Tag: atiku

  • Upholding Ondo APC result negates democratic norm, say Atiku, Olumilua

    Upholding Ondo APC result negates democratic norm, say Atiku, Olumilua

    Former Vice President  Atiku Abubakar and a former old Ondo State Governor, Evangelist Bamidele Olumilua, yesterday said the All Progressives Congress (APC) should reconsider its decision to uphold the Ondo State governorship primary election.

    Atiku, in a statement by his media office, said the party’s decision to jettison the recommendation of the Appeals Committee to cancel the election and conduct a fresh one was a negation of good democratic practice.

    He said it was wrong for the National Working Committee (NWC) to disregard the recommendation of the panel, which found reasonable ground for the cancellation of the primary and the conduct of a fresh one.

    Atiku urged the party leadership to always be guided by respect for the rules, fairness, equity, neutrality and democratic consensus.

    Former Lagos State Governor Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, in a statement, called for the resignation of National Chairman Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, who he accused of committing fraud in the Ondo APC governorship primary.

    Atiku said it was imperative for the national leadership to live by the rules of internal democracy and respect for democratic consensus. “You cannot break your own rules without creating problems,” the former Vice President said.

    According to him, since the APC found veritable reasons to review the outcome of the election and was able to establish valid grounds to cancel it and call for a fresh one, the decision to deviate from its own resolution is a negation of due process and an unfashionable hollow in democratic best practices.

    “It was wrong for the APC to have set aside a resolution it had reached aimed at resolving the crisis in our party in Ondo State. It is a recipe for acrimony and division.”

    He stressed that pretending a problem doesn’t exist would not make that problem go away, and advised the leadership to do a soul searching and address this problem.

    Atiku challenged the party to promote the law and due process in the conduct of its affairs noting that they are germane to the party’s unity and stability.

    He urged the aggrieved members of the APC to exercise restraint in seeking redress to the crisis, advising the leadership to retrace its steps and do the needful to restore confidence among the conflicting parties for the overall benefit of the ruling party.

    Olumilua told reporters in Ekere-Ekiti that only the cancellation of the controversial September 3 primary allegedly won by Mr. Rotimi Akeredolu could guarantee victory for the APC in the November 26  election.

    Olumilua warned his party against rebuffing calls for a fresh, transparent and credible primary acceptable to leaders and members of the party and the electorate.

    He explained that the non-conduct of a fresh primary in line with globally-acceptable democratic practices would affect the unity of the party seen as a better alternative “by the good people of Ondo State.”

    The former governor called on President Muhammadu Buhari to intervene in the feud between Tinubu and Odigie-Oyegun in the interest of cohesion and harmony.

    Olumilua said: “The protest, and the kind of information that we received after the primary, is unpalatable and does not portray our party in good light. It does not say well of us as a party that is trying to instill discipline. With this development, what are we instilling?

    “What are we teaching then? What lesson or impression are we creating? Definitely, it is a negative impression that sends bad signal about us and our party.

    “We must urgently correct it now, and conduct a fresh primary for the governorship. Otherwise our party may be heading for failure at the poll, and it will not only stop at this, it will also affect our popularity, and it will affect the unity of our members.”

    The elder statesman described the dispute between Tinubu and Odigie-Oyegun as “unfortunate”, saying it could affect the party, which is just finding its feet at governance.

    Olumila said: “When two elephants fight, the grass suffers. No doubt, this misunderstanding has further caused a lot of damage within our party, and it would continue to polarise the party, and could cause the early disintegration of the party if care is not taken.”

    Olumilua urged the President “to intervene speedily before it is too late” because fifth columnists could also hijack the situation to cause trouble.

  • Tinubu, Atiku, others proffer ways for economic recovery

    Tinubu, Atiku, others proffer ways for economic recovery

    Nigeria needs to tap into its enormous natural and human resources to redirect her economy away from dependence on oil revenue and create a broad economic base to harness it tax potential and domestic investments for sustainable growth.

    This was the submission of political and business leaders yesterday in Lagos at a lecture on “Nigeria’s economy: Growth the only imperative” held to mark the investiture of the president of the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers (CIS), Mr. Oluwaseyi Abe.

    All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu; former Vice President Atiku Abubakar; former managing director of AMCON Mustapha Chike-Obi; Mr Oluwaseyi Abe and other economic and investment experts agreed on the need to diversify the economy and seek alternatives that could guarantee long-term growth and stability, away from the fluctuations in oil prices.

    Tinubu emphasised the important position of leadership and sustained investments in the economic recovery plan, noting that “any orchestra without a solid conductor cannot be successful”.

    He added that investments in economic growth drivers and major infrastructure, such as electricity, are necessary to achieve other aspirations, such as domestic manufacturing base.

