nigerians.

    The president’s address at the inauguration highlighted a pivotal truth: the prosperity of our nation rests significantly on the shoulders of our youth. As more than 60% of our population, young Nigerians should not be mere onlookers in affairs of the country but should be drivers of progress. The ongoing economic reforms championed by President Bola Tinubu aim to create a robust economy, where opportunities abound for every young mind willing to innovate and work hard.

    One of the critical issues addressed by the president is the reverse in human capital flight. It is evident that by building an economy that offers prosperity and empowerment at home, we can dissuade our professionals from seeking greener pastures abroad. The commitment to strengthen the economy through bottom-up policies reflects the administration’s determination to make Nigeria a land of opportunity for its youth.

    President Tinubu’s promise to implement the outcomes of the National Youth Conference is a testament to his administration’s dedication to inclusive governance. This initiative is not just about dialogue but about actionable change. Youth are encouraged to express their ideas frankly, knowing that their perspectives will shape the policies that guide our nation’s development.

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    It is encouraging to observe the tangible signs of economic stabilization under the current administration. The falling prices of goods and a stable exchange rate signal the beginning of a prosperous journey. This newfound economic resilience is already drawing investors’ interest, paving the way for technological advancement and innovation.

    The conference will examine vital areas such as political governance, economic transformation, and skills development, including fields like Artificial Intelligence and climate resilience. These are essential components in ensuring our youth are equipped to constructively contribute to global discourse and local transformation.

    As we embark on this journey, it is crucial to recognize that the success of these initiatives hinges on our collective action. The administration has demonstrated its commitment through tangible projects and support systems, such as the student loan schemes and infrastructure development. However, it is up to us, as Nigerian youth, to seize these opportunities and translate them into sustainable growth for our communities and nation.

    President Tinubu’s message was clear: the future of Nigeria is in the hands of its youth. We stand at the cusp of significant change, and I urge every young Nigerian to engage wholeheartedly with this process. This is our moment to make history, to transform challenges into opportunities and aspirations into reality. Let us take up this mantle with determination, knowing that together, we can build a prosperous, inclusive, and vibrant Nigeria.

    •Dare Ojepe Senior Special Assistant to the President on Youth Engagement, Abuja.

  • Five years since the pandemic

    Five years since the pandemic

    Sir: In 2020 the world saw the first pandemic in a century, Covid-19 claim about three million lives that year out of a global population of 7.8 billion.  The last pandemic the world experienced before that was in 1918 – the Spanish Flu – which claimed 50 million lives that year.  Then the world’s population was 1.8 billion people.

    Life as we know it has changed since 2020 when most of us had to stay indoors for our own safety and only essential services such as supermarkets, local shops and hospitals were open.

    The world of work has changed: prior to 2020 many of us felt we had to have a physical office or place of business to be in business.  The pandemic made thoughtful entrepreneurs come up with shared workspaces where you can pay for an office address and even take meetings there without having to commit to a full office space if you can’t afford it.  People who sold things in shops turned to Instagram and personal websites to advertise their goods and sell from there instead of paying rent for physical shops.  We no longer have to physically go to people’s offices for meetings if we don’t want to thanks to meeting apps such as Zoom and Google Meet, just to name a few. 

    Apps to make our lives more sedentary have thrived because of the pandemic: you don’t need to go anywhere to buy food, furniture or hire an artisan; do it all from your smartphone.

    Many marriages and romantic relationships fell apart during the pandemic.  Couples who only saw each other for less than 12 hours a day during the working week were now faced with seeing each other 24 hours a day, seven days a week: real character couldn’t hide and a lot couldn’t take the reality of who their other halves were.

    I believe cleanliness is now taken more seriously in Nigeria.  The pandemic introduced hand sanitizers to public places such as banks, offices, churches and supermarkets – places where hand sanitizers never used to be.  Our country is still not as clean as can be but the education about the danger of dirt has been disseminated. 

