Category: Discourse

  • How Emefiele sold naira policy conceived by PDP-inclined former general to govt

    How Emefiele sold naira policy conceived by PDP-inclined former general to govt

    The hardships caused by scarcity of the new naira notes are not mere happenstance. Some have asked Nigerians to bear with the government and the Central Bank of Nigeria(CBN), saying that the shortage of the notes is a temporary setback, and that the gains, when they manifest, will reinvigorate the economy.

    The Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning,  Mrs. Zainab Ahmed, who once said she knew nothing about the policy when it was announced , later turned round to speak about its benefits. But those with insight into how the policy was conceived dismissed her claims, accusing her of being economical with the truth. To them, the policy was politically motivated. They anticipated the hardships caused by the policy and were too convinced that the government, the All Progressives Congress (APC) and its presidential candidate, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, would have their goodwill badly affected before the polls commence on February 25 with the presidential election. The plotters,  it was further learnt, are intent on blocking power shift to the South, despite its justifications and implications for national integration, cohesion and unity.

    Competent sources said a retired General, who is determined to ensure that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate,  Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, wins the February 25 poll, plotted what has turned the country upside down in the last two weeks.

    For Atiku to emerge as PDP presidential candidate, the General played a behind the scene role, mobilising delegates and mounting pressure on other Northern aspirants to withdraw from the race. The withdrawal of Sokoto State Governor Aminu Tambuwal from the primary after it kicked off was due to the pressure.

    The retired Army Officer is working in concert with some foot soldiers, who are now trying to whip ethnic sentiments, it was learnt.

    Part of the agenda now is the effort being made to persuade Northern leaders, including monarchs, to  withdraw support for the APC at the poll.

    The fuel and Naira scarcities are also being exploited to cause public disadisaffection and incite voters against the ruling party and its presidential candidate, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    According to the sources, the General, PDP top shots, including Atiku, and Central Bank Governor Godwin Emefiele, are working in cohort to reduce the chance of APC at the presidential poll through blackmail and propaganda.

    At a rally in Abeokuta, capital of Ogun State, Tinubu had raised the alarm that the fuel and currency scarcities were meant to demarket APC  and its ticket by fifth columnists and saboteurs. He also said they were also exploiting the scenarios to embarrass President Muhammadu Buhari.

    To underscore their connivance, Atiku and the PDP leadership kept mute as the currency swap sentenced Nigerians into agony.

     PDP Deputy National Chairman Chief Olabode George, who was miffed by the strange silence,  blamed Atiku and National Chairman Iyorchia Ayu for their silence on the raging fuel and cash scarcities.

    He also expressed surprise over the silence maintained by the Campaign Director-General, Tambuwal.

    While Tinubu spoke up on behalf of Nigerians, urging the President and CBN to extend the deadline for the Naira swap,  Atiku, who had kept mute, attacked the APC candidate for condemning the fuel and cash crises.

    However,  PDP and Atiku, who was vacillating, never saw any merit in calling for any extention, despite the public agony. 

    When the public disenchantment grew, Atiku later called for calm, advising Nigerians to bear with the Federal Government.

    The source said elements behind the current crisis were acting a script. “Everything is programmed. The General who was behind Atiku’s emergence as candidate at the PDP primary is coordinating the onslaught against the APC. The aim is to set  people against APC and its candidates,  particularly Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    “The retired General has experience in such things. He spearheaded the annulment of the June 12 election. He is a PDP supporter who worked behind – the – scene to foist Atiku on the party at the primary. He used Tambuwal to achieve his aim,”he added.

    According to the source, “the General has been campaigning underground, visiting his fellow retired Generals and top traditional rulers in the North, telling them why power should not shift to the South. Having succeeded in the PDP, his mission now is to scuttle that unwritten agreement on power rotation among political actors in the country.

    “The general was also instrumental to the overthrow of Buhari as military Head of State in 1985. Ganduje felt short of revealing the identity of this General when he said that anti – June 12 actors have regrouped to truncate the democratic process.”

    Another source who advised the APC to quickly nip the antics of the retired Army officer in the bud said the General, who is adept in political manoeuvring,  has listening ears among those close to President Buhari.

    He pointed out that although he and other people opposed to APC had plotted a different outcome for the APC presidential primary, they were disappointed that Tinubu won.

    The source recalled that before the APC presidential shadow poll, they dropped Buhari’s name until the President pointedly told those in his cabinent wishing to vie for elective offices to quit.

    The source stressed:”One of them was Emefiele, who was said to have bought cars and painted them in APC colours with his picture inscribed on them.  People who ought to know better, among them media chiefs,  cheered him on . Some went to court seeking judicial pronouncement affirming his right to contest while in office as CBN governor.

    “His supporters dismissed the sound and solid argument that he was desecrating the cherished values of tradition of the CBN. When Buhari read the riot act, Emefiele ended his campaign. It was no surprise that he bought into the plot hatched by the general.”

    Revealing how the CBN governor was co-opted into the plot to incite the electorate against Tinubu and APC, the source said they creatively introduced the dangerous policy of Naira note redesign and swap in a hurry, knowing that it will inflict hardship on Nigerians who will in turn blame the APC for the mess.

    He said that was why Governor Nosiru Rl-Rufai quickly clarified that the Naira change, which was sudden, chaotic and provocative, was not the policy of the ruling party.

    However, to get the backing of the government, the General and his allies reached out to those very close to President Buhari.

    The source said:”This was easy as they were the promoters of Emefiele for President. Having secured their buying in,  Emefiele now sold the idea of currency swap to the president. He told the president that the move would curb kidnappings,  abductions and insurgency.

    “An elated president Buhari instantly bought into it. He also told the president that it has tremendous economic benefits. Emefiele’s co-conspirators among Buhari’s top aides added that it would demonitise the voting process, thus enhancing the integrity of the forthcoming elections.

    “The president was reminded of a similar policy he implemented in 1984 as military Head of State. His face shone like the sun. He nodded approvingly.  At that point, there was no going back on the policy as far as Buhari was concerned. Emefiele was mandated to go on with his plan. 

    “With Buhari now fully in support of the plan, the General, through his boy, Tambuwal, broke the “good news” to the PDP.”

    He added:”That was why Atiku and the PDP criticised Tinubu when he spoke in Abeokuta about the devilish plot.”

    Instructively, while Tinubu condemned the deadline, which he said, was unreasonable, Atiku never condemned it, but he and PDP twisted Tinubu’s remarks.

    Indeed, the PDP candidate,  Atiku also asked the president not to allow further extension.

    Reacting to Atiku’s statement, the Director of Media and Publicity, APC Presidential Campaign Council,  Bayo Onanuga, described the PDP candidate as Nigeria’s enemy number one.

    Also, Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike, who urged President Buhari to call the CBN to order, said the crisis was deliberately created to create a chaotic atmosphere for elections. 

    Wike urged Nigerians to be calm, despite the provocation.

    Many economic experts have condemned the Naira redesign policy, which led to the withdrawal of N2 trillion from the system.

    They also pointed that the printing and injection of  N300 billion only to the system fell below expectation.

    Although Emefiele knew the CBN lacked the capacity to print what will be enough to go round, he kept assuring Nigerians that the apex bank has made enough of the new notes available to banks.

    Although the CBN governor accused the banks of hoarding the new notes, many bank workers said the supply was inadequate.

    Yet, Emefiele caused Buhari to direct the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission(EFCC), Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) and DSS to go after his fellow bankers when he knew that what the CBN had released was not enough to go round.

    Nigerians who could not understand and bear the confusion stormed the banks to demand for their trapped cash, creating unsavory scenes and in some cases, beating up bank workers.

    At the weekend, Emefiele admitted to the Council of State that the CBN does not have the capacity to print adequate new notes.

    PDP leaders are

    conspirators, says George

    To George, the attitude of the PDP leadership smacked of conspiracy.

    He said:”In all honesty, I cannot decipher the logic of quietness against the cliff edge that Nigeria has been plunged.

    “Our party, the PDP, and others, such as the Labour Party, SDP, NNPP, seem to have concurred to the present shenanigan. I wonder, what hate, what evil, what madness will propel anyone of sane mind to plunge Nigeria into the present state of hopelessness, annihilation and abject suffering of the citizenry.”

    The PDP elder, who spoke with reporters in Lagos, lamented that “due to this anomaly, which is a deviation from regulation or what is regarded as normal, there seems to be a graveyard silence on the part of PDP leadership.

    George said:”It puzzles rationality. It benumbs our senses as Nigerians wake up every day to daily agonies of perennial fuel scarcity, tossed at us by the NNPC and the agony of non-availability of cash, occasioned by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) through its Naira rebranding.

    “Where is the Presidential candidate of our party, the PDP, Atiku Abubakar?  Where is Iyorchia Ayu, the National Chairman. How come the voice of the DG, Campaign Council of the PDP is drowned in perpetual silence against the atrocities of the APC government with the presidential election just a few days away?

    “Why have they allowed their voices to be drowned in conspiratorial silence? Where are the opposition political parties? What does the graveyard silence portend for Nigerians?

     “It seems to mean that Nigerians’ right to good has been consigned to the dustbin by the political class..”

