Tag: Bamanga Tukur

  • Jonathan appoints Tukur Ambassador- at-Large

    Jonathan appoints Tukur Ambassador- at-Large

    President Goodluck Jonathan has approved the appointment of Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, the former National Chairman of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), as Ambassador-at-Large.

    The Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced the appointment in a statement yesterday in Abuja.

    The statement said Tukur would be “assigned special duties by the President” under the new appointment.

    It chronicled the former PDP chairman’s achievements in public and private service.

    The statement said: “Tukur served as the General Manager and Chief Executive of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) from 1975 to 1982 and Governor of the then Gongola State in 1983.

    “Between 1994 and 1995, he served as Minister for Industries.”

    The other positions were: Vice Chairman, International Ports and Harbours Association; Chairman, International Cargo Handling Association; and Chairman, Governing Council of Institute of Business Development.

    Tukur, as until his appointment, was the Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC), a position he assumed since January after he resigned as PDP chairman.

  • Nyako’s impeachment plot suffers setback

    Nyako’s impeachment plot suffers setback

    •Stakeholders protest Tukur’s grip on party

    Plot to impeach Adamawa State Governor Murtala Nyako has been stalled, following a split in the House of Assembly on plans by a former National Chairman of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, to make his son, Awwal,  the next Deputy Governor.

    Ten of the 25 lawmakers have opted out of the impeachment plot.

    The lawmakers are suspecting that Tukur might still enthrone his son as the next governor in 2015 after Nyako might have been removed from office.

    Their fears were borne out of the fact that Tukur installed over 70 per cent of members of the Adamawa PDP Executive Committee.

    A source said: “The euphoria of the 100 per cent PDP majority in the House of Assembly appears to be short-lived, especially following the visit of Kano State Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso to Adamawa.

    “Kwankwaso, who met with Nyako and some lawmakers, succeeded in gaining some grounds for the embattled governor.

    “Already about 10 members, though remaining in PDP, have pledged their loyalty to Nyako because of Tukur’s perceived role in the PDP crisis which seems to be resurfacing again.”

    A lawmaker said: “Ten lawmakers have accepted a “ceasefire”, following the Kwankwaso’s intervention.

    “It will be difficult to secure two-thirds to remove Nyako from office. To make matters worse, our leaders are busy plotting on who should be deputy governor.”

    Responding to a question, the source added: “I think the presidency is a circumspect that the impeachment move against Nyako may not fly because we are yet to receive any security brief or report on the governor.

    “With Tukur trying to position his son for deputy governor, the impeachment plot is dead. We want a break from the past; we won’t allow Tukur have his way. Nyako would not have left for the All Progressives Congress (APC), if not for the face-off with Tukur.”

    Some PDP stakeholders have protested Tukur’s continuous grip on the party.

    A source, who spoke with some newsmen, alleged that Tukur is in control of the party’s State Executive Committee.

    He asked the party leadership at the national and state levels to make sure that no caucus is given advantage, if PDP wants to win the state in 2015.

    He said: “All is not well within Adamawa PDP even though we seem to have a common political obstacle in Governor Murtala Nyako.

    “Already, our leaders are split along pro and anti-Tukur’s caucuses having realised that Tukur had positioned 70 per cent of his loyalists in the State Executive Committee.

    “The former National Chairman recently called a caucus meeting of the elders/stakeholders, together with the loyal trusted PDP Executives in the state he installed, to strategise on how to make his son’s aspiration a reality.

    “At one of such meetings in Abuja, it was resolved that any member of local government or state Executive Council who is not willing to support the ambition of Awwal Tukur must be flushed out.

    “There was a follow up meeting in Yola where the same position was reiterated by Tukur’s caucus.”