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    Nigeria didn’t need the pandemic to make us more religious but more developed countries did.  Within a year of the pandemic hitting the world, the religious faith of the United States increased by 28%; Spain by 17%; Italy by 19%; Canada by 16%; Australia by 15% and the United Kingdom by 14%.  The extended family closeness which had been traditionally stronger in Africa, South America and Asia, now extended to North America and Europe because of Covid-19.  The fragility of life wasn’t lost on people who lived mostly insular lives, more centred around themselves as individuals or just their nuclear families.  The immense loss of life during Covid made them appreciate relatives they no longer kept in touch with or kept in touch with infrequently.

    Mental health awareness has improved globally, even in developed countries where it was traditionally less stigmatized because those countries have industries where talking about mental health wasn’t something its participants were willing to reveal publicly.  In Nigeria, where public mental health revelations were a complete no-no, it’s now more accepted to talk about your mental health publicly.  Some companies even hire mental health trainers to educate their staff on how to manage it.  The internet and social media are not short of many who claim they can help your mental health for a fee.  So, mental health has even created jobs.

    The pandemic was terrible, particularly for those who lost loved ones.  It also made us think of new improved ways of living.

    •Obinna Inogbo,obinna.inogbo@yahoo.co.uk

  • Flagrant force of lawlessness

    Flagrant force of lawlessness

    Sir: A couple of days ago, personnel attached to the Sam Ethnan Airforce Base, Ikeja stormed the Ikeja Electricity Distribution Company, where they assaulted workers and journalists.

    In which sane country does security personnel storm a place like criminals, beating anyone in sight and seizing their devices? This is indeed truly shameful.

    Every now and then, given the resistance they encounter in the course of carrying out their increasingly perilous task of protecting Nigerians, men of the armed forces cry out over the deteriorating relationship they enjoy with Nigerians. With actions like this, how will it not be so?

    What is the base hiding? What is it desperate to continue hiding? IKEDC says it owes the sum of N4 billion. They have not come out to deny or dispute the figure. So, why have they not paid? Do they think that being an arm of the armed forces makes them exempt from paying electricity bills?

    It is one of Nigeria’s great embarrassments that more than sixty years after independence, and more than 25 years since the country limped to a return to democracy, the country has continued to limp into darkness, with devastating consequences for the economy and quality of life.

    There is bottled up frustration with the situation of things in Nigeria. This bottled up frustration is not reserved for any group of Nigerians. All Nigerians feel it. Consequently, no group of Nigerians can presume to feel more frustrated than other Nigerians.

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    Many Nigerians are law-abiding. Save for the few rebels and renegades who are bent on turning the country upside down, many Nigerians recognize the sacrifices the Nigerian military is making to defend the integrity of the country, especially in these days when terrorists pound sections of the country with renewed fury. Nigerians of goodwill support the military without reservations.

    Yet, whenever personnel of any arm of the military lets loose their pent-up frustration and lets fly on Nigerians, Nigerians as one are reminded of the dark days of military dictatorship when Nigerians groaned under the boots of military officers.

    Violence hardly solves any problems

    If the Nigerian Air Force has become a chronic electricity debtor as the IKEDC has undisputedly disclosed, the debt and consequent power outage can only be cleared by negotiation and liquidating their debt.

    Going to beat up staff of an electricity distribution company or deploying other forms of criminal highhandedness not only presents them as irresponsible debtors but also as dangerously unprofessional.

    •Kene Obiezu,keneobiezu@gmail.com

  • The Abachas bay

    The Abachas bay

    The Abacha family are baying for IBB’s blood, for his claim that Sani Abacha and dark forces annulled the June 12, 1993 presidential election, which Bashorun MKO Abiola won.  Abacha tossed MKO into jail from which he never came out alive.

    In their tiff with IBB to defend their late father’s “honour”, the Abachas spoke loosely of “virtues” — of “honesty, sincerity and integrity”!  O my!  Did their brute of a father have any honour?