    To the former military governor of Ondo State, the Federal Government is overwhelmed, stunned, halted, stalled, anc puzzled about grappling with the current challenges.

    He added:”I believe the various state actors can do better. Managers of our economy should not take Nigerians for granted by churning out retrogressive economic policies.

    “We should rather strive to review our focus and our ultimate horizon . Nigeria must withdraw from the destructive brink.”

    George lamented that the country has continued to toy with power supply, which is very germane to the development of any developing economy.

    He said Nigeria loses an estimated $29 billion in accruable revenue every year due to epileptic power, adding that it is not sustainable.

    George stressed:”Power is the very lifeblood of all industrial revolution. It is the fuel of all economic development. A nation without efficient power supply cannot rise into the bright dawn of the digital civilisation.

    “It is stuck forever in the bleak dark side of economic underdevelopment and teeters inevitably on economic ruination.”

    On the chaotic cash crunch imbroglio, George said:”The decision of the  manager of our financial system, the CBN,  to redesign the Naira, has only pushed the country further into dire straits.

    “Our national economy has sunk deeper into the abyss, and the people are being made to become refugees in their own country with hunger ravaging every home. The policy on the currency should not have been contemplated in the way it was implemented.”

    He added: “The citizenry are only worse for the policy, toiling in vain every day for the non-availability of the new notes. The tragic comedy of the financial crisis is the internal exchange rate racket going on in all the states.

    “For you to get Naira cash across the counter and from POS operators, there is an ‘exchange rate’ (charges) depending on the  financial smartness of the operators.

    “Nigerians now pay between 10% and 25% for them to get their hard-earned Naira cash. Nigeria must be the only country in the world where you pay ‘officially’ a percentage in local currency for you to get your money in banks.”

    George said Nigerians cannot be forced to move away from a cash-based economy to a complete cashless regime overnight, judging by the current archaic state of technology, the internet which is still in its epileptic state and the perennial fuel supply situation , which has also thrown the country into turmoil .

    Frowning at the fuel scarcity, he said it is scandalous, adding:”As Africa’s largest crude oil producer, many months of fuel scarcity, especially during the Christmas and New Year festivities, reflects the dysfunction in Nigeria’s public administration and the economy.”

    “The government and its agencies are clueless, making conflicting statements and embarking on uncoordinated actions. This is the time for Nigerians to open their eyes and minds by voting for a competent and experienced person to take us to the promise land. We cannot afford to make mistakes this time around. Any move short of this is a recipe for complete chaos.”

  • Why Nigeria must end selfish, incompetent leadership

    Why Nigeria must end selfish, incompetent leadership

    By Dr Gbenga Adeoye

    Over the years, government agencies have been led substantially by people who possess insufficient education, experience and exposure.

    What we fail to understand is that in Latin, we learnt that you cannot give what you don’t have (Nemo dat quod non habet).

    The worst aspect of it is the interpretation of a Yoruba proverb that described unfit leaders as people who ought to be sleeping on the floor but suddenly find themselves on the bed with a good mattress.

    Misbehaviour and foolishness occasioned by pride become inevitable from such people when they occupy leadership positions.

    Let us take a look at the following to underscore my view.

    National Assembly since 1999 has refused to touch the most important aspect of our Constitution which is restructuring. No one among Senators and House of Representative Members does not know that the only way to move forward is the devolution of powers.

    As a matter of fact; the party in power today had a committee that came up with recommendations on the need to restructure Nigeria. Even the Jonathan-led government spent money on the conference, but it was never implemented.

    Who does not know that security is local? Why would it take us 24 years to remain at the level of talking without acting on just one important solution to our security problem – state policing?

    How do we explain the policy of Naira redesign that has caused more harm to the poor than the rich? How do we describe the quality of the new notes compared with the old ones? How do we explain the exchange rate in Nigeria?

    How do we explain the cases of multiple taxations where non-state actors collect road taxes, make an arrest and impound vehicles?

    Why would it take an eternity to rule on the VAT Collection rights of states and stop multiple taxes such as Consumption Tax from hotels and eateries?

    How do you explain the statement by certain persons in the name of religion where human lives do not mean anything again to people?

    How do you explain that our best brains at all levels cannot get a ticket to run for office? Only those who have money can get it even if they are incompetent.

    How do you explain that you need billions to win an election as a governor, and yet we say they are corrupt? Why would they not take back their investment?

    How do you explain the level of Ignorance and the level of illiteracy in the North?

    How do you explain that Nigerians travel a lot, yet we cannot set up our National Airline in 24 years of democracy and after the death of Nigerian Airways by mismanagement?

    How do you explain the timing of the Naira redesign and the hardship on the people?

    How do you explain the level of migration of our youths to Canada, the United Kingdom and the USA? Doctors and nurses and now teachers are leaving.

    How do you explain the poor quality of graduates from our colleges of education, polytechnics and universities? How do you explain the level of ignorance in the church where a pastor asks people to raise their phones, and he prayed for miracle bank alerts?

    How do you explain underage marriage and out-of-school children in the North? How do you explain that most leaders go for medical treatment abroad?

    How do you explain the poor treatment of our security officers (Police, DSS, Army, Civil Defence?) How do you explain that people retire for over a decade but are not paid their gratuity?

    How do you explain that pension and cooperative deductions are not remitted for years?

    How do you explain the jumbo salary of politicians and the cost of governance? Why should someone suddenly become a billionaire after winning an election or after taking an appointment?

    How do you explain that a Presiding Judge while sitting in court can be killed right inside the court? How do you explain that some judges had to file a writ to make their claim from the government? What signal are we sending to those on the bench as they hear such matters?

    How do you explain the level of poverty in the land? How do you explain that able-bodied young men are thugs without work and at just a little spark they ensure crisis erupts in cities? How do you explain the destruction of properties in Lagos during the EndSars Protest?

    How do you explain that most Federal Medical Centres and state General hospitals do not have MRI and other scan facilities? How do you explain cultism in secondary schools?

    How do you explain the increasing number of girls around our cities working as harlots or doing runs or whatever they call it?

    How do you explain the number of jobless graduates in Nigeria? How do you explain that we deliberately ignored technical education?

    How do you explain that up till now, the electricity problem is yet to be resolved?

    Without power, can any country be industriThe only way to answer these 31 questions is to conclude that the wrong people have been in leadership for too long and at various levels, whether it be at federal and state agencies, by election or by appointment.

    To move Nigeria forward, we must ensure that incompetent, selfish and arrogant people are not allowed to lead at any level again.

    •Dr. Adeoye, a lawyer and chartered accountant, can be reached via dga@gbengaadeoye.com

  • Harvest of landmark projects in Sanwo-Olu’s Lagos

    Harvest of landmark projects in Sanwo-Olu’s Lagos

    By Idowu James

    The Centre of Excellence agog last week as President Muhammadu Buhari paid a two-day working visit to Lagos for the commissioning of iconic projects of Governor Babajide Olusola Sanwo-Olu, the Executive Governor of Lagos State.

    President Buhari was busy for the two days he spent in Lagos moving from one location to the other to cut tapes. Governor Sanwo-Olu who came in at a very difficult time of COVID-19, a global health pandemic that crippled socio-economic activities of the world proved his leadership capacity through his sterling achievements despite unprecedented challenges.

    The recent inauguration of Imota Rice Mill, Light Rail (Blue Line), Lekki Deep Sea Port and JK Randle Center for Yoruba Culture and History, among others, attest to Governor Sanwo-Olu’s records of sterling performance.

    Lagosians and Nigerians in general are much aware of Sanwo-Olu’s achievements which include; the construction of over 308 roads, the repositioning of the health sectors through the building of more health centres at the grassroots, and a free health policy for children below 18 years and adults above 65 years of age.

    Under his watch, Lagos state recently took delivery of new trains from Milwaukee, United States, for its red line rail project. This is another major milestone in the drive by Governor Sanwo-Olu to deliver the operation of the red line rail system .

    Likewise, in the area of infrastructure, Governor Sanwo-Olu has performed exceptionally, some of the projects include; the Lagos-Ogun boundary roads, Lekki-Oniru Traffic circulation projects, Pen Cinema Flyover and road networks in Somolu, Ikoyi, and Victoria Island.

    The Lekki-VGC Regional Road and Lekki-Epe-Ibeju road expansion projects are transformational infrastructural projects that will improve the quality of life. Rehabilitation of inner-city roads in 57 local development areas as well as local government areas, and commissioning of BRT lane in Oshodi-Abule Egba corridor are great testimony to the sterling record of Governor Sanwo-Olu’s performance.

    It will be recalled that before Governor Sanwo-Olu took the government of Lagos, refuse disposal and management was a huge challenge. Sanwo-Olu reorganised LAWMA and the Private Sector led Waste Managers stakeholders otherwise known as PSP, were empowered to keep Lagos clean.

    Sequel to the bold intervention, within weeks, refuse disappeared from the streets. Also, aligning with Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu well thought masterplan, Governor Sanwo-Olu takes the environment as a highly important sector of the state and donated 60 units of 24 cubic meter trucks, 12 loaders and 30 units of 12 cubic meter trucks to further enhance effective and efficient service delivery across the metropolis.

