Tag: BUHARI

  • Femi Adesina and Buhari’s regrets

    Femi Adesina and Buhari’s regrets

    • By Ibrahim Mustapha

    Sir: Femi Adesina, former media aide to ex-president, Muhammadu Buhari last week said the former president regretted some of the decisions he took while in office and felt he could have done some things better. The ex-presidential spokesman stated this while speaking at a programme tagged ‘Media Dialogue with Femi Adesina’, organised by the Association of Veteran Journalists in Osun State.

    The former presidential spokesman did not tell Nigerians which policies his former boss carried or failed to carry leading to his regrets. But he seemed to be more specific on the benefits of naira re-design policy, few weeks to 2023 general elections. 

    Prior to his election in 2015, Buhari denied the existence of petroleum subsidy and called it a fraud. He promised to stop it if elected. During his campaign, Buhari promised to fight corruption, fix the economy and secure the country. However, upon assumption of office, the former president came to term with stark realities and met a mountain of problems ranging from broken economy and deteriorating insecurity.  While he underrated the magnitude of problems outside the power, he was overwhelmed by the same problems when in power.

    Read Also: How I will tackle inflation, naira, forex crises, by Cardoso

    The subsidy payment which he promised to stop jumped up under his watch. The subsidy payments continued to gulp trillions of naira until he left office. Insecurity which was confined to the Northeast, with Borno State badly hit by the activities of Boko Haram, snowballed and became a national phenomenon with bandits, killer herdsmen and unknown gunmen allowed to operate with little resistance.

    Buhari’s regrets did not come to many Nigerians as surprise. Rather, it should serve as a wakeup call to our leaders that, power is transient. There is life after power. That is the period leader regrets his actions or inactions while in power. The present administration of Bola Ahmed Tinubu needs to look before it jumps. The time for politics is over. What Nigerians need now is good governance anchored on accountability.

    President Tinubu will not live to regret if he can fix the country’s four refineries. This will guarantee affordable premium motor spirit (PMS) to Nigerians and thereby moderate the inflation currently on rampage. Tinubu will not regret if he can tackle the menace of insecurity bedevilling the country – the bandits, killer herdsmen, unknown gun men and criminals holding the country to ransom. He will have no regret if the 33 million, multi-dimensionally poverty stricken Nigerians are uplifted and enjoy good standard of living. He will certainly not to regret if the poorly paid civil servants receive decent and better wages.

    •Ibrahim Mustapha,

    Pambegua, Kaduna State.

  • Mosan-Okunola distributes palliatives to residents

    Mosan-Okunola distributes palliatives to residents

    •  By Muinat Ajibade-Alasela

    The Mosan-Okunola Local Council Development Area has distributed food items to community members and council staff.

     The event, which took place at the Secretariat, was attended by representatives of Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), League of Imam of Alfas and community leaders.

     Council Chairman Adebisi Adebajo said that the current economic situation called for urgent intervention, adding that the distribution exercise would cut across the council political wards.

    She stated that the intervention would go a long way in helping the masses cope with financial pressure of the moment.

     Mrs. Adebajo said: “In cushioning the effect of subsidy removal, we know what is going on with our economy. We want to assure our people that this programme of palliatives distribution is going to be a continuous one. We will try as much as possible to support and assist our people because of the situation of the economy in the country. I assured them that next month we are going to do better by the special grace of God.”

     She said the items given were rice, garri, beans, sugar, and tomatoes, among others.

    The council boss urged the residents to support the leadership with prayers.

    Read Also: Impeached Ogun council boss lied against me – Abiodun

    Vice Coordinator of CAN in Mosan-Okunola LCDA, Felicia Bakare, expressed appreciation to the chairman for the gesture.

     “We really appreciate her and we pray that Almighty God continue to strengthen her. She promised us a lot of things and I believe she is going to do it,” she said.

    An Islamic cleric, Abdul Salam Agbede, thanked the chairman for her kind gesture.

    Iyaloja-General of Mosan-Okunola Local Council Development Area Elizabeth Ogunlade lauded the effort of the chairman and urged her to add more food items in the package that would be given next.