    “Today, Nigeria is going through very serious economic challenges. We are blessed with human and materiel resources. The most important component of these resources is human resources; that is why change begins with us,” Tinubu said.

    He challenged Nigerian professionals to think together and devise creative solutions that could help in solving some of the pressing national problems citing the bold pioneering initiative he coordinated with other professionals to champion the course of independent power production.

    The former Lagos State Governor pointed out the need to explore all available options including coal and waste to generate powers.

    Atiku highlighted the need to broaden and increase the efficiency of the tax collection system as a way to ensure Nigerian economy can sustain on the resources of her citizens.

    “We can’t just borrow our way out of our oil addiction. Our governments must live on taxes, the way other democracies do. It will help us live within our means, as it means government can only spend what the people can bear. It will help ensure accountability as tax payers are more likely to ask for accountability when the money comes directly from their pockets,” Atiku said.

    He noted that the constant complaints about oil price, pipeline vandals and lack of funds had tended to divert and distract from the real challenges the economy is facing, which majorly dwell on the unworkable economic model and need to restructure government finances so that politicians have a real incentive to create a more conducive business environment.

    He said the main cause of Nigeria’s economic problem is the addiction to oil revenues and the dependence on central revenue generation.

    “”It is, therefore, clear that rather than praying for higher oil revenues, we should seize the current opportunity to get over our addiction to oil revenues. Discovering new oil wells in the north or south is no substitute. Government should look to sustainable sources of revenue, mainly taxes, duties and other levies. And it can only enlarge the tax base by encouraging diverse economic activities right across the country and investing in human capital development to produce the entrepreneurs, inventors and workers of the future,” Atiku said.

    According to him, rather we need federal government officials who are willing to step back and carefully work out how they can empower the private sector to grow the economy and create jobs. And I don’t mean selecting a few companies deemed worthy of government support. No, we need radical reforms that streamline our bureaucracy and eliminate rules and regulations that stifle innovation. We also need robust management processes that ensure that public money buys us better infrastructure, education outcomes and healthcare.

    Abe said that if the federal government must sell national assets, that must be done through the nation’s capital market.

    According to him, there is nothing wrong in selling the national assets especially those that are under performing to save the economy.

    “The country will surely come out of the recession if actions and measures being taken by the government are properly executed. I see us coming out of recession latest from the first quarter of next year,” Abe said.

  • Atiku: Recession will soon be over

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has asked Nigerians not to despair or lose hope in the face of the current economic recession.

    The recession, he assured, will pass away and give way to economic prosperity.

    Atiku said while it might take some time to get out of the current situation, so much must be done to achieve economic prosperity.

    In a Sallah message by his media office in Abuja, the former Vice President said Nigerians, particularly the Muslim Umma, must learn to their brothers’ keepers.

    While congratulating Muslims on the celebration of of Eid el-Kabir , Atiku urged them to use the opportunity to reflect on the situation in the country and lend one another shoulders of support.

    He said Nigerians should go and celebrate like other people in the world in spite of the economic situation facing the country, assuring them that this storm will pass away.

    Atiku called on Nigerians to continue to work hard, persevere and pray for the success of the policies and measures by the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration.

  • Recession will end soon, Atiku assures

    Recession will end soon, Atiku assures

    Former Vice President and Chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Atiku Abubakar has urged Nigerians not to despair or lose hope in the country as the current economic recession will soon give way to economic prosperity.
    According to Atiku, while it might take some time to get out of the current situation, so much need to be done to achieve economic prosperity since a lot of things were left undone for too long by the nation’s past leaders.
    In a Sallah message released by his media office in Abuja, Atiku said Nigerians, particularly the Muslim umma must learn to be their brothers keepers.
    While congratulating Muslims on the celebration of the festival of Eid el-Kabir celebration, Atiku urged them to use the opportunity to reflect on the situation in the country and support themselves.
    He said Nigerians should celebrate like other people in the world in spite of the economic situation facing the country, assuring them that this storm will pass away.
    He said the Sallah celebration calls for sober reflection, prayers, cooperation and the display of solidarity among Nigerians so that no one feels left out.
    He called on Nigerians to continue to work hard, persevere and pray for the success of the policies and measures being put in place by the APC government of President Muhammadu Buhari to restore the nation’s economy to good health and improve the lives of the people.

  • Agricom appoints Atiku as Chairman

    Agricom Field Services Network, a telecommunication company, has named former Vice President Atiku Abubakar as its Chairman.

    It made the announcement in a statement by its Executive Vice Chairman Adegboyega Olulade.

    According to a report in the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja at the weekend, Olulade said Agricom Network provides extension services to over 250 million registered farmers nationwide.

    The vice chairman expressed delight that the former vice president has agreed to bring his wealth of experience both in agriculture and other successful businesses to bear in Agricom.