     

  • Jasmine Tukur hug socials

    Jasmine Tukur hug socials

    PRETTY Jasmine, one of the 12 daughters of the frontline politician, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur  is gradually hugging stardom.  Her calmness and beauty draw so much attention to her. She was one of the guests at the recent launch of Polo Luxury- ‘Polo Avenue’. During the wedding of  Ahmed, the last of the seven sons of former Peoples Democratic Party Chairman last month, Jasmine also played a prominent role.

    Just like her sisters, she had all her education in Nigeria before she proceeded abroad to further her studies. She shuttles between Ashburn, Virginia where she lives and Nigeria.

  • Bamanga Tukur  plans superlative  wedding for son

    Bamanga Tukur plans superlative wedding for son

    COME 19 April, 2014,the Lagos social scene will be shaken to its foundation, as the former Chairman, Peoples Democratic Party, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, plans a superlative wedding for his son, Ahmed. The younger Tukur will be tying the nuptial knot with Karimot Bamisedun, a daughter of a popular business tycoon, Alhaji Rotimi Bamisedun from Ikorodu, Lagos State, at the prestigious Eko Hotel and Suites. Many high-powered and influential personalities from all walks of life are expected to grace the occasion even as aso-ebi and invitation cards have been sent out.

  • Tukur resumes at NRC

    Tukur resumes at NRC

    Former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Chairman, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, yesterday resumed at the Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC).

    He described President Goodluck Jonathan’s transformation agenda as one which had awakened the sleeping giant that was the Railway.

    Tukur, who praised the level of funding for the corporation, assured that there would be adequate funding to ensure the success of the corporation.

    He said he was bringing to the saddle a wealth of experience, which saw him leave a legacy at the Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA), where he built 18 ports across the country within five years.

    “There is the will, the wish and the available capacity to bring about the kind of capacity we deserve as Nigerians and this is what we are bringing to this job,” Tukur said.

    He pledged to heal the Railways and leave a legacy of transformation that would surpass his achievements at the NPA.

    Said Tukur: “I have come to see for myself what is on ground. My appointment is to find a healing for the age-old institution and with the support of other members of the board of directors and management of this corporation, we will achieve success.”

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • PDP: Impunity is all you know, and all you need to know …

    Concluding his famous “Ode on a Grecian Urn”, Romantic English poet, John Keats (1795-1821), wrote: “Beauty is truth, truth beauty, — that is all/Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know”.

    Keats wrote at a period of intense anguish, almost ennui; when the greens of Britain made way for the grey of industry, and the romantics, ever, ever wary of change, rued the sure and steady disappearance of the green they had known; and all but predicted doom for a future green-less-ness.

    Keats himself was battling intense personal and family tragedies, before succumbing to consumption (tuberculosis) at mere 26. So, in the Grecian Urn’s eternal beauty and happiness, he located, in startling contrast, his own eternal woes, though his life was but a fleeting wind!

    Well, this is no excursion into Keats’s poetry; or even the English romantic genre. It is rather noting some parallels between Keats’ England and contemporary Nigeria.

    Keats’s England was all anxiety over the future, even if its government’s industrial revolution was charting a course that would secure the future, even if the curse of green-less-ness (as feared by the poetic Romantics) would come back to plague the globe.

    Today’s Nigeria is all anxiety over its future. Though spinners of President Goodluck Jonathan insist the President is doing the necessary envisioning to secure a better Nigeria, the ennui of not quite a few is that the president is at sea.

    So, as the hearts of Keats’s romantics skipped a bit, there was evidence that the loss they mourn would breed a future good. In Nigeria’s case, it would appear a double jeopardy: everything is topsy-turvy yet there is hardly any guarantee it would end in any future good. But then, the public are a great one for pessimism, let them! That, as the Pentecostals would mouth, is not the portion of the President and his men.

    Talking about the president, he was in especially boisterous mood the other day in Owerri, when addressing the PDP tribe gathered there. An upbeat president, flush from his impunity of Sanusi-slaying, told the “mammoth” crowd gathered, and warned PDP defectors to retrace their steps, or forfeit their pecking order in the party.