    The governor also provided 102 compactors, 100 double dino bins and also 232 Drainage channels cleared and he commissioned Lagos Waste Management Authority, LAWMA Academy to develop human capital capacity of the LAWMA personnel. Recreation parks were also created across the state.

    The World Health Organizarion, also eulogised governor Sanwo-olu’s courage in the face of the dreaded COVID-19, placing Nigeria as the fourth-best country in the world in the effective management of global health pandemic. This great accomplishment will remain in the hearts of many Nigerians and Lagosians in particular till date.

    Under Health, Governor Sanwo-Olu has delivered seven maternal and Child centres across various communities like: Eti-Osa, Ajah, Badagry, Epe, Alimosho,Igando, Amuwo-Odofin. In the same manner, five public health facilities were renovated in Ebute Metta, Harvey, Odan, Isolo and Ketu-Ejinrin in Epe division.

    The governor has also established 10 triage and oxygen centres and a 300 bed isolation centre is also under construction. The health of the vulnerable segment of the society is also paramount to the governor, over 1,417 children and adults received free surgeries. Also, not fewer than 5,963 pupils in 30 schools benefited from the BOSKOH Health Programme. 563,210 Lagosians have enrolled in the Lagos State Health Insurance Scheme.

    Other ambitious plans he has for Lagos include a 7-storey 150-bed new Massey Children Hospital, Adeniji Adele, Lagos Island. Doctors’ quarters at Gbagada and Yaba, Mental Health Centre at Ketu Ejinrin, Infectious Disease Research Institute, Yaba, 300-bed Isolation Centre at Yaba and General Hospital, Ojo Local Government.

    In education, there are over 1,097 projects his administration has undertaken in 970 public schools in Lagos State. He supplied 86,000 dual furniture sets to schools. 70 new school buildings were also constructed. 197 schools also got renovated. Not fewer than 450,000 pupils were also given e-learning devices. 18,000 teachers also got trained under Eko Excel, while 92 public primary schools and 71 blocks of classrooms were rehabilitated across the state in order to improve the learning outcomes of kids.

    In the pursuit to further harness the economic potential of the state and empower young people, 300 youth were trained in aquaculture of arable crops, over 6,000 graduates produced yearly from 19 skill acquisition centres.

    In entertainment, in addition to the existing provision of N1billion hospitality fund, plans are underway for 100 hectares film city in Epe.

    In all, the administration of Mr Babajide Olusola Sanwo-Olu has performed remarkably well in the delivery of dividends of government across all strata.

    So, President Muhammadu Buhari could not but be impressed when he was invited to commission Blue Light Rail, 32 metric tons, Lagos Rice Mill in Imota, Lekki Deep Sea Port and other great projects in Lagos State.

    On the strength of the litany of achievements under governor Sanwo-Olu, Lagosians know that the social contract they had with him when he was contesting for office in 2019, is obviously on course. They are more ready to renew the pact on March 11, 2023 through the ballot.

    The morning has shown the day in Sanwo-Olu’s Lagos. The people of the State know that he will not renege on the promises he made. The future of the state looks brighter under Sanwo-Olu with the clear, ambitious plans he has for the people.

    •  James writes from Lagos

  • The hater of Nigeria: A rebuttal of Sonala Olumense’s article

    The hater of Nigeria: A rebuttal of Sonala Olumense’s article

    By Bayo Onanuga

    Coming in the countdown to the general election, Sonala Olumense’s two-part article leaves no one in doubt of his mission to dissuade Nigerians from voting for the All Progressives Congress in the forthcoming elections.

    Unfortunately, his spin is based on naive idealism, crass ignorance and pretentious partisanship that leaves all but one party on his self-made ballot.

     Let us deal with the facts. The APC in 2015, following a progressive critique of the political economy of Nigeria, concluded that a country that does not grow what it eats would never have food security. Besides, over 50 per cent of Nigerians in agriculture – farmers, peasants and middle-class agripreneurs- are discouraged by the high imports of foreign foods which sabotage their productive efforts to live by feeding the country.

    The APC took the progressive position to stand by the Nigerian farmer, protect agriculture and restore food security. It canvassed for the votes of Nigerians based on this manifesto and secured its mandate in the 2015 general elections.

    As soon as it assumed power, the APC government wasted no time in walking its talk on zero tolerance for food imports. The Buhari administration excluded 41 food imports from accessing foreign exchange through the official window and slammed a 71 per cent tariff on imports. 

    Focussing on rice, maize, cassava and other crops with multiple uses, the Anchor Borrowers Programme, launched by President Muhammadu Buhari in the first year of his administration gave generous credit to over 4.8 million farmers and linked them with industrial off-takers to secure their investment. For the first time in history, Nigeria was able to cut rice imports of 2 million metric tonnes by 98.4 per cent.

    But what did unpatriotic Nigerian rice importers do? Rather than diverting their investment to domestic production, they sabotaged the policy by engaging in the illegal smuggling of rice and other commodities. Suddenly, Benin, a country with a population of 6 million recorded over 2 million metric tonnes of rice imports in one year. A high percentage of this found its way to the Nigerian market. To further protect Nigerian farmers from these saboteurs, the APC-led government closed the borders making it possible for local production to soar.

    Today, the APC can proudly claim the return of the groundnut, maize, beans and rice pyramids as a promise made and delivered. The value chains of these crops have breathed new life into the agro-industry as companies are using them as local substitutes for imports. The return of the rice pyramids has revived the hitherto moribund rice mills and promoted the establishment of new ones, the recent being the Imota Rice mill project in Lagos considered the largest in capacity in Africa.

    Sonala should fact-check this: The associations of maize, cassava and rice growers with members across the federation have acknowledged the positive transformation of their means of livelihood. They said there has been no time when agriculture has been given such a robust impetus.

    Encouraged by this policy, a giant player in rice production, Olam announced last year that it would double its production from 120 million to 240 million metric tonnes by cultivating over 5,000 hectares of additional land for rice. Another player, Coscharis was encouraged to develop 2,500 hectares of land to grow rice. In the last seven years, the potential of Nigeria to meet its 6.8 million domestic demand for rice has improved by reaching 5.4 million metric tonnes.

    Rather than commend these giant strides in reducing the dependency of Nigerians on foreign food imports, haters of APC like Sonala prefer to dwell on the challenges the nation is facing in trying to eat what it grows. They advertise the increase in the price of rice, the evidence of market distortions in which higher production and smoother linkage of the crop to market would eventually overcome and unpredictable floods which ravaged cultivated plantations, as the basis to clamour for the return of rice imports.

    But it is not only agriculture whose demographic and civic significance has been prioritised by the APC government in executing its contract with the people that deserves recognition for fidelity to electoral pledges, the achievements in infrastructure are also a source of pride to the APC.

    However much the farmers grow, they have to move their crops to the market. The critical importance of transportation infrastructure in the agricultural value chain explains the attention it has received in the last seven years. Rail, which was introduced to Nigeria to move export crops to the ports, has regained its role. The completion of 156 kilometres Lagos-Ibadan standard gauge rail and the extension of 8.72kilometres to Apapa port to ease exports, 186-kilometre Kaduna-Abuja standard gauge, 327-kilometre Itakpe-Warri standard gauge rail and Abuja Light Rail showed that APC has lived up to its promise on rail infrastructures.

    It has much more to brag about with roads. According to the Minister of Works & Housing, Babatunde Fashola, the APC has constructed 8,352 kilometres of roads by engaging 339,955 workers. It has broken the jinx of the Second Niger Bridge by completing and opening it for travel. It is currently building a long bridge that will bring better transportation to the people of Bonny.

    Investments in air and sea ports may have trailed these mass-oriented transportation sectors, but it has not delayed work on air and sea ports. The new Lagos terminal is a great sight to behold. It has reduced traffic congestion, boosted the image of the country and improve passenger management.

    In a cheeky drivel, Sonala condescendingly writes that he has not said that the administration has not built a road there or a footbridge there. If the Second Niger bridge is his idea of a footbridge, then one should be concerned that age may be eroding his capacity for value judgments.

    At the last count, there is no sector that the Buhari administration has not touched. Housing has constructed 13,000 homes and is building 20,000 more. Many initiatives in power generation and distribution such as the incremental 4,000MW project, Solar Power Naija, Nigeria Electrification project and the take-off of the Rural Electrification Project constitute the multi-dimensional approach of the administration to delivering electricity to the people.

    Nigeria’s digital economy has received a lot of boost through projects such as the launch of the new national 5G policy, the Nigerian Highway right of way for fibre cabling, the national ICT infrastructure backbone and the construction of a Tier 4 data centre.

    In oil and gas, the discovery of oil in Bauchi, new oil mining lease agreements for deep water exploration, the ongoing Nigeria-Morocco pipeline project and the successful completion of Nigeria’s first marginal field bid round give hope that our country is on the path of progress.

    To demonstrate commitment to domestic refining of oil to produce petroleum products, the Buhari administration rehabilitated the Port Harcourt refinery, supported the take-off of six modular refineries in the Niger Delta and launched the Nigerian Upstream Cost Optimisation Programme to reduce operating expenses.