    The state reads: “We are happy to have former Vice President Atiku Abubakar as our chairman. As a farmer himself and as someone who recently diversified into the production of animal feeds and fertiliser.

    “We are confident that our chairman will give Agricom focused and visionary leadership and also wish our new chairman a successful tenure in office.”

    The statement also named Dr Adinoyi Onukaba as the Executive Director (North.

  • Atiku kicks as Ribadu returns to APC

    Atiku kicks as Ribadu returns to APC

    Nuhu Ribadu has returned to the All Progressives Congress (APC), The Nation learnt yesterday.

    The former Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Chairman got a letter from Adamawa State chapter of the party seeking his return to the party.

    He is going to be readmitted with a former governorship candidate of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria( ACN ) in the state, Mr. Marcus Gundiri, with their supporters.

    But former Vice President,  Atiku Abubakar, Adamawa State Governor Jibrilla Bindow, and two others have protested to National Chairman John Odigie-Oyegun and the National Working Committee (NWC) against Ribadu’s return.

    The APC leadership told Atiku, the governor and others that the constitution allows an individual to join a party of his choice.

    Once a state chapter of the party is receptive to anyone’s membership, there is a limit to which the National Headquarters can do, they were told.

    Ribadu accepted to return to APC following overtures from the leaders of APC at the national level, ex-Governor Murtala Nyako, the Secretary to the Government of the Federation Babachir David Lawal, the state and local government chapters of the party.

    A June 22, 2016 letter by the Adamawa State chapter, signed by the Acting State Secretary, Alh. Saidu Naira invited Ribadu back to the party.

    The letter reads: “We the entire APC Adamawa State chapter wish to invite you back to your “Home party”, APC.

    “Given your track records and progressive nature, we strongly believe APC  is where you belong to.

    “We are also mindful of the efforts and contributions you made during the merger without which the merger would have been difficult.

    “To this end, we reaffirm our request for you to come home to APC and assist and contribute to the success of the APC government both at the state and national levels.”

    A party source said: “We decided to invite Ribadu to return to APC because he was frustrated out by some PDP elements who defected to our party during the merger and countdown to 2015 elections.

    “Ribadu did so much for APC in Adamawa State but the setback which made him to go to PDP was frustration following a disagreement with some of our leaders, like ex-Vice President Atiku Abubakar, on the impeachment of ex-Governor Murtala Nyako. Ribadu worked tirelessly to save Nyako from impeachment but our leaders paid lip service and stoked the fire which made ex-Speaker Umar Fintiri to remove the former governor.

    “The insincerity of APC leaders in the state made Ribadu to defect to PDP against his own volition. So, he left APC as a result of local politics. It was a state affair but today things have changed.

    “When Ribadu was pushed to the wall, he had no choice than to pitch tent with the PDP which needed a credible candidate. Ribadu was frustrated out of APC for being a true party man to save Nyako.

    “And the PDP elements, who joined APC, were uncomfortable with the anti-corruption stance of Ribadu and his acceptance in the party. So, it was convenient to hatch a plot to kick him out of the party.

    “Today Nyako is vindicated and Umar Fintiri is under investigation by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission( EFCC).

    “We are now out to correct the past by asking him  to return to APC because Nyako has been vindicated. The court said his removal was wrong. Ribadu has also been justified because he insisted that Nyako was a victim of political vendetta and abuse of power. Nyako is back.

    “We have realised that we have all wronged Ribadu. We want him back.”

    Asked if Ribadu has accepted the offer, the source said: “He has agreed to return to our fold. We are all happy with him.”

    Atiku, Bindow, the Secretary to the Adamawa State Government and the Chief of Staff on Monday protested to John Odigie-Oyegun and the NWC.

    The four-man delegation met  with Odigie-Oyegun and his team.

    It was all about Ribadu, a source said.

    The source, a member of the NWC, said: “We were all shocked that the ex-VP came with the governor and two others to prevail on the  leadership of the party not to readmit Ribadu into APC.

    “They spoke of the need for party discipline since Ribadu contested on PDP platform against Bindow. They said Ribadu’s coming back will spell doom for APC unity in the state.

    “They all forgot that they were once in PDP too before defecting to APC. Bindow is a former PDP senator.

    “Some of us spoke about added value which Ribadu can bring to our party as one of the brains behind the merger politics which led to the birth of APC.

    “Contrary to their mission, the leadership at the national level and stakeholders are extremely excited about the return of Ribadu. He is a progressive in thinking and action. The APC needs his service. We became suspicious because no leader of APC at the state level followed them.

    “At the end of the day, the party said constitutionally you cannot stop anybody from joining a party. We told the delegation that it is a state issue. If the state executives of APC accept Ribadu, we cannot reject him.

    “We will however do our best to reconcile all members of the party, whether old or new. Our ultimate target is to keep the APC family united.”