    All Progressives Congress (APC) Chairman in the area, Alhaji Waheed Orire, advised the residents to exercise patience as the items would go round.

  • How Buhari spends post-presidential days

    How Buhari spends post-presidential days

    • By Garba Shehu

    This week, President Muhammadu Buhari clocked 100 days away from office after completing two terms of four years each as President of Nigeria.

    He chose to stay in Daura to be far away from Abuja in order not to distract the new APC administration and in the hope also that the distance will make it possible for him to have a good rest and to care for his farm which had not received as much attention as it needed while he was away.

    He goes to the farm four days of the week and is upbeat about how well the crops and his animals are now doing. He gets a good measure of rest but the visits have not abated. To manage the numbers, he has a weekly program drawn for him as they did while he was in the Villa.

    Visitors are scheduled on the program but there are so many people who just start their motor bikes and cars to head out to Daura to him in the belief that he has the time to receive all visitors.

    Among his many “special guests” are party faithful, grassroots groups, farmers, artisans, artists, praise singers, nurses and doctors, religious leaders, community leaders and several other professionals. Not left out are those who benefited from the administration, one way or another.

    The other day, he was musing the decision to remove fuel subsidy by the Tinubu administration, saying he had hoped that it would lessen the pressure on him by constraining the large number of people who pick up their transport and head to Daura to see him from all parts of the country, but that he had noted that instead of they coming one by one, his friends, including the poor and the marginalized now group themselves, share costs to hire buses to come to see and talk to him.

    So while it is the case that some in the country were happy that he was no longer in office, there are some, even more that continue to cherish and admire him.

    In the eight years he led the country, Muhammadu Buhari had taken many decisions and as is human, one or two may have been wrong. But no one, not even critics, can question his intentions when those decisions were taken.

    There has not been a single area that has not been touched by the Buhari government, with massive, positive changes in the eight years he held fort.

    In the normative functions of our governments, an administration takes four to five major decisions in four years and they rush to the public square to celebrate themselves. Looking at the records he left, the Buhari government has taken hundreds of major decisions in the eight years it was in office, and yet you hear nothing but criticism upon criticism.

    The promise of tackling corruption and establishing a strong democracy was a prime factor in the rise to power by Muhammadu Buhari and the All Progressives Congress party in 2015.

    On coming to office, the administration directed all Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) to close their accounts with deposit money banks to fully operationalize the Treasury Single Account. TSA was launched in 2012 but left on the drawing boards. More than 17,000 bank accounts were closed and an average of four billion Naira in monthly bank charges was saved. Government revenue, it was found out, was being banked in personal accounts and signatories were, in some instances, big men and women who had retired from service.

    Read ALso: Earthquake: Buhari, AfDB boss condole with Morocco

    This was closely followed with the institution of the Integrated Personnel and Payroll System, IPPS to cover all MDAs in spite of great opposition by the armed forces and the universities. Ghost workers in excess of 50,000 were flushed out and savings in hundreds of billions made.

    The last administration established “project lighthouse,” a financial data integration engine that helped to identify unpaid debts put at more than five trillion Naira, out of which a good part has been recovered. It subscribed to the Open Government Partnership, OGP in 2016, instituted the Whistleblower mechanism which has been legislated into law, fast-tracked Identity Management taking registered entries to well above 100 million from just about 20-25 in 2015, boosted assets recovery at home and abroad with enhanced laws that ensured transparency in the management of the funds and generally increased the latitude of power and authority of anti corruption agencies and the office of the Auditor General of the Federation.

    Throughout these eight years, no bribery allegations against the person of Muhammadu Buhari were ever made.

    One of the of the greatest achievements of the Buhari government has been that it diversified the economy. The administration achieved self-sufficiency in rice, and financed millions of small farmers of 23 different commodities, an effort that helped to boost the export of agricultural commodities.

    In addition to programs such as the Anchor Borrower Scheme, the Buhari government launched the Presidential Fertiliser Initiative, following the success of which Nigeria has become a net exporter of certain variants of fertilizer;  it set set up Special-Agro Processing Zones, resurrected the National Agricultural Land Development Authority, NALDA, set up the National Young Farmers Scheme, Agriculture for Food and Jobs Program and the National Livestock Transformation Program, NLTP among others.