    Not for the president the genesis of their grievances, not for him the emotional dislocation, not for him even the collateral damage for the democratic polity, of a ruling party, unravelling because of its penchant for systemic injustice. All the president knew, and all he and his party needed to know, was the language of threat, the language of impunity. Conform, or else …

    Ah, the other day, Jonathan Rivers Man-Friday, the wike-wike-talking Nyesom Wike, was threatening that should his Oga-at-the-top, Jonathan, win in 2015, Governor Rotimi Amaechi would be arrested and post-haste thrown into the slammer! But what if he does not win? That, to him, is no option. So, Amaechi, start shivering and trembling!

    And even old man, Bamanga Tukur, now in a rehabilitative railway camp, was also all threat until the party nearly collapsed on his head!

    But then, impunity is what they know, and need to know …

     

     

     

     

  • Why court must stop Mark, Tambuwal, by 79 defectors

    Why court must stop Mark, Tambuwal, by 79 defectors

    Senators, Reps who dumped PDP for APC battle to keep seats

    The 79 legislators, who sued the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) and leaders of the National Assembly over threats to declare their seats vacant, justified their decision to defect from the party yesterday.

    The lawmakers – 22 PDP Senators and 57 members of the House of Representatives, including those who have defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC) – argued that Senate President David Mark and House Speaker Aminu Tambuwal could not declare their seats vacant.

    They contended before the Federal High Court, Abuja that Mark and Tambuwal cannot rely on the provisions of sections 68(1)(g) and 68(2) of the Constitution in declaring their seats vacant because there is division in the PDP and a faction of the party has merged with other parties.

    They argued that the two conditions precedent for lawful defection, as provided in the Constitution – division and merger – had occurred to warrant their defection.

    The planitiffs’ lawyer, Mahmoud Magaji (SAN), argued that – as against the contention by the PDP, its former Chairman Bamanga Tukur and Mark – the power to decide whether a defecting lawmaker’s seat is vacant or not, where his party is factionalised, is the court’s.

    Magaji, who adopted his final submissions in the case, argued that his clients were justified in abandoning the PDP and that the National Assembly’s leadership cannot, by virtue of their defection, declare their seats vacant.

    His argument was in reaction to arguments by Joe Gadzama (SAN) and Ken Ikonne (lawyers to the PDP, Tukur and Mark) to the effect that the plaintiffs’ seats automatically become vacant upon their defection, by virtue of the provision of Section 68(1)(g) of the Constitution.

    They argued in their counter affidavit that the suit was misconceived as the plaintiffs were under the wrong impression that it requires Mark’s and Tambuwal’s pronouncement for the seats of defecting law makers to be declared vacant.

    Both lawyers argued that there was never a division in the PDP to justify the plaintiffs’ defection and qualify them for exemption as provided under Section 68(1)(g) of the Constitution.

    The section deals with instances when seats can be deemed vacant. Section 68(2) deals with the powers of the Senate President and Speaker to declare seats vacant.

    Gadzama, who tendered two judgments from earlier cases involving the Tukur-led faction and the Abubakar Baraje-led faction of the party, argued that the PDP was never divided.

    Ikonne argued that the plaintiffs failed to prove that the party was actually divided to the point of being turn apart. He also argued that the plaintiffs misconceived the nature of the powers vested in the Senate President under Section 68(1)(g) of the Constitution.

    Ikonne said his position was informed by his understanding that the provision of Section 68(1)(g) is not only mandatory; it is self-executing.

    “This is because the vacancy happens by virtue of the operation of the law,” he said.

    Gadzama and Ikonne, who had in their preliminary objections queried the competence of the suit and urged the court to strike it out, urged the court to dismiss the suit, should it resolve the objection in favour of the plantiffs.

    Replying, Magaji argued that the existence of the suits, whose judgments Gadzama tendered, was a confirmation that the party was polarised. He argued that what the Tukur-led PDP sought in one of the cases was that members of its Executive Council be declared the authentic leaders of the party.