    It was also gathered that President Muhammadu Buhari’s supporters endorsed the return of Ribadu.

     

  • Atiku and the restructuring mantra

    Atiku and the restructuring mantra

    The issue of restructuring Nigeria has been said over and over again but it has received more verve since after former Vice President, Abubakar Atiku, lent his voice about a month ago. The reactions that have trailed Atiku’s submission  he wants the country to be restructured  are such as to suggest that that was just what Nigerians were waiting for. Save for chieftains of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) who have expressed contrary views on the matter, nearly every commentator since Abubakar Atiku’s submission have taken a cue from him.

    The matter has been so well canvassed by the former Vice President himself and other contributors that I find it necessary to repeat the points here, at least for now. What seems to interest me at the moment is to examine why Atiku’s intervention has so raised the matter to another national crescendo, to the extent that it is being said in some quarters that it is a ploy to reposition himself for presidential power. My view, however, is that whether it is for self-serving interest or altruistic motives, Abubakar Atiku has provided Nigerians with a lead and that we should appoint him the arrow head for this very important assignment. To say the same thing differently, the former vice president should be made to realise that having provided this lead and rekindling the interest of Nigerians the way he had done and at this point in time, he has to go the whole hog.

    The question then arises, does he, Atiku, have what it takes to take on this responsibility? The answer is a decided yes. Second question: Will Nigerians be willing to allow him play this role? The answer is another big yes. Third question: Is there anything in Atiku’s pedigree that suggests that he may or could abandon the project half way? The answer is, yes and no.

    First the “Yes”: which is because Atiku, the only Nigerian leader that Nigerians prefer to call by first name, has a precedence of making a dramatic u-turn on causes he had so brilliantly and resourcefully galvanized many a Nigerian. For example, the way he handled the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on which platform he rose to his political pinnacle, would hardly fetch him many accolades. But the “No” because in all that, Atiku’s ultimate concern is justice and fair play, the difference being that there is a ting of radicalism in his approach. Which, in my view, positions him more appropriately to lead the instant cause of re-inventing Nigeria.

    What struck Nigerians, as well as the rest of the world, is that Atiku is one of the most visible leaders of the ruling party. So, calling for “restructuring” at this time (when his fellow party men, including the president, loathe the very idea) and in the language in which he couched his call, took many by surprise. The result was that two points of view immediately emerged in trying to situate Atiku’s submissions at a book presentation event in Abuja. One was (is) that he has fallen out with his people in the APC, notably the presidency. The other was (is) that he is trying to work on the psychology of the people of the former Eastern Region, some of whose kit and kin are currently involved in separatist agitations, through MASSOB, IPOB, Avengers and  what have you. I remember a fellow (an Igbo) saying that Atiku “is telling Ndi Igbo what they want to hear”

    Taken either together, or singularly, the two perspectives offer legitimate ambiance to proceed with the agenda of getting Nigeria re-invented, restructured, re-negotiated or whatever the vocabulary employed. If his views are as a result of a crack within the ruling party, then that re-enforces his progressive credentials; as a fellow who can afford to go beyond partisan proclivities to take a transcendental look at issues concerning the wellbeing and stability of the Nigerian nation. He did it with the PDP, with the New-PDP, even though not many people saw what he saw then. My hunch is that Abubakar Atiku is again seeing what his fellow compatriots in the APC might not be seeing or pretend not to be seeing.

    Much earlier, that is before the New-PDP saga, Atiku saw that the Obasanjo presidency, albeit his being a key actor himself, was about to plunge the nation into a major crisis through his principal’s third term agenda. He started the fight within but some saw him merely as an over ambitious deputy. By the time we knew what was happening, we were almost there. As it is well known, the needless summersaults and quarrels that characterised the transition from Obasanjo to Yar’adua were the fall outs of the aborted, ill informed, third term agenda. If, as is being said, Nigerians actually were desirous of a change in 2015, then it would not be out of place to state that they merely keyed into what Abubakar Atiku saw when he ‘rebelled’ against the PDP with his New-PDP.

    As for the perception of saying what the people of the former Eastern Region want to hear, I think that should gladden the hearts of my people, for finding an ally of the caliber of Atiku. What more can they ask for if there is an Atiku to canvass a cause which majority of his kit and kin up North hardly want to hear. Even if Atiku does not, on his own, believe in restructuring, that we have found a hearing ear in him is a boast and I believe the entire people of the Southern Nigeria should seize it.