    Under the APC administration, efforts to expand opportunities in non-oil sectors have led to remarkable initiatives in the solid minerals sector. For the first time since independence, Nigerian gold became part of our reserves in 2021. Private investors, such as Segilola were encouraged to build gold mines and three others were licenced to build gold refineries. To support Nigerians in the sector, the Buhari administration launched the Presidential Artisanal Gold Mining Development Initiative and established institutes of mining technology to build their human capacity.

    The most outstanding achievement of this administration is the resources committed to taking care of the underprivileged, the poor and the vulnerable.

    First, it established the National Social Investment Programme and registered 46 million persons from 11 million households. Second, it created a conditional cash transfer programme which gives out N10,000 to 2 million beneficiaries monthly.

    Third, the administration launched the Survival Fund, the National Youth Investment fund and the National Special Public works Programme. The survival Fund has provided support for over 12 million registered beneficiaries.

    On jobs, the strategy has been to empower existing small, medium and large-scale firms with credit to enable them to expand their operations and create more jobs. In this regard, institutions such as the Development Bank of Nigeria have given out N482 billion to over 200,000 MSMEs and the Bank of Industry has disbursed N1 trillion to over 3 million MSMEs.

    Contrary to the doomsday imagination of Sonala, these beneficiaries will be engaging in self-love by wishing the APC to continue to run the affairs of the country because of its impact on their lives.

    The more persuasive argument to vote APC is that it has presented Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the former governor of Lagos State whose legendary vision and deep intellect enabled Lagos to respond to the financial, infrastructural and environmental challenges of the early ’20s and survived. This is the verdict of history that Sonala does not see or agree with. 

    The candidate of the APC raised the revenue of Lagos State from N600 million to N5 billion. Nigeria needs a president who can use his intellect and network to increase the country’s IGR. Nigeria needs electricity. It was Tinubu that launched the first Independent Power project with the Enron barges in Nigeria. Nigeria needs a president who can solve its energy problems. Nigerians need a self-reliant economy free from dependency on imports. Tinubu built a self-reliant economy that is still working today as more and more Nigerians troop to Lagos to achieve their dreams. 

    On February 25, 2023, the good people of this country who share the vision of the APC will vote for the party. Maybe, Sonala will then realise that this campaign of calumny and hatred is destined to fail.

    •Onanuga is Director, Media and Publicity, APC Presidential Campaign Council (PPC)

  • Between Ugochinyere and Onwuemeodo: The crux of the matter

    Between Ugochinyere and Onwuemeodo: The crux of the matter

    By Declan Emelumba

    Of late, Sam Onwuemeodo, the life Chief Press Secretary to the dynasty of former governor of Imo State, Owelle Rochas Okorocha, has arrogated to himself the status of the guru and special adviser to the government on public relations, information management and public administration. Wired by this delusion, he proceeds to publicly present himself, even if fatuously, as the oracle of government image management. Even more silly, he dared to pontificate for Governor Hope Uzodimma and his government, how to manage information. Sadly, like a man estranged from history, particularly his own history, he is quick to draw comparisons on information management between the Okorocha era and the Uzodimma administration.

     Consequently, an Onwuemeodo, who did not only act deaf and dumb, but collaborated with Okorocha to embarrass everyone with many information management blunders, suddenly finds the effrontery to lecture the Uzodimma administration on the type of speech the governor should or should not present to an Editors’ Conference. He even went further to advise that the governor should be thrown into mourning when Ikenga Ugochinyere Imo’s house and vehicles were burnt. This is pitiable and is tantamount to someone struggling in futility to give what he obviously does not have.

    Is it not really pitiable that this self – acclaimed professor of public information management, for all his “grandmastery”, could neither filter nor remediate the grotesque utterances, policies, and missteps of that fatal Okorocha regime? Onwuemeodo could not mount his high horse when Okorocha proclaimed that he purchased his second term as governor (as opposed to being elected by the people), or when he upgraded the wanton disobedience of court orders into a state policy. “Professor” Onwuemeodo could not also lecture his pay master, Okorocha, when he denounced due process in governance or when he “proposed” and signed the abominable four-year rolling budget. He could not also find his voice when his boss berated pensioners for living too long, or when he chased civil servants into the bush in the name of compulsory farming. What was his response when he restricted  the attendance of civil servants to work to three days in a week.

     Indeed, the irony is obvious. A man who was part of the information management team of the Okorocha administration – which ended with the worst public image of a state government – draws from the same Okorocha information (mis)management strategy to pass his message. What a great pity!

     Now, while Ugochinyere and PDP rushed almost immediately to point accusing fingers at the government, Sam Onwuemeodo believes that officials of the state government, particularly Governor Uzodimma, ought to have shredded their robes in mourning to show empathy, as the father of the state. Because that did not happen, Onwuemeodo says the governor is insensitive, inexperienced, heartless and lacking in empathy. And this is coming from a man whose highest career point is serving as the Chief Press Secretary to a state governor.

    Let’s take aside the insults on the person and office of the governor by Onwuemeodo and interrogate the facts of the matter –  including the analogy of Rochas visiting Charly Boy when his father died.

     Before the unfortunate incident at Akokwa, Ugochinyere claimed that he had earlier escaped a similar attack by gunmen. Indeed, the first thing he did was to accuse the state government of complicity. The matter had not even been investigated. To the best of my knowledge, the alleged attack has not been formally reported to the security agencies. Yet Ugochinyere hastily concluded that it was the state government that was after him. The only “evidence” he presented was an audio recording wherein, according to him, he was threatened by an aide of the governor with whom he had a personal altercation.

     Assuming, but not conceding, that the said audio recording is genuine, when has it become a crime for a Nigerian citizen to express his disgust at insults on his person? But if there was not any premeditated motive to rope the state government in, could it not have made sense for Ugochinyere and his cohorts to wait for the police report before rushing to the public with that weighty and self -serving allegation?

     And just when Uzodimma was celebrating his third year in office, with Nigerians hailing him for the massive infrastructural revolution he has wrought in the state, the Akokwa attack surfaced to take away the attention from the successes of the administration. Part of the plan is to sustain the evil narrative of a state mired in insecurity. Again, the matter had not even been officially lodged with the security agencies when Ugochinyere and his PDP collaborators flew off the handle to accuse Governor Hope Uzodimma and his administration of culpability and responsibility for the attacks. Under that scenario, what was expected of the governor? To first clear his name or to sympathize with his traducer?

    Let us be real and practical here. If a man is attacked by armed robbers and he goes to the market square to accuse his father of being responsible for the attack, what should be the natural reaction of his innocent father? To sympathize  with him or to clear his name of the false accusation? That is the issue here.

    And as it is clear, in his foolery, Onwuemeodo who now postures as one who has acquired experience as both a governor and statesman, scolded Uzodimma for clearing his name. He went further to give the governor elementary lessons in governance and ethics by faulting the way he talked and reacted to the incident. To Onwuemeodo’s warped logic, Uzodimma, as a father of all, ought to have first sympathized with Ugochinyere, even when he stands falsely accused before the public.

     Yes, you sympathize with a son who acknowledges you as his father. You sympathize with even a prodigal child who comes to his senses and apologizes for his gross misdeeds. You welcome a repented son home and show him love, not a heady one, not a chronic hallucinator, who relentlessly accuses the said father of plotting his downfall. That is the crux of the matter

     Both the PDP and Onwuemeodo, as advocates for Ugochinyere, wanted the governor to have stopped the attacks. If their minds were not obfuscated by hatred, if they had taken time to assimilate and analyze the governor’s response, they would have allowed their befuddled brains to comprehend the fact that Uzodimma said the attack was as a result of disagreement among friends. Because they are not privy to the quantum of security reports available to the governor, they would never understand that what happened was a reaction to a breached agreement – the consequence of an action. What would have been the business of Uzodimma in meddling with their agreement? Every adult is responsible for his actions or inactions.

    At any rate, the Government has since urged the security agencies to do their job and to avail Imo people and indeed all Nigerians of their findings.

     Now, to the asinine analogy of Rochas visiting Charly Boy when his father died. What Okorocha did was expected of the sitting governor then. Justice Chukwudifu Oputa, apart from being a retired Justice of the Supreme Court, was also a former Chief Judge of the Imo State. Protocol demanded he should be accorded a state burial irrespective of the personal feelings of the sitting Governor. So what Rochas did was for the senior Oputa, and not the son. I presumed that since Onwuemeodo claims versatility in the art of governance and diplomacy, he ought to have known the difference.

     He also ought to know that it is illogical to assume that Uzodimma or any member of his administration is enjoying the spate of insecurity unleashed on the state by desperate and failed politicians who know themselves. It is inconceivable to even suggest as Onwuemeodo did that Uzodimma is using insecurity as a step towards achieving a second tenure. That is insane. And that is a wicked propaganda against an innocent man who has been in politics for 40 years and who has never been linked with any iota of violence. How then can he use the blood of Imo people as a stepping stone for power? What kind of power? This could be the strategy employed by Onwuemeodo and his master under their disastrous era. But Uzodimma, as a man of peace, prefers a peaceful state to enhance development and spread the dividends of democracy in the state.