    Magaji contended that there was nowhere in the suit decided by Justice Evoh Chukwu of the Federal High Court, Abuja, where anyone denied division in the party. He drew the judge’s attention to a portion of Justice Chukwu’s decision (pages 72 to 75), which he said supported his position.

    Magaji argued that it is only the court that can decide when a seat is vacant where a member defects to another party when there is a division in his old party.

    He urged the court to disregard the defendants’ objection to the suit and grant his clients’ prayers and reliefs.

    Tambuwal, represented by Alex Marama, challenged the suit’s competence and urged the court to dismiss it. He argued that the suit amounted to an abuse of court’s process because it was wrongly filed.

    Tambuwal argued that the suit ought to he initiated by way of writ of summons as against originating summons filed, because issues raised required the calling of oral evidence to resolve.

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), represented by Al-Hassan Umar, chose to be neutral in the proceedings. It filed neither an objection nor a counter affidavit in the suit. It argued that the dispute was a PDP affair.

    Justice Ahmed Mohammed refused Magaji’s request that the court should sanction Senator Ita Enang, who he said urged Mark to declare the seats of some of the plaintiffs vacant, despite a subsisting interim order of the court directing parties to maintain status quo.

    Justice Mohammed, in rejecting Magaji’s prayer, held that the court’s rules made sufficient provision for how issues relating to disobedience to court’s orders should be handled.

    He held that since there was no formal application for an order against Enang, Magaji failed to provide evidence against the senator, “the court is not in a position to sanction the said Senator“.

    Justice Mohammed has fixed judgment for March 26.

    Defendants in the suit include Tukur, Mark, Tambuwal, the PDP and INEC.

    The plaintiffs are, in the originating summons, seeking a declaration that:

    •the circumstance prevailing at the national level and various state chapters of the PDP (4th defendant), which led to factions/ divisions as witnessed at the Special National Convention of the 4th defendant held on 31st August 2013 and holding of a parallel convention simultaeneously at Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre, followed up with the emergence of new National Executive Committee constitute and qualify as crisis, faction and division anticipated under section 68 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 as amended;

    •any of the plaintiffs or other members of the PDP who pursuant to the crisis that led to factions/divisions in the 4th defendant, joined new faction of the 4th defendant or desires to join it or another political party (individually or as a group) is/are saved by the proviso to section 68(1) (g) of the Constitution, as amended without losing his/their elective seats; and a declaration that:

    •in view of the proviso to Section 68 (1) (g) of the Constitution as amended, the 1st defendant or any other officer of the 4th defendant or any person or authority whatsoever cannot declare vacant the seats of any of the plaintiffs or other members of the 4th defendant that joined or who may desire to become members of another political party, in view of the present crisis that created factions/divisions in the 4th defendant.

    The plaintiffs are pleading for an order “restraining the 2nd and 3rd defendants from conducting any proceedings in their respective chambers aimed at declaring the seat (s) of any the plaintiffs or other members of the 4th defendant who joined or intended to become members of another political party vacant” in view of the present circumstance in the 4th defendant as vacant.

     

  • ‘Tukur qualified  to head NRC’

    ‘Tukur qualified to head NRC’

    The management of the Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC) has said those criticising the appointment of Dr Bamanga Tukur as its board chairman were less informed about his achievements.

    The NRC said the former national chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was qualified to chair the corporation because of his clout and records, especially as the managing director of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA).

    A statement by its spokesman David Ndanusa Ndakotsu said Tukur’s appointment had received kudos beyond the nation’s shores.

    It said the corporation benefited from the freight and haulage of goods across the country during Tukur’s tenure.

    The statement said Tukur ensured that the NPA had a representative on the NRC board, maintaining this till date.

    It noted that Tukur had always made a “loud case for investments in the railways.”