    Back to one of the questions we posed earlier: Isn’t it a ploy for kick-starting another presidential project? My answer? Perfect and ingenious! If as is being said the former vice president wants to use the restructuring mantra to further his presidential ambition, then he is, in my view, introducing a refreshing vista into Nigerian politics. For too long, we have complained about politics without ideology; we now have one: The restructuring of Nigeria to make it workable.  Contrary to the belief in several quarters, ideology is not only about Marxism or Socialism, Capitalism, Communism or what have you. As a matter of fact, those nomenclatures hardly exist any longer in today’s global political lexicon. At a point, there was the talk on the need for home-grown ideology. In my view, restructuring Nigeria is one such; if not the most significant, home-grown ideology we should embrace. In other words, if the word “r-e-s-t-r-u-c-t-u-r-i-n-g”, is too long and tong twisting, then we should drop it and simply focus on the fact that the old assumptions on the unity and oneness of Nigeria have become obsolete or completely nonexistent.

    If I were Atiku, there is no better time to pursue a presidential ambition than now. If Nigerians could fall for a campaign for “change” that was hardly well defined and which is proving to be unachievable, then nothing can be more fascinating than throwing up the issue of re-negotiating of Nigeria to provide a fresh start, not just for the purposes of acquiring presidential power, but for the final objective of providing a super structuring that will guarantee the wellbeing for generations unborn, whether they come from the East, West, North or South. Even if it does not eventually lead him to the presidency, Atiku Abubakar should be made to understand that if he pursues the matter of restructuring to its logical end, he would have earned himself a place higher than all the previous Nigeria presidents put together. To be sure, he does not have a monopoly of knowledge but that will not be a problem given that he had in the past demonstrated an uncommon flair for team work.

    Unlike each of the former presidents that were thrown up since the current republic, Atiku Abubakar is very eclectic, more gregarious and detribalised. There are some who even point to the fact that he has in-laws across the country. But I do not personally look at that, because each marriage or each set of in-laws is a potential source of acrimony. I do not know how many in-laws he has across the country but any fellow who has such exposures, as they say of Atiku, and still commands this level of acceptability across, must have something unique that goes for him.

    On a more serious note, however, I would prefer to look at Atiku’s candour, forthrightness and ability and courage to always try to stand out each time he sees that his co-gladiators are doing the wrong thing. Atiku Abubakar, from what we know of him, is a fellow who is at home with his people. Differently put, if a fellow of his standing up North would, entirely on his own volition, decide to align with people in parts of the South to canvass restructuring, then it offers hope that the project is feasible. To be sure, Nigerians are under no illusion that restructuring can take place before 2019. But the good news is that we now have a fellow whom we can hold unto even after 2019, presidency or no presidency. I am aware that my critics may point at previous article in which I came heavy on the former vice president for intervening in the politics of my home state, Imo. But the good thing is that we are now talking about tackling the very matter or matters that necessitated such interventions. By the time we restructure Nigeria, such interventions will no longer be necessary, neither will the critical articles.

    In the past, Atiku was seen as a bad party man. True or false, my view is that what we are seeing is not just another anti party. Now that we know that being a good party man in Nigeria does not translate into being a patriotic Nigerian, we are going to be more cautious in accepting the jibes his party men and their agents in the media are likely to throw at him in the days ahead.

  • Atiku’s call for workable federalism

    Once again, ex Vice President AbubakarAtiku, two weeks back did what he does best – exploiting the weakness of his political adversaries. Atiku who has no apologies for his shifting party loyalty took advantage of President Buhari’s disdain for politics and politicians, forgetting he did not become President only on account of being ‘Mr Integrity’, a virtue that did not help him in his three previous outings until he learnt to play politics. Atiku deliberately chose to educate Buhari, whose government’s legitimacy is under serious threat by Boko Haram insurgency, Fulani herdsmen and Niger Delta militants that the overriding  objective of politics is the ‘protection of individual sovereignty against political coercers’ haddismissed off handedly the unresolved national question.

    Buhari’s attitude is in character with his predecessors’ in office. He has forgotten that he won election through the support of ethnic groups just as Obasanjo, an imposition of Fulani hegemonic class that distrusted MKO Abiola believed the national question was resolved once he became president, or Jonathan who was only allowed to rule in order to pacify the restive South-south warring groups or even MKO Abiola who on his way to winning election told a reporter  that with his election, there would be no need for a national conference to address the national question. Both Obasanjo and Jonathan resisted the discussion and resolution of the national question.

    Atiku’s call for restructuring has since been echoed by groups such asAfenifere, a Yoruba socio-political organisation, the pan-Igbo umbrella body, the OhanaezeNdigbo, as well as some other credible Nigerians likeChief EmekaAnyaoku, former Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, and Maj. Gen. Ishola Williams (rtd.), an ex-chairman of the Nigerian chapter of Transparency International who understand a federal structure itself celebrates tribal identities.