    Indeed, with the call by PDP for the Federal Government to declare a state of emergency in Imo State as a result of insecurity, we don’t need to look further for the sponsors of insecurity in the state. They had vowed to make the state ungovernable for Uzodimma. Seeing that their devilish plans are not working, they have come out openly to attempt to topple the governor through a state of emergency. But like all their plots, this latest shenanigan will also fail.

    That is why Onwuemeodo’s insolent and rambling tirade against the governor will be treated as mere burden of leadership which has to be tolerated. The illogicalities can be dismissed as the ranting of one enslaved to self delusion, who consequently deludes himself into thinking that a bat can ever be classified as an animal. Or that elementary knowledge  or and limited regional exposure, can earn someone automatic professorship.

    More importantly, the legacies of looting, tyranny, debauchery, nepotism, and institutional paralysis which characterized their reign of terror has rightly occupied cupious inglorious pages of our history books.Those indelible pages of history will continue to haunt the perpetrators.

     Now, for the records and in sharp contrast: Uzodimma has achieved in three years what that inglorious government could not achieve in eight years. The difference between the two administrations is like that between day and night. Incidentally, Imo people are enjoying the light of day. Their votes alone, with the grace of God, will determine Uzodimma’s fate, and not the bile of minions who think they can play God with no pedigree to show. As Abraham Lincoln one said, “You can fool all the people some of the time, and some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time”.

    • Emelumba is the Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Imo State

  • Dissecting Tinubu’s framework for power and energy reform

    Dissecting Tinubu’s framework for power and energy reform

    By Babatunde Raji Fashola

    I have challenged people to ask themselves if they can remember anything the main opposition committed to, when they were elected in 1999 and for the 16 years they allowed Nigeria to drift without any clear policy direction or articulation.

    Other than slogans like “Transformation Agenda” whose details were undisclosed, during a period of prolific earnings from very elevated international crude oil prices, to a “Seven Point Agenda,” which later became a “Five Point Agenda” I am yet to receive a response.

    Unless it remains hidden under their unreliable umbrella, it must be taken that we surrendered 16 years of our lives to a party from 1999 to 2015, that made no credible promises and no recognisable commitment.

    To those who may wonder why I choose to start my intervention this way, it is my answer to those who erroneously assert that politics in Nigeria is not about issues. They are wrong.

    APC came into office by identifying the major issues confronting Nigeria before the 2015 general elections and the national survey conducted showed that the issues at the top of mind of voters were security, corruption and the economy.

    The APC made clear commitments about how to deal with those issues and got elected.

    As far as the economy is concerned, one of its necessary drivers is infrastructure to which the APC has vigorously committed herself.

    he results are manifesting with thousands of kilometres of roads and bridges, expanded airport runways and terminal buildings in 5 international airports, a new seaport in Lekki, the Ajaokuta, Kaduna, Kano Gas Pipeline, train seven of the NLNG, investment in the Dangote Refinery to support private sector initiative for local production of petroleum products as well as the upgrade of four (4) existing refineries.

    Why are these important you might ask? Our opponents reluctantly acknowledge these giant strides but are unable to connect them to the economic opportunities they offer now to workers, construction companies and suppliers who operate in this economy; and they are unable to see what this means for Nigeria’s economy in the future.

    On one hand they talk about stimulating the economy by “production, ” but their home economics model does not address how anyone can expect to produce without roads, ports and bridges or gas.

    They are unable to relate cost push inflation to travel time, the cost of haulage or delays at the port or indeed to how continued importation of petroleum products that they could not reverse in 16 years impacts the cost of living.

    I doubt whether they appreciate that the port that they privatised has not produced the desired results and it is APC government that has rebuilt the Apapa to Oworonshoki road that evacuates the largest and busiest port in Nigeria, and it is the same government that is building the Lagos – Ibadan Highway that facilitates distribution of goods and services. Yet, they want to privatize more.

    The importance of this part of my intervention is to demonstrate without a shadow of doubt that infrastructure is the foundation for building any economy following which are policies that herald reforms.

    The Buhari-led APC government has spent their time in office building this critical hardware of infrastructure and many parts of power sector infrastructure are already being put in place.

    The agreement with Siemens, under the Presidential Power Initiative, seeks to remedy the shortcomings of the privatisation they undertook in 2013 especially the distribution sector where some of those who acquired the DisCos do not have the necessary financial means to finance the investment required to guarantee power to homes and businesses.

    These are massive numbers of Distribution transformers and related assets.

    The Buhari Power Initiative seeks to deliver in 3 phases:

    a)    Critical and ‘quick win’ interventions to increase the system’s end-to-end operational capacity (currently 5GW) to 7GW;

    b)    Distribution Network bottlenecks to enable full use of existing generation and distribution capacities, bringing the system’s operational capacity to 11GW;

    c)    Total operational grid capacity of 25 GW in the long term, with commensurate upgrades and expansion of the national generation, transmission and distribution systems.

    d)    The building and upgrading of 100 sub-stations critical to distribution.

    e)    The purchase of 11 mobile substations to provide relief when local substations need repair or maintenance.

    f)      The purchase and installation of 2,906 Distribution Transformers.

    In the same vein, many of the power plants constructed under the NIPP do not have sufficient gas supply or transmission lines.

    I visited 23 out of the 28 generation plants in existence at a time. From Geregu to Omotosho to Papalanto and the Enron Power Station, gas supply was being rationed amongst turbines, so that all the existing capacity could rarely be deployed. This is partly what the Ajaokuta, Kaduna, Kano Pipeline Project seeks to address.

    In other places, it was the transmission capacity that was struggling. This is what the Presidential Power Initiative is responding to by seeking to provide:

    a)    The installation of Distribution and Transmission lines covering 11,650 Kilometers.

    The Buhari government has also put in place a policy for mini grids, supported by NERC Regulation No. MERC/-R-/110/17 of 2017 that allows individuals and corporations to generate and distribute off grid, embedded power of 100kw without approval and up to 1Mw with approval.

    This again puts a lie to the argument the grid needs to be decentralized. It has been decentralized and people need to take full benefit of the policy. The government in office has led with initiatives of embedded power in markets like Ariaria, Sabon Gari and Sura in Aba, Kano and Lagos.

    There have been initiatives in university campuses, 9 (NINE) in total, with 7 (SEVEN) completed, with Phase 2 for an additional 7 Universities in procurement.

    These are only part of 67 off-Grid power projects already implemented by the APC Government under the supervision of the Rural Electrification Agency.

    You might then ask, why are there still power outages? My response is that there is still work to be done. The deployment of mini grids has not yet taken widespread application and this is where the private sector needs to be made more aware of the policy and the regulator needs to be more proactive. I will come to this shortly.

    The Siemens Presidential Power Plan to address distribution and transmission and the gas projects are works in progress that have started and are at various stages of implementation and completion.

    This brings me therefore to why we are here. The Asiwaju Framework for Power and Energy Reform.

    This is well articulated in the APC tradition of identifying issues and proposing solutions; on pages 30 to 32 of Asiwaju’s Action Plan for a Better Nigeria titled Renewed Hope 2023.

    First, he recognises at page 30 of the plan that the problems cannot be solved overnight.

    He offers to eliminate the losses between generation and distribution by addressing the transmission problems which the current Presidential Power Initiative has started.

    He connects with the problem of end users relating to provision of meters and offers support for domestic manufacturing on page 31.

    This is more than a paper policy. It speaks to many things including Asiwaju’s known commitment for standing with people in need. It tells those who are victims of estimated billing that they are not invisible. It is a message that Asiwaju sees them and offers a solution.

    It also demonstrates APC’s progressive credentials as a party committed to the improvement of the human condition.

    The contrasting position is the policy on metering left by the main opposition before 2015, called CAPMI, an acronym for Credit Advanced Payment Metering Implementation which required consumers to advance the cost of their meters to DisCos.

  • Why no state can catch up with Lagos economically

    Why no state can catch up with Lagos economically

    By Gbenga Adeoye

    Recently, I got an SMS in Lagos saying I have been penalised for driving with expired vehicle licence and the papers was actually renewed that same day after it was brought from a workshop where repairs and upgrade were carried out.

    How did they get to know, this was the first question I asked. Through traffic cameras, probably at Ikoyi, was the answer from a brother who understands auto database management.

    Of course, the only error was that the system has time lag between the renewal of papers and the database to which camera pictures were synchronised.

    They understand that they may not be right all times and so there is room for you to contest or object to the bill if you can prove the basis was wrong, and they will delete the fine.

    Payment option was also there with card. I objected because my papers were renewed that same day when the car were brought out of workshop.

    What a wonderful state moving towards United States and United Kingdom in billing and traffic offence management.

    Beyond this experience, there are two major factors and one of them had 13 reasons why no other state can catch up with Lagos State.

    Factors:

    A. Lagos as the capital of Nigeria in the past. Deliberate development programmes.

    The fact that Lagos was a former capital of Nigeria is an advantage that will continue to work for the state.