    The statement added: “…One of his enduring legacies as NPA’s MD was the famous movement of Completely Knocked Down (CKD) parts for Peugeot assembly plant from Apapa Port, Lagos, to Kaduna, by rail and the head-start the NRC had with the movement of containerised traffic across the country.”

     

  • Comment

    Comment

    For Olatunji Dare

     

    Unceremonial exit of Alhaji Bamanga Tukur is unfortunate despite his personality. PDP does not have respecter of elders, why must this insult happene to him. From Chika

    Dare, your text captioned “Retirement of the lexical kind” sounds very interesting but just note one thing. Babangida, a Northerner ruled the country for eight years. Obasanjo, a Yoruba man also ruled the country for eight years. Remember that there is no oil-well in Mina neither is there any at Abeokuta. Jonathan is of the hen that lay the Golden egg but you people did not know his value. These past leaders did not paint any old building not to talk of errecting any new one yet they remained honoured. Do not forget that the entire south-south and south-east look upon Jonathan as their candidate. You wish to see a united Nigeria but you seem to overlook the bane of the unity. I speak secretly to you that Jonathan’s neglect ends Nigeria coesive bond. Not a threat but of a whole truth. Anonymous

    Sir, I want more light into this amalgamation of a thing. From Ayodele Joseph Akao, Edo State

    You favoured the word ‘dismiss’ against the word ‘retire’ with respect to the disengagement of the service chiefs. There are number of valid reasons to justify the disengagement of a service chief and from newspaper reports that I read the presidency gave at least two of such reasons. There may be reasons to suspect every move our president makes but I do not think you were fair to him this time around. From Col. Peter Ulu (rtd).

    I read with worry the comment of Femi Fani-Kayode. I saw him as a religious and sectional bigot whose sense of social decency has badly deranged. Or how else can a man who was a minister and was alleged to have left office with poor records turn round to preach a poorly worded sermon – the gutless eunoch… He can only deceive the teens! His insult on our President is sad and Femi is an ingrate! If he feels he can whip up cheap sentiments, he is a joker! Anonymous

    Olatunji, so what terminology are you suggesting instead of amalgamation? Should we use cohabitation of the southern and northen protectorate as a terminology? Anonymous

    Mr. Dare, your article was a true direction of my thought how then do Nigerian council of elders think in this direction or Mr president? Another article for the young generation to claim their destiny. Thanks! From Peter, Abuja

    Re: Retirements of the lexical kind. Bamanga Tukur had bowed out after the forced exit. Who knows tomorrow regarding this occurrence. However one injustice committed against Bamanga tukur was that, he came in democratically but removed undemocratically. That however is a lesson for us all that ‘No condition is permanent’! From Lanre Oseni.

     

    For Segun Gbadegesin

     

    The ouster of the former PDP national chairman, Bamangar Tukur, may be a stepping stone to something better for the party, who knows? But Nigerians, I think, are more concerned with how the PDP and its ruling government could be reformed to give the people a sense of belonging in their much touted transfomational agenda, or give way for a viable alternative than who goes out of the party and was replaced by who. We are by no means interested in the strategy at using party politics to divert our attention from more important and urgent national problem – our economic reform. From Emmanuel Egwu

    Why is our ones objective ‘The Nation’ gradualy turning to an APC bulleting? Objectivity has been thrown into the trashcan. From Gabriel, Jos.

     

    For Gbenga Omotoso

    “The power of dream” is knowledge based and well researched. Nigerian politicians should put the interest of the nation on their priority list and avoid corruption and rancour. From Sunday Fiola esq, Sango Ota, Ogun State

    Unlike Biblical Joseph ‘The Dreamer’ which is spiritual and eventually came to pass, I agree with you 100 per cent on your analysis of day dreamers. Do not forget to include others like Buhari to balance your beautiful and bitter truth write-up. So far, I commend APC for what they have done in Lagos. However, APC and PDP should also not be in another mid summer night dream come. From J. Williams, Lagos.