    The truth is that patriotic Nigerians including the murdered SaroWiwa who advocated Nigeria’s 16,000 communities and about 350 ethnic groups be restructured into non-federal states are not the enemies of Nigeria but are driven by institutionalization of injustice by our successive leaders. The enemy of society, according to Ade Ajayi, a celebrated African historian and former Vice Chancellorof University of Lagos,‘is not tradition or ethnicity or nationalism but ….those for purely selfish reason and without love of community try to exploit ethnicity, religion or cultural differences to win popular votes, contracts or promotion’. When Obasanjo’s second term bid was threatened, a man who said he is not a Yoruba leader ran back to his Yoruba ethnic group and Jonathan another opponent of restructuring became an ethnic irredentist during his desperate bid for a second term in 2015.

    Injustice is the bane of Nigerian society. The 1954 census put the figure of the dominant ethnic group, the Yoruba in the western region at 76.4percent, Igbo dominant ethnic group in the east at 64.5 percent and Hausa Fulani in the north at 54 percent. The coalition partners ignored the aspirations of 35.5% and 45% of minorities in their region to create region for the 23.6 minority in the opposition region. Insurrection by the Tiv that demanded for self-actualization was violently and brutally suppressed by the coalition partners using the military.

    But with free flow of oil money from the Niger Delta, those who had resisted break up of their regions started scrambling for more states. Generals Babangida and Abacha went on to create more states and LGA funded from federal purse for the north, allegedly allocated 95%of of the oil blocks to northerners  with the support of a few Niger Delta ‘vultures’.  Babangida, Obasanjo and Jonathan sold $100b Nigerian investment for a paltry $1b. These leaders and beneficiaries of injustices visited on the nation are the only people who insist we are good the way we are

    Federalism as ‘a structured institutional approach to political participation, decision making and problem solving’ has been celebrated as the answer to inter-ethnic rivalry and mutual distrusts  by more than half of the world including the US (1787) and most part of Europe after two devastating world wars. In Nigeria, a vigorous debate and negotiation which started during the tenure of Cameron as Governor General of Nigeria (1931-1935) preceded our own federal arrangement designed to promote‘the unity of Nigeria and protect the interest of diverse elements that make up the country’.While Zik conceived it as an efficient method of administration in a multi-ethnic society,Awo saw it ‘as a philosophy of opportunity to enable various ethnic groups progress at their own pace’. And while Awo considered it best for us because‘Nigeria was a geographical expression (Awo, 1948) Balewa believed up to that time‘our unity was a British intention for our country (Balewa, 1947), and Arthur Richard persuaded the British House of Commons that it was  only the accident of British suzerainty which has made Nigeria one country’, (Arthur Richard 1948).The all Nigerian 1950 Ibadan conference recommended a federal system and in 1954 we had a truly federal arrangement. Our new inheritors of power because of greed betrayed the dreams of our founding fathers and returned us to pre 1954 Nigeria.The ongoing crisis of legitimacy and identification by restive groups which are results of injustice is therefore the challenge facing Buhari and his APC.

    And restructuring is by far cheaper than our current experiences or the uncertainties that lie ahead. It is the cheapest way to fight corruption because there would be no money to steal at the centre. It is the cheapest way to checkmate the menace of Fulani herdsmen because local communities are best at protecting their communities. Instead of some groups trying to impose their values on others, South-south, controlling its own resources will force its leaders to confront its own demons. It will allow zones threatened by desertification to deploy their youths currently condemned to spending nine months in the forest to planting trees while the food basket zone will be strong enough to protect its borders.

    The fears about the resistance of unviable parasitic new power centresto the dictatorship of old divisional centres are the fears of those benefitting from the current unworkable and wasteful system. They include traditional rulers collecting five percentfrom allocation made from Abuja, the local council councillor that built houses after two years in office, the commissioners,ministers and potential governors.

    Just as federal structure is a symbol of our pluralism at the centre, so it will be at the new geo-political zones. And just as Abuja will no more distribute resources itdoes not generate, the new centres will only provide broad policy outlines. They will similarly not carry the burden of wayward constituent units. Edo State in South-south with a resourceful leader payingN25,000 as against N18,000 minimum wage without default will not carry the burden of Bayelsa that is unable to pay its teachers despite earning in one month of what Edo earns in a year. Lagos, going outside to other states to lease land for agriculture, create jobs and guarantee food security for its citizens or Ogun State embarkingon investment drive that will lead to the building of two airports and three sea ports will not carry the burden of Ekiti whose governor’s idea of governance isto be accompanied to open market to buy imported fish and cow skin by hailing thugs and ‘okada’ riders who should be in farm, or an oil-producing state like Ondo thatcannot pay its workers.

    Restructuring and devolution of powers which are far cheaper than what we have experienced since the derailment of our federal structure by ill-informed military who still don’t understand that compromise rather than force is best in managing a multi-ethnic society will put an end to injustice by ensuring everyone sucks his mother’s breast.