    The NLTP was the administration’s effective response to herder-farmer clashes which spiked a few years back, that have substantially been curbed.

    The Buhari government launched programs  to streamline 46 million vulnerable people into the country’s development process, men and women who were otherwise deprived of it as the nation progressed and in way, helping thereby to increase their faith in democracy. Two million poor and vulnerable households received N10,000 bimonthly stipend per month; 10 million school children received a meal a day which has boosted school enrollment and following presidential approvals, so many schemes- Nigeria’s Micro Pension Scheme,Survival Fund, National Youth Investment Fund, National Special Public Works Program, COVID-19 Targeted Credit Facility, Survival Fund, Nigeria Investment and Growth Fund, the Development Bank (created in 2017) and the enhancement of the Bank of Industry just to cite a few have  all come  into play to make life better for the citizens as part of the massive changes in the economy.

    The Covid-19 pandemic was brought under control due to the relentless leadership of President Buhari. In fact, the country was among the top few that came out with strong economic activities after the pandemic. It has happened due to the farsightedness of the President and the effective leadership of the efforts by the former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Boss Mustapha.

    Today Boko Haram terrorism has almost been quashed. There has been a massive improvement in health infrastructure, a significant and new education policy has been framed, and even a policy against open defecation has been formulated and is taking hold in many states.

    No one should be angry at some revisionist characters whose only focus is the delegitimization of significant Buhari legacies.They refuse to acknowledge that bomb explosions, suicide bomb incidents and all that stopped when President Buhari stepped in. The National Security office was ruthless in denying End User Certificates, EUCs to those bringing in Urea fertilizer. They impounded shipments of fertilizer for over 5 years to freeze the bomb-making industry controlled by terrorists thereby helping to bring these atrocities to a standstill. The so-called critics don’t want to acknowledge the great job done by the nation’s intelligence agencies in diminishing the IPOB, its affiliates and other secessionist movements. The National Intelligence Agency, NIA single-handedly worked with our neighbors, especially Niger Republic in bringing down illegal small arms and light weapons importation into Nigerian territory by 78%.  This agency carried out extensive work on the blocking of the insurgent Cameroonian Ambazonian network’s  infiltration into Nigeria. Our security and intelligence operatives were virtually awake 24/7 and the President was well aware at all times on the evolving situations.

    Buhari’s critics don’t want to acknowledge how General Marwa’s arrival on the scene completely paralyzed the activities of big time drug syndicates. What General Marwa did in just one year has not been achieved in our National history. Even the Senator Hadi Sirika that they want to smear has improved aviation security beyond any of his predecessors. His efforts are acknowledged by international organizations including the International Civil Aviation Organization, ICAO and by many other countries. Where were they when he was keeping awake at night to ensure that the Abuja runway was repaired in record time? Or working to fully execute the modernization of terminal buildings in Lagos, Abuja, Kano, Enugu (plus runway) and Port Harcourt?

    It’s no mean achievement that the Nigerian aviation sector made the world’s second fastest recovery from the COVID-19 crisis.

    The critics don’t want to acknowledge that maritime security experienced such a turn around when Admiral Gambo came on board. In less than one year, the International Maritime Bureau was singing the Nigerian Navy’s praises for normalizing the dire security situation in the Gulf of Guinea, GoG. Their reports clearly stated that for the first time in 27 years, the GoG had become the safest maritime environment.

    There has not been a single area that had  not been touched by the Buhari government. We have seen massive positive changes in the last eight years but as they say, the one who is pretending to be asleep is harder to wake up than the one who is actually sleeping.

    Bullies who attacked governments and “something dropped” will continue to antagonize Buhari borne of anger from lost opportunities. A certain Buhari “critic” who served a Military Governor in one of the Northern States, even his underwear was bought from government coffers. When they came in they freed thieves, robbers and receivers of stolen goods and even gave them a working capital!

    Within a few weeks, crime returned to Kaduna, and yes, the other places and he has the effrontery to speak as he did. This society has no use for such squalid nonsense!!

    How many of these people do you think were happy when President Buhari said “no more free money”?