    Can a brutal thief, whose sleaze still assails our nostril as the notorious “Abacha loot” — the worst public graft in Nigerian history — be said to have “honesty, sincerity and integrity” that these fellows glibly link to their paterfamilias’ blasted memory?

    Did they even remember how Nigerians danced and sang, in unbridled joy, and hailed the “divine intervention” that took that monster away, so that Nigeria could reclaim its soul from that brutal and greedy thief?

    Do they even know how many lives Abacha and his goons despatched to the great beyond, on Lagos streets, for protesting the restoration of MKO’s mandate — a crime Abacha himself apologized for shortly after? What of the hundreds of others he killed for his vice-hold on dirty power, after he shoved off Ernest Shonekan, another pitiable historical wimp?

    No one could bring Abacha to book because it was an Army of “anything goes”, as attested to by General Salihu Ibrahim, who was retired as Army chief of staff, so Abacha could have a field day for his bare-faced thievery and sundry crimes.

    Okay, IBB annulled June 12 — damn him too and no tears from here!  That was an abominable crime that will continue to plague the generations to come of everyone involved, as the Abachas are finding out.

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    But did IBB also toss Abiola into jail, where he spent his entire presidential term? Didn’t the stark and greedy Abacha do that, and threw the jail keys away?

    Do the Abachas even know that the money “Home boy” Abacha stole, at executive gun point, have consigned millions of Nigerians into poverty, nay, penury, more so in their native North West, the second poorest geo-political zone of Nigeria?

    Honour!  Virtue!  What nonsense!  Abacha and these two concepts are parallel lines that would never meet, even if their thieving father comes back in 100 lifetimes! Honour!

    The Abachas should bury their heads in shame for having such a cold-blooded thief as family head.  They should lug their burden in quiet but torturous shame!  Yet, they bay for blood!  

    They should count themselves lucky that Nigerians are very forgetful and forgiving.  Otherwise no one would have tolerated their fancy release claiming honour for a fellow absolutely bereft of one.

    Still, the IBB/Abacha brickbat is a reminder that military rule is absolute catastrophe, that propels the worst to sit in judgment over their betters.  It’s the power illogic of booming guns!  That’s the blasted Abacha memory which Nigerians will never forget. 

    Abacha and honour?  What a laugh!

  • On the Renewed Hope Automobile Credit Fund

    On the Renewed Hope Automobile Credit Fund

     Sir: I have followed with keen interest, the laudable Renewed Hope Automobile Credit Fund launched by the federal government to promote local automotive industry and provide affordable transportation options to Nigerians. Commendably, the initiative is said to offer a single-digit loan scheme and has recently commenced in January.

    Without doubts, this great initiative will be a game-changer for the local automotive industry and Nigerian car buyers alike. At a time when the hardship bites hard, this initiative will provide an unprecedented opportunity for Nigerians to own brand-new, locally manufactured or assembled vehicles at an affordable price with an option to buy now and pay later, gradually.

    Like the NELFUND which has relieved some students of the financial burden on tertiary education, this initiative will also stimulate economic growth while supporting local auto manufacturers.

     Need I add that another critical aspect of the fund is its focus on promoting locally manufactured or assembled vehicles and this is a crucial step towards reducing our reliance on foreign imports and developing a sustainable automotive industry. Personally, I’ve always hoped to partner with local manufacturers who are producing high-quality vehicles that meet international standards.

    The process of accessing the fund is also remarkably straightforward. Customers can visit this local automotive industry websites, discuss their options with the team, and obtain a pro-forma invoice. CrediCorpNG then credits the manufacturer directly, making it easier than ever for Nigerians to own a brand-new vehicle.

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    As a patriotic Nigerian and auto dealer who is always looking for ways to innovate and stay ahead of the curve, the Renewed Hope Automobile Credit Fund has given myself and other patriotic auto dealers the opportunity to do just that. We are already exploring new financing options and partnerships that will enable us to offer even more competitive pricing to our customers.