    It is good to dream uncle Ggenga, as I am dreaming to be the governor of my state (Imo) so that my family members will get their own share of the cake. Anonymous

    Re: The power of dream. The power of dream you believe are oftentimes unrealistic could be 50-50. For some, dreams could be a reality. Fayose, Ladoja, Akala and Omisore may not be in your loved camp, at least one of them in the supposed dream, will prove your conclusion wrong. I hope tribunal will not bail you out as usual! Tukur had learnt that Nigerian politics is not the ‘truth’ one bares in totality afterall all those five defected PDP governors that were acclaimed ‘bad products’ while in PDP are being worshipped by ACN-CPC/APC today. When Suntai is ready to listen to the truth, he will succumb. From Lanre.

    My dear Gbenga, your piece on “The power of dreams” is not only interesting but amazingly fascinating. In each of the instances you took up, you examined with the precision of soothsayer and prophetic icing. I suggest that you do those concerned a favour by extracting a memo from your labour for their purpose. Anonymous

    Dreams power the world without it there will be no meaninful progress. Kudos to those who dream. Although ambition and vanity do not help matters. From Peter Nwakpa

     

    For Tunji Adegboyega

    The piece is interesting. The truth is that unemployment is synonymous with capitalist economy and ours is a peripheral capitalist order. Why? Because it is based on private profit. The whole thing will change when the toiling masses conquer political power and organise a humane society. From Amos Ejimonye.

    It is very unfortunate that good governance is not in Nigerian leaders’ dictionary. We are the laughing stock of the international community due to bad governance. Corruption and social vices have become ‘untouchable’ issues. How can we move forward? Let us pray now. From Gordon Chika Nnorom, Umukabia, Abia State.

    Thanks for publishing my ‘musing’ in your column last Sunday. This is the abridged biography of the average Nigerian. From pregnancy, his or her mother works at least 10-12 hours a day to support the father whose income is not sufficient to take care of the family (that is if he has any income). From birth he/she begins to live with hunger and every other form of deprivation. Have you noticed that one of the very first thing an average Nigerian child knows is “Up NEPA”!. Then, after wangling through school, he/she is forced into the labour market where all kinds of jackals are waiting to exploit him/her. Tell you what, there are many graduates out there who will sacrifice almost anything to secure a 15-hour a day job to earn N30,000 monthly. Believe me, there are graduates in this country today who work 8-10 hours a day and earn less than N15,000 naira monthly. Yet, our legislators are the highest paid in the world; they are even earning more than Obama and Angela merkel of Germany and our ‘coordinating minister’ keeps telling us that the economy is improving. My brother, anyone who says he/she is ready to die for this county should be told upfront: only those politicians deserve to pay whatever price Nigeria requires to experience peace and have a shot at progress. God bless you for your insightful write-ups.

    National Assembly has indirectly become the National Directorate of Employment. To get a good job in any government establishment in Abuja these days, you must have a link to a federal lawmaker. That is why 2015 is going to be hot. All of us must become lawmakers and political office holders in order to survive! From Okwudiri, Abuja.

    I am embarrassed that your piece in the January 26 edition of The Nation on Sunday almost suggests it’s wrong to bat an eyelid if a man or boy is underpaid or treated poorly on the job … Yes, you did mention the London educated guy but there is no parity in your presentation as far as male/female disenfranchisement is concerned. I guess speaking out for males equally would have made you lose what’s left of your manhood. From Mike, Port Harcourt.

  • How not to save the Railways; Wanted:  A Housing President

    How not to save the Railways; Wanted: A Housing President

    So Bamanga Tukur of Chairman PDP and NPA ‘infamy’ or fame in the 1970s is back in transport, as chairman of the Nigeria Railway Corporation. Is this a blessing for Tukur and Nigeria or a blessing for him and a curse for Nigeria? Did his record in NPA including an investigation into his involvement in a $5m private purchase of a ship, recommend him for the job? Did he open the state branch of the CBN for a party spraying event?