    Buhari said money in National Security Agencies is for security. Lazy men and women who can’t work cannot just walk in and walk out of that place with bags stuffed with  money in a free-for-all. These ones have nothing to teach anyone. President Tinubu, a wise politician will equally see through their masquerade.

    Muhammadu has done his part and left. History will judge him, and fairly I think.

    • Shehu is ex-President Buhari spokesman
  • Buhari expresses pain over deaths, destruction in Morocco earthquake

    Buhari expresses pain over deaths, destruction in Morocco earthquake

    Former President Muhammadu Buhari has expressed sadness over the loss of many lives, numerous injuries, and extensive damage caused by the powerful earthquake that struck central Morocco.

    In a personal letter to King Muhammad VI, the ruler of Morocco, with whom he said he had a good working relationship while in office, the former president said he was really saddened by the disaster and the attendant deaths and destructions.

    Buhari’s message was contained in a statement circulated on Monday, September 11, by former senior special assistant to the president on media and publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu.

     The ex-president said: “It is with a deep sense of sadness that I write on behalf of my family and myself to express our deepest sympathies and condolences to you and the people of the Kingdom of Morocco in the wake of the devastating earthquake that struck your country on 8th September 2023.

    Read Also: Buhari: it’s victory for democracy

    “I am deeply saddened by the loss of lives and destruction of property caused by the earthquake. I stand in solidarity with Your Majesty and the people of Morocco in this difficult time and pray for the swift recovery of those who were affected by this tragedy. May the souls of the departed rest in peace, and May Allah bring peace and solace to those affected.

    “While extending, once again, my condolences, please accept, Your Majesty, the assurances of my highest consideration and esteem.”

    The letter, sent to the Royal Palace in Rabat Morocco was personally signed by the former President.

  • Buhari: it’s victory for democracy

    Buhari: it’s victory for democracy

    Former President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday described the decision of the Presidential Elections Petition Court (PEPC) on the dispute over the February 25 election as a victory for Democracy and Nigerians.

    In a statement by his spokesman Mallam Garba Shehu, the former President said: “If anybody has won today, it is the democracy and the people. With the verdict of the Supreme Court, the election period is over and it is time to put the heat and dust behind us.

    “From here, the new APC administration led by Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu should get the support of everyone in order to deliver the promises it made to the people.”

    Read Also: JUST IN: Labour Party rejects PEPC’s judgement

    The statement reads: “Former President Muhammadu Buhari has expressed his happiness with ruling of the PEPC confirming the victory of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and its candidate, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and his running mate, Vice President Kashim Shettima in the February 25 election.

    “The PEPC has written history by spurning intimidation and all manner of prejudice to deliver justice according law to a majority of citizens whose wish is that the choices they made are respected.

    “The former President also voiced his appreciation to all citizens for maintaining peace throughout this period and prayed for continued progress and development under the APC government.

    “He sends warm congratulations to the president, the vice president and the APC on the victory in court, expressing his best wishes to them in fulfilling the peoples aspirations.”

  • New book on the relentless battle between Buhari and his conscience to be released on tomorrow

    New book on the relentless battle between Buhari and his conscience to be released on tomorrow

    A compelling new book on the struggle between President Muhammadu Buhari and his conscience throughout his leadership in Nigeria is set to be released this upcoming Monday.

    Titled “Conversation with Muhammadu Buhari’s Conscience,” this book delves deep into the conflicts of principles and wills that Buhari faced as he made monumental decisions that directly impacted the lives of over 200 million Nigerians.

    It was written by Paul Powell, a reformative author who sought out and engaged Buhari’s conscience to uncover the underlying motivations behind the General’s significant choices as both a military and democratically elected leader,.

    Read Also: IFAD, GEF lift economy of 78m smallholder farmers across 100 countries

    The book unravels the intricate dance between power and morality. Buhari served as Nigeria’s military head of state from December 31, 1983, to August 27, 1985, and as the democratically elected President from May 29, 2015, to May 29, 2023.

    The prologue warns readers that Buhari’s conscience’s story “is not for the faint of heart,” setting the stage for a gripping and thought-provoking read.

