Tag: Buhari support organisation

  • Buhari support organisations hold thanksgiving

    The Buhari Support Organisations (BSO), Southwest Zone, led by Prince Felix Awofisayo, has held a thanksgiving service in Osogbo, Osun State.

    The service was to thank God for the successful and peaceful outcome of the 2019 presidential election in favour of President Muhammadu Buhari, and to offer prayers that the impending Supreme Court judgment on the Osun governorship election will be decided in favour of Governor Gboyega Oyetola.

    Prominent clerics present at the thanksgiving were Dr Taofeek Abdulhameed, Deputy Imam of the Federal Polytechnic, Ede; Special Apostle J. F Ogunsola from the Cherubim and Seraphim Movement Church, and others.

    Governor Oyetola, who was represented by the Deputy Chief of Staff, Binouyo acknowledged the impact of support organisations in politics, and gave great kudos to the strategic efforts of the organisation.

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    Prince Awofisayo thanked God for the re-election of President Buhari, who he described as a believer in social justice “and the solidarity of communities”. He also prayed for Oyetola’s success at the Supreme Court.

    He said: “The Next Level will be pivotal for the good health of the republic as well as the consolidation of what President Buhari has already started, which is the creation of a political economy that will benefit the majority. We give thanks that under the guidance of our creator, the president is committed to waging a no holds barred attack on poverty.

    “In the Next level, the war will be fought with rigour, the foundation laid for poverty to be eradicated. When the history of our time is written, those who rallied around the ordained banner of social justice through the Next level will have their names on the pantheon of the honourables.”

  • Low turnout at Buhari’s one million-man march

    A one million- man march for President Buhari organised on Thursday by the Buhari Support Organisation (BSO) in Niger state witnessed a low turnout.

    Organisers were clearly disappointed as crowd didn’t turn out as expected.

    The march started at the Trade fair complex in Sango, Minna at 10 am with less than 100 people.

    However, as the march continued to Government House and rounded off at the Buhari campaign office opposite the old state secretariat, some other people joined in the march.

    People from the 25 local government areas of Niger state were expected but there was no representation from over 20 local government areas.

    The Nation noted banners representing people from Bosso and Chachanga local government areas.

    While the target was meant for one million people, the crowd was not up to 2,000 as observed by our correspondent.

    Speaking to newsmen after the march, Chairman of the Buhari Support Organisation in Niger, Mallam Umar Shuiabu refused to comment on the low turnout but said they never induced anyone to join the march.

    He expressed satisfaction over the turnout and the number recorded at the march but refused to give the total head count of participants.

    “The march was organised to garner support for Buhari. We have never had a government that has fulfilled its campaign promises like the Buhari administration.

    “We did not induce anyone with money to come out to march. The people you saw during the march joined because of their love for the President. We do not rent crowd. People came here on their volition.”

    Shuaibu called on Niger people to vote for the President on Saturday, saying Buhari ‘s administration has been able to turn the nation into a prosperous economy.

  • 2019: I’ll reward hardwork, loyalty this time — Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday assured his supporters that their handwork and loyalty would be adequately rewarded.

    Buhari gave the assurance in Abuja while delivering a speech at the inauguration of his support group tagged, “ Together Nigeria’’.

    The event was organised by the Buhari Support Organisation.

    Buhari, who expressed gratitude to the organisation, said, “some individuals and organisations might be feeling disappointed because we have not been able to please everyone.

    “I would like to assure you that this time, handwork and loyalty will be rewarded adequately.’’

    According to the President, the event reminds him of the political struggle and support he has been enjoying from the group over the years.

    He, therefore, endorsed the plan put in place by the Buhari Support Organisation to reposition the organisation and strategise towards success in the next election and beyond.

    “This once again gives me further encouragement, hope and optimism in our political journey,” Buhari said.

    While acknowledging the overwhelming nationwide support he has been enjoying over the years, Buhari said his administration was already celebrating the landmark achievements so far recorded.

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    He expressed gratitude to the group for sensitising Nigerians to the successes recorded by the governing All Progressive Congress (APC).

    He also expressed appreciation to the Nigerian celebrities for their contributions to the growth of the country’s entertainment industry as well as projecting the good image of Nigeria abroad.

    “I would like to thank our celebrities for projecting the image of Nigeria globally and your contributions to our entertainment industry,’’ he said.