    That has made it the commercial capital of Nigeria to the extent that even when the capital was moved to Abuja, Lagos remains a centre of excellence.

    Apapa Sea port and the airport at Ikeja could be regarded as part of key projects that put Lagos at an advantage.

    Regardless of the capital advantage of Lagos, there are deliberate and intentional projects that set Lagos apart.

    Since the time of Baba Jakande, Lagos has been so deliberate in its development.

    From 1999, here are the list of deliberate projects; completed, ongoing or about to start.

    Lekki Free Trade Zone

    Most manufacturing that aimed at solving our import dependence problem are at Lekki Free Trade Zone. No state can compare with Lagos on this.

    Lekki Deep Sea Port

    One major asset any nation require for international business is sea but sea can only be useful if the port is well-developed.

    New Lekki Deep Sea Port is a Lagos State idea and it’s one key project unique in Africa.

    Dangote Refinery

    If anyone is in doubt about the impact of Dangote Refinery, the person just needs to wait a little and see how Nigeria will stop importation of finished petroleum products. In addition, fuel scarcity and heavy demand for forex to import fuel will end with Dangote Refinery.

    Again, kudos to Lagos. Even though I am jealous of Lagos because I was expecting that project at Olokola in Ogun State, Lagos and Ogun are two states difficult to separate and as such we rejoice with Lagos. It is our collective gain and glory.

    Ikoyi Link Bridge and Lekki Epe Expressway.

    These two projects are wonderful. Those who link ikoyi from Admiralty Way in Lekki Phase 1 understands better. The kind of traffic people use to experience before that bridge was hell.

    When the road from Victoria Island is fully completed to Epe, driving around Lagos Island will be as easy as eating pap and bean cake and everyone can testify these projects are not cheap and, in my view, the toll fee compared to reliefs for Lagosians is not excessive. Nevertheless, today is not a day to discuss desirability or otherwise of tollgate but one Yoruba proverb says: “A good and sweet soup, it is money that cooks it.”

    Lekki Airport.

    There is no doubt the population in Lagos requires more than one airport.

    When the airport at Lekki is fully completed by Lagos State since there is a Federal Government approval to do same. The economic impact is so huge that it will be difficult to project the positive impact now. No state can match that as well.

    The new Blue Rail Line

    Soon, moving around Lagos will be so easy as most cars will be off the road, once traffic is reduced, productivity will increase.

    Rail Transportation is one thing that set London apart. China is doing all that can be done to have rail lines and stations that beat western designs.

    The Tax Collection System.

     Lagos tax system is super.

    If you pay tax in any bank in Lagos, they will issue you the coloured receipt instantly. In some states, you may not get receipt for one month. In Lagos, there are some dedicated taxpayers; they are so pleasant on the phone while reminding tax payers to pay. The system is really working in Lagos. Other state should go and learn from Lagos.

    BRT Lanes and Buses.

    This is one project that is unique and it will complement the metro rail. No state can match it.

    Lagos Judicial System.

    Lagos has fast track courts, small claims courts and a lot of uncommon innovations in the administration of Justice. God bless Prof. Yemi Osinbajo for his role when he was attorney general and commissioner for Justice but in addition, kudos to those who came after him and continued to improve on those foundations. Lagos can also be regarded as the capital of commercial legal practice.

    Most law firms in Lagos are of international standard. Even Lagos campus of Nigerian Law School is said to be the most tedious for students.

    I can testify to that having passed through that campus, but for me, it is positively tedious.

    Entertainment and Social Gatherings.

    There is no state with the kind of social life as Lagos, we call it Eko for Show, may be because Ijebu and Egba people are plenty in Lagos, because when it comes to social gathering, you cannot beat the Egba and the Ijebu.

    In fact, may be Egba and Ijebu can say in Yoruba that Awa laleko, meaning, we own Lagos. There is no need to prove this, it is just a mere expression of demography or their percentage in Lagos social gatherings)

    Except Abeokuta Club, Lisabi Day and and some Regberegbe associations and clubs in Ijebuland with the Ojude Oba Day ; where in Nigeria can you find the kind of men at Ikoyi Club, Metropolitan Club, Polo Club, Yoruba Tennis Club, Boat Club and so on?

    Lagos is unique. Everyone wants to be in Lagos. One interesting thing is members of these clubs  are not necessarily Lagosians by birth. The network of these men and women is beyond normal.

    Even young people for their NYSC, want to be in Lagos. Many still want to live in Lagos despite the traffic   

    Churches and Church Leaders are more in Lagos.

    Although many argued that churches should have been factories, God’s factor in history has been instrumental to the greatness of Israel and some other countries founded on the foundation of righteousness. America started like that, till today, you still hear, God bless America.

    RCCG model parishes in Lagos are unique places of worship, House on the Rock, Winners Chapel, CMS Church, Ikoyi Baptist, Methodist, Foursquare, MFM, Trinity Church in VI, Deeper life, Citadel formerly Latter Rain, Apostolic Church, Covenant Christian Centre, Day Star Christian Centre, The Shepherds Flock, among others, are wonderful places of worship.

    The fact that Pastor Kumuyi and Pastor Adeboye are touching the soil of Lagos regularly is like Elisha & Elijah dwelling in a given land.

    Ogun State shares in the unique blessings of having RCCG camp, MFM, Canaan Land and Deeper Life Camp too but more importantly having the first church in Nigeria (The St. Peters Cathedral in Ake at Abeokuta) is not in vain.

    Eko Atlantic City in Victoria Island

    United States Embassy has laid the foundation of their embassy which has the office and residence of staff.

    The project is unique, one that attracted investors from the world. No such anywhere in Nigeria.

    The giant of it all is the Fourth Mainland Bridge which has a four-year completion time. The kind of business impact along that bridge is beyond explanation and imagination.

    The bridge will traverse Abraham Adesanya to Badore and then on the lagoon to Ikorodu, and it will burst out on Lagos Ibadan Expressway Way around sparklight. This is more than a miracle because it means anyone going to Lekki from Abeokuta or Sagamu have no business to drive to Berger and Alapere nor Iyana Oworo but just join the Fourth Mainlamd Bridge from the express.

    Channels Television will become CNN indeed as access to Channels TV from Lekki will be so straight and direct to Isheri. It will also ease their reporting.

    The impact on real estate for offices, residential, and cottage industries will be phenomenal.

    If any state wants development, they should attend a school in Lagos to learn strategic development and I am recommending to Lagos Business School to start an Executive MBA Programme, titled: “Lagos Strategic Development Model (MBA-LSDM).”

    I recommend that governors should send five directors & five commissioners from their key ministries as students for this course. Comprehensive for 90 days. If they pay N20 million per student, it will be worth the benefit and development gains.

    Practical nexus between development, increase in IGR and those projects will show clearly why no state in Nigeria can catch up with Lagos. Some will even say, Lagos can stand as a country, and they may not be wrong.

    • Dr.Gbenga Adeoye, a lawyer and a chartered accountant, can be reached via dga@gbengaadeoye.com

  • Predictable budget cycle: Great legacy of Ninth National Assembly

    Predictable budget cycle: Great legacy of Ninth National Assembly

    Shortly after his emergence in 2019 as the 14th President of the Senate and Chairman of the Ninth National Assembly, Ahmad Ibrahim Lawan promised to ensure the 2020 Appropriation Bill was passed and signed into law by the President before the end of that year. That promise would have sounded outlandish in many ears and many would have dismissed it outright as a flight of fancy induced by Lawan’s euphoria of electoral victory.

     Going by precedent under the Fourth Republic, there were valid reasons for such scepticism.

     By 2019, it had become normal for the Appropriation Bill to come into law not earlier than the first quarter or even in the middle of the budget year. This was in spite of the apparent injury the delay was delivering to government’s annual spending plans and the economy.

    How to reset the budget cycle or financial year to run from January to December as was the case in distant past had confounded and beaten the previous National Assemblies. But that was not for lack of efforts on this part of the federal lawmakers. Session after session, they visibly worked to instal a steady, reliable and predictable January to December budget cycle. That just didn’t happen, for many reasons.

     However, with great determination,  strategic thinking and multipartisan cooperation in the Chambers, under a new milieu of effective collaboration amongst the Arm of Government, the Ninth National Assembly achieved the feat on first attempt in December 2019!

     The impacts of timeous passage of Appropriation Bills on budgetary performance,  governance and the general economy have been severally articulated by economic experts.

      Even at the best of times, the Nigerian economy has needed every positive effort it can get for revamping it. The COVID-19 pandemic, the Russia/Ukraine war and sundry local challenges make such efforts even more imperative now. Imagine, some of the advanced economies are already reeling in or tottering at the edge of recession.

     Of course the Nigerian economy too slid into recession twice in recent past. But on each occasion, it quickly pulled out. The quick recovery was significantly enhanced by the effective collaboration and proactive interventions of the NationalAssembly.

      It is on record that the performance of the budget has improved under the new stable cycle to such extent that the performance numbers are now almost hundred percent.  

    This is one of the achievements for which the Ninth Assembly has not been granted the deserved credit.