    With chapters such as “Buhari’s Conscience, the Unseen Navigator,” “The Burden of Leadership,” and “Aisha, Rare First Lady and Moral Compass,” the book offers a comprehensive analysis of the role Buhari’s conscience played in shaping Nigeria’s fight against poverty, insecurity, and corruption. Additionally, it explores the influences that shaped Buhari’s ethical and moral standards, examining the lenses of conscience from spiritual, emotional, and psychological perspectives.

    Notably, the book includes a chapter titled “The Assessment of the Buhari Presidency,” which presents a roller coaster of emotions as defenders and critics of the administration passionately present their justifications. Esteemed personalities such as Shehu Sani, El Rufai, Peter Obi, Aliko Dangote, Garba Shehu, Dele Momodu, and Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala provide their perspectives on Buhari’s leadership.

    The publishers said readers can now pre-book the digital version or order the print version in paperback or hardcover on Amazon.

  • What Buhari told Melaye after budget presentation in Abuja

    Since the picture emerged of President Muhammadu Buhari pointing his index finger at Senator Dino Melaye after he presented the 2020 budget at the National Assembly on Tuesday with Dino responding by hailing him with a salutary fist, there have been speculations as to what the President was telling the senator.

    Observers who have followed the confrontational stance of Melaye with the Buhari government and the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) closely were quick to guess that Buhari was issuing a threat to the cantankerous senator. But a source who was at the scene of the interaction has told Sentry that what Buhari said to Melaye was nothing of a threat but a question that is pregnant with meanings.

    According to the source, Buhari simply asked Melaye: “You mean you are still in this chamber?”

    Of course, the question is open to different interpretations considering the issues around Melaye. Since his days as a member of the House of Representatives, the senator who until he was sacked by the Court of Appeal yesterday represented Kogi West has come across as a querulous fellow whose presence is known to provoke crisis in the legislative chambers.

    But he has been unusually quiet in the 9th Senate; a development that many has attributed to the failure of the former Senate president, Dr Bukola Saraki, to return to the upper chamber following his defeat by the APC candidate in Kwara Central during the last National Assembly elections.

    Still, other watchers of events would interpret Buhari’s question as an indication that Buhari had already got wind of the direction of the Court of Appeal judgment that sacked Melaye on Friday and was simply expressing surprise that the deposed senator was still in the chamber.

  • Xenophobia: S/African authorities again frustrate evacuation of second batch of Nigerians

    The evacuation of the second batch of Nigerians from South Africa owing to ongoing xenophobic attacks, suffered an interruption on Tuesday following the delay in granting landing permit to Air Peace.

    The airline has volunteered to evacuate Nigerians willing to return to the country following the recent violence against foreigners in the southern African country.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the airline in collaboration with the Federal Government had on Sept. 11 evacuated the first batch of 187 Nigerians from South Africa.

    There was a plan for the airline to evacuate another batch of 320 Nigerians who had indicated interest to return home, with the flight expected to arrive in Lagos at 7.00p.m on Tuesday.

    However, Mr Allen Onyema, Chairman of Air Peace, told newsmen in Lagos that the airline’s B777 aircraft deployed for the operation was still on standby at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Lagos.

    According to him, the aircraft is supposed to have departed Lagos at 1.00 am, but was denied landing permit by the South African authorities.

    “We did not take off at 1:00am as scheduled because South African authorities are yet to give us landing permit.

    Read Also: Xenophobia: 320 Nigerians to return from South Africa on Tuesday – Mission

    “We are hopeful that they will give us the permit. Our crew waited till 3:00 am, but when the permit did not come, they went back to the hotel.

    “Once we get the permit we will set off to South Africa. We don’t want to speculate but we are hopeful they will give the permit,”Onyema said.

    NAN reports that the South African authorities had on Sept. 11 also prevented some Nigerians from leaving the country, by insisting on a fresh profiling exercise in spite of the one earlier conducted by the Nigerian High Commission.

    The situation led to several hours of delay before 187 of the more than 300 Nigerians were successfully evacuated.

    (NAN)

  •  Their pound of flesh

    IT was a tough call for President Muhammadu Buhari, the anti-graft czar of our time. The Supreme Court on Monday raised an ethical issue during hearing in a case in which he was a party. Though the case was struck out, the panel of justices wondered whether his lawyer, who works in the Federal Ministry of Justice, was representing him in his official or personal capacity.