    However, I must caution that the success of this initiative depends on the continued support of the federal government and the private sector. The federal government needs to ensure that the fund is adequately funded and that the process of accessing it remains streamlined and efficient.

    To surmise, the Renewed Hope Automobile Credit Fund is a ground-breaking initiative that has the potential to transform the local automotive industry. I am excited about this initiative and look forward to seeing the impact it will have on the lives of Nigerians.

    •Babatunde Yusuf, Canada.

  • The ruckus in Rivers State

    The ruckus in Rivers State

     Sir: Politics mightily bemuses with just how easy it is for relationships to go down the drain. For many politicians, the sage political advice that there are no permanent enemies or friends in politics is a coda.

    In 2023, Rivers State experienced a change of political guard. It was as smooth as butter, because Nyesom Wike who had been governor for two terms of eight years handed the baton to Similayi Fubara whom he had worked closely with.

    The transition in Rivers State was expected to be hassle free. In fact, given that it was the first time in sixteen years that an outgoing governor handpicked and installed his successor, it was not predicted that there would be any significant drama. To this extent, what has happened in the state since then has taken many by surprise.

    Nyesom Wike, the former governor and current minister of the Federal Capital Territory, has since fallen out of favour with Siminalayi Fubara whose conciliatory unassuming mien has belied the ferocity with which he has dug in to defy his former boss.

    While scores have accused Wike of being overreaching and overbearing, what is clear is that less than two years into his term in office as Rivers State governor, Fubara is locked in a supremacy battle with forces that supported him to be governor. From the local government chairmen that served under Wike to legislators loyal to him, the battle has been exhausting and ultimately distracting from the business of providing good governance in the state.

    A key consideration for Fubara however is that he seems to have the support of the Rivers electorate who are clearly desperate to know who to hold accountable for time spent in office. They do not want a proxy governor. They do not want a situation where the number one citizen of the state cannot call his soul his own.

    The Supreme Court has sent all the parties back to the drawing board by voiding the local government election held in the state and reinstating the sacked House of Assembly members. These decisions may be a kick in the teeth for Governor Fubara but whatever it is, all the parties involved must sheathe their swords.

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     The state has been in the news frequently in recent times and not because projects are going on at an unprecedented pace, but because two politicians have cast caution to the wind and turned the state into a war zone.

    Because both Fubara and Wike have channelled resources into their unseemly spat, the focus on providing the dividends of democracy to the people of the state has been lost. Instead, what has happened is that the state has incurred heavy losses for example when some local government secretariats in the state were razed and again when the state House of Assembly complex was bulldozed. 

    The madness in the state has gone on for far too long  and it should now be brought under firm control. Rivers State does not belong to one person or a select few. The long-suffering people of Rivers State are bone-tired of hearing the same things over and over again. They must now be governed in the peace they deserve. It should never be the case that few people should deprive an entire state of serenity.

    •Kene Obiezu,keneobiezu@gmail.com

  • The benefits of rotational presidency

    The benefits of rotational presidency

    Sir: After sixty – five years of independence and more than two decades of Fourth Republic, the time seems auspicious for the country to start addressing some of its national questions. Since independence, of the complex knotty national question that regularly befuddles the country is the presidency, and its succession between the north and south.

    Notwithstanding the amalgamation of 1914, Nigeria is a nation of two hemispheres north and the south, and each side has inalienable right to the presidency as the highest position in the country. Whereas the constitution guarantees tenure-ship of four years of two terms, meaning eight years, for an incumbent president, north or south, but till date there is no constitutional provision to guarantee an uninterrupted eight years for the occupant of the presidency seat, north or south.