    ‘Together Nigeria’, which is made up of Nigerian celebrities, is an advocacy group supporting the re-election of President Muhammadu Buhari in 2019. (NAN)

  • Oil boom: Deconstructing Buhari’s facts

    Ibrahim Apekhade Yusuf, who fact-checked President Muhammadu Buhari’s claims on state of the oil sector from 1999 till date, shares the outcome of his findings

    President Muhammadu Buhari last Tuesday while speaking to members of the Buhari Support Organisation (BSO) at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, heaped praises on the late head of the military junta, Gen. Sani Abacha for building roads and developing infrastructure in the country.

    Abacha was Nigeria’s military Head of State from 1993 to June, 1998 when he passed away.

    Buhari said “No matter what opinion you have about Abacha, I agreed to work with him and the PTF road we did from here to Port Harcourt, to Onitsha, to Benin and so on… On top of other things in the institution, education, medical care and so on.”

    President Buhari also wondered why the country is still in debt despite the huge income from crude oil realised by previous administrations.

    Speaking inter alia, President Buhari said: “I have to repeat what I want public to know here. Some of you may not have heard it. Either there is no power in your place or even in the television, I said and I challenge anybody to check from Europe, Asia and America. Between 1999 and 2014, Nigeria was getting 2.1 million barrels per day at average cost of $100 dollars per barrel.

    “It went up to $143. So Nigeria was earning 2.1m million times 100 times 16 years seven days a week. When we came, it collapsed to $37-38 and it was oscillating between 40 and 54 sometimes. I went to the Governor of Central Bank; thank goodness I did not sack him; he is still there! I went with my cap in my hand but there were no savings, only debt.”

    However a fact check on some of the claims made by Buhari showed that he was mostly wrong.

    The claims

    He had claimed that oil prices averaged $100 per barrel between 1999 and 2014, when in actual fact, Brent crude, the benchmark grade for Nigerian oil, sold for an average of $55.8 per barrel in nominal terms within that period, according to data compiled from the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).

    Specifically, the BP Statistical Review which list oil prices since 1861 till 2016 showed that the average prices from 1999-2004 was $44.

    Buhari had said ‘‘I challenge anybody to check from Europe, America and Asia; between 1999-2014, Nigeria was producing 2.1 million barrels of crude oil per day at an average cost of US$100 per barrel and it went up to US$143.”

    Buhari was elected in May 29 2015, on that day a barrel of Brent crude traded for $65.56 according to a historical price compilation on the Financial Times markets portal.

    Brent would average $57 that year and it wasn’t until December 2015 that the price slipped to an all-year low of $37.93 per barrel, perhaps this is the period the President was referring to, as a supply glut exacerbated by American shale output and the resumption of Iranian exports, combined with slowing Chinese demand to send prices tumbling.

    Buhari is however closer to the actual daily production average with his claim of 2.1 million barrels daily.

    Between 1999 and 2014, the average daily production was 2.3 million barrels.

    The low point in that period was in 2002, when Africa’s largest oil producer pumped an average of 2.1 million barrels daily. Three years later, in 2005, the country pumped its highest volumes of the period- some 2.6 million barrels daily. However there was a huge slump in production to as low as 700,000 barrels per day at some point at the height of the Niger Delta militancy between 2006 and 2009, before President Umaru Yar’Adua declared an amnesty that helped oil output rebound.

    Buhari’s statement that he went to the CBN Governor cap in hand to get a bird’s eye view of the state of the economy while it is true hardly means anything. The external reserve is the dollar equivalent of oil revenue that the country earns and has already been disbursed to the government in naira by the central bank, meaning it shouldn’t be considered as the government’s savings, except if adjusted for cash stashed away in the ECA or federal government savings.

    The Excess Crude Account (ECA) is used to save oil revenues above an amount derived from the budgeted benchmark price and was created in 2004 by then President Olusegun Obasanjo.

    There was $2 billion in the account as at May 2015 when Buhari came into power. The savings in the ECA was as high as $20 billion before the Goodluck Jonathan administration.

    It is unclear if federal government savings were factored into the gross $30 billion external reserves with the Central Bank in May 2015.

    Regarding debts, according to the Debt Management office (DMO), Nigeria’s debt profile was N12.12 trillion as at June 2015, a month after Buhari assumed office.

    The domestic portion amounted to N8.4 trillion, with federal government bonds accounting for the largest chunk at 63 percent, while the external portion was $10.3 billion, with multilateral loans from the World Bank Group and Africa Development Bank Group dominating the pack at $7.23 billion.

    As at December 2017, the domestic debt had nearly doubled to N12.6 trillion, with bonds still accounting for the largest share- 69.23 percent, while external debt rose 83 percent to $18.9 billion.