     Instead, the doubting Thomases and mocking birds did not immediately stop laughing. Even while some acknowledged the feat, they doubted it could be sustained.

     However, it has.  In 2020 and 2021. And now again, the Appropriation Bill 2023 was passed by the Assembly on 28th December, 2022.

      According to the Senate President, it would have been passed even earlier, before the lawmakers went on Christmas recess, but for some problems that emanated from the Executive in the process of preparing the Appropriation Bill. Those problems, later resolved through collaborative efforts, delayed but did not frustrate timeous passage of the Bill.

     Therefore, President Muhammadu Buhari signing the Appropriation Bill 2023 into law on Tuesday 3rd January, 2023, which was the first work day in 2023, is historic. Not just for the National Assembly but for the country at large.

     Yet, it is particularly historic for the Ninth Assembly because that is its last Appropriation Bill as its tenure ends in June this year.

     It is noteworthy that the virus of late passage of Appropriation Bills year in year out had infected even state Houses of Assembly. But with the action of the Ninth Assembly setting good example at the national level, the trickle down effect has encouraged a turn around in the process in the states too. Many state governments have embraced this new culture at the national level and those that were not doing well before in that regard have taken the new cue from Abuja.We have seeing virtually all state Governors signing Appropriation Bills before the end of the year.

     There is yet another innovation that has been entrenched in the country’s financial system by the Ninth Assembly. This has to do with the practice of approving the Finance Bill side by side the Appropriation Bill. The Finance Act provides the support base for an effective implementation of the Appropriation Act through some major reforms in fiscal policies of the government.

     For instance, the 2022 Finance Act, which was passed same day shortly before the 2023 Appropriation Bill was passed, is to facilitate amendment to some fiscal laws as the Capital Gains Tax, Company Income Tax, Customs Excise Act, Federal Inland Revenue Service Act, Personnel Income Tax and Stamp Duty Act.

     The Ninth Assembly has made it a tradition to pass this piece of legislation alongside the Appropriation Bill and this is another legacy that the succeeding Assemblies must sustain. All these feats are made possible by the effective and efficient collaboration between the National Assembly and the Executive arm of government.

    Also, through this cordiality, the Ninth National Assembly has accomplished all the items in its Legislative Agenda months ahead of the expiration of its tenure in June. It may also be difficult for some people to believe, but this Assembly has passed more Bills than any other before it.  The Senate President, Ahmad Lawan, noted recently at a public gathering that President Buhari has signed more Bills into law that were passed by this Assembly than any of his predecessors had done under any Assembly.

    The tenure of the Ninth Assembly under Ahmad Lawan’s watch has less than six months to run out.

    However, its legacy and work rate guide us to expect more accomplishments from it until its last day. 

    •Awoniyi is Media Adviser to Senate President

  • How Nigerian economy can improve in 2023

    How Nigerian economy can improve in 2023

    By Dr Gbenga Adeoye

    Usually, when a car is to break down, certain signs will be seen by the owner and over time it gets worse if repairs are not carried out on time.

     For Nigeria, there are some signs of danger. Students who paid school fees and have been debited are now being deported because the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) could not fund the settlement.

     Big manufacturers who largely depend on imported materials are in serious need of forex, but after their naira have been taken by commercial banks and sent to CBN, for months, they are not getting their money.

     Most Letters of Credit (LC) applications and forex bids are just mere papers resting on the table in banks. Most bank workers in LC foreign operations will be laid off in 2023.

     In a short while, if you need anything overseas, you will have to go get your dollar outside the banks and to avoid a problem, you will now have to carry your dollar cash and enter the aircraft with it or else your money will not get to the recipient because CBN may not be able to honour the settlement.

     Most brilliant young men and women have migrated, from doctors to nurses to IT guys and now teachers will join them. Estate valuers, accountants, lawyers and several professionals are migrating in large numbers. This is very dangerous.

    Commercial banks no longer get forex for Form A. Students are now going to be deported because their payments did not get to their schools. Medical treatments and indeed all those essential needs are no more beneficiaries of forex. What a terrible situation. CBN, where is our dollar? Nothing in foreign reserve to settle obligations?

    What is most surprising is that the new notes are not available in banks. Customers still get paid with old notes even after December 15. Something is wrong somewhere. Stamp duty money is said to have disappeared into some pockets. Different stories every day.

     Somehow, you almost want to put a bet on it that such news is untrue, because how do you explain that Nigeria’s five-year budget has gone to the hands of a few guys? How did we get here? This a big question yet without an immediate answer.

    Solutions

    Only what is produced in Nigeria will eventually be available. We must then work out those skills that will enable us to do almost everything here as China did. We may suffer for, maybe, a decade like Cuba and continue to ride old cars and so on but over time, things will improve.

     Billionaires in naira may not even be able to import things through banks as the dollar will not be available in 2023. Dollar demand in the parallel market will go to the roof as almost every importation will depend on the black market. The dollar may go to N1,000 in January, later to N1,500.

     The tax compliance drive will be stronger than ever before in 2023, but the FIRS must be careful to avoid too much pressure on those paying already and rather work hard to widen the tax net.

     Exception from tax based on less than the N25 million threshold turnover will likely end as we may be losing a lot more from small companies in view of the fact that many big manufacturers will face tough times with difficulty in getting forex to buy imported raw materials, and they may begin to close certain lines and relocate them to more stable forex arena in Africa.

     Most airlines will stop their Nigerian route as many have stopped already because they could not get forex to take back their proceeds.

     It means a time will come when you will need foreign exchange to even buy a ticket. As I heard, some airlines no longer accept the naira. Another boom for those in the forex market. This is dangerous as the dollar will keep rising as predicted above.

    Recommendations

    We need all professionals to sit together to solve our problems. As one of my elder brothers said: “When elections are contested and won, the government belongs to everybody.”

     To that extent, I will recommend a government of national unity from all seven major parties: APC, PDP, LABOUR, NNPP, SDP, ADC & APGA. We must join hands to work together to find a solution to our problems. This year requires patriotism and not political fights.

     Some guys that have been in government since 1999 have information about where our dollars are kept and those who stole them. They even know where the accounts are.

     We don’t need to spend money on litigation. All we need to do is to begin to take over that money and bring them back to our foreign reserve account, so we can at least have a new Nigeria. The kind of money in the hands of some people is so much that if they wage war against Nigeria; they may win. 

    Some people have enough money in dollars and pounds kept offshore that is enough to even rebuild all our schools and set up a national carrier.

     Yes, we need all those dollars. There is no need stressing our judges and prison budget. All we need to do is to get as much as we can get to kick the country going and get it back on track.

    We must speed up our development in the areas of roads, rail lines, hospitals, technical schools, universities, and ICT, and reduce the number of subjects in primary and secondary school with a focus on career paths. We must end the lending rate of 35 per cent and have an interest rate to be a maximum of 15 per cent if we want real sector growth.

     Divine intervention in my view also implied that men and women with integrity, character and intelligence will join hands together under God to work for the good of the country: men who understand that they do not need billions to have food and raiment; men who place value on hard work than pleasure.

     We must all join the next cabinet regardless of whoever wins the election and whichever party we belong to. Yoruba, Hausa and Igbo and indeed all tribes and ethnic nationalities must come together to deliver our country from the danger ahead.

    We all know the seven parties and we know the three strong ones and so it must not be personal or party interest anymore but rather national Interest. God bless Nigeria and may God raise men that will fight for the country economically in 2023.

    Dr. Adeoye is a lawyer and chartered accountant. He can be reached via dga@gbengaadeoye.com

  • The just shall live by faith

    The just shall live by faith

    By Peter Obadan

    To the Glory of God and all who deserve honour, I write.

    I write to you my brethren because we are one in Christ. I know the Lord as my Saviour and I have by His grace been in the faith for about 55 years.

    I write to you men and brethren because the earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof. I am a politician inspired by the Holy Spirit. I was elected Prime Deputy Governor of Edo State, “the Heart Beat of the Nation” and was in office from 1992 to 1993,to the glory of God.

    I write to you my brethren to recall to mind that I was in exile for about five years after the military coup of Gen. Sani Abacha.

    I became an active member in NADECO. I was one of the few that was in strategic committee with great minds like Lt. Gen. Alani Akinirade, H. E., Commodore Dan Suleman, Prof. Bolaji Akinyemi, H. E. Sen. Bola Tinubu, Sen. Tokunbo Afikuyemi, Late Ambassador Raph Uwuche, H. E. Chief John Odigie- Oyegun, H.E. Kayode Fayemi and our Late Pa. Anthony Enahoro.

    I write to you my brethren because I love God like you do but, I desire that you understand political issues based on facts and truth, as we all seek an egalitarian society. To correctly extrapolate current issues in arriving at a just, factual and spiritual conclusion, you need knowledge of the past. When done, we can conclude where God is leading us. “We can do nothing against the truth but for the truth”.

    I write to you because I was with our father Archbishop Prof. Benson ldahosa of blessed memory in attempting to direct the political minds of the Saints for leadership in Nigeria. Permit me to write expressly about myself in this paragraph that it might be known that I have not been influenced or persuaded to make this presentation.