    Fox example, President Bola Tinubu is in his first four years of a constitutional eight years, a southerner; yet the coast is not clear whether APC his party will clear him for a second term of four years. As there is nothing in either the party or the constitution that barred prospective contestants for the presidency in 2027, some northerners are already jostling up and warming for the 2027 presidential contest against the incumbent who also is entitled to another second term tenure of four years as stipulated by the constitution.

    There are already series of political hullabaloos and manoeuvrings if only to wary the spirit of other contestants. Some political pundits are already dancing themselves lame even before the real dance starts. All these are happening because the principle of rotation either at party level or at constitutional level has never been vouched.

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    What we need in Nigeria is a truly united federation based on equity, fairness and justice and the principle of rotational presidency between the north and south as entrenched in the constitution is one of the surest ways to achieve this. The rotational principle if entrenched in the constitution and the party constitution, will act as a check on the greed and desperation of political gladiators who are ready to go any length if only to win election at all cost. 

    Politics seems to be a profession that scoffs at fairness probably because of the innumerable opportunities that abound; yet no good politics can take place or abound in an atmosphere of chaos and lack of clarity of intents and purposes.

    It is absurd to see members of APC, the ruling party already gathering for purpose of uniting against the president his entitlement to another four years of a second term notwithstanding. The presidency will just be two years old in May and already, the heat of political realignments for 2027 even in a APC ruling party is already deadly.

    This has the tendency to cause detraction to the president whose mind should be at rest to concentrate on governance based on political party manifesto. The president deserves a good rest of mind to pursue his programme. Usually, if this rotational principle is put in place constitutionally, incumbent president will be saved the trouble of lack of peace of mind to pursue his programmes for the nation.

    Rotational presidency has many benefits such as giving the incumbent the stability of mind to address issues of governance appropriately and head long; giving him time to marshal his programmes and how best to implement and execute them for the benefit of the electorate. Stability of tenure means he can undertake and achieve many things for the country in eight years. Except defeated by opposition as in 2015, the incumbent has confidence to finish his tenure and implement his party’s manifestoes to the letter.

    Aside being a recipe for peace, stability and probable progress for the nation, it would have solved one of the most knotty national questions since independence.

    •Sunday Olagunju,Ibadan, Oyo State.

  • CBN’s recruitment of 16 directors: A break from the norm

    CBN’s recruitment of 16 directors: A break from the norm

    By Tajudeen Suleiman

    The central bank of any country is a uniquely influential institution. Due to its mandate of maintaining monetary and financial stability in line with the economic vision of the government, everything it does can impact everyone. That is why a PhD. Economists and experienced bankers are the top picks for heading the banks.

    This is why appointments at the central banks are always of interest to institutions, groups, and individuals. In Nigeria of today, the Central Bank of Nigeria is an institution of utmost public interest due to the state of the economy and the ongoing economic and financial reforms of the President Bola Tinubu administration.

    But sadly, in Nigeria, appointments into the CBN are not seen as part of the building block for the country’s economic rejuvenation. The CBN is seen only as a juicy institution where the elites scramble for a seat at the table and where politicians invoke Federal Character provisions of the Nigerian Constitution to put their cronies in positions to access the wealth of the nation.

    Whereas, in other times, where economic engineering is taken seriously, only the most talented look forward to a career in the institution. A statement about recruitment into the Bank of England (similar to that of the US Federal Reserve) describes the bank as an “intellectually stimulating” environment that is “highly professional.”

    It further states that “While organisations in the private sector are focused primarily on profits, the ultimate objectives for us are always the quality of our thinking, the rigour of our analysis and the overall deliverables in line with our vision of promoting the good of the people of the United Kingdom by maintaining monetary and financial stability.”

    Emphasising the importance of competence and professionalism for the bank, it says, “The issues we deal with on a daily basis have implications for everyone in the country.” This statement is as true for the United Kingdom as it is true for Nigeria today.