  • Atiku on Buhari and restructuring

    Atiku on Buhari and restructuring

    GIVEN the candour and trenchancy of former vice president Atiku Abubakar’s views on the state of the nation last week in Abuja, federal officials may spend more time analysing his motives than understanding the import and relevance of his constructive ideas. Alhaji Atiku had at a public presentation of Chido Onumah’s book, We Are All Biafrans, made scathing and particular remarks on President Muhammadu Buhari’s management of the economy and politics. The president, he said, must find ways of leading the effort to restructure the federation, decentralise it, and make it less suffocating. He was also uncomfortable with the president’s economic management style, especially his approach to the herdsmen crisis.
    The former vice president caused many to wince when he suggested that Nigeria was saddled with “a leadership that is not prepared to learn from the past and a leadership that is also not prepared to lead.” A few days earlier, the president had told media interviewers he had no interest in revisiting past efforts, particularly those of his predecessor, ex-president Goodluck Jonathan, at restructuring the federation through a national conference. Whether Alhaji Atiku was responding to the president’s unwise view is not clear; but it is enough that the views are strong, relevant and weighty. The president himself had been roundly condemned for denouncing efforts to restructure the federation in the face of mounting national challenges to peace, stability and growth. So, when the former vice president weighed in on the same subject, and couched his view so trenchantly, he was likely to be accused of directly referring to and denouncing the president’s stance.
    In some respects, the former VP had earlier made some of the remarks attributed to him, though with perhaps less severity than last week’s. His views are probably gaining traction because of the president’s disregard for the true change the electorate thought they had voted for. Of course, the electorate knew the president must grapple with a broken economy made anaemic by the Jonathan government. It was also clear by the time of the last polls that many other aspects of the nation were either broken or about to be broken. Once sworn in, the president had to prioritise the nation’s existential challenges and deal with them firmly and urgently. But almost immediately, it also became clear to the public that the president needed to expand his vista and multitask very quickly, for too many other ancillary challenges were beginning to crop up and complicate the problems, making them intractable.
    But instead of responding to the widening gyre of crises gnawing at the country’s innards, the president stuck to his default mode, scorned the campaign to extend his areas of concern, isolated himself from both his party and other support bases elsewhere, and postured grandly as a lawgiver whose person, views and perspectives were sacrosanct and incorruptible. That standoffishness, combined with the deepening and metastasizing national crises, and a general unwillingness to explore new ideas and seek help from a wider political and ideological base, have unnerved the country and appeared to stultify the president’s efforts. This may explain why Alhaji Atiku’s seemingly harsh advice resonated so widely last week.
    The Buhari presidency will be tempted to focus on Alhaji Atiku’s person. They should resist that temptation. Even if the former vice president was motivated by malicious reasons, his views are not. He was right on Niger Delta; he was right on the need to repair the country’s political structure; he was right to ask for new economic paradigms; and though it may grate on the president’s nerves, the former vice president appeared to be giving the problems of the country more thought and was even sounding presidential, not to talk of courageous, a commodity he had never lacked. It must be humbling to the presidency that Alhaji Atiku addressed these salient issues, and did it very well. Should the presidency join issues with him on his observations, they would embarrass themselves, for they would be forced to debunk arguments admired by the rest of the country, and put the lie unsuccessfully to frustrations sometimes unspoken but nonetheless felt. No matter what motives propelled Alhaji Atiku to give vent to his views on the nation’s crises, he has done the Buhari presidency a world of good to draw their attention to these problems in their first year in office.
    It is also not unlikely that Alhaji Atiku, an unrepentantly ambitious politician, had other motives for publicising his succinct views. He has never hidden his ambition to be president, and inspired by the trajectory by which President Buhari assumed the presidency, the former VP would hold out hope for a glorious electoral future. In terms of courage, which he exemplified by his opposition to former president Olusegun Obasanjo between 2003 and 2007, he has shown himself to be a forthright and sensible politician and individual, one not afraid to gamble his future on a single throw of the dice. He has proved adept at synthesising public yearnings far better than President Buhari, and is more accessible, more gregarious, more gifted at discovering talents and mentoring them, and more nationally inclined, with friends everywhere. There is no doubt he would make a good president, probably a better president.
    But he could not have defeated Dr Jonathan in 2015, for the epithets hurled at him by Chief Obasanjo in the years before 2007 stuck to him painfully and remorselessly. He was of course healthier and more endowed than the then Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate, the late Umaru Yar’Adua, but Chief Obasanjo had told the country and the world that Alhaji Atiku could not be trusted with the country’s money. The former vice president did everything in his power to shrug off what he described as criminal defamation, but nobody was buying. He ran a good race on the ticket of the then Action Congress (AC) party, but it was a short and hopeless fight. His sojourn in the political wilderness has however not attenuated his vigour, his friendliness, or his presence of mind.
    For a man so gifted, so thoughtful and so indomitable, it is a mystery that his virtues are not accompanied or reinforced by the principles and character that define and ennoble greatness and statesmanship. He generally does not flip-flop on ideas and philosophies, but he is unpredictable in party loyalties, jumping from one party to the other casually and almost insouciantly. Had he acquired the staying power and fortitude necessary to undergird his fidelity to ideas, and had he eschewed the lust for power which constantly triggers and dogs his nomadism and political peregrinations, it is not inconceivable he would today be leading the PDP and, in view of a faltering All Progressives Congress (APC) bent on self-destruction, be positioning himself for a powerful bid for the presidency in 2019. But notwithstanding his weaknesses, the nation is blessed to have him in politics, especially the courage and ideas he propagates so admirably.