    Aside from Mama Archbishop Dr. Margaret Benson-ldahosa JP, OON, I am the oldest member of the ldahosa Ministry having been associated in fellowship when membership of our Pentecostal

    congregation was less than 30. I have served in various capacities in the Ministry. I was a Youth Treasurer, Sunday School Secretary, Sunday school superintendent, National Presbyter member of the Supreme Executive Council, twice Pastor of the Mother Church (CGMI, lyaro), National Auditor of the Church (pro-bono while Papa was alive), Chairman of the Word of Faith Group of Schools, Lecturer, All Nations for Christ Bible Institute; Chairman of the first Constitution Drafting committee, Chairman and initiator of the C.G.M. Sunday School Manual as currently being used,Author of 23 books freely distributed and currently Member of the Benson ldahosa University Council as constituted by Mama.

    I was a founding member of the Full Gospel Businessmen Fellowship and I have directed many religious convocations. I am a Chartered Accountant and Tax Consultant having qualified as a chartered accountant (ACCA) at 26 without going through a tertiary institution. I have been honoured with a Merit Award by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria. Mine is Godliness with contentment.

    I write to you with conf idence realizing that men of fa ith and cloud of witnesses like these my brothers, William Kumuyi, David Oyedepo, Mike Okonkwo, Wale Oke, Joseph Ojo,Ayo Oritsejafor, Felix Omobude, Emma Onofurho and a host of others of the older generation can authenticate or testify to facts herein stated, my attributes,  political standing but , above all , my faith. Let it be known, however,that I desire most what God says about me.

    Therefore, I write to you, my brethren, and to many of you in the faith that I can refer to as my dear children so that you may know the truth, as only the truth can lead us to take the right political decision on who rules Nigeria come 2023.

    Wisdom is the principal thing for dependence and it is profitable to direct. We know that the Government that be is as ordained (permitted) by God. God will always allow a reign of human authority to either bless His people or chastise His children. Romans 13: 1. “Let every soul be subject unto the higher powers. For there is no power but of God: the powers that be are ordained of God”. What we consider weak, inappropriate and not fit and proper to rule, God uses to glorify His name. 1 Corinthians  1:27

    As Christians, we are counselled to pray for those in authority so that we could have peace of mind. 1st Timothy 2: 1-2 “First of all, supplications, prayers, intercessions, and giving of thanks be made for all men;for kings and for all that are in authority; that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all goodliness and honesty”. What manner of prayers do we hear these days?

    We know that when the wicked rule, the people sorrow. Irrespective of how terrible a Government may be, when we pray as Saints and God is introduced into the situation, He changes it for our good.

    What was the story of Abacha? The vibrant youths in their thirties may not appreciate what God did some twenty-four years ago unless they are history students. “The effectual fervent prayers of the righteous, availeth much”. God has not changed.

    I write to you my brethren because I am one of the Pentecostal political forerunner s in our dispensation with the slogans of; No cross, No crown and “when the righteous rule,the people rejoice”.

    Herein, I remember one of our fathers, Samuel Odunaike, who paid the supreme prize while campaigning in 1991. May his soul continue to rest in the Lord.

    I write therefore to you because I have gone through the mill and what I see and talk about in politics , most of my Pentecostal brethren, may not comprehend Politics is not fish and chips. In Nigeria, political issues are dynamic and you cannot theorize on issues.

    While in exile, we fought for the institutionalization of democracy and some of Nigeria’s finest men like late Pa Anthony                Enahoro CFR, Lt, Gen. Alani Akinrinade GCFR, H.E. Chief John Odigie Oyegun, Prof. Bola Akinyemi, H.E. Commodore Dan Suleman, Late Ambassador Ralph Uwuche, Senator Tokunbo Afikuyemi and H.E. Senator Bola Tinubu did put their lives on the line for this nation. In winter and summer, we advocated justice, equity, true federalism and oneness. Like Nehemiah, we desired to build the broken walls of our Jerusalem.

    To the extent that we (NADECO in Exile) conceived a government in exile and as men of knowledge and wisdom, we set in place the type of nation we want and how it should be ruled. We recalled often our forgotten National Anthem “though tribe and tongue may differ, in brotherhood we stand”. We should inculcate this phrase in all our children.

    Let me herein commend Prof. Wole Soyinka for his activation of NALICON and support to NADECO. I must commend Lt, Gen. Alani Akinrinade  and H. E. Senator Bola Tinubu who funded the struggle. H.E. Senator Ladoja and Late Chief Harry Akande were friends of NADECO in exile. I was in charge of the Quadrangle office donated by Lt. Gen. Akinrinade and I can attest to our individual acts because I kept a good diary. Most of you have read my books titled: “Children in Exile” and “Ambassadors in chains” . Please, read the later, it’s just 227 pages and over 5,000 copies were freely distributed

    A change of government of Abdulsalam was initiated by the powers that be, to enable us bring to reality the type of government we conceived, and Chief Anthony Enahoro was suggested as the next President of the country. I was invited to persuade Pa Enahoro by the inner caucus and to this move, former President Ibrahim Babagida took time to talk to Pa Enahoro over the phone, which I witnessed in one of the London hotels organised by Sen. David Mark, and Sen. Tunde Ogbeha and to the knowledge of Chief John Odigie Oyegun because I informed him. Like I did when we signed the Radio Kudirat documentation in Gen. Akinrinade house. I signed for South-South. These two retired generals did so much to effect a change for good in Nigeria.

    Chief Enahoro turned down the offer and so, the men in uniform reached out to President Obasanjo. At a party organized by Late Ralph Uwuche for President Obasanjo after his incarceration, with ten of us in attendance, I was assigned to probe OBJ’s interest . When I had the opportunity, we discussed Papa ldahosa whom he claimed comforted him in prison through his letters, which led him to Christ. Although he told me that he would have nothing to do with presidency, it was obvious that he was also accessing NADECO members.

    Our vision in exile burns in all the members, although it appeared buried for 24 years; buried until now that a David is ripe enough to take over from Saul.

    NADECO members do not all belong to the same political party. However, Senator Bola Tinubu has been running with the vision. It was the collective vision as we desired that he played out in Lagos by recruiting men who could also run with the vision to change the structure and prosperity of Lagos. Still propelled by that vision, he has chosen again to be President. I am persuaded that Tinubu saw beyond religion in the man Shettima that he has chosen to be Vice President.

    I write therefore, to you my brethren because there is an Esther in the house, who will help Mordecai and the children of Isreal. Let the Muslim-Muslim ticket be and let God have His way. The heart of the King is in the hand of God who turns it withersoever He wills. Proverbs 21: 21

    By the sheding of Christ blood, salvation was secured. He is the Blessed Assurance. There is an Esther in the house of Tinubu and by the righteousness of the wife, the man shall be cleansed. ( 1st Corithians 7 vs 14) Brethren, there is an Esther in the house called Remi, Remilekun (Stop my grief) This should be our contentment and this is an Esther who is determined and can declare “if I perish, I perish”. God has gone before us.

    I write to you my Brethren to avoid listening to Satanic verses and voices for many have risen in emotional outburst without hearing from God, the God of knowledge, who knows our end from our beginning. They take the name of the Lord in vain. They speak to draw sadness, over spoken words and quest for puritarian environment, ascribing their statements to God, like the mene mene tekel Upharsin (Daniel 5:25) but their blabbings are vain, like, a sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal.

    I have gone through the mill like I said, and I want to see the tree of democracy we dreamt about in exile grow. Let these ministers of doom realize that he who wills a dagger never wears the crown. They have forgotten vital issue of praying for all those in authority so that we can have a peaceable living environment.

    I write to you my brethren that you may know that after 24years, Tinubu is picking up the mantle of leadership without realizing that he is a tool in God’s hand. He is a battle axe. Senator Bola Tinubu is picking up the mantle in the 25th year of rejection on behalf of all who fought for democracy,those who helped to nurture and bring democracy to fruition, inclusive of all those issues we conceived in exile, during the reign of the military junta of Gen. Seni Abacha.

    Tinubu is standing for all the men and women who fought and died for democracy. He is standing for Ken Saro Wiwa and the students that gave their lives. He is standing for the unknown soldiers who died in the civil war to make Nigeria one. He is standing for men and women who died in plane crashes during the junta’s reign and the young military officers whose plane was brought down.

    This is a divine mandate and Tinubu is only a tool in God’s hand. When God has finished processing this election, the Saints will appreciate that their prayers over the years and their cry for a just society is not in vain.

    Although the f ig tree has not blossomed, let us all rejoice in the Lord for year 2023 is the beginning of greater things for our nation. The God of the valley is the God of the mountains. The God of the hard times, difficult times, perilous times, is still the God of the bountiful harvest to come.

    The race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong…but time and chance happeneth to them all. Eccl 9:1 I am not a prophet, but be assured that this election has been settled by God. Tinubu will be our President.

    Before I say, thank you, Let me appreciate President Buhari for the courage to reprint currencies which as an Accountant I know will in the long run control our liquidity management and strengthen our currency.

    Thank you

     

    • H.E. Rev. Dr. Peter Obadan is former Deputy Governor, Edo State