    This is why the Central Bank of Nigeria under Governor Yemi Cardoso has broken with tradition. Cardoso, like his counterpart at the US Federal Reserve, Jerome H. Powell, is confronted by an economic reform that has brought financial hardship to the majority of citizens due to rising inflation.

    But Cardoso’s reforms at the CBN portray a governor who takes his job seriously and is determined to deliver for the good of the country.

    Aside from the monetary policy reforms of the CBN, many will welcome the thrilling news that the CBN recently recruited 16 new directors through a highly competitive process and not through arbitrary promotion. These appointments, which were more of an internal promotion exercise, took effect from March 3, and it affects critical departments of the apex bank such as Monetary Policy; Trade and Exchange; Banking Supervision; Payment Systems and Consumer Protection, among others.

    The CBN reportedly engaged the global consultancy firm PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) to conduct the selection process for the directors from among top officials of the bank who applied, following an internal advertisement, to ensure only the most competent are elevated. It is highly commendable and in line with global best practices for central banks. It is certainly the type of promotion process needed by the CBN at this time. 

    Reports indicate that the PwC conducted a two-phase appointment process designed to eliminate bias in the recruitment and ensure the process is transparent. Many would wish that all critical national institutions in the country could also conduct their recruitments in this manner to ensure the right persons, no matter their ethnicity or religion, are put in charge.

    Usually, for central banks, the recruitment process will include competency-based interviews, ability testing, occupational or motivational questionnaires, written assessments, case studies, and/or presentations. Anyone who scales through all these is an asset to the institution and must not be denied the chance to help the country because of their religion or where they come from as long as they’re Nigerians.

    No one will be surprised by reports that the staff of the bank commended the selection process as objective, transparent, and merit-based. It is a far cry from past tradition, where directors are arbitrarily selected because of their connections with VIPs or because they’re favored by the CBN governor.

    This break with tradition is widely seen in economic and financial circles as a step towards strengthening governance and operational efficiency of the apex bank. It signals a significant internal restructuring aimed at enhancing the bank’s operational efficiency and regulatory oversight. An internal memo quoted by Premium Times said the appointments were aimed at “achieving the Bank’s vision and mission for long-term success.”

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    A look at some of the new appointees also shows that diversity was one of the selection criteria – a point that can never be over-emphasised in a diverse country as Nigeria. While economic policy should be driven by capacity rather than regional or ethnic consideration, inclusivity is essential in a multi-ethnic and multi-religious country like Nigeria,

    Mallam Abdullahi Hamisu, the newly appointed director of Banking Services, is from the north of the country. Before his appointment, he served as coordinator of banking services under the Operations Directorate. He now occupies a position that is pivotal to ensuring smooth banking operations across the nation.

    Sike Rita Ijeoma, one of the appointees from the South East, is the director of the Financial Policy and Regulation Department. She was formerly the director of the Banking Supervision of CBN. Her expertise and leadership earned her the new position where she is expected to significantly push the CBN’s mission of maintaining a stable and efficient financial system in Nigeria.

    Akinwunmi Olubukola Akinniyi, from the southwest, is the director of the Banking Supervision Department. He was an assistant director in the Payments System Management Department of the CBN before his new appointment. He is credited with leading the team responsible for the formulation of payment system policies and facilitating stakeholder consensus on payment system development strategy in Nigeria.

    He also participated in major reforms in the Nigerian Payments System, including the implementation of the Nigeria Central Switch, Cashless Policy, and the Payments System Vision 2020.

    Oboh Victor Ugbem, a senior development economist, is the new director of the Monetary Policy Department. Victor, who is from the South-south of the country, has over 20 years’ experience in the areas of monetary, financial, and agricultural policies as well as private sector development.

    He was formerly an assistant director in the CBN, providing technical support to the design and implementation of the Bank’s policies.