  • Atiku and his 2019 manifesto

    Atiku and his 2019 manifesto

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar is man God has blessed tremendously. He is fantastically wealthy and has a doting family. By divine providence he was promoted to Vice President when all he had aspired to in 1999 was govern Adamawa State.

    So what more can a man ask for? Simple answer: the Nigerian presidency. Atiku has run unsuccessfully for president for 23 years beginning in 1993 with the defunct Social Democratic Party (SDP).

    I am reminded of Atiku’s unrelenting push for the presidency by his powerful but pregnant intervention at the presentation of Chido Onumah’s book ‘We are all Biafrans’ in Abuja recently. The central thrust of his speech at the event was that Nigeria wasn’t working and the federation needed to be restructured.

    That is by no means a novel observation. Indeed, our unresolved national question has been at the root of sundry national and constitutional conferences since the late 70s.

    While it is hard to fault much of what Atiku had to say, it is equally difficult to condemn Buhari after 12 months because he never made any commitment to ‘restructure’ Nigeria during the campaigns. His focus was on the corruption, economy and insecurity.

    Atiku makes all the correct noises but cannot defend himself against critics who say that while in office as Vice President – especially in the first four years – he had all the clout to influence and actualize some of the things he’s now criticising the incumbent for.

    A deeper reading of what the former VP had to say shows clearly that this was no ordinary speech. This was an assessment of the state of the nation, a review of Buhari’s first year in office and a proposal of what he would have done differently if he were president – by one of the incumbent’s erstwhile rivals.

    This is a man putting himself in the shop window saying ‘hey, look, I’m your alternative’. The speech read like the outline of the manifesto for a possible 2019 run.

    I was stunned by what looked like a blithe dismissal of what Buhari has done in 12 months or is likely to accomplish in what is left of his tenure. These were the remarks of someone who had lost hope in what is possible and attainable with the current leadership.

    Soundbite after soundbite was unsparing. Here are a few choice quotes.

    “If I had won, I would have sold 10 per cent shares in the NNPC; that will give me 20 billion dollars which would build infrastructure for the Niger Delta but we will always end up with accidental leadership.

    “Again, here we come back to the same economic challenges that are facing the country but we also have a leadership that is not prepared to learn from the past and the leadership that is not prepared to lead.”

    Having said all that, Atiku then does his grading.

    “He promised to look into issues like power, insurgency, unemployment, corruption and diversification and if you are to take two out of five, you can give him a pass mark. He has dealt with corruption and with Boko Haram. For power, give him time.”

    Where I schooled two out of five is not a ‘pass mark’ but fail grade. So Atiku’s generousity is not supported by the parameters he has laid out. If he was trying to soften the impact of the hard knocks he had just delivered, he was unsuccessful.

    There’s something to be said for telling truth to power. But such friendly fire coming from a ruling party grandee like Atiku can only be indicative of frustration and disaffection. It should disturb the APC given that it was delivered at a time the government was taking flak from all sides for what some consider a less-than-stellar outing in the last 12 months.

    Like the clever politician that he is, Atiku’s speech has something for everybody. For advocates of restructuring in the South West and South East this is music to the ears; for separatists groups like MASSOB and IPOB there’s something; for Niger Delta militants and sundry avengers the prospect of selling a chunk of NNPC to develop the region should cause their heads to swim with dollar signs.

    I have no doubt that Atiku has prepared to be president and has a good idea of what he would do if he ever got there. In some ways, he’s like the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo who prepared himself rigorously but never found a way through the political thicket.

    I suspect that even if Buhari and APC lift their game in the next three years, Atiku would still run. However, he’s unlikely to do so on the platform of the APC which would probably still present Buhari if he’s good health.

    He won’t run on the platform of the PDP because the damage done to the former ruling party isn’t something that can be undone in one electoral cycle.

    That means he would most likely seek out a third force – an amalgam of refugees from PDP and APC as well as stragglers from existing parties.

    It would be folly to dismiss such a proposition out of hand. If APC formed barely two years to the 2015 polls could go on to win a comfortably victory, all things are possible.

    That is why rather than dismissing the Atiku speech, Buhari and the APC should regard it as a warning shot fired across their bows.