    It would appear that the debt has all but risen since Buhari rode into power, but then he could point to ailing oil revenues as a reason why his administration racked up record debt to stimulate an economy that choked under the pangs of the oil price and production downturn and slipped into its first recession in 25 years in 2016.

    The President’s claim that his administration splurged on capital budgets in 2016 and 2017 is not far from the truth, as far as it is in naira terms but not in dollar terms.

    In defence of  Buhari

    With the Buhari administration’s chaos sucking up all the attention, it’s been able to move forward on a range of issues, according to Femi Adesina, Special Adviser to the President (Media and Publicity) on some 10 good things accomplished so far by the administration.

    • According to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), the economy has recovered from the slow-down and eventual recession, which started in 2014. There has been improvement with stronger growth for three successive quarters. From contracting by 0.91% in Q1 2017, the economy has grown by 0.72% in Q2 2017, to 1.17% in Q3 2017, and 2.11% in Q4 2017.
    • The Q1 2018 GDP shows that the economy has recorded a GDP growth of 1.95%, compared to a contraction of 0.91% in Q1 2017.
    • The growth is driven by Agriculture and Industry, which shows that finally, after more than 50 years of lip service, the Nigerian economy is on the road to diversification. The oil sector’s contribution to GDP is 9.61%, while non-oil sector’s share is 90.39%.
    • One of the factors responsible for the positive performance of the economy in Q1 2018 was the spending of about N1.5 trillion on infrastructure projects in 2017.
    • For the past 15 months, inflation has declined consistently from 18.72% to 12.48%. The country is steadily on the road to single digit inflation rate.
    • The first quarter of 2018 saw a continuous growth in total capital importation into the country, the fourth consecutive quarterly increase since Q2 2017. The total value of capital imported is $6,303.63 million, a 17.11% growth over the figure reported in the previous quarter.
    • Foreign reserves stand at $47.79 billion, compared to $29.6 billion inherited in May 2015, after about six years boom in oil prices in the international market. The increase came at a time of modest oil prices, showing transparency and accountability by government.
    • Nigeria’s Stock Market ended 2017 as one of the best-performing in the world, with returns of about 40 percent.
    • Tax revenue increased to N1.17 trillion, in Q1 2018, a 51% increase on the Q1 2017 figure.
    • Milled rice production has increased from 2.5MT to 4MT, and rice imports have dropped from 580,000MT in 2015 to 58,000MT in 2016. Millions of dollars have been saved.

    These are just little among the good things happening to the Nigerian economy. Only the wilfully blind will not see it, but it does not stop the good work, which continues.

    On exiting recession last year, President Muhammadu Buhari had said he would not consider the job done, until the ordinary man feels the impact of the rebounding economy on his life and pocket. We are inexorably on that road, no matter what scoffers may say.

     

  • Buhari supporters warn against tampering with INEC leadership

    Accuses Jonathan of returning Nigeria to ‘inglorious ABN days’

    Buhari Support Organisation, the umbrella body of all voluntary groups working for the election of the All Progressive Congress (APC) presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari,  has said that any attempt to tamper with the leadership of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) will amount to tampering with the credibility of the forthcoming elections and the independence of the commission.

    The group also alerted on plots by President Goodluck Jonathan and his supporters to bring back the inglorious days of the Association for Better Nigeria (ABN) by using the court to scuttle the elections.

    Addressing a news conference in Abuja on Wednesday, the organization’s Director of Media, Dr. Chidia Maduekwe, said current campaign against INEC by paid commentators and supporters of President Jonathan was aimed at tampering with the conduct of the elections and return the country to the days of June 12 when the election of late Chief M.K.O Abiola was annulled.

    Maduekwe also alerted Nigerians on a possible legal plan to truncate the elections.

    He said that part of the propaganda will be to force the Chairman of INEC, Prof. Attahiru Jega, to resign or be forced to proceed on terminal leave and be replaced by another northern Muslim professor who will carry out the bidding of the government and its agents.

    He accused President Jonathan and his supporters of breaching the tenets of the Abuja Peace Accord, but was quick to state that the President and his associates do not have the monopoly of fragrant breaches of the accord.

    He said: “It has become imperative to ask Mr. President to rein in his aides if he must be seen to walk his talk that, his ambition is not worth the blood of any Nigerian. His aides and associates are working at cross purposes to this his favorite cliché by daily fanning the ambers of hate, pursuance of death wish and even going as far as stalking of General Muhammadu Buhari outside shores of this country.