    In what appears to be a reflection of the prominent role women now play in the board rooms of commercial banks in the country, the CBN has promoted six women to the position of directors in charge of crucial departments. They are:  Yusuf Rakiya Opeyemi – Director, Payment System Supervision: Mrs. Jide-Samuel Omoyemen Avbasowamen – Director, Information Technology: Aisha Isa-Olatinwo – Director, Consumer Protection: Mrs. Sike Rita Ijeoma – Director, Financial Policy and Regulation: Mrs. Monsurat Vincent (Strategy Management and Innovation and Dr. Adenike Olubunmi Ojumu (Medical Services).

    Other directors named in the appointment are Dr. Usman Moses Okpanachi (Statistics), Mr. Farouk Mujtaba Muhammad (Reserve Management), Dr. Adetona Sikiru Adedeji, (Currency Operation and Branch Management Department), Mr. Mohammed-Jamiu Olayemi Solaja,(Other Financial Institutions Supervision Department) and Mr. Musa Nakorji  (Trade and Exchange Department).

    Analysts of the CBN reforms have commended the inclusivity of the appointments despite being merit-based as proof of its objectivity and transparency. Kudos to the CBN Governor for navigating the vexing challenge of federal character while searching for the brightest minds within the system.

    It is only when we put people in positions where their skills and qualifications are best suited that we can get positive results. This is what the US Federal Reserve, the Bank of England, and other central banks do to be at the top of their game.

    It is hoped that the processes leading to the appointments of these 16 directors would become a tradition to ensure that only bright minds are put in charge of executing the mandates of the apex bank. For the sake of Nigeria and Nigerians.

    Cardoso has raised the bar and blazed the trail. He would be judged by the success or failure of his reforms and innovations. On the economic horizon, the weather is getting brighter, and there are reasons to be optimistic.

    Nigeria’s economy is recovering faster than anticipated. Inflation eased to 24.5% in January, while Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) inflows are rising, and the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is expanding.

    The BusinessDay reported over the weekend that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)-led Monetary Policy Committee’s decision to maintain interest rates at its last meeting has fuelled a rally in Nigeria’s Eurobond market, reinforcing foreign investors’ confidence in the domestic economy.

    The paper wrote that the investment report shows that Nigeria’s Eurobond market closed the month of February in positive territory, signaling sustained foreign investor confidence. Quoting data from the Debt Management Office (DMO), it said the average yield on Nigeria’s Eurobonds closed at 8.80 percent, 41 basis points down from 9.21 percent at the beginning of February, signaling “strong investor appetite.”

    The CBN is proving doubters of its reforms wrong. Cardoso and his team of brilliant deputy governors are doing a good job of brainstorming for the public good. They are showing that the central bank is a laboratory of ideas and not a casino for sleazy men in suits. They deserve the support of all Nigerians to rescue the country from the economic abyss into which years of thoughtless leadership have plunged it.

    But no doubt, critics would continue to analyse every action of the CBN because of what the organisation represents. So, just as several economic analysts have done, the purpose of this write-up is to urge the team not to rest on its oars.               

    Tajudeen Suleiman is an Abuja-based journalist. He can be reached via tajudeensuleiman@yahoo.com

  • Re: Rail from pork

    Re: Rail from pork

    • By Wale Adedayo

    Sir: The Nation’s Olakunle Abimbola authored a piece Tuesday March 4, “Rail from pork”, which sought to put down efforts to establish a South-West Development Commission (SWDC) by the federal government. I disagree with his position, which does not take on the ground verifiable facts into account.

    As he rightly pointed out, these commissions reflect another level of bureaucracy. But Abimbola needs to reflect on governance at the grassroots, which is very poor at the moment. Most state governors, if not all, in Nigeria have failed the people. Of course, their lackeys in the different Houses of Assembly are not different. Governance is yet to provide critical infrastructures and other things that our people need. To make matters worse, the governors have deliberately destroyed the local government system, which is a sure way of reaching the grassroots.