    Chairmanship of the railway corporation is a national moral assignment requiring integrity. To fully recover from the 40+ years deliberate destruction of Nigeria’s railway system in favour of road trailer and tanker transport, Nigeria needs a strong modern, vibrant nationwide, all inclusive, non-politically or ethnically biased railway and railway policy. It is difficult to see how and what Bamanga Tukur brings to the railway table that will justify his appointment. Yes, the railway corporation is suddenly juicy with many new contracts, but is it Bamanga Tukur’s task to bleed the railways and contractors in order to raise funds of the party in power towards the 2015 ‘s-elections’? I think not.  Is he there to rest, after the hypertension of the PDP chairmanship? I hope not. He should better rest at home.

    Is he in the railways because of his tremendous knowledge and expertise in transport, modern engineering and 400km/h fast trains? Definitely no! Is his job for personal compensation and financial gain as chairman after a job well done in his party? Who knows? Whatever the truth, Bamanga Tukur may have a conscience especially at his age of 80+ now that God is close at hand. His party is fond of floating 80+ year olds as if the 40-60-year olds are incompetent, though they are presidents in other countries. After all President Jonathan saw other leaders in banks, business and politics in Davos. How many were 80+? Nigeria must once again endure Tukur as chairman of railways and the consequences of Tukur, if the railways staff do not strike in protest, and if Civil Society does not protest adequately. Tukur has probably supported the destruction of the railways in the past or support the benign neglect of the railways under all governments till this one. Why would Jonathan send Tukur, not known for success, to head one of his more successful projects? After all, who objected to the railway evacuation of goods from the NPA harbours throughout Nigeria during these last 40 years? Has he had a change of heart? Can a camel lose its hump? If not Nigerians should demand his redeployment to be chairman of prison commission or ask him to retire.

    I was invited to a television programme on the housing shortage last week. My contribution was brief as I did not say what was expected. So I will say my piece here. The reason Nigeria has a housing problem is totally political. There is no great ‘Housing President’. We have a lot of lip service from presidents but little practical action. What little is done often benefits a fraction of the civil service class with special housing and land allocations. Though Dangote is the 25th richest man in the world, not including silent shy Nigerians and retired generals, the poor housing situation is compounded by the high price of cement under his cement ownership, the land policy in Nigeria with the politics of the Certificate of Occupancy, the high cost of land and building materials and the almost absence of genuine mortgage loans and decent outright or long-term purchase terms.

    The great nations of the world built mass housing through politics- government programmes and policy decisions of the leadership- some mired in corruption with corrupt construction companies frequently in court. In spite of this corruption, the housing gets built and the loans are given. The post-war building programme that gave most Americans a home was a presidential directive to give work to the returning soldiers and the people a lift out of post-war depression.

    In the UK, it was the building policies of the Labour Party which provided council housing for the masses. In Lagos and most of Nigeria, most of the official housing was for government workers, taken over from the colonialists GRAs and police barracks. Awolowo’s AG and successors did build estates, some of which fell into private hands. It was during the time of Jakande of Lagos State that massive attention was paid to housing. He can rightly be called ‘Jakande the Builder’ as his policies and actions gave many Lagosians a chance to own a home even though 40 years later most of them are crumbling. The federal government has attempted to build token estates in every state but political squabbles made some of them to be located in insalubrious areas and being federal government contracts, the quality was often less than standard. The private sector has also tried to intervene but the resultant efforts are usually high end multimillion housing scams, I mean schemes. The result of these efforts is a massive under-supply of common man and middle class housing, estimated to be between 14 and 17million homes or apartments. Nigeria knows it cannot build high-rises, as our poor maintenance culture will make the upper floors uninhabitable with security risks of gangs running estates as happens worldwide. Nigerian needs a ‘Housing President’.