    “The memories of a nearly successful assassination attempt on the life of GMB are still fresh in our minds. Our patience, our meekness, our prayerfulness and our patriotic commitment to maintaining the national peace should not be misconstrued for weakness.

    “Let it be stated clearly that Mr. President’s aides and political associates do not possess the monopoly for flagrant breaches to the Abuja Peace Accord. The hour has come to henceforth disallow these psychopathic sociopaths that have taken over the megaphone of Mr. President and tell them in very clear terms that enough is enough.

    “We are ready to rise to the occasion to take down any unwarranted, baseless and inflammatory condemnation shot in our direction henceforth.”

     

  • ‘Why Buhari is boycotting NEDG organized debates’

    The Buhari Support Organisation, the umbrella body of all support groups campaigning for the election of the Alll Progressive Congress presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, has explained why the former head of state decided not to take part in the debate organised by the Nigeria Election Debate Group.

    The spokesman of the organisation, Dr. Chidia Maduekwe, said the composition of the debate panel is a clear indication that there was a ground design to rubbish the hard earned integrity of Buhari.

    He noted that if the military with its integrity could be roped into Buhari’s certificate saga, anything can be done by the ruling Peoples Democratic Party to rubbish the APC presidential candidate, saying “it is our duty to be vigilant always and refuse to offer the platform for PDP to achieve their mischievous objective.”

    He said: “The Buhari Support Organisation wishes to underscore our candidate’s decision not to be hoodwinked into participating in the sham debates promoted by Mr. Sola Omole of NTA and some other pro-Jonathan individuals from African Independent Television.

    “A cursory look at the composition of the panel reveals that it includes the likes of Mr. Mike Omeri, a Director – General of the National Orientation Agency and a close associate of the last Minister of Aviation, Stella Oduah, who was a major financier of Jonathan’s election bid in 2011 and Ms Sally Mbanefo, the DG of Nigeria Tourism Board.

    “With such composition, the NEDG is certainly tinted and cannot be seen to organise a credible debate. In a severely corrupted third world nation, one cannot reasonably expect a political appointee to organise a fair debate that could result in an electoral loss for his employer.

    “The other principal promoters from NTA and AIT represent the two electronic organisations that have made no secret of their unalloyed support for President Jonathan’s re-election bid. These television stations are presently the overt campaign vehicle for the PDP presidential candidate.

    “The recent hate documentary that ran for several days on AIT is a pointer to the extent that Jonathan handlers are prepared to just rubbish the hard earned integrity of Gen. Buhari. We recall that in 2011, it was alleged that one of the President’s Chief Economic advisers obtained questions in advance and forwarded them to Mr. President’s ministers for answers.”

  • Buhari to subject campaign funds to ‘public scrutiny’

    Buhari to subject campaign funds to ‘public scrutiny’

    The former Head of State, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (rtd) Support Organization said at the weekend that funds accruing to the All Progressive Congress presidential aspirant’s campaign organization will be subjected to daily public scrutiny.

    The organization also said Buhari is prepared to support any aspirant that emerges from the party’s presidential primaries slated for this month.

    The Head of Media, Publicity and ICT of the organization, Dr. Chidia Maduekwe, said at a media briefing that the Organisation is currently working on a website where Nigerians can monitor all donation to the retired General’s platform.

    Maduekwe said: “Like Buhari said, we are going to be transparent about everything. At the moment, we are working on the website which you can assess daily and see how much is coming in. A lot of money has come in, but I want that site to be functional so that you have the accurate figures. The amount coming in will be opened to everybody every second to view.

    On whether Buhari will accept money from other Nigerians, he said: “First, you build on your strength. Buhari’s strength is the crowd. Where you go for his campaign, you will see the large crowd that comes there. We want them to have a sense of buy in into the Buhari project and that is why we have established the crowd funding platform. By doing so, we have not disenfranchised any other willing partner.

    “As of today, we have a platform called Buhari Crowd Funding group. That is an innovation. Every second, some money is being paid into account by concerned Nigerians. So, that could serve as a pool to even pay for the ticket. You are aware that in politics, it is not usually how deep your pocket is.

    “Today, Barack Obama does not have a house of his own, but lives in an apartment. But he funded a campaign. We want to say that if people believe in General Buhari as the arrow head of the change we so deserve, then, they will be willing to make their contribution.

    “So, having borrowed money to buy his form, we have set up a platform that can provide money to pay back that loan and indeed fund his campaign. It will be a litmus test of how popular he is and whether he is really the peoples’ President in waiting.”