    Sadly, each time our people talk about failure of government, it is the federal government they always accuse of doing nothing to help their situation. And, not just the federal government, which consist of the federal judiciary, National Assembly and the Federal Executive Council, it is whoever is in office as president who always get the short end of the stick for the serial failures of our governors. Many, naively, often accuse the president of failure to do what either a state governor or local government chairman ought to do.

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    If the governors had been up to their tasks, there should have been no need for any development commission. The development commissions are a direct intervention by the federal government to ameliorate the deplorable situations in all the six geo-political zones of the country. It is like helping the states do the work for which their governors were elected.

    Being a federal establishment, funds to run the commission will of necessity come from the federal purse. And, the Southwest is one of the biggest contributors to that purse. So, if other zones have these commissions, it stands to reason that one should also be established to take care of lapses by our sleeping governors in the zone. In that wise, instead of abuse, we should summon up the courage to praise individuals like Otunba Gbenga Daniel, who took it upon themselves to ensure that the Yoruba Nation is not cheated of its dues. Others have these commissions. Why should the Southwest be deprived of one?

    •Hon. Wale Adedayo,

    Okeliwo, Oke Ife,

    Ijebu Ife, Ogun State.

  • Varsities and vanishing academic culture

    Varsities and vanishing academic culture

    • By Sunday Olagunju

    Sir: Universities are citadels of learning and staunch builders of character. Erudition, awesomeness in learning and benign character are the defining attributes of universities as centres of learning and research.

    When people advocate maturity as basis for admission of students in the universities, they seem to want to obviate two evils that are rampant among students of higher institutions of learning, namely: the tendency towards sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.

    Given the heterogeneity of university students and their background, there is always a culture which acts as a unifier and as a leveller to which all the students must subscribe to and adhere to as both given and basic.

    Sadly, the rapid implosion in the establishment of universities and the inability to provide accommodations for the vast majority of intakes seems to be fast eroding this systemic culture to which the university as a system is noteworthy.

    There is a copious difference and dissimilarity between the town and the gown and students coming into the university must be ready to imbibe the philosophical ethos of ideas, learning and civility, including the benign character, to which the university system is uniquely known.

    With the abrogation of hostel accommodation, whereby most students have become virtually day students, there is a gradual creeping of open lawlessness and gross indiscipline into most university campuses.

    In the sixties, even down the eighties when university students were fully accommodated, universities took on the toga of unique villages which cultural ethos all students freely subscribe to and be part of.

    It was a taboo in those days not to recognize your lecturer, even though they were seldom seen around. In those days, you could hardly look a lecturer in the face, let alone have a roughshod encounter with him or her.

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    Students feared misconducts that are exposable or could lead to expulsion because universities were fewer and possibility of securing alternative admission was either remote or non-existent.

    Today, the preponderance of universities, both public and private means that an expelled student can always secure admission to other available universities, without even time lag. This has further eroded discipline and decorum of behaviour by most students.

    Apart from the few crisis in the universities like those of the 60s during the Professor Saburi Biobaku Vs Eni Njoku  over the vice chancellorship of the University of Lagos, when a student Kayode Adams stabbed Biobaku and Ali Must Go episode at the University of Ibadan which led to the death of Kunle Adepeju, a part four student, universities were generally peaceful and accommodating.

    While most private universities have accommodation for their students, most public universities are partly with the majority of the students living off the campuses. Given the growing moral decadence in the society, there is no vice chancellor that can vouchsafe for the characters of off campus students in the act of maintaining law and discipline within the campuses.

    Most universities produce half-baked graduates in both learning and character and this also reflect in their attitudinal disposition to work and ethical life on graduation. To achieve a wholesome recovery of the universities from the group of lawless and undisciplined students, universities should advocate for private partnership for hostels development so that most students can live within the four walls of the universities to imbibe both the culture of learning, harmonious living, bond of friendship, mutual consideration and respect for lives, culture and worth of human being as life’s greatest asset.

    Sunday Olagunju

    Ibadan, Oyo State.