    The lawyer said he was representing the President in his personal capacity. The justices frowned at his response, wondering why the President should use tax payers money to fund a private case. His action, they said, offended the Code of Conduct for public officers.

    In a way, they are accusing the President of wrong doing. Coming from a bench where some members are facing corruption charges, the insinuation is not lost on the public.

  • Between Buhari and Jonathan

    SIR: Had Jonathan Goodluck defeated Buhari Muhammadu in the 2015 presidential elections, Nigeria might not have come out of recession. He lacked the fiscal discipline to manage the economy, no disrespect to Jonathan, a very good man but goodness on its own never changed anything in history but brutal hard-headed leadership; and he made Nigerians boogied in the dark his entire period in office.

    Iweala Okonjo said so before she disavowed her position. With less money than what Jonathan got, President Buhari Muhammadu did his best to steer the ship of state away from possible depression.

    The bane of leaders in third world countries is the total collapse of real governance, there is no stability in the pursuit of policies. Away with the old and start with the new. The level of abandoned projects in Nigeria is befuddling. Every new government starts new projects and throws away all projects by the previous administration. They borrow money to start projects and never see it through to the end. This is not the case in Asia, irrespective of the previous party /government in power; new administrations pursue projects and complete them for the common good.

    The Buhari Muhammadu’s administration tower above Jonathan’s because projects inherited from the Goodluck Jonathan administration aren’t abandoned, they are investigated in the first instance and if established that they are not bogus projects awarded to cronies and that these tasks satisfy the aspiration of communities of people for whom the jobs are directed, these ventures are finished. He needs to be commended even though I am not his supporter any longer.

    Under Jonathan, states couldn’t pay salaries and even though it is not the responsibility of the federal government to pay salaries, bail out funds were given to states to do so. And now the government is on the tail of governors to recover said cash. Need I say also that even though the economy was rebased under Jonathan, it was just a boondoggle not felt by Nigerians and cash had to be borrowed to pay federal workers.

    It doesn’t appear to be business as usual.

    We never hear of wastages of the ecological funds under Buhari anymore but we once did under Jonathan. You follow? These funds are released for critical projects and not for the sake of elections. How was Norway in 2014 able to raise its sovereign wealth fund to $829 billion from a paltry amount set up in 1990, and everyone in Norway theoretically became a millionaire in Norway’s local currency?

    Probing people under the guise of fighting corruption is not the answer to Nigeria’s problems but the completion of abandoned projects.

    These projects are in every corner and bend in Nigeria and completing them would serve the needs of Nigerians more. Here is where the country needs to deploy civil servants to supervise the completion of outstanding jobs instead of employment for quota basis and for its sake.

    Legislation should be put in place to prevent politicians from awarding elephant projects as a pretext to lining their pockets with public money.

    The main challenge of the Buhari administration is his failure to tackle the security challenges all over the place in the country. His media men are interested only in the glare of publicity and do not have the correct strategy in communicating his achievements to the Nigerian people.

    All told, in rating the performance of Goodluck Jonathan and Muhammadu Buhari, the average performance of Jonathan for me (I may be wrong) was in the region of the 20th percentile. Jonathan had passion for the office of president of Nigeria but didn’t have purpose.  The average performance of Muhammadu Buhari for me (I may be wrong) in his first term in office was in the region of the 45th percentile.  Muhammadu Buhari’s purpose for the office of president of Nigeria was firmly fixed, but you could see that he didn’t have passion for the office, the chief reason he hardly speaks to Nigerians, hardly travels in-country to find out missing pieces but loves to globetrot to tell world leaders where these missing pieces are in Nigeria and how world leaders can help Nigeria and at such moments he forgets that branding exercises starts at home.

    I wonder aren’t people his age scared of frequent travel on air. Neville Chamberlain was scared stiff of flying but had to, to see Hitler so as to prevent eminent war with Germany.

    I need to consult my teachers to find out if both scores are pass marks in examinations?

    • Simon Abah,

    Abuja.